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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 :
samedi 4 juillet 1896
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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, 1896-07-04, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" pt SAAS fos iy AN blind orien B20 Ci MPT, SALLE: 0S 10% REA GT RU EA ATTRA Last Edition.: Ÿ mm = = phen peipibepyiaadiphl lint TT ag v ; > \u201cCR Hi Cf Ti DER CABINET.the constitution allows a defeated gov- PANTELIS HATZIMANOLAKIS © K.GEORGEIONDAKIS.T0 TRACE CRIMINALS.PO ait ernment té retain power until a meeting > (EE \u2014_ of the House.the democratic spirit of THE FINANCE COMMITTEE RECOM- P pion nav Take Place modern times requires that the will of MENDS A SECRET SERVICE \u201cte ae - To-day, E OVER THE PO- FIFLD.-7 a TENERAL GL ANC LITIC AL em 4 \u2014The Tupper Ministry Ortawa, Juls nis \u20ac.> ro immeciate SisA of resigning A a cabine\" conncil is called for three «elec this afternoon.Tne appoint- - + où Mr.George R.Webster as chief Deparimnéntl is con- in Cusion- | Woud's Brock- tHe is Mr.J.FL.cieri firmed.oe L.\u2026 rertner.ville law parne | gir Charles Tupper has taken the seat in ce House lately ouéupied by Mr.L.La wiil have Mr.Foster on Ti.Davizs.He EU ee ax ee Ficho Minerve\u2019 declares that it does not © to retard in the least the ferma- vf the Liberal government.Mr.\"or having been entrusted by a ma- \"7 of the electors of Quebec with the \u201cion to settle at once the: Manitoba \u2018ol question, he will have to do bet- \u2018Lan Messrs.Caron and Ouimet and Minerve\u2019 says it will keep him as | as it can In that difficult task.\u2018 v.led Archbishop Langevin approves | Laurier's ldw, the \u2018Minerve\u2019 accents \u2018\u2018forenand.As regards Sir Charles © ver's resignationÿ it says that the | the people \u201cfor-havite\u201d etéétét Sr rer Joly De Lotbiniere, that he was a Pro- dicéé-thet the people be rejected.A PORTNEUF PRIEST'S ELECTORAL ADDRESS (To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\") Sit\u2014The echoes of the political contest still rumble in the county of Port- neuf and on Sunday last a little thunderstorm accompanied by heat lightning startled the worshippers in some of our parish churches.In Cap Santé the priest stamped about in a passion, smote the balustrade with his clenched fist and thundered at the people that they were a \u2018band de betes,\u201d and in Portneuf the sermon was a storm of invective.a testant, and that Protestants had no re- liglon and any one that says they have \u2018Is a lar.\u2019 These specimens will serve to show what the Liberal party had to contend against in Portaneuf, when added to the clerical interference the Conservatives provided unlimited whiskey and bank notes in abundance.By the way, it is rumored that some of the bank notes dealt out in St.Bazile belonged to defunct banks, but this report lacks confirmation.The men who have continued steadfast against such adverse influences for principle and honest government deserve appreciation instead of invective, and when the clergy have recovered their senses no doubt they will perceive this.In the meantime we must have patience with them.K.D.NET RESULTS OF PATRONISM.(To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\u2019) Sir,\u2014I s=e-that your Kingston correspondent has been interviewing Mr.J.L.Haycock anent the result of recent elections.Mr.Haycock says that \u2018he has no doubt that thousands of Patrons supported the Liberal party, believing that their principles would be carried out if the Liberals were returned to power.Hc evidently forgot to add that for every Patron who thus supported the Liberal party there were two Patrons who turned their backs entirely on their principles and weut over to the Consersatives.cogitharisonier the -election reftirn®: feith thèse cast at the previous election wAll convince any fairminded observer of the truthfulness of this.Consequently the Patron candidate in three-cornered contests was in nearly all instances supported in the most part by those whese sympathies were and alwavs had beep with the Liberal party.This resulted.as had been foretold by the Liberal leaders, in Conservative candidates slipping in between the two whose platform and principles were almost identical.Thus we see through the efforts of our Patron friends to organize and run a third party from ten to fifteen seats in Ontario and two in Manitoba were wrested from the Liberals.While to-day instead of the thirty to forty seats that were to have elected Patrons, thus giving them the balance of power, they have less than one-tenth of that number.Mr.Laurier has won the day but no thanks to the Patrons.well organized in the other provinces and equally successful in splitting the Liberal vote as in Ontario, the friends of good government to-day instead of re- Joicing would have been in sackcloth and ashes, for without a doubt, through their suicidal course, Sir Charles Tupper and his corruptionists would have obtained another lease of power.The moral of the whole thing is that while the principles of the Patrons were goôd and their efforts in the main honest and well meant, their methods were wrong, and sadly lacking in practical results.Instead of assisting to overthrow a rotten and corrupt administration, in a majority of instances they unconsciously voted to keep that administration in power.History repeats itself, as in the long list of third parties that have long since gone to a premature grave, the Patron movement has to a large extent, judging by practical results, undone the very work that it was organized to perform.JNO.M.COOK.Aulisville, Ont., July 1, 1898.A \u2018SCOTTISH AMERICAN\u2019 VIEW.One cf the chief lessons deducible from the campaign is that the Catholic people of Quebec are less dominated by the priesthood than are the \u2018Loyal Orange\u2019 and other Protcstants by their churches and lodges.In the case of the Horn.Clarke Wallace the Orangemen did come out strongly in supporting him against the infliction of separate schools in Manitoba; but in other instances, like that of Hughes in Victoria, they failed to do their duty.Still, \"it is a hopeful sign when even a small break has been made in the hitherto solid ranks of the organization In question, \"just as it ig equally ausplcious that other people are beginning to show they can do some thinking Cee A Tp Me nes WTA ETRE SN RG PÉR ee ad Ra pier = Had they béen as CONSTANTINE MALINAS.SOME LEADERS OF THE CRETAN THE BISHOP OF KYDONIA AND HIS DEACON.PAUL ANAGNOSTAKIS.INSURRECTION, for themselves in spite of the \u2018machine\u2019, by supporting Patrons and McCarthyites, or Independents, of whom twelve have been eletted.Among the chief causes to which may be attributed the Conservative defeat is the strong feeling of animosity entertained towards Tupper as a man.With a leader like Sir John A.Macdonald it is not improbable that the party would once more have proved Ît- self victorious.Sir John, with all his faults, was idolized by his party, and \u201cCharles is dgfested by, his reluctant \u2018fol \u2018Scottish American,\u2019 July L400 - > -\u2014 | POLITICIANS AT THE WINDSOR.Mr.Laurier did not return to town this morning, \u2018as was expected.Mr.Tarte, who still, with Col.Domville, and one or twa others, is at the Windsor Hotel, said that he badly needed rest.\u2018He has done a noble work and held out well.But he is very tired.\u2018And in the process of cabinet-making, how do you fare, Mr.Tarte?\u2019 \u2018Ah, about that I can say nothing.I see that other people are willing to give.me this and that.If I know anything about it\u2019 (and here Mr.Tarte gave an arch look), \u2018I say nothing for the present.And this applies to all the other material.What is known is one thing; what is declared is another.\u2019 \u2018When do you expect that Mr.Laurier will be called to Ottawa\u201d \u2018Well, Sir Charles cannot hang on much longer, although I would not be disposed to blame him for any unnecessary delay up to the present.There is always business to be finished, which takes time.He cannot be complained of in this regard so far.\u2019 \u2014 ST.ANTOINE RECOUNT.The recount of the ballots in the St.Antoine division was commenced before Judge Pagnuelo this morning.Neither Dr.Reddick nor Mr.Mackay was present, but they were represented as follows: Hon.Mr.Hall and Mr.C.A.Du- clos for Dr.Roddick, and Messrs.N.W.Trenholme, Q.C., E.Holton and J.M.Ferguson for Mr.Mackay.Mr.Johnson, the returning officer, was present and Mr.F.8S.Maclennan acted as his counsel.Some objections were raised at the beginning, by Mr.Maclennan, on points of procedure, but the judge overruled those objections and ordered the recount to go on.On à question raised by Mr.Trenholme, the judge stated that it had been decided that the presiding judge had it in, his discretion to admit or exclude the general publie, cr allow more than one agent of each candidate.to be present in the absence of the latter.In the present instance, there being but few persons in the room, they would all be allowed to stay.The ballots of Poll No.1° were then examined and two of the votes cast for Mr.Mac- kay were set aside because the deputy returning officer\u2019s initials were marked twice.In Poll No.2 two of Mr.Mackay's bal- were set aside on account of the ballot papers being numbered.The recount is now in progress.A ¥ pb pe GA feared hy bis opponents, whereas: 4 lowers: and despised by dbaséGritut=t a lots and five of Dr.Roddick's ballots |\u2019 quiet Te a THE CRETAN REYOLT.\u2014 Situation on the Island Rapidly Approaching a Crisis, STRONG FEELING IN BRITISH PARLIAMENTARY CIRCLES FOR ARMED INTERVENTION.ÜR.BALFOUR'S UNIOPTTARITY.London, July 4\u2014The dicontent in government ranks with Mr.Balfour\u2019s leadership has grown apace since his abandonment of the education bill.Mr.Balfour seems to be of the opinion that Mr.Chamberlain\u2019s leadership is impossible or that it could only happen at the risk of breaking up the party.In seeking to replace him three names are under consid- eration\u2014Mr.Chamberlain, Mr.Goschen, and Sir Michael Hicks-Beach.THE CRZTAN TROURLE, a 74 908 5 2 TS =.7] commission, may report.and Mr.Justice Hawkins.There are rumors of an application to postpene the trial for the presence of witnesses from South Africa, scme of whom are now in the thick of the fighting in Mashonaland.The government appears anxious not to delay the proceedings and to get as soon as possible to the inquiry by the ¢om- mission on the Chartered Company.The reply sent by Mr.Chamberlain to the demand of the Transvaal government for the trial of Messrs.Rhodes and Beit and Dr.Harris is undeistood to be that the | British Government will deal with.the uegtion under the light of what the mission cannot report before the summer of next year, Rhodes, Beit and Harris hardly need fear.BEHRING SEA DISPUTE.The Britis) Commissioners who are to join in the inquiry into the Behring fur seal fishery are expected to finish their labors and return to England early in October.Prof.Darey Thompson, of Dundee University, will visit the Priby- loff Islands, while Mr.Barret Hamilton visits the Commander Islands.They The statement made in the Houce « are both of high repute as naturalists and Commons yesterday by the Parliamentary Secretary to the Foreign\u2018 Office to the effect that the Turkish Government had agreed to immediately apply the measures which the powers demanded for the purpose of restoring tranquility in the Island of Crete is not accepted inside or outside Parliament as in any wise assuring a settlemen\u2019 of the troubles between the Turks and Christians there.The events in the island have been such as to render futile mere diplomacy.The concert of the powers does not impress the Christian insurgents, who, no doubt, have in mind the much- heralded concert in the case of Armenia, which was laughed to scorn by the Sultan.The Cretan Christians have no faith in diplomatic prdmises, having had experience of their worthlessness through many years of Turkish misrule, and they mean to bring about, if possible, a decisive conflict that will overthrow the Turkish regime.A conference of the Christian leaders held yesterday at Kam- pose, resulted in a determination to disregard the offers of Georgia Pasha Bero- vitch, the new Christian Governor, unless the reforms promised are solidly guaranteed by the powers.If the governor convenes the Assembly only about a dozen deputies are likely to respond.The debate on the Cretan situation in the House of Commons last night showed that the dominant sentiment among the Unionists and unanimous feeling of the Liberals were in favor of a strong British policy even should it go to the length of armed intervention.Mr.Cur- zon, parliamentary secretary of the Fer- eign Office stated, however, that the government would not imperil the peace of Europe by taking isolated action and that it would go only-as far as the other powers were willing to go.The \u2018Speaker\u2019 to-day voices the Liberal policy in an article urging the government to use the fleet to prevent Turkish trcops from landing in Crete, and to insist upon the neutralization of the island under European control.,, THY JAMESON TRIAL.The court which is to try Jameson and his co-ralders will be composed of the Lord Chief Justice, Mr.Baron Pollock : - A a Caio # rare 0 are credited with some special knowledge about seals and seal fishing.\u2014 DEMOCRATIC SILVER FIGHT.Chicago, July 4,\u2014A morning paper says: The silver men declared last night that they had 623 delegates to the National Convention who would vote for free silver.This does not include any contesting delegations from Nebraska, South Dakota and Michigan.The latest silver men\u2019s slate passed around is: For President, Henry M.Teller, of Colorado; for vice-president, John R.McLean, of Ohio; for temporary and permanent chairman of the convention, Senator Joe Blackburn of Kentucky.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014 WILL BE NO MILITARY CAMPS THIS YEAR.Ottawa, July 4.\u2014There will be no militia camps this year.It will be impossible to get the necessary amount put through parliament in time for the camps being held unless the House was to proceed with business on July 16.No matter when the government may resign, an adjournment of parliament will now be necessary.\u2014 MEETINGS AND SOCIETIES.YOUNG IRIsHMEN'S8 L.AND B.SOCIRTT.At a meeting of the Young Irishmen\u2019s Literary and Benefit Association last night in their hall, Dupre lane, it was decided | to hold the annual excursion down the river on July 27, on the steamer \u2018Three Rivers,\u201d which has been chartered for the occasion.' THE BABBATH DAY.The Rev.Dr.Benson is announced to preach a special sermon on Sunday evening in Mountain Street Methodist Church on \u2018Sabbath Desecration and its Results.\u201d The Sabbath day rightly understood and observed is essential to our freedom and happiness.\u2018I did it simply because it is right,\u2019 was the reply of a certain railway president, when questioned why he had stopped the running of certain railway trains on Sunday.Such an order in Canada would be -greatly appreciated by one of the most industrious and overworked classes of the community \u2014 railway employees.Public morals suffer wherever the Sabbath is disregarded.To undermine and destroy our Sabbath is to destroy our Dominion.As the com- FUND.\u2014 ;- , THE RESERVE FUND DWINDLES \u2014NO MONEY FOR THE EXHIBITION.At the Finance Committee meeting yesterday afternoon the Mayor brought up the question of providing the police department with a prop Secret.service fund, to be spent in apdrohending criminals.He sald that Montreal was the only city in the world which had no such fund.In many cases he had had to take the responsibility of providing money to OL LNDR, detectives to pay their own expenses.The whole committee concurred in his | opinion, and it was decided to report to { council, recommending that an amount of six hundred dollars be awarded for à secret service fund.The chairman, Ald.Rainville, said that the city would have to pay at once $14,- | 000 for various judgments against it.The amount would have to be taken out of the Reserve Fund, which unfortunately had dwindled down to $18,000.He .wanted the members to know that there now would only be $4,000 at their command in the reserve fund.: \u2019 The Health Committee asked for six hundred dollars to pay the expenses of a new clerk in the department whose duty it would be to enforce the new by-law regarding burial certificates.A portion of the amount would be needed to partition off a new office.Ald.McBride said the Finance Committee had no money for new clerks but he would vote in favor of $300 being given the Health Department.\u201che mat ter was not definitely settlea.Ald.Brunet, on behalf of the Board ef Health, asked for $1,500 for repairs to the chimney of the incinerator.The opinion was entertained by the majority of the committee that the contractor was responsible for the work of repairing, and the city attorney was fnstructed to look into the contract with Thackeray & Co.and report at the next meeting.-À letter \u201cyas read from the Montreal Bixposttion Compafiy-asking for money to aid it in carrying out its annual exhibition.On account of the leanness of the \u201ccivic exchequer the request could not be granted.se CHINESE OUTRAGE.FRENCH MISSIONS DESTROYED AND THE CONVERTS SCATTERED.\u2014\u2014\u2014 London, July 4.\u2014The \u2018Standard\u2019 publishes a despatch from Shanghai saying that a serious rebeliion has broken out on the borders of Kiang Su and Shantung.Rumors are current that the French missions have been destroyed and the converts scattered.A German missionary is said to have been killed.It is also reported that' an American or British Woman Missionary has been abducted.\u2014 ARMENIAN RELIEF.The hon.treasurer ol the Armenian Relief Fund would thankiully acxnow- ledgs the undernoted donations: A friend of Lakefield, $1; First Baptist Church, = per Mr.Alex.Stewart, $26; H.H.Lyman, $25.As the balance at credit of this fund, about $3,700, will shortly be remitted to the parent fund in England, known as \u2018ThgwDukes\u2019 those who wish to add their donations to the above will be pleased to forward them at an early date to the \u2018Witness,\u2019 or to F.Wolferstan Thomas, the Molsons Bank.honorary ireasurer.= GULF REPORT.L'Islet\u2014Clear; east wind.River du Loup\u2014Clear; north-east wind; inward, 7.30 a.m., Scotsman.Father Point\u2014Clear, north-east wind ; iuward 5 a.m., Queensmore.; Cape Chatte-\u2014Clear; east wind; inward 8 a.m., Hungaria.: Martin River\u2014Clear; calm.Cape Magdalen\u2014Clear; \"calm ;.inward 3 a.m., Gerona; 3 p.m., yesterday, Coban.Fame Point\u2014Clear; calm; inward § a.m., Kingswell.North Shore\u2014Clear; east wind.Low Point\u2014Hazy; west wind ; outward yesterday, Murcia; to-day, 6 a.m.Turret Crown.Cape Ray\u2014Clear; north wind ; inward, 8.30 a.m., Mongolian.Cape Race\u2014Clear; north-east wind; inward, 5 p.m., yesterday, Ormiston.THE WEATHER.Meteorological Office, Toronto, Ont., July 4, 11 a.m.\u2014The following are the minimum temperatures: Calgary, 54; Prince Albert, 54; Qu'Appelle, 56; innipeg, 50; Port Arthur, 52; Parry Sound, 6{; Toronto, 60; Ottawa, 54; Montreal, 54; Quebee, 56: Chat-.ham, 48; Halifax, 50.Probabilities for the next twenty-four hours: Fair to cloudy ; showers and thunderstorms.Montreal, July 4.Readings by Hearn & Harrison's Stahdard Barometer at noon to-day, 20.93 ; yester- day, 80.13.To-day, temperature, max.64, min.54; yesterday, max.70, min.56.ee EE a er ew.it was hardly fair to ask the * ~~ te ar 4 \u20ac wy sith , \u201cagahs Ir EE TOR ely oo joy = - ree \u2018 CL net Lu Lo re TP kT PE RE PRES a © EL 5-2 assim rer To \u2014 Epa pe it a gr 0 rage AL 0 AR St mir « ee Er apr pe \u201d PS OUT EE 2 RIRTHS.MARRIAGES AND DEATHS.Notices of births, marrlages and deaths must {nvari- edly be endorsed with the name and address of the acnder, or otherwise no notice can de taken of them, Birth notices are inserted for 25e, marrtage notices Jor 50c, death notices for #5a prepaid.The announcement of funera! appended to death notice, 860 extra ; otre\u201d extension to obituary, such as akor® gketch af life, two cents per word extra, eect poetry, which ia 50 aents per line cxtra\u2014prepaid.dnnual subscribers may have announcements of births, marriages and deatho (:thout exxended obituary or veracs) ocourring in their immediate familfen, free of caargs, PERSONAL.The Rev.Dr.Scrimger and family have left town for Bic.where they will occui\u201d Mrs.McKenzie's cottage durinz July aid August.% .M ae ar cace EY IE 3 5 , 4 RE, If A DA pe tie og pew Pd pa.OY AO DOME I pe.bly tL irsday ts\u2019 ot > with state a tha: shou!! OT hi thay trews C sup- Lye à.2 hèa n mpanv ap or lb, ani siders it ann ers, |i: h new Ur.=\u201c very jh us.credi: of the in the obanlv 1.and ght ut wer + et; as in the esired ver fer Pn Caring in se and per de- pcasion Zhland t wear those L week pm the hgland.would to the he cap- to drill The a dis- by the Conti- British pts who of the on the ne band doublet st the 2e pro- i's re- ere be- in the he kilt, s, For s when Hest be- alion.clusion, pirit ¢¢ 1, and up the set the ocieties )S, and retain presen: 1d will- - motto JET.LIFE - name, attemp: Charles à place he out- 7 after- bothing nd had \u2018letcher \u2018ing off .The th were Brown- ath \u2018ne vas Dol panion, > Water to save ere the as tre- narrow boy of ESETVES 0 save ecently is fur- rge, in- 0.135 14, W.yiv, B- 3; 5192), 1922, J.,G.VW.1935, G.: 51951, icrcles; pcipede; or cut- LE.r.John Richard 1 Seale, t night after a ay, the of «the -ith the nd was he city- Zetland ill take '84 Dor- {lv have occupy uly acd SEEN RAC SA RM Aer NT LG PRS, dre Léa PE Fe ES ES re OL Sr a an PERDRE ARE .# SATURDAY, Jury 4, 1896.THE MONTREAL DAILY \u201cWITNESS.8 COM GIAL :\u2014 _ Va CN Cf a \u2018 .pr | nl voip pa TT ADVERTISEMENTS.\" T0 COUMEBLIAL i John Murphy & Co.\u2019s \u2018Advertisement.ver TE OI HI summa } | TT ms TT ESP CSD LES TROIE GUESS | WHOLESALE PRICES.| 7, | ?| Cable advices to the Board of Trade this morning arr as follnws:\u2014 London, Saturday, 136i.- Liverpool spot wheat steady, Minneapolis first bakers\u2019 wheat quiet, 4s Juiy 4 Sait maize quiet.\"7, 165 24.Futures, c,d Julv.48 1nd Aug.Sept.Oct., 48 A Nov.maize quiet, Is 11144 July, ave 39 \u201c1.4 Fept.Oct.3s 1d Nov., 3s 1,4 J'ec, CONSOLS.London, July + 12.30 p.m.\u2014Consois.\u2014 Moss and account, 1192.VERPONI, MARKET PRICES 1 \"CURRENT.July 1.1806, \u2014Spring wheat, 4s cv ant i 4 ay ce id.rad winter, 98 1%d to 5s SA peas 4s 94, pork.#8.lard, 21s 34; tallow.172.rheese.is fd.LONDON WOOL SALES.9 The offerings of wool , Jul- London, sales to-day were 10,993 bales.ere waz an active demand and at ex- There was an excellent de- etter grades of merinos, on \u201cental operators and su- ragerly bought, treme prices.mand for the b tha part of \u2018ont: \u201corior cross-treds were ; Sefly hv the home trade.Medium and \u2014farior lots wero comeeted for at full Srices.The sales wore Yew South Wales 2 Scoured, 11d to 1= ad.locks and pieces 734 to 1s 044.tirrasv.240 to 111.4.10 ks and pieces, 4d te sd._ \u2018Queensland ~ Go baies.Scoured, 11d to ls sol .locks and pieces, 9d to 1s 2%d.Greasy.Kind to T!,1.ineks and pleces, 4d to Bd.Viczoria -2,.9%) bales.Scoured, 91 to 1s 4d.looks and pieces.A%d to 1s 2d.Greasy.4d tn 10i.d.le~ks and pieces, 53d to 9%d.South Australia\u2014100.Scoured, 9%d to 191,d.locks and pieces, 8d to 9%4d., Greasy BA tn 11d.locks and pieces, 5d to Tied.Tasmania \u20141.37 bales.Scoured, 10d to 1s 2t,d.locks and pieces, Td to 11d.Greasy, sd ro is 14:0 locks and pieces.54d to 84d.New Zealand\u20142.600 bales.Scoured, 7d to \u2018s 2d .lecks and pieces, 9%d to 1s.Grazr, 412d to 94; locks and pieces, Rd tu 9d Cape of Good Hope and Natal\u2014600 bales.Sroured, 9d to Is 14.Greasy, 4%d to 63d.TRADE IN THE UNITED STATES.New York, June 3.\u2014Bradstreet's to-mor- row will say:\u2014General trade in both commercial and industrial lines is duller, but the falling off is in part the usual midsummer dulness.Comparatively few ~hanges are noted, but most of decreases in either price or demand.The sentiment of the trade at many points is that the immediate outlook for business is not favorable.The general industrial situation shows no renewal of activity.The apparent improvement in wool has disappeared.Manufa-turers refuse to buy new material simply because it is cheap.Exees- sive dulness marks dry goods, although this is the usual season for stock-taking.Cotton mill treasurers.controlling 4,090,000 spindles.have agreed to curtail production.A large amount of woollen machinery remains idle, and the iron and steel industries are as flat as heretofore.- Business fallures in the United States for six months number 7.602, the: lgrgest: six months\u2019 total since the records.have been éompiled.\u2018 Thé fnctease, compared with 1805 and 1894 is 15 and 156 percent, respectively.CHEESE SALES.Perth, Ont: July 3.\u2014There were 1,43) cheese brought into Perth market to-day all white.Sales were slow and only 250 sold at 6%c, the balance was shipped to \u201c'ontreal to store.Four Montrcal buyers were present.ee THE CAMERA AND CRIME.As a social force the camera is hardly to be beaten, whether its accomplishments be regarded from the standpoint of romance or of utility.A considerable book might be written on this side of the question.Photography has un- ioubtedly established serious claims on cur gratitude.Apart from the pleasure it gives in enabling us to keep our riemory of faces and places green, it has been of incstimable value to those in whose hands society leaves the care of 1's possessions and the lives of its mem- vers.By its means, on the one hand, crimes have been brought home to unsuspected individuals, and, on the other, inckless creatures resting under the gravest of charges have been shown to te perfectly innocent.We recall a case related some years ago in which the strength of a chain of circumstantial evidence which threaten- \u201c1 to hang a prisoner depended on a ink in the shape of a match-box.The ot was supposed to have belonged to \"ar accused, and evidence to that effect \u201cis forthcoming.Some scratchings on \u2018*.Tndecipherable by the naked eye, were hotographed by an expert, and showed \u2018ha\u2019 the box was the property of a man \u201cha lost it some time previously.Pho- : vaphy saved the prisoner's life and rrv.Another case, equally remark- : was that in which a chisel was -\u2026! near the spot.where a constable \u201c+ murdered.Every tgace of the cul- : Lad vanished, and the idea of ever 4 Ying him was given up at last by \u201877 the police themselves.One day?ver, a lynx-eyed individual poinced 0° some faint marks on the chisel near \u2018» handle, the chisel was photographed, \u201cletters \u2018rocks\u2019 became quite plain in i picture, a diligent search through © books of local ircnmongers brought \u2018* light a person named Orrocks, and 8'r a trial, which ended in his convie- \u201c.Orrocks confessed that he was the ever.Photography sent him to the glows, The camera is, of course, the detec- _ x MOSN efficient aid.At Scotland Yard ard in all central police offices, ~umes of photographs are preserved +! srudie] more assiduously than the Prst prized family album.The police < + shown such tender regard for tr convicts who have once passed \u2018>rough their hands that the collection 0° plotographs at Scotland Yard amounts ' fi\u2018ry thousand, and lest in the whirli- \u201ci of time some part of the distinguish- | rareer of the originals.should fade \u2018\u2019ém the official memory, a record of rir past is written by the side of the \u201cf\u2018ograph.Police officers come from 37 And near to ingpect these albums, ! an inconvenient habit they have of \u2018renlzing a person who has nce been reed\u2019 makes the convict very shy of \u2018° honor they are always anxious to bestow upon him before restoring him to \u201c\u201c\u201cedom.Nor are the authorities con- .rms, 4 5 242 pe ar AGNI jg EET) REA RL TER TYAN Sh ESTATE REC EEE ee ES SES = \u2014 \u2014\u2014memmise = ess \u2018mails from Halifax to wr A. i % = , ; 27 (ENT FOB BALE.J : A \u2014 { Coloniai House, oo dae Phillips Square, * DOHOÉSÈCHSHHHH 0H SOS \\ ~ Les = 42 2 ESS lA me ge Be er A < ~~ SIRT trs se 19H01 59150HH50HH0 CHINA Our \u201cStock Patterns\u201d | are now complete in } \u201cFurnivalls\u201d Al A eee Ti EE ee tt eee re ey ee BORE ess = MYRTLE GREEN MARGUERITE.No.8731 ENAMELLED MARGUERITE.| INDIAN BLUE LISBON.\u2018 | \u201cFruit Jars.\u201d Creare , 7.Mail Orders Selicitod.PALMER'S, LADIES\u2019 #AIR DRESSERS, 1748 Notre Dame Street.; ; .> , .) : \u2019 The \u2018Union Cold Storage.Company's LS Can - .; ; oe EE LS an 4e * + 5 + ST - = gen 3 é Fo \u2019 ney z a \"pre 25 Be PESTE TT TE A = \u2014 ea Sr THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS.PAIE ENTRE A ROSE A ET ER ES ., Lo - 3 SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1806, Weekly Calendar SATURDAY, J vLy 4.M\" STEWART MUIRHEAD WILL SPEAK TO MEN Saturday night, at 8 o'clock.REY J.J.GUTHRIE, D.D.Of London, Eng.Will conduct the Young Men's Bible Class at 3 o'clock on Sunday afternoon.July bth.All strangers in the city are cordially invited to\u2018 these services.YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Dominion Square.For\u2014\u2014 Isle Gros Bois Steamer FILGATE will leaves Jacques Cartier Pier daily.if weather permits, for Isle Gros Bois, at 10 o'clock a.m.and 2 p.m.Returning from the Island al 11.15 - a.m.and at 5 p.m.Steamer open for Sunday school and other excursions to tue Island.ART ASSOCIATION, PHILLIPS SQUARE SUNDAY IN THE BAOKWOODS, By T.FAED, R.A.PRESENTED BY LORD MOUNT-STEPHEN NOW ON VIEW.Galleries open Daily, 9 a.m.to 6 p.m.ADMISSION, 250.26 Sunpar, JULY 5.FEMMANUEL CHURCH Rev.E.C.EVANS, D.D,, Pastor.The Rev.W.W.Willard, OF CHICAGO, ILL.Will preach Morning and Evening.EVERYBODY WELCOME! POINT ST.CHARLES CONGREGATIONAL CHULCH, 185 Congregation Street, Rev.D.5.HAMILTON, B.A, pastor elect, Will Preach Morning and Evening.Sunday-school and Bible Classes at 3 p.m.STRANGERS WELCOMED.Communion Service at the close of the evening worship.Monpar, Jury C6.ENGLISH Workinzmen's Benefit Society.The e Roguler Monthly Meeting of the E Society will be held on MONDAY.the 6th inst., at 662% Craig street, at 8 p.m.\u2018All members requested to atten JA MES BACON, Fin.Secy.THE GOSPEL OF THE GRACE OF GOD Will be preached, D.V, At the Gospel Book-Room, 7 § PHILLIPS SQUARE, On Monday and Tuesday evenings, at 8 o'clock, PAUL, J, LOIZEAUX, Of Plainfield, N.J.ALL WILL BE WELCOME.Forure MEETINGS.QT MATTHEW'S S.S.PICNIC } Satnrday, July 18th, \u2014TO\u2014 OTTERBURN PARK: Trains leave Point Point St, Charles and Bonaventure Station, $30 A.M., 1.30 P.M, Children, 30e.Adults, 60c.ARISTOCRATIC HOSPITAL NURSES, \u2018There issquite a remarkable impulse just now among young women of culture and education to become hospital nurses.said the head surgeon of a big hospital.\u2018The Countess of Airlie\u2019s daughter, Lady Griselda, some time ago joined an Edinburgh hospital, as \u2018probationary nurse,\u201d and only lately 1 have received quite thirty applications from ladies, some being clergymen\u2019's and doctors\u2019 daughters, two Girton ex-students, and several highly connected.Faw applicants, though, realize what a wearing life it is; several young ladles I've known have found the strain too much, and had to resign.Still, some ladies show wonderful aptitude.One we had seemed to possess nerves of iron\u2014could witness the most trying operation.She has lately married a noted surgeon, and has taken a large house, as a kind of private hospital, where her husband's patients can be nursed by herself.Another, at this hospital now, a beautiful girl and quite young, is a born nurse.She has that restful, soothing manner and voice, and that intuitive way of anticipating an invalid's vishes that is so rare and so valuable.She is the niece of a nobleman, and has practically given up a life of luxury for one of * alleviating pain.Her patients are kept well supplied with flowers and grapes from her father's hothouses, and whencver she has an hour free, her brougham comes for her and she goes off shopping and buying little luxuries for them.Many of he~ aristocratic friends call.too, and both the patients and the hospital box benefit by their visits.\u2014 From \u2018Cassell\u2019s Saturday Journal\u2019 for , June.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 > 4 A point well worthy of \u2018making a note on' in these days when divorce laws are clatming the attention of reformers.says the \u2018Union Signal,\u2019 is the fecord of Wyoming which has had woman suffrage for twenty-five years.From 1870 to 1890 the raie of divorce in the United States at large increased about three times as fast as the population.In the group of western states ¥omitting Wyoming, it increased nearly four times as fast as the population.Irn Wyoming it increased only about half as fast as the population.SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Oully Witness, $3.00, Weekly Witness, § sl.1008 = ne reductions to clubs Northern 10 copies to one address, $2.5 ; on, $040 Ps si 50:1 For Grea ritain add $1.04 per annum for post: aon on Wodkly Witness ; 23c on Northern Messenger ; $3.60 on Dally Witness.The last edition of the DATLY WITNESS is delivered in the city every evening uf publication ad 34.06 per annum, eel ADVERTISING RATES.DAILY WITNESS, Five Hines and upwards, 10c per ine.Contract on favorable terms.WEEKLY WITNESS.With iarge type or cuts, r line.Ome-third reduction If sct in our Rey amall advertising tyves.Hpecial contract ratss.F.Shur July ENS Sun.Mon.Tues.Wed.Thur.| Fri.Sat 11234 516/7/8|9j10-/11 12/13|14/15/16|17j18 19/20|21|22/23/24/25 26/27 |28/29/30/31 The Daily Witness.SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1896.Our correspondent \u2018Sincerity,\u2019 writing from Maxville, denounces clergymen in that vicinity, Protestant and Roman Catholic, in round \u2018terms as being hypocrites and hirelings, who prostitute their sacred calling\u2014pre- tended preachers of righteousness, caring only for the fleece\u2014and very much else, all apparently because some of them are understood to have voted CoBservative.In one case we are aware of a clergyman having gone much farther than exercise his private suffrage, which, indeed, every citizen is bound to use to his best ability, namely, Father Macdonnell, who id the name of his bishop wrote a letter instructing his coreligionists t8 vote Conservative.\u2018 Such a course is, in the case of a Roman Catholic clergyma an, and still more a Roman Catholic\u2019 bishop, entirely objectionable, as there underlies every such instruction the implied assumption, more or less admitted by the voters, that the subject is one on which a Christian can differ from his spiritual adviser only at his soul's peril Apart from this we have not heard of any case in which a clergyman of any dénomination did anything unbecoming his office further than being frankly Conservative, as our correspondent tells us some Protestant ministérs as well as Roman Catholic priests were.Such a choice is in his mind, În view of the corruptions of the now retiring government, utterly heinous, and he gives what is no doubt good reason why it should be considered so.Our correspondent can evidently not understand, and we must confess neither can we, how any honest man can possibly support such a nest of corruption as has been re- peetedly exposed, and he de- ncunces those who do so as utterly dishonest.We have, however, to keep constantly in mind that there are many things on earth which we canrot understand, and we have to acknowledge the obvious fact that many earnestly conscientious and utterly honest men not only do support such governments but live in the most affectionate relations with the members of them, holding them in almost worshipful admiration.While such facts are present to our every day observation we must be careful how we lose our respect for those who differ from us in judgment, even on matters which seem to ourselves so obvious.-\u2014_\u2014\u2014 SHAKING OFF HER LONG SLEEP.There is the sound of railway building in China.Li Hung Chang has a grand plan to carry a \u2018Grand Trunk\u2019 line from Pekin southward to Tien-tsin, which is the seaport.of Pekin near the mouth of the Pei-ho, then southward across country to Hang-kow, on the Yang-tse, one of the largest inland cities of China, and so on south to strike the sea again at Canton, on the southern coast of China, which is the nearest great Chinese seaport to the British port of Hong Kong.The line from Pekin to Tien-tsin is a government line, but from there south Li's idea is to make it a private enterprise in the hands of Chinese capitalists, \u2018 in the hope that it would saon become profitable, as certainly it should, passing, as it would, through pro- vicces with as many millions of population to the given area as we in Canada have thousands.The ; plan of Chan Chih Tung, who is Li's greatest rival in the statesmanship of China, Shanghai to Soo-chow, a modest distance of fifty, or sixty miles in the direction of Nankin, and with no doubt the ultimate notion of carrying it on to Nankin, and then on to Tien-tsin and Pekin.Li\u2019s railway would be the more valuable from a strategic point of view to the Pekin government, which recently proved its incapacity to ccntrol the people of some of the provinces through which this railway wculd ultimately pass.Chan\u2019s railway would be the more promising from a commercial point of yiew, running as it would through an absolute beehive of humanity and in a region which has long felt the impulse of fcreign commerce, and which is more or less Europeanized.These two schemes are spoken of as rivals, apparently because they have Leen associated with the names of rival statesmen.There can be no rivalry between them, except as to which would gain the first financial favors.from a government which is in no position to spend much on either.Both roads should be, and indeed must be, built at once.The safety of the government makes the one imperative, and the obvious business attrac- ticns which the other offers to cabi- talists seem to make its further post- pcnement impossible.Both railways would probably have been built long ago without any government encouragement if there had been no obstruction.The Chinese have the greatest possible objections to railways for reasons both religious and social.Their religious objection is the fear of offending the earth spirit, Feng- shui by name, which is, we suspect, if they only knew it, Chinese for malaria.The great awe, as they have noticed, as the New Yorkers also have, that] whenever mother earth is assailed by pick and shovel fever and death su-{; pervene all along the cutting.The social objection is on the part of the infinite army of land and water car- rlers, who assume that they would be out of employment if rallways were built.However, if it be true that both political parties, as we would say, have put railways in their platform, it seems to prove that these obstacles are at last giving way before the logic of obvious necessity.Once the bell rings for building rail- \u2018ways they will spread over all China- as fast as the feathered crystals stretch out over damp glass on a fresty morning.Meantime it is evidently necessary to proceed with caution, as Lord Lj does not even hint\u2019 at foreign capital.He speaks of it being an opportunity for His Ma- Jesty\u2019s wealthy subjects, and he is creating large iron works so as to produce the rails at least within China itself.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 PARTY SPOILS.No one can condemn too strongly the principle of Andrew Jackson, that the patronage of government, should be regarded as spoil to be shared among the members of the party vie- torious at the polls.The natural corrolary to this doctrine is that the persons appointed by a vanquished party should be sent to the right- abcut the moment that party is superseded.The effect of this is that at each election the party in power has ten thousand slaves fighting for their very lives, and the party out of power has a hundred thousand fighting to tear their living from them, and not a spask of patriotism can by any: means find its way Into the fight on either hand.This ignoble system, born in the world.below, was: introduced into the United States by Jackson, and completely held sway there | ~ until the permanent civil service ap-| pointment measure was passed, which now protects large classes of officials.The idea of turning out civil ser- vents of former governments has never becn acknowledged as a principle in Canada, and has never, in spite of great political temptation, gained general ground in practice.We are not here boasting of the purity of our civil service, which has been greatly prostituted to party ER N WR 3 ) is to build a railway from: Chinese have him in \u2018of \u2018his appointments.temptible.:#weep of all revokable appointments service, but we have sought to save it from -this last degradation,\" Fer-a party coming in .to revoke the appointments of a party going out, except for the very gravest cause, is against all the interests où honesty and good government.A precisely opposite rule applies, however, to what we have already spoken of:as death-bed appointments.in their very conditions and circumstances a wrong committed against the people, and we have no hesitation in declaring and demanding that all such, in so far as they are revokable by the incoming government, should be swept away at one Swoop, and further, that a general law should be passed by which the death of a government will in the future without further action make void all appointments whatsoever, whether otherwise revokable or not, made after the gov- errment was obviously and demonstrably moribund or made within a given time of the government's resignation.The law deals thus with a man\u2019s business transactions entered into after he is presumably insolvent, and the same rule should apply to all the transactions of a government.There have been only two changes of party since confederation.Before retiring in 1873 Sir John Macdonald made an enormous addition to the civil service, which greatly increased the cost of government for his successors, while at the same time he left an empty treasury, with vast maturing obligations.Mr.Bengough, in \u2018Grip,\u2019 hit off the situation in one of his admirable cartoons, showing Mr.Mackenzie as old Mother Hubbard, | who went to the cupboard, * To get her poor dog a bone; .When she got there the cupbcard was bare, And so the poor dog got none.Besides such appointments to such positions as lieutenant-governorships, judgeships, customs collectorships, deputy ministerships, and other actual offices which had been vacant, Sir John Macdonald's Government had created scores of new offices to which \u2018political hangers-on were appointed; en.wère appointed lighthouse- | keggers at points where\u2019 there were no lighthouses.It is said that these \u2018tninot appointments had they been ghzetted- would have filled seven or eight pages of the \u2018Canada Gazette.\u2019 These appointments to offices not in existence were never gazetted ; they were all cancelled.But the greater number of the larger appointments to actual vacancies were allowed to stand, although they were very numerous.When Mr.Mackenzie was léaving power he made eight appointments only to actual vacancies, on principles which he carefully laid down.Mr.Mackenzie held the civil service, according to British usage, sacred, and met the cost and the annoyance of Sir John\u2019s numerous appointments as well as he could, though among those whom he thus spared he warmed some vipers.Quite different was the course of Sir John Macdonald, who when Mr.Mackenzie resigned cancelled nearly every one Further, Sir John\u2019s Government passed acts remodelling many offices, by which process he got rid of Mr.Mackenzie's appcintees and made his own appointments.The weights and measures act was a brilliant example of his policy in this respect.By that act he deprived several hundreds of Liberals of their offices and put his own friends in their places, showing that when one wants to override constitutional barriers it is easy to do it.There should be no repetition of this sort of thing.Subterfuges are con- There should be a clean made in articulo mortis, and there should be a cutting down of all services that have boo overcrowded to make berths for politicians, but there shculd be no dismissing to find places for needy Liberals.A SINGULAR DEMAND.Those who{ for partisan political purposes are prophesying all sorts of evil as a consequence of the verdict of Canadians all over the Dominion against the Tupper Government and in favor of a Laurier administration are doing all that lies in their power to bring about the evils they pretend to anticipate.All but a very few of the more highly protected manufacturers and combines have very wicely, ceased making political war These are nounced.by threatening to destroy the industries and commeénde of the country ; for the most part the proprietors and responsible managers and directors cf large industries are now hastening to reassure the country by beth word an ddeed.Manufacturers who a couple of weeks ago were quoted as declaring that their businesses would be endangered or injured by the policy of Mr.Laurier are now declaring unequivocally over their own signatures or under their own names that they have the utmost corfidence in the fair prospects of the country, and even in the intentions of Mr.Laurier.Some of them are extending their factories or starting branches, which they had of course planned before the elections, but they see nothing in the result of the elections to interfere with their plans.There are, of course ,some firms which have seized what they consider as a \u2018favorable opportunity\u2019 to curtail what had perhaps leng been an unprofitable business ; such businesses would in any event have been compelled to contract and cut down they had probably been looking out for an excuse to do so.Those industries which have been very highly protected, but which, in spite of such protection, are in such an infirm condition that they are compelled to discharge their employees or close down if any reduction of the taxation is so much as spoken of, are exactly what Sir John Thompson described as \u2018mouldering branches,\u2019 which, as he declared, it would be well in the general interests of the country to lop off.That was the policy of Sir John Thcmpson\u2019s Government, which, it will be remembered, turned from extreme protection to tariff reform.The method of lopping off was of course by the simple process of reducing the prctective duties in such cases, and a very good\u2019 measure of tariff reform was actyally proposed by Sir John Thompson\u2019s Government.Business men complained then, as they are inclined to complain now, of the uncertainty which must prevail until the actual measure of tariff reform is, passed by parliament.That is an evil inseparable from a protective tariff.So*long as the tariff \u2018has to be arranged from time to time according to the supposed necessities of manufacturers who are always wanting more protection, and who have to fight for what they consider as their.true share of protection there must be frequent changes.There has not been a single parliament since 1878 in which general changes of the tariff nave not been made ; not a single session exceffit perhaps the last, in which particular changes have not been made.The urcertainty, therefore, in the present case is not a new evil.With a revenue tariff, however, which will remain stable until the necessities of the revenue or of reducing taxation compel its alteration, there will be fewer occasions of uncertainty.For partisan purposes some of the more rabid and renegade political organs are demanding of Mr.Laurier a detailed statement of his policy.In view of the fact that Sir Charles Tup- per is still in power, and may possibly, though not probably, meet parliament and try to retain the reins of power, to demand of one who is still just a member of parliament that he shall officially state his policy is absurd, and only an enraged tyro would make such unreasonable demands.Every one must know, too, that a general revision of the tariff cannot be made within a couple of months.It will take months of investigation and deliberation before a detailed tariff can be laid before parliament.The first session will be a short one, in which supplies will be passed and probably a Manitoba commission an- During the recess the new finance minister and his colleagues will be able to frame a readjusted tariff.For months, however.for nearly a year probably, there will be no disturbance of the tariff, and manufacturers and business men can safely work on that theory.arent Dr.Paul, Garnier of Paris, who has been making a special study of the children of habitual drunkards, comes to this conclusion: \u2018There is a flaw in the very nature of these young : wretches that the psychologist sees clearly and notes with apprebension\u2014the absence of affectionate emotion ; and when they do not become lunatics they show insensibility and pitilessness.\u2019 Here is a temperance lesson of startling power.ONTARIO .MANUFACTURELS.NOT DISTURBED BY THE POLITICAL SITUATION.HOW ONTARIO VIEWS MR.LAURIER'S ADVE 7 TO POWER.(Special correspondence of the \u2018Witnes: Toronto, July 4.\u2014The political situar.continues to be a subject of keen tho.quiet discussion.There is no doubt the public mind about the defeat o Tupper administration, but there is : certainty about the time of the as.bling of Parliament for the despatcl, Js 2 business, and also about the person: .of the Laurier ministry.l'ortunat« the want of certainty docs not In eit! er case interfere seriously with the cour: of business.There is not a mauufa turer in this city, probably not one \u20185 this province, who will not go on ve.much as he would have done if the 1 sult bad been the other way.Many «.those who supported the government not hesitate to say that they are not i! pleased with the change, and that the.have no fear of any evil effects from revenue reform.It will be very easy for the new government to popularize itself with manufacturers of articles made wholly or partly of iron, by putting pi: iron on the free list, and imposing oni.alight customs duty on bar iron ar: steel.If this were done the manufa.- turers could afford to consent to a low: duty on articles such as they produce, as they have only from five to fifteen p.:- cent of a margin now, Iron manufa- - turers here talk freely in this vein a: say that if the Liberals will so adju- the matter there is no reason whv thes should not remain in office for a gener: tion.The protection now afforded Lu the import duty \u2018on iron might aévan- tageously be granted in the form of an increased bounty on the output of tha furnaces.Some manufacturers j.rofess to have a dread of Sir Richard Cari- wright, but the majority of them ser:n to exercise themselves very little about the holder of the finance portfolio.so larg ag Sir Oliver Mowat and Sir Henri Joly De Lotbiniere are of the cabinet.Cy the other hand manufacturers, like others, admit the necessity for seve retrenchment if the country is to escape bankruptcy, and for this part of the Finance Minister's task the fitness of Sir Richard is recognized by all.The fac: that Mr.Laurler\u2019's majority among his own compatriots is larger than his net majority over all has aroused in some quarters a fear of FRENCH DOMINATION, This feeling might easily become dangerous to his regime.if his followers prove to be unreasonable in their demands.His success in Quebec was so much greater than the most sanguine hoped for, that it is comparatively easy to win credence for the most absurd explanations.A favorite one in circule- tion Mere is that while the French Catholic bishops were fulmindting publicly against him they were privately using their Influentw to devure his success, \u2018on™ the understanding: that they are to hive from him such legislation as they desire.The best way to counteract the effect of such talk is for Mr.Laurier to show from the beginning that he is to be Premier in reality and not merely in name, and that he is prepared at any time to abandon office rather than surrender his freedom.There is no reason why he should not sweep this province at the next election as he swept Quebec, at this one, if he can only succeed in allaying the fear above referred to.The causes of his comparative failure in Ontario are well known, and they will probably have disappeared before the expiration of the present parliament.One was the alienation of a large part of THE CATHOLIC VOTE.It is safe to say that if this had gone with him to the extent of fifty percent, it would have made a difference of several ccnstituenclies in the reckoning.It it blamed for the defeat of several prominent Liberals, though in other places it went almost solid against the government.Much depended on the partisan sympathies of the parish priest in a particular locality, but it is expected that with the Manitoba school question out of the way, the Catholics will hereafter divide as they have done in the past.The comparative success of the government in Ontario was probably due much more to the present state of THE ELECTION LAW than to the Catholic vote.In some con.stituepcies the successive gerrymanders had a very injurious effect on the Liberal cause.In others the voters\u2019 lists were in a very disadvantageous condition.In some the non-resident vote was an element of importance.In others the deputy returning officers were either ignorant of their duties or were bent on assisting Conservative candidatgs.If Mr.Laurier wishes to have a fair fleld in Ontario five years hence he cannot too soon restore the, constituencies to some- thihg like thei:¥ old boundaries.This ~ would of itself give him an enormous advantage, which might be indefinitely increased by repealing the Dominion franchise law and enacting that the provincial voters\u2019 lists be used iu the Dominion elections.His position would be further strengthened by limiting the franchise to residents, and by limiting the appointment of returning officers to such public officials as sheriffs and regis trars.All these changes would be popular here, and not with Liberals only.2 ENGLISH BANKERS GROWING CAUTIOUS.One of the natural results of Mrs.Langtry\u2019s successful action against her bankers has already come about.On going to my own bank the other day\u2014 writes a correspondent\u2014to deposit a bundle of papers and title-deeds for safekeeping, I was informed that they would redeliver them to nobody but myself.Ther could not take the risk of giving them up even to a messenger carrying my written order.As my time happens to be valuable, and I could not depend on being able to fetch the documents when I next want them, I brought them away with me.Perhaps bankers will not be sorry to be relieved of a duty which was at the best unprofitable, and which now appears to involve them in extensive and James's Ga- uncertain liabilities.\u2014\u2018St.zette.\u2019 SIR THI Wil Rai vec tail inte Cul Che rep Gri LA AY ve HT Ocg5d HU aga.9 0 CF \u2018 \u2018 1 AL: D; WITNESS.5 pi Sarurnary, JULY 4, 1896, ; THE MONTREAL: DAILY WI | Ah! e = 4 Ÿ ee ne = i] i \u2014 oo : 3MEN'S: MEET: \u2026 i ak , protest against the proposition for the| PLUMBERS\u2019 CONVENTION CLOSED._ SPORTS AND GAMES.THE WHRELME ADVERTISEMENTS.i {i \\ THE RAI W AY WORLD.free transportation of bicycles.\u2018 \u201cThe bi- - Cae = » Quebec,~ July 2\u2014The C.W.A.meet is now RE i BARU: cycle had no place oh \u201cthd pa¥seénger THE PLUMBRES HAVE A DRIVE, AN EXCURSION : \u2014 practically a thing of the past.A number 4 - strain anyway,\u2019 he sald.\u2018The bicyclists AND A DINNER.EVENTS THIS AFTERNOON.of the Msitors.who have mot yet left for E bit CA CHARLES RIVERS-WILSON DIS- are now treated with all the courtesy Yesterday afternoon the visiting mem- LOT TT UT .their local colleagues to La Bonne Ste.bl : AL \u2019 .possible.\u201d Mr.John H.Carter of Win-| bers of the National Association of Mas- : = Anne, and will take part -to-night in the | CUSSES THE OUTLOOK IN chester.believed in increased accommo- i\u2019; \"pp oo Foy A ton of Canada \u201cYoung Shamrocks vs.\u201cNationals, Inter- fancy dress street parade, which will be ac- | You're Mar ied a! ; AMERICA dation for wheelmen, but was against the were entertained to a drive around the mediate Lacrosse series, Natlonal grounds.companied by an ifumination and a display ; oure marr 4} Ç a or heels.co LT _ of fireworks from the war vessels in port.8 ; frge carriage où against carrying wheels CIty by their city brethren, following) y.Yambért Boating Cfub annual regatia.To-morrew there will be rides to Lake | AND HOUSEKEEPING, THEN'S Eh VENT f ral p de bv railway men The which train was taken to Lachine where Watchcase vs.Clippers, baseball game, Calvert, and visite to the forts at Levis | THE TIME OR SOLID COM- | Ti: CS THF FKOSPECTS ARE DRICHTBR\u2014 [T\u20ac\u20ac were made D: d y file with the the whole party embarked for a run Amateur League series, Watchcase grounds.and the falls of the Chaudiere, with a re- | FORT.YOU ARE A \u2018MON- I 2 > C wheelmen were requested to file with the down the rapids St.Gabriel vs.St.Lawrence, and Mont- gatta on Lake St.Joseph and a lacrosse | ARCH OF ALL YOU SURVEY.ii | : ss.\" EASED) WITH THE ACTION OF THE C.P.R.commission a list of suggestions as to In the evening a dinner was held at| real vs.Riverside, quoits.match between the Senior Toronto Club AND THERE'S NOTHING TOO ji | f 5-9 LS specific changes desired.a 1 McGill vs.Montreal, lawn tennis, Mont- and the Quebec Club on the Q.A.A.A.GOOD FOR YOUR OWN HOME.ak Ltio + York.July 3\u2014Sir Charles Rivers- 4 the Richelieu Hotel at which the pou real grounds.grounds.THERE ISN'T HALF THE B 1 i Ÿ P siden: of the Grand Trunk i elected president of the association, r.St.Lawrence Yacht Club, 25-foot class 4 PLEASURE GETTING THINGS ; x Pugh en been several THE ANCIENT CAPITAL.Joseph Lamarche, occupied the chair.| ace | § PIECEMEAL.AS IN GETTING EEE i (ay Company, «ho has been her toasts suitable to the - THE SAILORS IN PORT.| ICEMEAL, AS IN GETTING 11 t ln \u2018in this country on business per- FACTORY INSPECTORS Loyal and other toasts suita THEM T O} \u2014 Bt in thss country OR\" iated FEMALE neh \u2019 occasion were duly honored.LAWN TENNIS.A first-class programme of songs and | EVERYTHING NEW AT THE the y 4 10 that company and Base | it re a | SAME TIME.MAYBE YOU + u «ts wiil rerurn to England on the Quebec, July 4.\u20141a keeping with the \u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 TO TRY FOR THE TUXEDO COP.music was rendered before à gorge audi- CAN'T SPARE ALL THE MON.| e urd Laer \u2018Lucania\u2019 The visit of Sir| promise to the Women\u2019s National Coun-| NOTRE DAME'S NEW ORGANIST.\u2019 ence chat ¢ night.Mr.Hamilton Ferns EY.THAT DOESN'T MAKE BE, sem- ard deer sst successful, both cil at their last meeting here under tb Tuxedo Park, N.Y., July 3.\u2014E.P.Fis- stitute +5 ! se 1 OR 1 TR ANT DIFFERENCE.AKT | ; h of cries has been mos wav, and he will presidency of Lady Aberdeen, Mr.Flynn The powerful organ of Notre Dame \u2018her won the first round in the Tuxedo presided, Toiati Ces es 2 ist ames DON'T NEEL MUCH MONEY.st 4 svetal and puces L'aestors of the has appointed two lady factory inspec- Church will henceforth be in charge of tennis tournament to-day by defeating M.on the ates wha ad Kindly cone @ VE ARE READY TO FURNISH Es) nnel 2 \u2018be Hoard on the results of tors, Madame Provencher of Quebec und Professor J.A.Dussault, who bas been |.Whitman, of Harvard.This visio te sented to assist were mueh appreciated by \u2018 YOUR HOME FROM TOP TO tels, SRE Proauk Ut a system, together Madame King, née Vessol, of Montreal at appointed to succeed the late Mr.Beique.Sides hi to challongs Maleol® match wil] all who were there, the bulk of whom were BOTTOM FOR A PROMISE\u2014 Rl.ther PTE COS ne \"ions bearing on rail-|a salary of $500 a year each.Dr.W., Mr.Dussault is a native o Charles- take place to-morrow.Mr.Chace arrived sailors from the vessels in port.The ladics AND Th DA LANCE FOU CAN ikl.urse 2 etal affairs of the United Verge has also been named hygiene in- bourg, near Quebec, and is thirty-three here this morning and is said to be in ex- who sang incl ded Mrs.Flint, Mrs.Kel ¥ PAY MO .14 pfac- + net l\u2019anaña.What especially spector of factories in this district in.the years of age.cary ment for ms es cellent condition, aithoush in pracue ford White.Miss Hoyle obliged with two | YOU \u20acAN GET ANYTHING YOU EL very y.eases oe Grant Fronk an Pacific place of the late Dr.Samson.teen years Ta he succeeded his brother Mr.Fischer's long reach and heavy ground violin solos.WANT HERE ON CREDIT.HA .ve 1x the fact pat OBIT.itg' C at drives wiil undoubtedly worry e Provid- .7e ; ; $ NEL Lot bas lccuieä to hecnme à member Of NC Madame Faucher de St.Maurice, wife 25 organist of the Jesults es the efce crack, although the match is generally SALVATION ARMY NOTES.NO MATTER IF FOR THE HEE, O + vy ssocia'i ant i at- 2 + oe a : ; \" ' t do Join: Trafie AFFoca me he ; layed a of the well known French-Canadian lit- New York College of Music and in 1889 ccnceded to him.Major Sharp.of Kingston, is expected to PARLOR, LIBRARY, 4 til talnment of ts Tet be.Sir terateur of that name, and ex-M.P.P.| nt to Paris wherc for two years he \u2014 conduct services at the Point St.Charles i Lo CPL à th verv Enportant and interesting part.for Bellechasse died yesterday wen o h eat French mas- FOOTBALL.barracks on Saturday ni ht; all day on BEDROOM, DINING ROOM.AR ey \u201cisis.alto pleased with the Grand , : took lessons frcm the gr \u2019 Sunday in the Temple on Alexander street, | SEE rev- Cu ani (ho outlook for that property, THE WARSHIPS.ter Gigaut, and, at a musical compe POINT ST.CHARLES INSTITUTE FOOTBALL CLUB and at the French Hall on St.Lawrence ; KITCHEN, TL» or , ! he ic putting great reliance on the Admiral Erskine will transfer his flag tion the famous composer, Cami le for The first and second teams of the Point pain street Ray aionday night.anal vil Je | AND PAY US WHEN YOU GET irk reel?vx of Mr, Hays, General Manager, to on Tuesday next to the \u2018Intrepid,\u2019 which Saens predicted a brillian Pro- St.Charles Institute Football Club are re- acers This is the Major's first visit since À PAID.g nade ¢ that property on a strong and rev- with the \u2018Tartar\u2019 will then leave for him.Since his return from Europe a quested to turn out for a full practice on his appointment as Provincial Officer.and À : | pz earning basis, Mortreal, where they will remain a fessor Dussault has been organist a hig Saturday afternoon at three 0 clock; also a cordial welcome will be extended to him | THE AMERICAN WRINGER CO.! ony {+a \u2018Mail and Express\u2019 reporter who goo then returning to Quebec and Hyacinthe and at Oswego.t Notre Dame Sharp A up Points! YNot much time PY the city soldiers.Successor to Metropolitan Mfg.Co., Ii! and gov Im ar the Holland Hotel to-day, Sir leaving for sea on July 18.augurate his.engagement a to Bet into shape for the Caledonian cup ea à a fac- chartes Divers-Wilson said: Now that NAVAL HEVIEW to-morrow morning.matches.1638 1680 Noire Dame street, hy Ags 57 sit to the Uniied Sates is at an RE \u2014\u2014 ADVERTISEMENTS.T.A.EMDANS, Manager HET @ as 1.1 desire to say that it*has been most| There was a large crowd of spectators, 8 CRICKET.à per- Se Avable and successful im every point.! including many of the visiting wheel- KNIGHTS ELECT OFFICERS.; A id le, hfac- = Sn after arriving.a few weeks ago, we! men, on the Plains of Abraham yester- The regular meeting of Dominion As- MONTREAL V8.INVICTA.- PR rR and carved op an inspection of the Grand: day to witness the parade and review of sembly 2436, Knights of Labor, took The following eleven will pepresent the = i il just runk property and we went over it {he bluejackets and marines of the war- \u2018ening in their ball, 662% Montreal Cricket Club in thelr match w FFLOU the 5, ; i ; q- Place last evening ttend- the Invictas, to be played this afternoon on TS iy y \"horouzh:v, and somewbat to my surprise | ships in port under command of Ad- Craig street.There was a large atte the M.A.AA.grounds, estmount, play i pera- ! founi things and conditions very good.mira] Erskine.The force on the field ance, it being the semi-annual meeting | to commence at 2.30\u2014P.Barton, J.J.Boyes FOR BREAD.PASTRY and General Uso, ORE} | by in far: it was My second trip over the numbered nearly a thousand men and for the election of officers, which result- A\u2018 G.Brown, A.Browning (captain), W.The Cholcest Quality of Oatmeal,, Rolled Lo van- ine and I found things in much better the Jack Tars in their blue jackets and 4 as follows: \u2014J.H.Dodd, master work- | Duckitt, C.B.Godwin, A.Hodgson, C.M.NEW SCA LE Oats, Rolled Wheat and other Breakfast ap t an shape than l'had anticipaetd.We de-| yhite t sented a plendid ap- |.: orthy foreman; R.| C.Hughes, K.Mackenzie, H.F.Stow and Cereals for familles.wy th snage ; white trousers pre man; W.Keys, worthy J.H.Walt BRODIE & HARVIE HA ze 8 cuted nn several anprovements that a pearance, whilst they also proved them-| Keys, recording secretary; L.Z- Boud- » He Wallers.NO DH EIME 10 and 12 Bleury street HEE press to be male in the system.and, so far, selves to be very efficient in their drill \u2019 ial secretary; J.P.Moncel, : R R .NTH | Cart- Mr \u2018fivs, the general manager, is doing ; i .eau Anant! Bently, statistician; J.Me- CYCLING.3 Hs J seem s;!1- \u201clly.I have great confidence in STRUCK BY LIGHTNING.Ginn, almoner.The reports of the offi- WANDERERS BICYCLE CLUB.PIANOS HALE bout bis clement and ability, and I feel sat-| During the hurricane which swept this » am Assembly to be in good rng ih So ; .; .S , o-day, p.m., .i Joly Grai 1 Trunic, Of course, you know, busi- at Indian Lorette, owned by Mr.Henry A discussion took place on labor in gen- Tuesday, July 7, 8 p.m., optional destina- Possess a truly beautiful quality eco d to Ne @ Ent 4 ! D np 213 au- Club.The Peni- ird.S.ndon.Race, (Fri- al for y) af- ores 1e SS.al at àAvon- head, from 1.to- aloon , Mr.nfant, eggle, lbson, , Mr.Mrs.\u201cMr.Lewis, nealy, vard, ~abin, 8.sailed , full d the \u2014Miss Rye, Hon.lewel- es A.B.G., Mr.vilson ar, 88 with ed.A ngers rewell their num- e was doing consi- n ow- or wé depth feet, year, idered same 1eons- yndon, Sa.tur- ARS.\u2014Klndly allow a little space in your * ir anendent and widely read paper: to ce Ny TIT RS TTY Sarurpar, Jury 4, 1896.DET ER EEE Pate 78) = DT orne mm mm mm SES © SE{ SERPEST CAUGHT.A MONSTER OF THE RAGING DEEP FOUND IN PUGET SOUND. work preach And forbid- , a few be ef- 1 shud- urther.1 after ice the nd her ! And ers of Winter cienee\u201d right\u2014 do her ually ; jeard\u2014 side at man's 1 peace 3.Dean erance k men ger as nd had e true temp- wbich ped to But ad de- 1d the , Dean .Dr.ne had inister, agreed 1te use means t wina esides, n upon a little And baby\u2019s y were er and .Dean el; her >r tem- up, the t Mra.d these d been meet- of her they ?SATURDAY, JoLy 4, 1896.John Jenkins did not think so.He could not go to the bible class, which was for women only.He had signed \u201che pledge under Mrs.Dean\u2019s burning werds, and it was his meat and drink ro listen to her kind and encouraging addresses once a week.The public-house had no longer a charm {or him while she was in the little lecture hall close by.But now\u2014 well, by degrees; he found his way back to the \u2018Red Lion,\u2019 and Mrs.Jenkins.poor thing, found her little home getting bare again, and her nice syrniture again disappearing; and already her few months of happiness and comfort had begun to be a thing of the past.and she and her little family knew to their cost that Mrs.Dean's temperance meetings were no lenger held.And Mr.Dean danced his fat, beautiful baby boy in his arms, and joked his wife on her good locks ;: and as they enjoyed their supper ale together, laughed at her bygone scruples and old-fashioned ideas.Even the Rev.Mr.Bond rejoiced, as he and Dr.Winter could now enjoy an evening at their friend's house, and over their wine and cigars discuss the affairsof the church, without the uncomfortable feeling that the mistress of the house did not like smoke, ete.It was about two years from the time our story began, and a Tuesday evening ; the attendance at the bible class was larger than ever.Mrs.Dean talked well, and with much animation.The members listened, interested and edified ; but was this all?Somehow, the old way of lingering behind for a little more talk was omitted\u2014the warm hand-shakes, the personal interest, seemed gone.Although no one could have told why, Mrs.Dean's bible class was not exactly what it used to be.\u2018You sec \u2019 said one of the old members to her friend.as they walked home, \u2018between the doctor, the minister and her husband, Mrs.Dean's another woman altogether.She talks, of course, but not like she used to ; and did you notice to-night how flushed and excited she was, and\u2019\u2014\u2018Oh, Sarah ! don\u2019t say another word, it's too dreadful,\u201d said her, friend with a shudder.\u2018You surely don\u2019t mean\u2014but here we are at hcme.Come in, and have a little suppér with me, and I'll walk round with you afterwards.\u2019 An hour or so later the two friends were agaln passing through the streets of the quiet town.All at once they stopped short, as, just in front of them, out of a small public- house there emerged a well-known form, and they saw Mrs.Dean walk, or rather stumble, along the path before them.Sarah Clark hurried eon and overtook-Her ; and placing a firm hand on the lady's arm, -satd, \u2018Mrs.Dean, take hold of my arm, you are unfit to walk alone.I'll see you safely the rest of the way.\u201d She shcok the little hand off angrily, as if resenting the offer, and drawled out a sert of explanation, \u2018I went in there to walt for Mr.Dean\u2014mind your own business, and leave me alcne\u2014but here he comes ;\u2019 and in her kurry to free herself a small bottle fell to the ground, and broke to pieces.It was, unmistakably, gin! Mr.Dean saw and smelt it, and his angry face and manner made the Christian woman draw back, but she heard his words: \u2018You disgusting woman, you're a disgrace to me.I've been looking everywhere for you.She saw him put his wife's hand on his arm and stride away, while she kept pace with him with unsteady steps.The two at length arrived at their destination ; and after seeing her safely to bed, Mr.Dean drank his whiskey and water, and smoked his pipe, and congratulated himself that no one else knew! But, alas! this thing was not done in a corner ! Serah\u2019 Clark had seen and heard enough.She went home to weep and to pray, and, in God\u2019s strength, to resolve to do her little best to put this wrong right ; but what could she do ?\u2018William,\u2019 she said to her husband, as she tool off her bonnet, \u2018I've had such a shock to-night.I do believe Mrs.Dean drinks !\u2019 He laughed.\u2018Bless you, my dear, she\u2019s been going on at that game ever so long.Why, the baker\u2019s boy told me six weeks ago.He found her dead drunk on the kitchen floor, when he took the br2ad in one afternoon.These are your religious folks, you see ! And.there's the parson, he ain't much better.You don\u2019t catch me mixing up with that lot.Religion, igdeed ; I'm sick of the name! But, come along, it\u2019s ever so late, what with you bothering your little head about her.Teacher, indeed! She'll have tc start a new trade, I'r« thinking.\u2019 , At length a night arrived when Mrs.Dean\u2019s class met and waited in vain for their teacher ; and as she failed to come, one by one they dispersed.Sarah Clark alone remained, \u2018kind.for she believed her prayers vere about to be answered, and the \u201cpportunity for which she had wait- : and prayed so long wag going to \u201cgiven her.She was not mistaken.Presently, the door was pushed open, \"all hot and breathless, Mrs.Dean \u201c\u2018ered, She took her usual chair, \u201cel her head in prayer, and then, :Ÿ about to begin the lesson, she +1 helplessly around her.\u2018Only \"ere !\" she exclaimed.Her voice - \u2018ndistinet, and she dare not meet « Clark's earnest gaze, which she -7S fastened on her.:-+cen have b@n here, but they vs Li CA pli left, as you were so late, Mrs.Dean.\u2019 Sarah Clark drew nearer, an\" putting\u2019 that same small hand on Mrs.Dean's shoulder, and looking steadily into her eyes, she said, slowly : \u2018I waited to speak to vou alone, Mrs.Dean, for I must be true to my conscience and faithful to my God.I am glad the wcren are all gone\u2014glad for their sakes and glad for your sake, that they have not seen you in the state you are in to-night.Either give up this class, Mrs.Dean, or give up this dreadful drink ; and, for God's sake, don\u2019t make these women hypocrites, like\u2014' \u2018Like I am myself,\u2019 burst out the lady.\u2018I know it; don't you think I hate myself and am as much disgusted at my weakness as ever you can he at me.Yes, I'll give up the class.I'm not quite as far gone as you think.Oh! I'm a wretched, miserable woman, and I khow it, but I'm so weak, so weak !\u2019 And her face and manner changed as the tears fell, and she leaned over the little ; table before her and sobbed aloud.\u2018It is when we know we are weakest that God seems strongest,\u201d and with words of hope and comfort Sarah Clark talked to the poor, despairing woman, who had in days gone by been the messenger of peace and comfort to herself ; till at last, thoroughly sobered, she rose to go.\u2018All you say is true, Sarah, but I will not sign the pledge ;\u2019 and she pushed the little card away.\u2018No, I shall never keep it ; there are wine and spirits in our dining-room cup- beard, and beer in our cellars, and I can\u2019t, no I can\u2019t, withstand.I've tried over and over again ; it's not one bit of use, \u2018Come and stay with me, then, ma'\u2019am,\u2019 said Sarah.\u2018We are teetotallers at our house, but we're only simple people.\u2019 Mrs.Dean thought of her husband, her baby, and of her beautiful home with all its comforts, and cf the :can- dal which such an action mighteause.As she thought, she aimlessly turned over the leaves of a Testament before her, and these words met her eve : \u2018If any man will come after Me, let him deny himself and take up his crues daily and follow Me.\u2019 \u2018Yes, I'll come,\u2019 she said.\u2018Thank you, Sarah.\u2019 It was a hard and long struggle, and even Sarah Clark wonld have given it up had she not possessed a pcwer beyond herself, which made her \u2018hope all things and believe all things.\u201d So she worked and prayed simultaneously, and at length tie reward came.Months passed, and Mr.Dean, his friend (Dr.Winter), and the Rev.J.Bond were sitting over their wine and cigars.: - \u2018Your wife produced quite a sensation the other night, Dean.Did you hear about it ?A Mr.Dean knocked the ashes from his cigar, looked fiei'cely at his minister, and asked, in an indifferent voice, \u2018No, what about it ?\u2019 \u2018Why, she held a big temperance meeting, and made a confession of her sins, etc.and they said over twenty people signed the pledge, and there were cries and groans and tears, and I don't know what not.Poor thing ! It was a pity she could not be moderate ; but she is an extreme woman.I think, however\u2014\u2019 Mr.Bond did not finish his sentence.He was interrupted with something like an oath.\u2018Shut up, Bond! I've had enough of your detestable doctrines and I'm tired of them, and of you, too.Don\u2019t preach your moderation here any more; it no longer suits me nor mine.If my wife is an \u2018extreme woman,\u201d then, God helping me, I'll be an extreme man ; and from this night I'll banish this stuff from my house, and brinz her back to the home from which you and I, gentlemen, have done our best to drive her.\u2019 Mr.Dean kept his word ; and, side by side to-day, the husband and wife are working as noble warriors in the battlefield of total abstinence.etl The Holy Ghost enables us to pray the prayer of love, as well as the prayer of faith.The Holy Ghost loads us into the dignity and power of our holy priesthood, laying upon us the burdens of the Great High Priest, and permitting us to be partakers of \u2018that which remaineth of the sufferings of Christ for His Body, the Church.\u2019 In this blessed ministry we are often made conscious of the needs of others, and permitted to hold up some suffering or tempted life in the hour of peril; and we shall find some day that many a life was saved, many a victory won, and many a blessing enjoyed through this hallowed ministry that reaches those we love by way of the throne, when ADVERTISEMENTS.Dnll, heavy aches, fierce, racking pains.Headache, of any kind, is an index of the condition of the stomach and bowels.Cleanse the stomach, keep the bowels in working order and you will be troubled no more with headache.A simple remedy does it, | AYER'S PILLS.Highest Awards at World's Fait.FL AE Se TIE J Le A A Cet kag \u201cCle He THE MONTREAL :we never could have reached them | directly.When we become wholly.\u2019 consecrated from our own selfish cares and worries, and fully at leisure for the burdens of the Master, the Spirit is glad to lay upon us the needs of multitudes of God's people, and the burdens of the whole Church and kingdom of Christ, so that it is possible to have a ministry as wide as the world, and \u2018as high as that of our great High Priest before the Throne.\u2014Rev.A.B.Simpson.\u2014\u2014\u2014 SOMETHING TO LIVE FOR.\u2018Nothing to live for 7\u2019 Soul, that cannot be ; But unto thee I bring in thy distress, A message born of love and sympathy, And may it prove, O soul, the golden key To all things beautiful and good and bless Thy life, which locks so comfortless.This is the word : \u2018 Some one has need of thee, Some one, or who, or where, I do not know : Knowest thou not ?Then seek ! make no delay.And tkou shalt find In land of sun or snow Who waits thee, a Little child, or pilgrim gray For since God keeps thee In Hjs world below, Some one hath need of thee Soméwhere to-day.\u2014 Wait.\u2019 __ ADVERTISEMENTS.À TRIPLE ALLIANCE, That Has Won in Every Conflict\u2014The Three Great South American Remedies Never Fail in the Cure of Rheumatism, Kidney Disease and the Worst Forms of Indigestion.The three great South American Rerie- dies have been called into conflict with many a desperate enemy, but the case is yet to be recorded where they have not come out the victor.If we take South American Rheumatic Cure, the story of the patients who have been cured by it reads like a fairy tale.Mr.D.Dessne- tels, of Peterboro, from rheumatism that he was blistered by doctors ten different times, in as many different places with the hope of driving the disease from his system.5 were drawn out of shape and the fingers almost destroyed.His left leg had to be encased in a plaster of Paris cast for.months.was like a new man, and in a short ti was completely cured.\u2018 called into question, unlike pills and powders and medicines of that kind.it immediately dissolves the uric acid and hardened substances that constitute this disease, and the system rid of these a cure is soon effected.Mr.D.J.Locke, nf Sherbrecoke, Quebec, rays he spent over $100 in treatment for a complicated case of kidney disease, but received no relief.After taking a few\u2018doses of South American Kidney Cure he felt wonderfullv helped, and, to quote his own words, \u2018I have now taken four bottles, and consider myself completely cured.\u2019 cured bv the use of South American Ner- vine.It acts on the nerve centres located at the base of the brain, from which come all nervous troubles and disorders of the stomach.\"Mrs.H.Stapleton.of Wingham, Ont., rays: \u2018I had been troubled for a number of vears with nervous debility, indigestion and dyspepsia, and had been treated by a number of the best physicians in Canada end England.I was advised to take South American Ner- vine.and must say/if ! had not done so I would not have been alive to-day.I will never be without it.Sold bv B.E.McGale, 2123 Notre Dame street, and Laviolette & Nelson, 1605 Notre Dame street.a+ CANCER For two stamps STOTT & JURY, Bowmanville, Ont.will give you fall particalars of a painless methol for curing cancers and tumors.No knife\u2014 no p aster.MENTION \u2018WITNESS.À 5 BQ One Half-Potnd Package of RAM LAL'S PURE INDIAN TEA, costing 25c, if brewed according to directions on each package, will produce one hundred cups of most delicious tea.Iu sealed lead packages only.To a Ah ; oh PT Ya hs LAER or STARE I Ego st UATE RTI A IRI suffered so terribly | His hands | One week after using South | American Rheumatic Cure this patient | When South American Kidney Cure isif The worst forms of indigestion were |\" DAILY WITNESS.\u2014 - ABSQ MOI _ ADVERTISEMENTS:! RAIS LUTELY PURE 5 AE À de Quiets Pain, Checks Bleeding, Reduces Inflammation, Is the Bicyclers Necessity.Piles, Sores, Burns, Colds, CURE Rheumatism, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Catarrh, Chilblains, Inflamed Eyes, Wounds, Bruises, Sprains, Headache, Toothache.Use PONDS EXTRACT after Shaving\u2014No Irritation Use POND'S EXTRACT after Exercising\u2014 No Lameness POND'S EXTRACT OINTMENT is simply a marvel, How What relief from excruciating pain.50 cts.instantly it cures Piles.Buy GENUINE Pond's Extract for genuine cures.Buv imitations for imitation cures.POUN'S EXTRACT CO.76 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.mii DURING JULY AND AUGUST We shall give a special discount on WALL PAPER of 10 p.c.This reduction is bona fide; we have not previously increased our prices IO p.c.Come and see our asscrtment for yourself, \u2014 $6® + : JAMES KIMBER & SON, 5 McGill College Avenue.NEN HE'S FOOD is w complete and entire diet tor Babies, and closely rerembles Mother's Milk.Over all the world Nestles Fool has been recognized for, ixdie than tty year: ns possessing great value.Your ; hyrici mn will confirm this statement.NESTLE FOO) is safe.It requires only the add'tion of water.to prepure it for nae, The great danger attendant on the ute of cow's milk is thus avoided.2 \u201c Consult your doctor abent Nestle's Food and send to us for a large samy la can and ovr.hook.\u2018The Babv,\u201d both of which will be sent free _ An application.Pr EE = LEÉMING NILES.& CO.(Surcessors to Thos.Leeming & Co.}- 53 St.Sulpice St: Montreal.\u201c The Discriminating Public Always DOYS MATCHES Plumbing, &c.§ (ROL & MCCULLOUGH'S Cover Leaf Butter 1 1b RLOCKS \u201c Ecored higber than all others from Ontarin at Worla\u2019s Fair, Chicago: ALL GROCERS.ATERLOO PASTE.TRE WONDERFUL FLY CATCH.Diploma awarded at the Provinciai Exposition, Mantregl, \"95, tor destroying Caterpillars on'Fruit Trees, Flies in\u201dthe house, bakeshep, dairy, etc.; etc.cer for it.Tradè supplied by WATERLOO PASTE CO., Montreal: : 53 Craig street Mammoth POSTERS Printed at the + Witness\u201d Printing House.Builders and : Carpenters.FLY SCREENS! FLY.SCREENS! FOR BOORS ANB WINDOWS.JOHN T.HENDERSCH.Carpenter, All Jiaas mâde ta order.\u201d Estifiiates given for i .Repairme.744 ST.EDWARD ST., cor.Bicyur; and St, Cathsrine + Hn + 1 WS 3 Barres We TE Sy Pe a ep ST 85 Oe \u201cabe ss eden 4 wi pee Ra N FRANK 1°.Ask your Gro-| IF YOU WANT WORK DONE REASONABLE In the line of Plumbing, Gas or Stearn Fitting, go to TAY LOR, i b fof \u2018polished floors?\u2019 .| hive sealing wax.\u2019 | that will do.| suppose it will do for the floor just as 9 BEADABLE PARAGRAPHS Agent\u2014'Can\u2019t I put a burglar alarm in your house?\u2019 Lady\u2014'\u2018No, we don't need it.\u2019 Agent\u2014'But\u2014\u2014' Lady\u2014'No, I mean it; the family across the street watches the place so closely that even à burglar could not get in without being seen! \u2014'Tit-Bits.\u2019 We are giving away a week's supply of food for your baty,either Robinson's Patent Barley or Patent Groats.F.Magor & Co., 16 St.John street, Montreal.+ 4 \u2018I want to ask one more question,\u2019 said little Frank as he was being put to bed.\u2018Well\u2019 acquiesced the tired mamma.\u2018When holes came in stockings, what becomes of the piece of stocking that was there before the hole came?\u2014'Judge.\u2019 RESCUED FROM INSANITY.Gentlemen,\u2014To say all 1 ought to in favor of B.B.B.would be impossible.It has been a great health restorer to me and I do swear by it.I gm a different man to what 1 was ten years ago when it was expected I would Le in the asylum, but now I am in perfect robust health.and it was the B.B.B.that did it.I suffered for five or six years from constipation, sometimes so severely that I went out of my mind.1 tried various doctors, both in the country and in the city, and took medicines too numerous to mention.but everything failed to have the desired effect.When 1 used Burdock Blood Bitters it succesded beyond all expectations, requiring only two bottles to cute me.To make it still more certain that B.B.B.is the real cure for constipat on, I may say that some two years afterwards I felt the symptoms returning and took one bottle more.and from that time to this present day (over cight vears) I kave never had any returns of the disease, I never knew any medicine to work so well.It does not seem to be a mere relever.but a sure and certain cure.as I can testify to, for hundreds of dollars\u2019 worth of medicine and advice failed to do me any good, but threc dollars\u2019 worth of B.B.L.made a permanent cure that has given me years of health ard comfort.Yours truly, C.L.Kilmer, Toronto.30 A POINTER TO BUILDERS.\u2018Now, sire,\u201d said the Royal Architect, \u2018how do you want this prramid built?\u2018By days\u2019 work.\" answered the King of Egypt promptly.\u2018I'm tired of contract jobs.\u2019 And the said pyramid is there yet.\u2014 Truth.\u2019 Ask your doctor about Robinson's Patent Barley and he will recommend it as the best bone and muscle former known.4 Mrs.Nuved (to clork)\u2014'Have you any wax Clerk\u2014'No: we only Mrs.Nuwed\u2014'Well.If it's for the ceiling 1 well?\u201d \u2014 Washington \u2018Times.\u2019 .\u2014 } ~ - Don\u2019t be advised to try this and that food when you find that Robinson's Patent satisfaction.: 4 Mrs.Partington has her humble follow: ers in the rurpl districts.In a Norfolk parish an old dame, referring to the surpliced their cypresses and hassocks.\u2019 When Baby was sick, we gavo her Castorta, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castors Barley or Pgtent Groats are givicg yon choir, declared \u2018they looked most bhittiful in\u201d.\u2014 283\" Antoine pet Gr aire wis 1 a now aman at \u2019 = square root.\u2018No, sir,\u2019 replied Tom.\u2018All- = ; *{ the roots I know are round.\u2019 Tailors, &c.Children Cry for | ELECTION NOTICE.Pitcher\u2019s Castoria.Elect your Tai'or for your Clothing, Children Cry for \u2014 G0 T0o\u2014 Pitcher\u2019s Castoria.J.D.ANDERSON&CO., Children Cry for 17 Bleury street.- Pitcher\u2019s Castorla.- Notices.ADVERTISEMENTS.\u201cPUBLIC NOTICE Is hereby given that\u2019 by an order of the Prothonotary of the Superior Court for the Province of Quebec in the District of Montreal, the undersigned, Sarah Jane McGee.widow: of the late Francis Dolan.in his lifetime of the City and District of Montreal, Dry Goods Merchant, has been author- tzed to take the quality of heir according to his Will and accept under beneflt of Inventory the Estate and Succession of the said late Francis Dolan.\u2019 \u2018 Montreal, July 2, 1896.SARAH JANE McGEE.PROVINCE OF QUEBLC, LCRNTE Gon, City of Ste.Cunegonde AS Da Of Montreal.a Ë a, PUBLIC NOTICE 2 @/.7 Is hereby given that the \u201cOp A assessors of the City of Ste AONTRS Cunegonde of Montreal - have completed the valuation roll of im- movables, as well as the rolls for personal taxes for all the \u2018wards of the aid city, and that the same are left at their office at the City Hall.where they may be seen and examined by any p n interested \u2018until TUESDAY.the 14th day of July next (159%).and that the assessoré will meet &t thelr aforesaid office at eight of the clock in the evening to revise the sald rolls and to hear and examine all complaints that may be.brought before them respecting any entry in such rolls, until THURSDAY, the 16th day of July next, 1896.(Given at Ste.Cunegonde of Montreal this third day of July, one thousanfi eight hundred «nd Free / F.PORLIER, City Clerk.Citv Clerk\u2019s Office.- Ste.Cunegonde Town.Hall.+ Ta eB ene BB A mee nh tit te a SS IOP \u2019 + THE ONLY FIPM .INN THE CITY Manufacturing Piciure Frames by Etectri-ity.The whole of our new liues of Mouldings now ia,\u201d end the largest and finest selection we have ever had G.W.WILLSON, Manufacturer of Moulding: and Picture Frames, 688 CRAISG ST., LXt GOUT LO \u201c*Withesd\" U fl v 13 RICES STUDIO.© Fam \u2018y Groups,\u201d every size and style ; also Clubs, Societies, etc., photographed at lowest prices.141 ST.PETER ST.| Tel.231.27 ONLY 25¢c A BOTTLE.The QUEZIN'S HAIR HELPER is a praparation that \u2018restorzs hair to its natural color and beauty, arrests falling out, removes dandr:ff and oures baldness.It isnot a dye.Itstimulates and invigorates the roots, prod sci a rapid growth, full of life health.Tr e clear part EX per de gud foamy So or §1 sale by ail ; A.D.MANNS, ¢ Cormer Mountain and St.Antoine stroot, ULLEY\u2019S Brush Works, 76-18 VICTORIA SQUARE.Whitewash or Tinturg Bzrusaes.Paint ana Varnish Lrushes.lingligh hair brooms and Dusters.Otlcloths and English Ficor Mops.English Shoe Sets.All House-cleaning Brushes sold at Fac.ory Prites.Carpet Sweepers Repaired Telephone 2740.ee a.- , \" 01 - J - yo ane a_i EI Co 3 Poy 3 5 keer man Le BN = A - 2 2 nd ST PE 3 D a a v ri n = th , pi a = 3 = To.- .= ; 3 pA 7 4 > BC raed p ne po - peu P Ÿ Enr re i R : 0 d A EEN Foiiid \u20ac > c w _ -.= - PE Ll Co.lee ~ i - pn Tee i em mea \u201c 5 = - = pty ~ x » a ES =\" ES ete 7e = # ro > ot er ei ZT 3 \"ad ice : fer a ; ~ Sete a i mn A pures ) mpm pts A - pc a) 22 a pd EE NTN _ 3 SF UF T ; z rep 1, Copan ee TR f pg CM ui Rm = = Ws JS 5 ae Wo or v VR SSL TT, as Any so; \u201c0 she Sede \\& a, 24 2 AIN ANS AE Loe.A ( SAC) y CIES \u20ac. ere, HIT WRG ET NMG) + ANNE » æ b Ssrornar.Jury 4, 1896.THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS, 18 \u2014 PTT 7 ) * ; [ q CORN NER.New Year's Ruby had forgotten all {older you will find that your Father To clean the walks and bring the CHILDREN'S LL abcut the promise.When there |in heaven has made some promises coal, came a sharp frost in October and |that you cannot understand, and you Or anything one wishes, RUBY = FAITH.che has something wonderful to ak about on this June day.Rose an very well, and Amelia Maria \u201c+ line is perfect in her behavior, ©.neither of these friends fill Ruby's aghts, Iu is something that papa her onlv yesterdar.They were garden, with the breath of Hheliotrope sweet about ion, and papa was giving her a few \u201cor.very high swings pefore they 4 -inthe 8 Cees and killed the white rosebush, she cried and remembered what papa had said, but in a day or two she forgot it again.So did not the father.All that season he was planning and arranging so that he might prove faithful to his little daughter.Late in December the family took a long Journey.Ruby was charmed with the cars and the steamboat, and with everything that she saw, and went to sleep on the last\u2019 night of the old year, with the promise that she should be at their new home when she wakenend in the morning.The went in to dinner.Avil that do 7 Lh° asked, as Ruby went np among (he high branches of | home where they were to spend three pleasant months.Sound asleep she was when the i carriage rolled through the avenue.will not be able to see how it is possible for Him to keep them.If this lesson teaches you to trust Him any- Way, as you did me, because He says so, and wait until He gets ready to show ycu the how.I shall be well paid for all my trouble.There is one thing to remember : Papa might have failed ; but God, \u2018who knows the future as well as the past, never fails.'\u2014\u2018Pansy.\u2019 \u2014\u2014\u2014 HOP-SCOTCH.The hop-scotch days are surely come, The gladdest of the year, And all the tempting sidewalks now With chalky lines appear.These same dear children, one and all, Unless, perchance, they're hired; Are very often, I have found, Inclined {o be.\u2018so tired.\u2019 \u2014Mattie Ingalls Sherman, in \u2018Youth's Companion.\u2019 \u2014 DAILY FOOD.SATURDAY, JULY 4.If we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it.\u2014It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord.\u2014Begober, and hope to the end.\u2014Rom.vifi.,, 26; Lam.iii, 26; 1 Pet.i., 13.SUNDAY, 7 LY 5.yoit know how I snowballed you and Unc'+ Fred, and how I went to ride with my new Aunt Kate in a sleigh, gad how we tipped over in the snow, and [ erled, and nobody was hurt 7 \u2018You remember the snow, then, and the cold.and the ice on the river 7\u2019 \u2018Yes, indeed ; ice everywhere ; and Harry went skating in the evening; and Uncle Fred said the ice was strong enough to bear an elephant.\u2019 \"Well, suppose I should tell you that next New Year's morning you might go out with me into the flower-gar- den and gather roses ?Would that be something strange, and hard to believe 7\u2019 Then you should have seen Ruby's eyes ! \u2018Oh! but, papa, I couldn't, you know, because roses don't grow in winter ; they are all covered up with the snow.\u2019 \u2018But yeu promised to believe what I said, whether you thought it possible or not.\u2019 \u2018Oh ! but, papa, I did not know you meent to say a thing that could not be.You didn't say it, though, did vou?You only said \u2018suppose.\u2019 Wen't you please, dear papa, to suppose something for me truly that could be \u201d \u2018Shave.I am not sure, you know, because papa has not wisdom enough ty be sure of anything.I do not know that I shall be alive next New Yrar.or that my little Ruby will be here to pick roses ; but I say that so far as I can now plan.if things go as I want them to, I will take you out cn New Year's morning and let you swered, as he whisked his handkerchief over her eyes.\u2018I've something to show you that you are not to see until you get to it.But, first, let me wisb you a happy New Year.Then he ran with her through the hall, down some steps; she felt the fresh air, but it did not feel like January.In a few minutes more the most bewildered little maiden you ever heard of was set down under a tree.\u2018There !\" said the father, untying the handkerchief, \u2018pick roses, my dear, to your heart\u2019s content.\u2019 There they were, a wealth of roses, red, and white, and yellow, and delicate pink-tinted ones, and strange flewers standing near them, whose faces she had never seen before, and the breath of June was in the air.And this was New Year\u2019s morning ! What did it mean ?-She was only five years old, not very wise.and sald in a soft whisper: \u2018Papa, we didn\u2019t die in the night, did we ?This isn\u2019t heaven, is it ?\u2018Oh, no!\" he said, almost smothering her with kisses, \u2018this is\u2018 nothing at all compared with what heaven will be.It is only the Southland of our own country, where the roges grow in January.\u2019 There were a great many questions to ask and answer after that, and it was not until almost evening, when they were out among the roses again, that papa said : \u2018Little daughter, papa kept his pro- mie, you see, though you did not un- and jp She looked up at her.father\u2019s face with a queer little smile, hf : ie free.; i ) we wma! do for swings, she said, as Before mamma had dressed her in Lord, all.my desire is before thee; RES sbe came down TD earth again, catch- the morning her father called her.From one to nine the figures white and my groaning is not hid from |, È BA ing her Leech a lire Tw ent real She was in a flutter of eagerness to We meet at every turn, thee.\u2014He will fulfil the desire of them Ik | univ high theu : 1 guess in a minute go to him.Mamma, he is out of À few lines here\u2014a few more there\u2014 that fear him 7 he also will hear 1s nore | conld have put my foot on One decors,\u201d cried Ruby.\u2018I hear his| The puzgle we discern.their cry, and will save them.\u2014Ps.[ELT vi the clouds Now, papa, tell me voice under the window.Where .xxxviii., 9 ; exlv., 19.Fi something reul new and Strange : sball I find my rubbers ?From far and near the children come, 1 2=\u2014\u2014\u2014_ it 1B comething that 1 most don\u2019t KNOW \u201cYou don\u2019t need rubbers, dear.\u2019 All eager for the play.A minister once asked a saloon-: Bok | how to believe \u2018Why, mamma, not to step out in| A jump apd turn\u2014a turn and jump\u2014 keeper if his consclence never trou- CE \u201cThen von woul Int believe it, I'm | the snow ?Well, where\u2018are my coat The game is under way.bled him respecting his business.The Tk afaid ; ver would sav \"Oh?I am'and hood ?| ,Ç man said : \u2018Come inside, sir.\u2019 .It was YUN svre that int xo, beconse it couldn\u2019t | | \u2018You need not stop for them, dear; A hop, hop here, a hop, hop there ; the middle ôf the day.There were , == | fi be vom nee whereupon Ruby | you may run right down to papa as| A block that they must kick ; ncne of the usual customers about.= À On blushed a lio Tv she sometimes you are.Oh, dont you think so much hard My friend went in.The grog seller CHASE & SANBORN'S Seal Brand Coffee fil r and ir hard +0 !«lieve things that Ruby stopped in the middle of the wor went behind his own bar, and, lean- .ys Biel fo no: conlerstand ; still she room, her boot half-buttoned : Will make these children sick ?ing on it, said : \u2018Reverend sir, there is the \u201cfinest grown.For perfect results TRE ceok hor lead positively : \u2018Not if \u2018Why, mamma!\u2019 she said.but mam- ; are times when I stand behind this follow directions in each can.Ei told iro me papa, if it was ever ma only laughed and ran downstairs; But rosy cheeks and laughing eyes bar and look at the men who fill this .In 4° 1 ever «6 havi to believe, and you Ruby followed, two steps at a time.| Defend the game they choose.rcom ; I hear their blasphemy -and Packed ground or unground In cans only.[HY / «1j was i.surely, so, I should Papa stood in the hall.He canght| The only ill-effect we see their lewd songs ; I see their fighting .Ÿ \u2019 w ir was.ity me, papa her in his arms for a morning kiss,| Is in the worn-out shoes.and their awful misconduct, and I Blin.) J Well\u201d «aid papa.considering, and but she was almost too full of her often say to myself, \u201cIf there is a HASE & AN BORN | i poking a rellow rose to put in his surprise to give it.And yet, when asked to dust a room, picture of hell on our -earth it is in y i )) jvton-heie, \u2018let me see.How would \u2018Papa, mamma said I might go to| To sweep, or wash the dishes, places like this.\u201d \u2019 BOSTON.MONTREAL CHICACO.ë | CE «his do ?Jo vou remember last New you out in the yard without my hood, \u2014 3 .| 5 Yours day and coat, and rubber v I \u2018Why.papa.of course I do! Don't! \u2018And blindfold at that,\u2019 he an- ADVERTISEMENTS.pi Take a small quantity of Cottoleds and a little oream ; warm fn à frying pan.Break 6 eggs in it and stir until} slightly cooked.Serve hot.Use not more than two-thirds as much Cottolene as you would 4 butter and be sure that you do not overheat it before dropping à in theeggs.This is always essential in cooking wit Cottolene, Gouin Oottolene word: where in with trade \u2018arks\u2014 Dot ene \u2026 And steer's Acad ft cost plant wreath every tin.Made only by IHEX.K.FAIRBANK COMPANT, Welling tagan Aun 38, MONTREAL.Natural Table Waters | PURVEYORS TO HER UE) pick roses to put at mamma's plate at derstand how he could.As you grow : breakfast.\u2019 : ; i! Queen Victoria! \u2018Real truly roses, papa, that smell?\u2019 YOU HAVE THE BEST VAL { JE | j RS re Real truly roses ADVERTISEMENTS 2 © TAS they grow out of doors, - TF you SAVE THE WRAPPERS and return 60 of them to THE \u201c4% a \u2018Certainly.\u2019 [ was very hard.Ruby had not cly remembered last winter, but the wirter before, and she knew that at New Year's time the snow lay deep In rhe 2arden, and all her mother's il ns were potted and standing on st-ives in the conservatory.She wrinkled her forehead, and wondered ar\u201d wondered.and almost said : \u2018But ther eouldn't be, you know.\u201d At last he- face cleared.She looked up at he \"father and smiled : \u2018Im going to ve jt.papa, because you say so.1 7\u201d zce how it can possibly be, but ir {D believe it all the time.\u2019 He» >ther, laughed, and stooped 8nd x VW That\u2019s Ayer\u2019s.The same old sarsaparilla as it was made and sold by Dr.J.C.Ayer 50 years ago, In the laboratory it is different.There modern appliances lend speed to skill and experience.But the sarsaparilla is the same old sarsaparilla that made the record\u201450 years of cures.Why don\u2019t we better it?Well, we're much in the condition of the Bishop and the raspberry: ¢ Doubtless, \u201d he said, \u2018God might bave made a better berry.But doubtless, also, He never did.\u201d Why don\u2019t we better the sarsaparilla?We can\u2019t.We are using the | same old plant that cured the Indians and the Spaniards.It has not been bettered.And since we make sarsaparilla com- | pound out of sarsaparilla plant, we see no way of improvement.Of.course, if we were making some secret chemical compound we might.But we\u2019re not.Were making the same old sar- diseases.You cap tell it\u2019s the same old sarsaparillæ because it works the same old cures.It\u2019s the sovereign blood purifier, and\u2014it\u2019s Ayers.«FREE Se I Always Reliable, Purely Vegeta Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coaicd.jy.late, purify, cleanse and strengthen.1}; WAY'S PILLS for the cure of all dicar.of the Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys.hia] Nervous Diseases, Dizziness, Vertigo, (.tiveness, Piles.\u2018 SICK HEADACHKE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS BILIOUSNESS, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA , CONSTIPATION : AND.and Al! Disorders ofthe Liver.Obserye the following symptoms resulr from diseases of the digestive organs « stration, inward piles, fulness of biond \u2018- the head, acidity of the stomach.nau heartLurn, disgust of food, fulness of weiy of the stomach, sour cructations, sink.: or fluttering of the heart.choking or su° * cating sensations when in a lying postur.dimness of vision, dors or webs before 1'¢ sight, fever and dull paln in the head.A.ficiency of perspiration.yallowness of the skin and eyes, pain in the side, chest Hmbs and sudden flushes of heat, burning in the flesh.A few doses of RADWAY'S PIL)S will free the system cf all of the above-namné disorders.\u2019 Price 23¢ n Box.Sold by Dry or sent by mail, IRE, Send to DR.RADWAY & CO, 7 st.street, Montreal, for Book of Advice.~ \u201c vr § Helen 13 DEAFNESS and Head Noises relieve hr using MA flson\u2019s Common Senne Fur Drums.New Scie +5, 1.tions; different frou.ii cbr devices.The only safe mine comfortable and invisle Fa Drum io the world.Heljs vieu medical skill fails.No wire ur string attachment.Write fo pamphlet.C.B MILLER, \u2019reehold Loan Building.60 V., toria street, Toron:o, Cunada, 8: agent for Canada.Mention this paper.RESTORES NATURAL Æ WHITENESS PLEASANT - 49 HARMLESS To USE =A f 25c.Co ° Ss.Lactated Food Prevents Deadly Diseases.A OPESA» CHEMILAL &~ BROMTO- tated Food is a sure preventative ot cholpra infantum and difarFhten, two of the most deadly troubles that beset infant life.The use of predigested Lactated Food means easy assimilation, perfect digestion, good health, strength and safety for the little ones.Thousands of doctors say that Lactated Food is the only safe summer diet for infants.4 BURDOCK ARTSHORN OR AMMONIA \u2014FOR\u2014 FAMILY USE, FOR THE TOILET, KITCHEN, LAUNDRY, Put up in pint bottles, two dozen in a case.Ask your grocer for it.MANUFACTURED AND GUARANTEED PURE \u2014BY \u2014 JOHN COWAN, S Dalhousie street, Montreal.\u2018Horse-shoeing and Blacksmithing.ea! .PSE Fg CC.McKIERNAN, FIORSE SHOER, 5 Hermine street, (15 years\u2019 experience in Montreal) All \u201cHorses personally attended to.Interfering, Tame ond Trotting Horses a Specialty.J.K.MACDONALD, Locksmith, Bellhanger, ; General Machinist and Blacksmith, Carpeaters\u2019 and Builders\u2019 Work to Orden Bell Telephone 9591.762 CRAIC 8T LEXANDER LINDSAY, HORSESHOER AND BLACKSMITH, 23 and $3 8t.Maurice street, (Cor.8t.Henry street.) Quick Servios, Good Work, and Low Prices Lable, reg.RAD.Orderg a:lder, Cosy using e Far inven- other simple, whera Fire or fo LER, Vic » SOle > [2 RY, ng.Ve Ry ect, fering, ), mith, rders D ST TH, ices aa 2d = a % a S\\TURDAY, JULY 4, 1896.CHESS COLUMN.- ¢.saturday, July 4, 1896.Dr.S.Gold.Fra- - \u2014Bv Problem, No.24.: WW.Shaw, Mont- rrually dedicated to J.cal.Black, 4 pieces.vo rg uy White, 6 pleces.qd mate in three moves, White to play ab Q on KR3, B's on \u201chi < Qsq, Rues Ts Ps on QR8 and Q4; 6 eces \u201cBlack: K on Ko, Kt on KKi2, ve on QB: and QE 4 pieces.aOLTTIONS, Problem No.17-\u2014B5 pr.O.F.Jentz, in DIEM ao = 3 two moves Wh Position- WE: T's où QRS ani QB ~ IX on KBS, Q on KB7, : B's on QRsq and Is on Q2 and Q6 ; ps = 7 he Ke.BRU RE on oon QB4, B on QK13, wr on QEZ, P's cn QKt4 and Q6; 5 Ties, arr move: R\u2014R5.D yvel by LU.W., Acton Vale.THE GAME, The following instructive game was cave! in the recent Divan Tournament borin \u2018lessrs.Teichmann and Loman.Tha rotes are from the London \u2018Stand- ar!\u2019 tare No.28\u2014Queen\u2019s Gambit.froze ll \u201cjam No.28\u2014Queen\u2019's Gambit Refused.Re- Tet-hmann.Loman.\u201cWhite, Black, : P-Q 4 1 P\u2014Q ¢ 2 5 PQ B 4 2 P\u2014K 3 + B\u2014Kt 3 4 B\u2014K 2 3 P\u2014K 3 5 Castles fA Kt\u2014B 3 6 Q Kt\u2014Q 2 7 B\u2014Q3 One of the exceptional cases in which - p\u2014pBé suggests itself, as the pawns cannot be broken up by Black with p\u2014QKt3, and P\u2014QR4, White's Q being developed.T PB 8 ties 8 x .3 5 P 9 Kt\u2014Q 4 19 Bx B 10 Qx B 11 Kt\u2014K 3 11 Kt (Q4)\u2014Kt 8 12 B\u2014Q 3 12 P\u2014X 4 Premature.12.P\u2014KR3 would have been advisable first, for an additional reason, viz., to prevent a possible sacri- ; \u2014 h.fice of BxP, ch.KxB; Kt Ktsq.ch., etc., if Black quits the dlagonal with his Q.\u2014B 2 13 P\u2014K R 3 i Pons 14 Px P 4 15 Kt (Q 2) x P 15 Kt\u2014K 4 - 16 Ktx Kt 16 Q x Kt.17 Q R\u2014K sa KR\u2014Ksq followed by QR\u2014Qsq Mould have saved a move.17 R\u2014Q Bq 17.P\u2014QB4 would be answered by 18.Kt\u2014B3, Q\u2014K2; 19.R\u2014Bsq winning the P; but he might have played here 3\u2014Q3 instead of moving a developed piece twice.15 PK R 3 18 Q\u2014Q 3 Intending 19.P\u2014B4 an {ineffectual threat, which brings his Q into an unfavorable position after White's R\u2014Qsq.15 R\u2014Q sq 19 B\u2014K 3 = Kt-K 2 20 Q\u2014K 4 x P=K 4 21 Kt\u2014Q 2 This move leads into difficulties.He might have played 21.P\u2014B3; and if :2, P\u2014B4, Q\u2014B2.©.P\u2014Q Kt 4 22 P\u2014B 3 + P\u2014B 4 23 Q\u2014B 2 : B\u2014B 4 BxE Better would nav bees 24., Kt\u2014 Bsq.; 25.BxB ch., KtxB; 26.Q#B4, Q\u2014 F., ete.I\" Qx Bch 25 Q\u2014B 7 .White has now the better game, and \u201cus the ending easily.K\u2014R sq Q\u2014Kt 3 ch tT K-R 2 27 Kt\u2014B sq : y'+\u2014Kt 3 28 Q R\u2014B sq ï TB 5 29 R\u2014B 2 x: -K 7 30 Kt\u2014Q 2 E B 3 31 P\u2014Q B 4 we !-\u2014-Kt 8 32 Resigns.CHESS CHAT.: Sir George Newnes cup was re- * 1n Brooklyn last week and its vas marked by a large gathering >rsazione at the Brooklyn Chess \" .re speeches were made, poetry \"| ani everybody felt that he had «lv done a great deal to bring v nver the water.The cup is 28 : :n height, including the base, the -\u2014* \u201cwing 5 inches high.It isa cup \u201c=.upon a castle.On one side is « \"zr representing Columbia; -on the \u201c+r the figure of Britannia.The Eagle \u201c -.00, and the National flags, with > «nblems, make an imposing plece, \u201c4sing bringing out the whole in 7 re>sive beauty.Excepting the base ©: solid silver, and weighs.about reunds.\u2018unbrella is destined to play an :: part in history.The Duke of \u201cigo is already known to faine as Umbrella Duke,\u201d and in ages to _\u2019végazine writers will indite long (x où whether Pillsbury really did \u201c+ Manhattan Chess Club on ac- vi his new silk gamp having been \u201crel or whether the umbrella story é solar myth in which mysteriously \u201c*.+ 1 are the particulars of a new iv Gambit.\u2018Anyway Pillsbury \"he Manhattan, and he says it is ~~ his \u2018parapluie\u2019 was appropriated ~ committee couldn\u2019t see that it \u201csponsible.Result: the Manhaty Las got left.\" l'ition to the seven prizes, aggre- X6\u2026 marks, offered in the forth- 8 Nuremburg tournament, a spe- \u201c77 Of 350 marks will be presented \u2018iron Albert Von Rothschild to the - of \u2018he finest game, and one of.\u201carks by Baron Von Der Lasa for AEE the best score against the prize-winners.The first prize of 3000 marks will be accompanied by a cup presented by the Prince Regent of Bavaria.\u2014\u2014\u2014 OVERTHROW OF \u2018PROTECTION\u2019 IN CANADA, (New York \u2018Herald.\u201d) The remarkable victory which the Canadian Liberals hate just won gives a severe blow to protectionism in the Dominion and promises to open the way to free trade between Canada and the United States.The Hon.Wilfrid Laurier, the Liberal leader, is reported as say- ng: \u2018We have been elected on a platform of tariff reform, and it is on these lines we intend to work.We shall apply ourselves at once to a revision of the tariff.\u2019 But it remains to be seen whether tariff revision in Canada will be.as scant and trivial as it has been in this country, where the enormously high McKinley duties on our imports were reduced in 1894 scarcely eight percent on the average.If the Canadian tariff reformers do no better than this they will soon disgust} the people.The suicidal folly and tremendous wastefulness inseparable from |\u2019 every form of protectionism have been so long and signally demonstrated that popular toleration of a tariff would seem incredible were not the people kept in ignorance of its real workings.For purposes of revenue we have found all tar- iffs\u2014high and low\u2014the most uncertain, the most uneconomic.the most unequal and the most wasteful of all known methods of taxation.It will be a happy thing if our Dominion neighbors seize the present opportune moment to lay a deep and solid foundation for free trade with the United States and all the world.Of course, we should be gainers, and the Canadian protectionists (following the example of our protectionists) might stars a campaign of calamity-howling and rais the silly cry of \u2018adverse trade balance,\u2019 \u2018flooding the land with foreign goods\u2019 and \u2018 destroynig domestic industries\u2019 for the beneflt of the United States.But Canada would galn by free trade infinitely more than she would lose.Happlly, she has now ranged herself, professedly at least, upon the side of commercial freedom and civilization.ADVERTISEMENTS.BRISTOL'S SARSAPARILLA A most valuable remedy of.prompt and positivé effect.It thoroughly clears the system of all impurities that clog the Vital Organs and impair their normal action.It regulates Liver, Kidneys and Stomach, cleanses and enriches the Blood, clears the mind, and restores the body to health and vig- , Or.puérers usure |] mre: ow rm rs For more than 60 years it has been tried by thousands with never failing success, wonderful _cures being obtained by its aid in cases vainly treated by other means.To this fact is due its great popularity.For Rheumatism, Salt Rheum, Tetter, Tumors, Sores, and all Blood diseases it is a sure cure.< CHAIRS and For Steamer and Camping Use.The very best made Sporting Goods and Fishing Tackle.THE.WIGHTHAN SPORTING.GOODS 0, O0.DTT DVD © BO VOD PVD DT caceesa(l) » Whenever You Are : Very Warm Whenever an unexpected hot day makes you wilt and lose all your strength and energy, go to the Laurentian Swimming Baths, cor.Craig and Beaudry, and have a cool, refreshing gwim in the pure spring water.dive\u2014Dbig enough for a good swim.\\ Deep enough for a good : Straw Hats DRAB SOFT FEDORAS, $2.00, $2.\u2018 OFFICE and BICYCLE CAPS from xx NELSON'S, 1864 Notre Dame Street.From 25c to $1.75.and $3.00 5c to $r.oo.IDL This world-famed Soap will cleanse without hurting either clothes or skin.Impure Soaps hurt everything.\u201c Sunlight\u2019 bas the largest sale in the world because it\u2019s the best Soap in the world.SAVES | CLOTHES | \u2018\u201c\u201cSunlight \u201d Scap Depot for Quebec, Frank Magor & Co., Montreal.etat - It will be a Marvellous Triumph of Matchless Bargain-giving.THE ST.LOUIS DRY GOODS STORE, Cor.St.Lawrence and Dorchester Sts.SEMI-ANNUAL JULY SALE.Over $58,752 worth of Dry Goods given at Bargain Prices.HUNDREDS OF THE MOST TEMPTING BARGAINS.7 .BEAR IN MIND that we will offer BONA FIDE fPargains in every class of (Goods and you All save con- ng siderable money by puicha your Diy Goods during this special sale.2788 1bs.of GRANULATED SUGAR, 2%{c a lb.As a first item, is it cheap 9 22 Cases of 10-4 WHITE QUILTS for double bed, 77c.1050 prs.WHITE LACE CURTAINS.800 doz.of TOWELS at 2c.500 doz.BATH TOWELS at 10c.82 pes.of GREY COTTON at 3c.Algo a very special lot of SILK what is sold everywhere for $1.00, at ST.LOUIS, 39c.The readers of the ¢ Witness\u2019 will please remember that St.Louis has $58,752 worth of the mdst selected Dry Goods that has to be sold regardless of cost, so if you want some Dry Goods why not try a new store that is making a cheap sale, you will not lose by coming and see the Bargain we offer.+ 8e: pe > \" | \u201c186, 188 and 190 St.Lawrence, .+ 558, 560 and 560a Dorchester./\u2014 \\ THERE ARE MATCHES That are very unpleasant to use, that\u2014arè always breaking\u2014strike only occasionally and when they do, give off poisonous Tames of sulphur.But there are also § Bryant & May's Matches, Which always.strike instantly\u2014don\u2019t break\u2014burn brightly\u2014and à don\u2019t give off any tumes of sulphur\u2014 which do you prefer to use ?; sole Azents ROBERT GREIG & CO., Montreal.for Canada, Nt WHAT AUNTIE SAYS.\"Ever since I was married up to the Jast month, I have had trouble with my husband about his food.I would get the Very best flour and pay the = highest price for baking powder to make my bis- 1 cuits and pastry with, He would always eat them J~.and then say 1 was trying to poison him, and that Yn I wanted to get rid of him, he had indigestion so VY bad.A friend recommended me to try Dalley\u2019s Self-Rising Flours, and I did so.I made biscuits and he was very fond of them.and ate them, at me again, and say that I wanted to kill him.But this time he did not ; he said I had struck the right key in my cooking.I told him I bad tried another kind of flour, and he said to keep on using that kind of flour.He said be would live a few more minutes if I did not make any more skips.4 hy YOU CALL for something to drink you should be careful to ask for what you know to be pure and palatable.When calling for Ginger Ale, Cream Soda or Boda Water always insist on having 44 The J , Brand < made from the pure natural soda water of the Laurentian Springs and pure fruit syrups.Manufactured by the Laurentian Spring Water Co., \u2018Telephone 6965.OÙ Co 90 BEAUDRY STREET._2k$} NEE 41 felt a little nervous as I thought he would glare: neatly and prom 15 Boots and Shoes.re A Anything In Footwear You want for the holidays is sure to ba HERE AS YOU WANT IT.Our siock of Russet and Biack Boots and Shoes is complete.We have strong, serviceable Boots and Shoes, the kind that just suit for conn- try roads or the seashore.Long walks will not tire you if your feet are comfortable, Oar prices are away down where careful buyers like to sce them.We bave a few odd sizes we are going to sell at cost or a little over, 199 ST.ANTOINE STREET, (Near Mountain Street), 2659-2661 ST.CATHERINE STREET, - (Nesr St.Matthew Street.) Bell Tcl, 3467.Merch.Tel.41 and 42.Vacation Time.Now that vacations are on see that the BOYS and GIRLS are suitably shod for a 2 months\u2019 siege.There is no time of the year in which the youngsters are barder on their FOOTWEAR than the present.Our Boots and Shoes are SOLID, SERVICEABLE and NEAT, while the prices are surprisingly low for the quality.Chaboillez square.Machinery, &o.DARLING BROTHERS, - Manufacturers of ELECTRIC, STEAM, : HYDRAULIC HAND POWER ELEVATORS, : | And SAFETY DUMB WAITERS.New Design, Perfect Workmanship, Best Material.Send for fflustrated Catalogue.\u2018 RELIANCE WORKS.\u201d 112 Queen Si., Montreal, © * NDREW YOUNG, ENGINEER, MACHINIST & BLACKSMITR 11 and 13 Busby Lane, SHAFTING, HANGERS and PULLIES, &c .REPAIRS PROMPTLY ATTENDED Cement, Drain Pipes, &oc.\"DRAIN PIPES.| Portland, Roman and Canada Cements, Fire Bricks, Clay, ete.ALEX.BREMNER, 50 Bleury street.(SCOTCH DRAIN PIPES, PORTLAND CEMENT, IN STOCK AND TO ARRIVE At Lowest Market Prices.rr , We.& F.P.CURRIE & CO, 100 GREY NUN STREET.Housefurnishings, &c.\u201c E TOWNSHEND - - \u201c©.EST 24 YEARS.; PURE BEDDING PATENTED | Call or ring up 1905 and get prices for Remaking \u2018Mattresses, Pillows, &c., before remuving.Also every description of Brass and Iron Bedsteads, Cots &c., Hair, Moss and Wool Mattresses.1 LITTLE ST, ANTOINE STREET.Cor.St.James street, only.cn NO BRANCH STORES ; « TJOUSEKEEPERS NOTICE BARGAINS IN CARPETS, ALL NEW PATTERNS.Cerpet and Upholstering work in all its branches executed.Carpets besten.| .OND, 220 & 254 Bt.Urbain st HENRYHAM TELEPHONE 1749.DE Id cB4er, \u201cnN | er ee TDA nt ns EE CU A mp \u2018of rising up and snatchirz the .from the men, and attempting to subdue LS TE Ls eed BEY be fm re 16 DAILY WITNESS.SATURDAY, JULY 4, 188, HOME DEPARTMENT.Tt mr PROGRESSIVE WOMEN\u2014THEIR ACTIVE FIGHT AGAINST EVIL\u2014LIFE OF LETITIA YOUMANS, THE CANADIAN PIONEER W.C.T.U.WORKER\u2014 ALUM FOR THE TEETH AND GUMS \u2014GOLD FISH AND HOW TO CARE FOR THEM\u2014SYSTEMATIC GIVING\u2014 ONE PERSON'S EXPERIENCE\u2014NEW YACHTING DRESSES.THE NEW WOMAN.Dear 1lome Editor and Friends \u2014T am much interested in the correspondence in the Home.especially the letters about the \u2018New Woman.I.as a man, perhaps, am incurring a considerable amount of unjust criticism from my own sex, and from a goodly number of the opposite sex also, for taking the part of the New Woman in her enthusiastic advancement of self improvement.Yet, 1 care not.1 sympathize very deeply \"with the women of to-day who are striving to promote their physical, mental and moral standard of living to a higher and nobler standard, yet who, because of this, are meeting with such reverses from individuals, or from whole institutions.1 consider iv a lasting disgrace to the character of aux recsonably intelligent individual to cast such a slander in the face of our noblest woman by ridiculing her aims, treating her capabilities with marked {ndiffer- -ence, depleting her in all sorts of offensive cartoons, and asserting that when women are allowed the same privileges as men, the entire world will become entirely de- mporahzed {rem the effects of her unlawful intrusion.Our New Women Fave no inten- tinn of becoming such monsters of intquity: fre>dom and rtdicule them.They love the men too deeply.and are too sincerely devoted to them to be guilty cf any such behavior.They are, in the first place.aiming at a blessed self improvement, physically and morally.They have become disgusted with the corruption of the enslaving fashionable worid, an] are adopting a more hyglenic method of dressing.They are denouncing the tobacco habit as an unnecessary, filthy appetite, tainting and contaminating the breath of life of all who use it.They have expressed their opinions on the liquor traffic in a grand declaration of their disgust and disapproval of the toleration of such an agency of Satan.and cry with one voice for the suppression of the accursed traffic, thus abolishing the cause of by far the greater part of the crime \u2018and misery of the world, and assuring a better mode of living, and surer protection for themselves and children.\u2018She was created to be man's helpmate, not his toy,\u2019 writes \u2018One of the Sex,\u2019 and this, I am glad to say, is very true.Do we not find abundance in the scripture to prove that weman was created fo be a loving, a sympathizihg companion of man: to bear her share of the burden.and to act her part in providing for their own, and for their children\u2019s wants?Where, on the other hand, do we find any statement to claim that woman was created to be a useless, dependent being.to be idolized.ana provided for by man, and that we men must recognize her as a very delicate creature, unable to fill the honorable position of helpmate to the man who chose her to be such?There are, I am sorry to say.too many women in this advanced age who would rather remain at home in the parlor and expect their husbands or servants to provide for them instead of falling into line vith the more progressive, the more intelligent, equal righters, and demand from jealous, tyrenni~al man.the privileges that once were lawfully theirs.Let these un- progressive women, instead of scorning the New Woman, lay aside their lady-like fancies, and arouse themselves to their sense of duty.Let them work to increase the Christian helpfulness in their own sex, helpfulress to the man who has wooed and won her, expecting to find in her a willing spirit, an earnest desire to do her share of the work that God intended her to do.Then we will soon have an abundance of lcving, deveted women, who will require ot the selfish, overruling men a reformation fn their morality, to fit them for the further advarced women.I say, from the depths of my heart.God prosper the women who are striving to gain their lawful rights, and to command recognition of public affairs.Oh, may success speedily overtake thelr attempts to cast off the yoke of bondage that man has placed upon them.and may men in the near future; be convicted and humbly apologlze for this* their disgraceful attitude toward the most loving, and helpful of beings, namely, the \u2018New Woman.\u2019 ' SINCERITY.HOME-MADE SUNSHINE, (By Mary D.Brine.) What care I\u2014as the days go by\u2014 Whether gloomy or bright the sky?What care I what the weather may be?Cold or warm\u2014'tis the same to me.For my own dear home skies\u2014they are always blue: And my dear home weather (the glad days thro\u2019) Is \u2018beautiful! summer\u2019 from morn till night, And my feet walk ever in love's true light.And why?Well.here is my baby sweet, Following me round on his restless feet, Smiling on me thro\u2019 his soft blue eyes, And gladdening and brightening my indoor skies.- And baby's father, with fond, true heart (To baby and me, home's better part)\u2014 His face is sunshine.and we rejoice In the music heard in his loving voice.So why should we heed\u2014as the days go by\u2014 The gloom or the light of the weather and Rky ; Of the outside world, when we're busy al] day \u2014_ Manufacturing sunshine which fades not To away?EE , With smMes, with kisses, with peace with joy\u2014 Father and mother, and baby-boy\u2014 We are living each day in the sunshine we make\u2014 And God keep us and guide us for love's \"dear sake! and \u2014\u2014 ALUM FOR THE GUMS AND TEETH.Many years ago, says a writer in the \u2018Popular Science News, I rrad in an old magazine\u2014\u2018Graham\u2019s\u2019 I think it was\u2014an article on the care of the teeth.Among other things it said that Horace Walpole, thouzh living to an extreme old age, had a perfect set of teeth at the time of his death.He attributed this to the habit of dissolving a very small piece of alum in his mouth three times a day.The recipe was given to him by a Mrs.Grosvenor, in her day a velebrated heauty, who also retained a flawless set of teeth up to her death, at the age of eighty.Ilaving at that time good teeth, and feeling in the confidence of youth that [could kcep them good by merely ordi care, I did not think it necessary to follow the example of the man of letters and the English beauty.But after ten years of married life, the tortures of the dentist's chair last summer recalled the anecdote to my mind.Fcur teeth had been extracted.ten were \u2018filled,\u2019 I had suffered fearfully frcm neuralgia, my gums were sore and spongy, and all my testh so sensitive that chew!ng was very painful, and biting even a mellow apple would bring tears to my eyes.I determined to make a test of the alum.I placed an ounce of the powdered on my washstaid, and, brushing my teeth after ench meal, I would take a very small pinch of the almn into my mouth, then a little water, ard hold the solution in for sev- cral seconds.The first effect was a delightful feeilng of cleanliness, and an unusual purity of breath, and after a few months of regular use, my gums were hard, and I could chew and bite with perfect i eese.Every housekeeper knows that alum is a hardener and an antiseptic.It is used in pickling to make the pickles brittle and keep them from spoiling.It is reasonable to suppose that these same properties render it a valuable agent in the care of the gums and teeth.I am requiring my children to use It, and it would be an interest- Ing exreriment in dental science if other mcthers wculd do the some and report results.The premature decay of children's teeth is a deplorable thing, and if it can be prevented or even retarded by this sim- Ile means, the fact should be made known.It should be carefully used and others may not need it so often, but I have found it excellent.GOLD FISH AND THEIR CARE.Dear Editor Home.\u2014-In answer to a re- have had ours for about a year.I am afraid our friend is killing hers with kindness.as she feeds them covery day.We never feed ours and only change the water once a week, sometimes only changing part of dt then.They find their food in the water.If you want to feed them occasionally, only drop a few tiny crumbs which you see them eat at once, not enough to He in the glcte.I have alway: been a devout reader of the \u2018Home Department,\u201d but this is my first atterapt at helping to fill that page.Although I am far from old I agree with our friend in wishing we eould have patterns of lace,ete., instead of fashion plates.We get so many of these things everywhere we turn.How many readers of the \u2018Home\u2019 have found the rashioi: p'ates useful?Can't we have the opinions of friends interested in this departiuent and thus be able to make a change if desired by all.Hoping this letter is not too long for a first attempt, I am, dear frionds, yours truly, DOROTHY.Dear Editor Home, \u2014In the above case overfeeding is the cause of death; change the water daily and give no food; there is sufficient vegetable matter in the water.I give water from the tap in summer and take chill off in winter.GOLD FISH.June 15.THE SECRET OF HAPPINESS.Dear Editor Home,\u2014T wonder if you can find room for me in your circle; although I cannot sav that I am a mother, of even a housekeeper, but only a plain \u2018school- ma'am,\u2019 yet I take a great interest in this department and would Hke to have a place among the other writers.Some time ago you asked for testimonials from those who were \u2018svetamatic givers.\u2019 Well I am happy to sav that I have adopted that system and find it a very helpful one.I know that I give a good deal more in this way than I otherwise would, and that it is always given with \u2018a willing mind.\u2019 I think it would be well if all would follow the example of Jacob, and say with him: \u2018Of all that thou shalt give me I will surely give the tenth unto thee,\u2019 Gen.xxvifi., 22.I quite agree with those who say that there is something disagreeable in every kind of work; and I have met several, who, like \u2018Housekeeper,\u2019 say that housework is trying and monotonous.They say, \u2018you don\u2019t know what it's like till you have tried it for yourself, just the same thing over and over again every day of the year\u2019; they get so tired of it and long for just one little bit of change.Now I know this is all too true in many cases, and there are some poor, tired, over-worked mothers whom I know, that I pity from the bottorn of my heart.But after .aH I think our lives are pretty much as we make them, and life is too short and precious to be gpent in looking at the gloomy side of our surroundings.Surely, if we try, we can find something pleasant in our work, whether it He in the kitchen, in the schoolroom or behind the counter; and you know, | dear friends, that it is \u2018the dally round quest for care of gold fish I would say that |.we have no trouble in keeping them: we - .life\u2014in the charmed circle of royalty for successful labors is a helpless invalid.~ THE MONTREAL the common task\u2019 which \u2018points to us the road that leads us daily neardr God.\u2018Housekeeper\u2019 is not the only one who sometimes finds her everyday work monotonous, but ft depends very largely on the spirit in which the work is done, whether we will enjoy it, or find it irksome and disagreeable.We all need more contentment in the work which God has given us to do; so instead of stopping to think .it hard or tiresome, or seeking for easier duties to perform, let us pray for grace and strength to do faithfully that which lies nearest io us, remembering that to him that over- cometh the Father has promised \u2018a crown of life.\u2019 \u2018 1 will close by quoting a few lines of a hymn which, I think, contains the secret 5 YACHTING it not be said that to intense pain is added thé want of the necessaries of life.offerings from those whom she has benefitted would, I am quite sure, bring her good cheer.\u2018Speak a kind word when you can,\u2019 is not more necessary in this world of sickness and sorrow than to do a kind act when you can.\u2018 In the concluding chapter of her book Mrs.Youmans says: \u2018After eighteen years of unremitting toil in the public temperance work I was suddenly seized with inflammatory rheumatism in the month of August, 1888.In a few days I was deprived of the use of my limbs and since that time I have been a helpless invalid confined to my bed.Everything that medi- woo DRESSES.of true happiness whatever our position in lUfe may be: \u2018There is a cross in every lot, And an earnest need for prayer: But a lowly heart that leans cn Thge : Is happy anywhere.\u2019 CT PET.June 23, 1898, \u2014 A BUDGET OF QUESTIONS.Dear Editor and Friends of tte Home, I very much enjoy thig department of the dear old \u2018Witness.\u2019 \u2018The Babes in the Wood\u2019 have reached their destination, but I hope we shall hear from them agains I hope the diploma in the kitchen will not be abandoned until it is proven that it is ineffectual, for there oertainly seems to be a false idea concerning the social status of servants.WIll some of the friends kindly throw light on the following questions:\u2014 When, and by whom was dancing first pronounced an unchristian amusement, and by what class of people has it since been \u2018denounced?Do the Y.M.C.A.and Y.W.C.A.Associations consider that waltzing is the most graceful and beneficial physical ewer- cise and teach it in their gympasium?Is it selfish for a person to play waltz music until some one who is listening expresses a desire to waltz and then refuse to play it any longer, pleading conscience as the excuse?Would dancing become a popular amusement among Christians if considered orthodox?Has it ever been considered unchristian in the higher grades of social instance?Have dancing and card playing proved themselves to be the mpst énter- taining, convenient, practical, etc:, In short, survived to be the popular amusements in the same sense that a good article survives the competition in the commercial world?Is the theatre a means of education; for instance, is it possible to get gq clearer, more accurate conception of Shakespeare's \u2018Merchant of Venice\u2019.by seeing it played than by hours of study?What is the difference as concerns right or wrong between improving the appearance of the hair by electric curlers, etc., and improving the appearance of the skin by cosmetics, rouges, ctc.?Is alcohol a food?Is it a stimulant?Why.AN INTERESTED READER.\u2014 \u2018CAMPAIGN ECHOES.\u2019 This ook is really a valuable addition to our prohihition literature.Its style is attractive and its subjects full of life, so that when once taken up it~ will be read through with increasing interest, and :as an educator it should find a place in -evéry Sabbath-schoo! in \u2018our land and in our public Hbraries as well.\u2019 , Its gifted author, Mrs.Youmans, is no longer able to travel in her advocacy of the cause of liberty from rum slavery, but from the.enforced retirement of her sick room she speekg through her book.It was published not only to assist in carrying on the work \u2018of \u2018éducating public sentiment,\u201d but in the hope that from its sale she might have an income sufficient to place her above want.This hope will yet be realized if each of our unions will appoint a committee of two energetic ladies to secure orders for it.Frem my knowledge of the facts I am prepared to say that this work should be undertaket at once, and the price of the Look 1s $1.00 sent with each order to the address of! Mrs.Letitia Youmans, 19 DMetcalfé strect, Toronto, by post-office order or reg stered letter.> une of nature\u2019s noblewomen, honbred too good to be unkind.\u201c| His voice saying I have refined thee, but wherever known for her beautiful life ang Let cal skill could suggest haf Leen employed but without avail.\u2019 : Her Christian resignation is seen in the following: Father's hand prepares the cup and what He wills is best.He is too wise to err and I seem to hear not with silver.I have chosen thee in the furnace of affictfcn.\u2019 At times the furnace seems to have been heated seven times, but His grace is sufficient.I be- Yicve that when the dross is consumed, and the gold well refined, I shall enter into His presence where there is fulness of joy, and sit down #t His right hand where there are pleasures forevermore.\u2019 Just think of it, my sisters, eighteen years of unremitting toil in the public temperance work! What a record! The wonder is not that our dear sister was obliged to give up the active work, but that she could continue in it so long.But though laid aside she is still inspiring the workers.Many other sharp mental axes are dcal- ing heavy blows at the root of the \u2018man- eating tree\u2019 of Canada and the civilized(?) world, and there is nothing more certain than that it will yet be destroyed toot and branch for it is not gf the Lord's planting.Our W.C.T.U.authorities, realizing the importgnce of the subject some years ago instituted a department of Scientific Temperance Instruction, and through their influence the subject is now taught in our schools; and many of our unions with a view to increase the interest of the scholars in the study of it give prizes to those who secure the highest marks.A knowledge of the effects of stimulants and narcotics on the human system will have a strong tendency to prevent their use.If we are to have stalwart \u2018home protectors\u2019 in tite near future the home as well as the school has its part to do.The fathers and the mothers must be busy doing their \u2018home work,\u2019 not such.as we hear so much about in homes where there are school children but home work nevertheless.Let us never forget that our everyday life is an object lesson to our chil@ren.It is what we are that most impresses them.For their sake as well as our own we should abstain from everything that is wrong.Very.few of us can leave them fortunes; but we can if we will bequeath to them what is even more valuable than silver or gold, the record of an upright,Godly life.MARY E.HAMMOND.Ottawa, Feb., 1896.: NO EYE FOR THE BEAUTIFUL.\u2018À friend, writing from Toronto, who does: | not see fit to give his name, says:\u2014'Dear \u2018Sir \u2014! am sorry to see on page 6, Weékly \u201cWitness,\u201d of 19th instant, such absurd pic- } tures for readers (lady) to copy from; they would make good scarecrows, but do not deserve room in so good a paver as the sound old \u2018Witness.\u2019 Yours truly, z .FAC, bo YACHTING DRESSES.¢ These stylish yachting dresses are of white and blue duck.The first is a plain skirt, unlined, \"and finished with a facing five ibches deep.\u201d The seams of the jacket are lapped and stitched.The fronts are fitted by one dart and a small neck dart, and a slit pocket Is set in below the belt.The fronts are fastened by a pair of Hink- ed buttons.The navy blue skirt is finigh- ed with a decp hem of lighter blue headed by rows of narrow white braid.The waist is a sagging blouse of the dark blue with a Thank \u2018I rejoice to believe that my | STANDARD OF ADVERTISEMENTS.> NEAT ÿ > ny >.né THE WORLD.a] @ Cadet ALY oR TE One of the Pope Mfg.Co.'s five great factories at Hartford, Conn.\u2018 ol « - * Les ES \u201d / 1h UC wy have no equal anywhere for Jrigid system of inspection.The are not properly represented in TCI rx ghicld-shaped plastron of the same stitched on the front.The front opens on a blue and white Jersey vest with revers faced with white pique resting on a de.n sallor collar of the lighter blue linen bordered with braid.Both patterns wool goods.DRESS FOR DINNER.Do you dress for dinner?Or do you consider that a practice incompatible with sterling merit and democratic spirit?Have you regarded It as a habit to be left exclusively to those who have nothing better to do than to exhibit different sets of garments at different hours of the day?If so, disabuse your mind at once of these views.Dressing for dinner, declares the Philadelphia \u2018Times,\u2019 is a custom to be commended from every point of view, including the economic and hygienic.It is economic to wear a semi-evening gown at dinner, for the street gown, which costs twice as much as the house gown, lasts twice as long with judicious changes.It is hygienic because there is actual bodily refreshment in soap, water, fresh linen and a fresh gown after the toil and turmoil of the day, and there is also the less easilye defined but equally.potent influence of pretty clothes upon the mind, and hence upon the health of the wearer.would look Well in all- NOTES AND QUERIEE.If Miss Aggie Ballantyne, who, some months ago sent money to Tirs.Jamal's School in Jerusalem, will send her address to the Home Department, we will forward her a letter from Mrs.Jamal sent to our care.WHAT WOULD JESUS DO ?Dear Editor Home.\u2014A few weeks ago, some one asked the opinion of some of the sisters or brothers on Christians .playing cards.If Christians have any doubt about these things let us test them by the Word of God.His Word says: \u2018Be not deceived; God is not mocked.Whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap.\u2019 Also, *Whatsoever ye do, do all to the Glory of God.\u201d The very name of Christian signi- fles that we are to be Christ-like.Let us ask ourselves the question: What would Christ do in our place?This short life is too precious to fritter it away in self- HE factories for making Columbia and Hartford Bicycles or thoroughness of methods.growing for 18 years.Every detail of manufacture is based upon accurate investigation of the scientific Department of Tests, guided by a Council of 21 Expert Engineers, and supplemented by the most COLUMBIA BICYCLES ARE IN A CLASS BY THEMSELVES\u2014Unequalled, Unapproached.+ æ- Columbia Art Catalogue, telling fully of Columbia, and of Hartford Bicycles, trustworthy [machines of lower price, is free from any Columbia agent; by mail for two 2-cent stamps.POPE MFG.CO., Hartford, Conn.\u2018We appoint but one selling agent in a town, and do not sell to jobbers or middlemen.If Columbias size, completeness of equipment, They have been steadily result is certainty of quality, + pour vicinity, let us know.i de i nit it \u2019 A 5 | For Ali er \u2018 el SUMMER COMPILAINTS, 25e & 59c bottles, At all druggists.\u2014 OR FROM \u2014 WALLACE DAWSON, 159 St.Lawrence St.amusement.God requires all our time and talent in his service.If we have any time on cur bands let- us go to our ungodly neighbore and point them to Christ, or pray for them, and we will ind more jov in this work for the Master than in all the card playing and other questionable amusements of the world.If you would ask any gambler how he came to be one he would tell you by the card table.As drunkards are made from moderate drinking, so are gamblers from moderate card playinz.If we sow cards we reap gumblers.If we sow strong drink we rep drunkards.Therefore, for example, I would say with S.Paul: If playing cards make my brother or sister to stumble, I will play no more cards as long as the world standeth.And Christ save in Juke 14-33: \u2018Whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not all that he hath he cannot be my disciple,\u2019 \u2018If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his.\u2019 (Remans 8-9).And now I will close with this verse:\u2014 \u2018Be brave to do the right, And scorn to be untrue; When fear would whisper \u201cyield\u201d Ask what would Jesus do?\u2018A Brother in Christ.\u2019 T.B.GRAY.P.S.\u2014In the same issue I saw another letter on \u2018Domestfe Help,\u2019 and I must ser it is the best cn that subject I ever read.80 good that I an: going to keep it for the benefit of fut: re generations.A SUPERSTITION VERIFIED.ris = = dis \u201cAa The New Cook\u2014Shure, mum, there agoiîn\u2019 to be a folght in this house; Oi upsit th\u2019 whcle box av galt.Vrs.Crossgrain\u2014Oh, pshaw\" Bridget; do not be so superstitious.Ii only shows ignorance.: CU 9 4 M > ~ ~~ / mn\u201d | RER A Pre 9 CFO EN En 7, x | SENS y À A og ; | À à rE +Mrs.Crossgrain (boiling over with angæcr.{\u2014W-h-a-t! You careless, good-for-nothine place of Hibernian humanity! I have \u201cto Your carclessress just as long as I can\u2019 \"Pack up your things! Leave this house .: a: once! Never let me sce your face The New Cook\u2014But, mum, Oi upsit it all | again! There = & whole pot of soup spoil- in th\u2019 soup\u2014 | ed.\u2014\u2018Puck.\u2019 in Tm \u2014 ith her say ad, the er) ing ood an! use ace oil- SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1896, FOR EE SR OST E TA PRE OR EE ana eve THE MONTREAL DAILY WITNESS.THE WITNESS JUBILEE SYMPOSIUM.Stories of Fifty Years Ago.Co a.Poe Low len, che of the old- ; ve ef che AVitaess was in the : Cay nog vii io friends, He, Ca 2 4 Ru 02 0 Vas a hale ara\u2019 ~~ seas.He remem- vec So the serv early days, a © wovettion, and had seen : - le rame to Can- vus born in Bdin- \u2018 oo at an early age) SP NS, They went to a Sic na.Tae ilrst vw rrival at the Nayoleon Bona- | Lo.\u2026 +6 serve what | rr: of ife banishment | fhe Pa PFronutmen banished ss rriile than death, if he | « ir.To Bonaparte | Le sun 1 Lou = NHtrhre ?These re- LL 14 5 4, 2 Loudon nothing.CU sembarkation of as Napoleon was ng suite of officers Ca .lon was six years! tp gt 5 = - +1, Up in the arms of what even then was Cw Pose T5 47 fc ta + fé lera 1 = « important and his- Gorn © wns go impressed with | iota wees it as though it| Qe re VA, | D !, ms Tether was employed vo oe coment in getting the guar- fracin ut Nanoleen was to live ready fer biv a 1 brirg a chili] young Lou- den a \u20ac qd \u2018inger men of that time, Mr.Lou- \u201cent into the militia and served in ; \u2018tv.He was in Col.Bethune\u2019s Lars.\u2018er a time.He had also a cont Of > supplying the trooos with | {1 Ile stück to his contract until it \u201c+3 finichodl, no matter how severe the \u201ctwas gn his own resources.When Poitrert had expired he gave up (7-3 avi discharged his men.* There \u201crv is time other duties for him 8°.\u2018arc.The rebellion and its pecu- I» ir.Was upon tbe provinces.Mr, , 717 sewed in the ranks and was pro- oo Lo be first sergeant.He was one \u2018he nuinbers of people who were in- t \u201ccuted Jn the rebellion losses bill and , i =3ciareidents of the burning of the tir lament House, 4 He also recalls the ROTERT LOUDON.| meatinz held in the general block on | brought a large detachment across with CAPT.ROBERT LOUDON, as the return t> power of the L be.al party ; tions prayers for victory.duly received, MeGiil strer, near College street, where they were attacked with stones and windows oi the hall were broken.When they sallird out the assailants bad de- carared.Hr was present with the crowd that assa\u2018tited and sacked the \u2018Vindicator\u2019 oiîfire and also with those who smashed Jim Hyland's tavern signboard and windows.Some magistrates came and talked to the crowd and quieted them.They afterwards went to Dal- housic square, where, he thinks, Courtney lived.Courtney was a well known ADVERTISEMENTS.leader, one of those thought to have had | a hand in the rioting, and Loudon waz.acquainted with Courtnay.| On tbe cccasion of their riot, this time, ! the Seventy-first Regiment was at St.| Helen's Island.A signal sent over their weapons.The artillery were also ordered out.It was after the burning of the Parliament House -that Courtn2 was taken suddenly sick with cholera.Sergeant Loudon was then quartered at Monklands and he was on leave on the same evening.He had stepped into Mrs.Murphy's tavern, as was the fashion in those days, and was getting a glass of ale, when a voice which he recognized as Courtnev's called to him from an adjoining room to come in.He went, and found Courtnev in terrihle agony, ccld perspiration pouring from him.\u2018I remained with him for three hours, rub- Ling him and endeavoring to help him)\u2019 says Sergeant Loudon.It was of no avail.Afterwards Sergeant Loudon left him with friends helping him, and returned to Monkland.Courtney was dead next day, and Sergeant Loudon never saw him afterwards.He cannot forget his terrible agony.Sergeant Loudon's cxneriences in the Montreal Cavalry were principally carrying despatches and looking after deserters, when on the frontier.He was sent at the time of the Parliament House rioting with eight men to Monklande, Col.Ermatinger telling him to report to Col.Bruce there.He was first sergeant of his troop then.In the war of the rebellion in 1861 Sergt.Loudon joined the New York or Harris's Light Cavalry, went all through the war and was promoted to be captain.He suffers now from rheumatism to some extent, but could sit his saddle yet.He residcs at present on a farm, and enjoys the \u2018Witness\u2019 and its fund of information.The jubilee symposium he more thorsughly enjoys, because it brings him to realize that many of those whom he once so well knew are still alive.His surviving descendants are many, and some reside in Montreal.MR.FLAWS SENDS CONGRATULATIONS.(To the Editor of the \u2018 Witness.\" Sir,\u2014It is significant that your jubilee year should be celebrated by such events and the;breaking of part of the yoke of the Quebec hierarchy, both of which events have to some extenf™been brought about by your faithful advocacy of political purity and religious liberty and freedom of thought in matters religious and political.I have read your valuable paper for over forty years, and had many transac- with the firm of John Dougall when in the commission business, and I wish by these few lines to bear testimony to my respect for the deceased proprietor as well as for its present proprietors and editors, and hope that your paper may continue long to advocate the rights of the people and condemn the misdeeds of designing politicians and crafty priests.R.FLAWS, Toronto, June 26, 1896.\u2014_\u2014 INTERNATIONAL BIBLE READING ABSOCIATION.(To the Editor of the \u2018Witness.\u2019) Sir,\u2014In this your jubilee year, in concert with so many thousands of admiring readers and friends.We send you warm greetings and wishes for continued and ever increasing success in your great field of influence of the highest import to the welfare of our country.Your noble stand agalnst Tupper and his unholy alliance gives unqualified admiration and The \u2018Pansies\u2019 were for which we send you 1 - thanks.Sale, MONDAY, others.making profits.following days.Summer Clearing AND FOLLOWING DAYS.DR = There are many sales held in this City during the summer months, but there is but one LAFRANCE SALE, We have cut prices in two in most cases\u2014in quarters in It is a question of Selling, not The thrifty buyer's purse will loosen its strings on Monday next and Watch our circulars.facts to whet your \u2018 economic appetite,\u201d Srey RAESSSEORS SES, 1 EES REESE 1 \\ \u2014$ JULY 6th, Here are a few MILLINERY.All our millinery goes at the enor» mous discount of 50 percent off the low prices, : + Call early- © DRESS GOODS.All kinds of new and seascnable goods, in every new pattern, 10 and 25 percent 67.It means that these goods are \u201cgacrificed\u201d on the altar of the bargain god, Sec them.PRINTS, in endless variety.A big lot at Te, good, warranted to wash prints.MUSLINS.19 percent off.LINENS.10 to 25 percent of, DUCK SUITS.The balance of our cool and comfortable Suits, in fine English Duck, with skirts of Empire out, all shades.: : Sults worth $3 00 for 81 50 46 CE 8 50 6 2 00 450 \u201c 280 Serge Skirts 8 00 \u201c 175 SILKS.All our Siiks, Black or Colored heavy or light Silks at a discount of 10, 20 and 30 percent.Pongee Silks, 19.Crepon 8ilks, 86e, MANTLES AND CAPES, Our pet department is open for a slaughtering sale, 20 to 50 percent off.We mean just what we say in this ad, Come and convince yourself- \u201c (ES P.Lafrance & Co., ST.LAWRENCE ST., Corner Dorchester, ENGLISH RIDING SADDLES.Just received a fine lot of Second-band English Riding Saddles.Call early and secure bargains.In New Riding Saddles and « Bridles you will find the best d assortiment in the city.A good well made Saddle, complete, for $12.A very fine Allover Pigskin Saddle, complete, for $20.Extra fine Allover Pigskin Saddle, with best fittings, $25.Saddles to rent by the day, week or month J.W.ROBERTS, London Saddlery, - - - 336 St.James St., Montreal, The rage for cycling is said to be seriously affecting the sale of pianos.The alarmist stories of the number of deaths, especially of ladies, while cycling lead to a statement in the House of Commons to the effect that in three months only three fatal accidents from the street traffic occurred in London, only twelve other cyclists (including two women) be- - JAMES M'NAB.Toronto, June 3._ ing on record as injured, SPECIAL NOTICES.Leaving for the Country.\u2014If you are leaving your city home vacant have ihe Dominion Burglary Guarantee Company look after it.Their speclal patrolmen are on duty all night and if your valuables are stolen you will be paid the loss.Office, 181 St.James street.Telephone, 1284, \u2019 \u2014\u2014 a Lal EE &c.3 17 LL EEE SE ES CEE /_ADVERTISEMENTS.Groceries, Provisians, KEES at roc per dozy OHOIOEST OREAMERY BUTTER at 20c per Ib.STRAWBERRIES and CHERRIES, CALIFORNIA FRUITS And a large stock of Cholce Groceries, Teas, dc., at CASSELMAN BROS., 54 AYLMER STREET.RASPBERRIES and CHERRIES.Leave your orders now for Raspberries by the pail.Last week for Cherries to preserve.REMOVAL SALE OF GROCERIES.We remove to our fine new premises with entirely a new stock.Great BARGAINS this week and next.Delicious 60c Ceylon Tea only 35¢ 1b.At DAVIS\u2019, Tel.4458.2121 8t.Catherine st, SEND YOUR Preserving Orders in this week to WALTER PAUL for ., .Strawberries and Cherries.BEAT FRUITS, LOWEST PRICES, WALTER PAUL.This Week and
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