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The Montreal daily herald and daily commercial gazette
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  • Montreal (Québec) :The Herald Company,1885-1888
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mercredi 16 juin 1886
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  • Montreal herald (1888)
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The Montreal daily herald and daily commercial gazette, 1886-06-16, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" 1ally ting rrect liver ur \\, 7 Nes » AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.VOL LXXVIII\u2014144 MONTREAL, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1886 {SUB:CRIPTION $606 À VÉAR Hotels sand men will go to work clearing up to- ! very bitter to those concerned, but excep- Steamship Miramichi, Baquet, Pictou, ST.LAWRENCE HALL 135 TO 139 St.James Street, HENRY HOGAN, Proprietor, The Best Known Hetl im the Dominion July ® mws 177 The Balmoral MONTREAL, | Is the Hotel for Business Men The Iroquois House, BEL(EIL MOUNTAIN, ST.HILAIRE, P.Q., Is now open for the Season.B.F.CAMPBELL, Manager.HOTEL BRUNSWICK Fifth Avenu>, New York.This most fashjonadie and centrally located hote] has been reaovated from top to bottom and is now re-opened under r:anagement o R.H.Southgate, npor the American and European plans.\u2018This hotel is the favorite resort for Canadians.MITCHELL, KINZLER & SOUTHGATE, Proprietors.Comrortahle Rooms, ÿ2 per day; Board, Sen por dev t1 236 Murray Hill Hotel.NEW YORK: The largest and finest constructed hotelin the city, on Park Avenue, one block from Grand Central Depot.(ON AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLANS.) 600 rooms, ele;antly furnished ard decorated The ventilation, drainage and sanitary arrangements generally, are the most perfect hat human ingenuity and ski can devise Stairways and 3 elevators, No charge for conveying bagg ge from or to the Grand Central Depot.HUNTING & HAMMOND, Proprictors.June 15 1y 142 THE RUSSELL, OTTAWA.The Palace Hotel of Canada This magaificent new Hotel, fitted up in the most modern style, is raw open.The Russell son(aind-noccmnpedations for over FOUR HUNDRED GUESTS, with passage and baggage elevators, and commands a splendid view of the city, Parliamentary grourds, river and canal.Visitorsto the Capital having business with the Government find it most convenient to stor % the Russell, wher they oan always wet leading public men.Theen- tire Eutel 18 supplied with escapes, and in case of fire there would not he any confusion or danger Every attention paid to guests.KENLY & ST.JACQUES, Proprietors, February 5.31 ST.LOUISHOTEL ste mé This hotel, which 18 unrivailed for size, tyle, and locality in Quebec, has just been completely transformed and modernized throughout, being refitted with new system of drainage and ventilation, passenger eleva tor, Electric bells and lights, &e.In fact, all at modern ingenuity and practical science can devise to promote the comfort and oon- vexience of guests has been su plied.WILLY RUSSELL, resident, CHATEAU SAINT LOUIS HOTEL co.Proprietors June 28 158 Laval House, (LATE LEMAY HOUSE, BORD A PLOUFFE.Having leased the above well-known and commodious brick house, now open, it will be new and completely furnished and ready for the reception of permanent boarders on the 22nd May.In close proximity to, and in full view of, the Ottawa River at this point, the opportunities for boating and fishing cannon bo surpassed, while the adjacent islands afford the most charming resort for picnics and parties.Boats will be furnished for the use of uests.The Canadian Pacific Railway will sto trains corth of the bridge at Sault aux Recok let, and special conveyance will meet all trains, thus bringing the house within haif &n hour of the city.The table will be furvished with everything the city and country can supply.Telephone connection wi the city.or terms o ard, special railroad rates.and all other particulars address ! NORRIS BEST, Bord a Plouffe, 1Jne 91 GLASCOW, Scotland.\u2019 PHILPS CCCX3URN HOTEL 141 ATI STREET.P, 0.Box 1347.April 16 First-Class; Quietly and Centrally Situated ModerateCharges.| Turkish Baths.THE MONTREAL HERALD ison fyle at this Hotel.Jaly81 WDE CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I.REVERE HOUSE.= Proprietress Good jam Commercial and Private Hotel.md ston ome, convenient to Rallway e = \u2026\u2026- \u2014 | CANADIAN JESPATCHES, NOVA SCOTIA ELECTIONS.\u2014 e The Government that Sapported Secession Resolations Sustained.The first news from Nova Scotia last evening gave the Liberals Halifax city by 450 majority, and it was believed Halifax county would increase the majority, Thea came the report that Yarmouth County had elected Gayton and Lawton, | Liberals.Later telegrams said that tho day had passed off quietly, both sides working hard ; that there was great excitement in the evening and night ; and that the Liberals had carried the great majority of the constituencies, \u2018The following despatch to TE HERALD shows that the Provincial Opposition wera nowhere, 1t is from a Conservative quarter and entirely reliable : | SPECIAL TO THE HERALD.] Harirax, N.S., June 15, Repeal and reciprocity have swept the Province like a cyclone, The Grits were splendidly organizel and held the winning cards from the start.The following counties have gine Grit :\u2014 Halifax, 600 majority.Lunenburg, 40 majority, Queens, majority not stated.Shelburne, 200 majority.Yarmouth, 1,000 majority.Digby, 300 majority.Colchester, 200 majority.Antigonish, 400 majority.Guysboro, 400 majority.Inverness, 200 msj rity.Victoria, 200 majority.Hants, 200 majority.- The Counties of Cumberland and Kings each returned a member of each party.; Annapolis and Cape Breton Counties Lave gone Tory.Attorney General Longley is defeated.Deepatches just in gay that while Bell, the leader of the Opposition, is elected in Pictou, the other two members are very doubtful, It\u2019s a regular Waterloo for the Toriex.It looks now as if they couldn\u2019t have half a dozen members in the new Legislature, Antigonish and Colchester, the conati- tuencies of the Cabinet ministers, Thompson and McLelan, went repeal by a very large majority.It\u2019s rough on the Ministers who have been stumping the Province vigorously.The Cape Breton Counties, which, it was said, wished to secede from Nova Scotia, will now probably stay where they are, [PRESS DESPATCH.) HALIFAX, N.S., June 15,-As far as can be judged to-night the Liberal local Government carried the country at the elections by a large majority, the supporters of the Government claiming twenty- nine out of the thirty-eight seats in the Assembly.The following is as complete a list as can now be made up of elected : Halifax, Fielding, Power and Roche, Liberals.Lunenburg, Church and Ross, Liberals, Shelburne,-Johnston and McCoy, Liberals.Queen\u2019s, Mackand and Cook, Liberals.Yarmouth, Law and (Gayton, Liberals, Digby, Robicheau and McNeil, Liberals.Annapolis, Ellison and M.Andrews,Conservatives, defeating Attorney-General Longley.Kings, Rand, Liberal, without doubt; the second seat is doubtful between Weston, Liberal, and Bill, Conservative, Hants, Haley and Frame, Liberals, Colchestor, Laurance and Clarke, Liberals, Cumberland, R.L.Black, Conservative, and T.R.Black, Liberal, Pictou, McLeod, Liberal, Bell, Conservative, and probably McColl, Liberal, Antigonish, McGillivray.Guysboro, Weeks and Fraser, Liberals, Inverness, McNeil and McKinnon, Liberals, =a Victoria, Fraser, Liberal, and Bethune, Independent Liberal.Cape Breton, Murray, Liberal, and one Conservative, Richmond, names uncertain but probably one Conservative and one Liberal returned.A FEARYUL VISITATION.The City of Vancouver Suddemly and Completely Destroyed\u2014The Work of Destruction Done in One Short Hour \u2014Fifty Lives Lost in the Conflag:a- tion\u2014Hundreds Lost All Their Possessions \u2014 Rebuilding Commenced Before the Ashes are Cold.TORONTO, June 15.\u2014The Globes Victoria, B.C., special says: The City of Vancouver was obliterated by fire yesterday [Sunday].Only four houses are now standing, The Hastings and Royal City saw mills are saved.The loss is halfa million ; insurance, one hundred and fifcy thousand.Fifty lives known to be lost ; fourteen bodies have been recovered, The identified are John Caswell, Mrs, Nach and George Bailey Fawcett, and the others are not identified.Mavor McLean telegraphs for aid for the relief of three thousand homeless people without provisions.The Mayor is forwarding relief and the Government is aiding in conjunction.The \u201c Princess Louise\u201d brought over today two hundred passengers who saved nothing but what they bad on their persons.ANOTHER ACCOUNT, New WEsTMINSTER, B.C., June 15,\u2014 Our promising, plucky little metropolis at the Pacific end of the C,P.R.is in ashes.Not half a dozen houses remain out of 500.The worst of all is the heavy loss of life.One short hour did the whole work, Ten bodies have been found and numerous persons are enquired for, The property saved is insignificant, \u201cA clean sweep\u2019 defines the situation, One thou- morrow for the Canadian Pacific Railway.Twenty contracts for rebuilding have already been let.Only three out of ten bodies have been identified.Many men are ruined, but determined to start in again on their old locations.widows.widowers and orphans among the sufferers.The property loes falls | | There are! (UNITED STATES TELEGRAMS, THE GREAT YACHT RACE.A Fine Day avda Clese and Interesting Race.SaxpY Hoog, N.J., June 15,\u2014At9 a.m directly upon the pioneer element of the wind blew 16 miles per hour from the new town, Hundreds of people are northeast, camped out.The people of New Westminster, the rival city,have been especial.race.The Mayflower does not participate ly open-handed and liberal, Prompt aid from the Canadian Pacific Railway is expected, Heroiem and hardships characterized the whole of the dreadful affair.Families were compelled to abandon their homes with a moment\u2019s warning and flee for their lives.Business men, in scarch of valuables, were compelled to rush through the flames or smoke or perish, Numbers sought refuge in the water, One was found in a well where he sought refuge from the horrible holocaust which defies description, Few people have more than the clothes they stand in, All the frame buildings in the town will be rapidly rebuilt, mostly of brick.Contracts for a large hotel and other extensive buildings representing half a million were let just before the fire.PROMPT ACTION, ToroNTo, June 15,\u2014Mayor Howland set to work early this morning to get a round robin signed by the members of City Council, authorizing him to send, on behalf of the city, $1,000 to-day for the relief of the sufferers by the fire in Vancouver, B.C, and in an hour or two the amount was sent through the Bank of British North America, and the following telegram sent to Mayor McLean, of Vancouver : \u201cYour message received, and request as to sending information to other Canadian cities complied with.You have our earnest sympathy.This city has sent you one thousand dollars through the bank of British North America, and that the sum will at onc: be placed by telegraph at your disposal at their branch at New Westminster.I anticipate that our merchants and charitable citizens will also respond, May God give kindly hearts everywhere to assist you in your great distress, (* Signed), * W.H.HowLaND, Mayor.\u201d The Fishery Question, OrTAWA, June 15,\u2014Itis said to be not unlikely that an International Commission will be appointed to settle the fishery trouble between Canada and the States.Cattle Breeding in the North-West.OrrAwaA, June 15,\u2014Manager Bell has completed his arrangements for the incorporation of the North-Western Buffalo Breeding\u201d Company, and a notice of incorporation will likely appear in the Canada Gazette of Saturday.Manager Bellsays it is the intention of the company to cress the buffalo with the Polled Angus breed.In this way the hide alone would be worth more than the price of a Polled Angus heifer, A breed of cattle would also be raised which would Le better able to stand the climate of the North-West.A Great Rallway Enterprise.Orrawa, June 15\u2014A memorial has been addressed to the Minister of the Interior on behalf of Messrs.Alexander Manning, H, S.Howland, John Bain, A.P, Macdonald, A.F.Manning and R.Macdonald, of Toronto, and Messrs.G.Foster, P.McRae and Duncan Macdonald, of Montreal, provisional directors of the Winnipeg and North Pacific Railway, asking for a large land subsidy in aid of their enterprise.This company was incorporated recently, and Mr.Manning is shortly to be in England endeavoring to float the scheme, They propose to construct a railway from Winnipeg via the Narrows of Manitoba and Fort A.La- lorneby Peace River Pass to the Pacific Ocean at Fort Simpson, and the memorial addressed to the Minister asks for a grant of 6,400 acres of land per mile for that portion of their railway from Winnipeg to Fort A, Lalorne, 10,000 acres per mile, such lands to be selected in the Peace River district.The company agree to construct the road to Peace River in eight years, provided the subsidy asked for is granted.\u2014\u2014\u2014 Honor to Mr.Gladstone, DUBLIN, June 15.\u2014The freedom of the city of Waterford will be conferred upon Mr.Gladstone next Friday.: A Mourning Court.LoxpoN, June 15,\u2014The British Court has gone into mourning for a period of three weeks on account of the death of the King of Bavaria.A Dynamite Outrage.PARIS, June 15.\u2014 Some striking miners attempted to destroy, with dynamite, a house occupied by miners who refused to join the strikers, A sentry saw the criminals and fired upon them.They escaped leaving the dynamite unexploded.The Expulsion Bill, Paris, June 15.\u2014The Senate bureaux have elected a committee to examine and report on the expulsion bill.Six of the committee\u2019s -members, including M, Barthelmy St.Hilaire, oppose the bill, while but three are known to approve it.Nevertheless it is believed the bill will pass the Senate by a narrow majority.A Side Xssue.EpINeURGH, June 15.\u2014Mr, Gladstone will on Friday cext be nominated for the presidency of the Scottish Liberal Association.The Unionists will oppose his election.The Dead King.Munich, June 15.\u2014At 8.30 o\u2019clock last evening Dean Tuerck, assisted by the Court clergy, read the funeral service over the remains of the late King Ludwig, which were lying in the entrance court of Berg Castle, After the service the body was placed in a plain coffin and conveyed to Munich in a hearse drawn by four horses.Three carriages conveying the clergy followed the hearse.A detachment of heavy cavalry met the hearse at Sendling, a suburb of Munich, and escorted it to the city, The remains reached the residence at the Schlossat 1.20 a.m.Their arrival was unexpected and nobody was in attendance to receive them, The Empress of Austria sent a splendid wreath to Berg Castle to be placed on the coffin, Monicz, June 15.\u2014A careful, thorough and scientific autopsy has been made on the remains of King Ludwig.It revealed an abnormal structure of the skull and the existence of a degencrati ve process in the membranes of the brain, due partly to chronic inflammation, The weather cloudy and hezy.The prospects good for to-day\u2019s yacht in the contest.In the morning the scene off Bay Ridge was one of great activity, The shore was lined with spectators and the chances of the big boats were eagerly discussed.The wind held steadily from the east and gave every evidence that it was blowing a lively breeze outside.Shortly after 10 am.the wind shifted a little to the north and blew at the rate of 12 miles an hour, A start was made with very little delay at 10.46 am.The Puritan crossed the line 3 minntes ahead of the Thetisand 8 minutes ahead of the Priscilla, The others were close behind the leaders at 11 a.m., they were headed for the Narrows and rapidly approaching them outward bound, while the white- bodied i'uritan was leading, but next behind her came the Priscilla and Atlantic.The little difference at the start availed the Puritan comparatively nothing, The Puritan rounded Scotland lightship at 1.08 and stood for the Sandy Hook lighuship.The Atlantic turned Scotland lightship at 1.16, the Priscilla at 1.18, the Grayling at 1.18-30, and the Montauk at 1.21.NEw York, June 15.\u2014The sloop yachts finished in the following order : Priscilla first, at 4 40 p.m.; Atlantic 2nd, at 4.49 and the Puritan third, at 4 53, The Priscilla allows the Atlentic 53 seconds and the Puritan 2 minutes and 53 seconds.The light winds preclude a thorough judgment of the meits of the yachts.New YORK, June 15.\u2014For ashort time after thestart, when the wind was away aft, the Puritan did some beautiful sailing and outstripped both the Priscilla and the Atlantic.But this contiued only for a few miles and after that the Boston boat\u2019s rivals had the best of the racing.As the fleet passed Fort Lafayette the schooners set their maintopmast staysails, Then the cloud of canvas was headed over for buoy No.8 off Sandy Hoek, which was rounded in the following order: Thetis, Puritan, Atlantic, Priscilla, Grayling, Montauk, Haze, The Puritan began to overhaul the Thetis and passed her off Sandy Hook, Outside of Sandy Hook there was more sea and more wind, and tue giants gained on the Thetis.The big fellows passed the Scotland light ship in this order : Puritan, Atlantic, Priscilla, Thetis, Mon- tauk, Republic and Clara followed closely, In the beat to the Sandy Hook light ship the P.iscilla passed the Atlantic, The Puritan and Atlantic had to make, to the surprise of all, one more tack to round the light ship than the Priscilla, «ish was handled by her owner, (General Canfield.After rounding the Priscilla shook out her jib topsail and headed up the bay, The wind now made a gentle slant to the eastward, The Atlantic rounded at 2.28.10 and the Puritan at 2 30, Then came a \u2018\u201cluffing match\u2019 between the Puritan and Priscilla.Another surprise was in store for the specators, for the Priscilla outpointed the Boston boat as well as the Atlantic.It had also been found that the Puritan could not outpoint the Atlantic in the breeze that prevailed.Nevertheless the Puritan by some short tacking fore-reached the Atlantic, and sgain took second place, still a half mile behind the Priscilla, Passing Romer Beacon, the wind began to die out.The Atlantic once more passed the Puritan.After that it was a drifting match.The Priscilla was somewhat overhauled, but won easily, The Atlantic was second and the Puritan, although only half a dozen lengths behind, could not get past the buoy 15, off Fort Hamilton, which was the end of the course of the giants, because the wind had completely died out.The other yachts crawled up to the mark at a later hour.The Priscilla beat the Atlantic 11 mins, 51 sec.; the Grayling beat the Montauk, 8 min, 55 sec.The Montauk takes second prize.In class C,the Agnes beat the Leona, 37 min, 13 sec.; the Thetis beat the Grace, 1 min.42 sec.Besides these in class D., the cutter Clara beat the sloop Athlone, 11 min.Class E., the Penquin beat the Adelaide, the Penguine winning the Livingstone memorial prize, Class F., Crocidile beat the Rival, 3 min,, 20 secs, Class G., Ilderon beat Nomad, 48 mins., 24secs.Class H., Arab beat Merlin, 21 mins., 28 sees, Class K., Hypatia had a walk over, On Thursday the annual regatta of the New York Yacht Club will take place.The four big sloopsand a number of other sloops and schooners are entered.There will be a subscription cup of $1,000 to be competed for by the four big sloops at this regatta, THE YACHTS TO RACE TO-DAY.Last Notes of Preparation\u2014Ths Mayflower Reaches New York.NEw Yorg, June 14.-It rained to-day, but that did not deter the yacht smen from getting their swift sailers ready for the great event to-morrow.The anchorage and grounds of the club at Bay Ridge were visited by scores of people to-day.In the basin some dozen yachts were receiving the finishing touches, On the ways and beach a small squadron was being scraped and painted, were off the breakwater, in commission, was the finest fleet of boats that have ever anchored together.It was nothing but bright hulls, clean scraped spars and snow white canvas, Owing to the ron-arrival of the Mayflower from Boston it is not likely that she will participate in the race, In order to grant her owner, General C.J.Paine, as much indulgence as possible, however, the club announces that the entry list for the special class will not close until within an hour prior to the start.At 5 o\u2019clock this evening she sped by City Island, The Puritan will be sailed by her owner, J.Malcolm Forbes.Captain Joe Ellsworth will have charge of the Atlantic and Capt.George Cooley Will handle the tiller of the Priscilla Captain Crocker, who last year commanded the Puritan, will sail the Boston sloop Thetis, Mr.Fish will command the fast schooner, the Grayling, The rivalry between the latter craft and the celebrated Montauk will be tionally interesting to the onlookers.The Grayling this morning was hauled out on the dry dock at Gowanus Canal for bronze painting.She looks as slippery a3 a banana peel, One of the Puritan's crew said to-day that judging from yesterday\u2019s.cruise in the bay, the Priscilla was the only New York boat to be afraid of, \u201cIt looks,\u201d he said, \u201casif the alterations in her had made her a better windward boat, and if this proves true we shall have our hands full to beat her.She is really the only one of the three sloops that the Puritan\u2019s people are seriously afraid of this week, though the Mayflower will be a cracker later in the season.\u201d This gossip is interesting, but good judges think that it will not do to throw the Atlantic out of the Tace 80 unceremoniously.\u2018The dimensions of the four sloop yachts and of the Galatea areas follows :\u2014 B Ey 7 Bg 5 2 204% 25 gE = #5 2 5 = 5 5 ® BB g PF .ie ° : : : : = : Length over all.95.1 95.0 95.0 100.0 10.0 Ou the water line.84.0 85.0 81.1 85.0 86.8 Extreme beam.23.2 25.5 22.7 23.5 150 Extreme draught.9.3 8.0 82 9.6 13.5 Area midship section.101.0 86.5 82.0 82.0 Outside ballast.35.0 .27.0 87.0 Inside ballast.25.0 45 0 13.0 11.0 Displacement.26.0 114.0 102.0 110.0 A Dying Couple, New York, June 15, \u20140On June 10th a young married couple named Thompson engaged rooms in Sturtevant House and kept it closely since.To-day they were found both dying together on the flyor with bullet holes in their heads and breasts, The husband was just able to speak when found, but could not tell what the cause of the tragedy was, The wife is dead, and the man was taken to the hospital, but cannot recover, The Brazilian Prince, WASHINGTON, D.C., June 15.\u2014Prince Aguste Leopold and the officers of the Brazilian frigate Barosso, who accompanied kim to Washington, were formally presented to the President by the Secretary of State at 11.30 o\u2019clock to-day.They were accompanied by the Brazilian 1 Minister.All wore the full dress uniform of their rank.The President extended them a cordial invitation to attend the State reception at the White House this evening, which they accepted.From the White House the party paid an informal visit to the Navy Department, Business Disasters, WEST MIDDLESEX, Pa., June 15-The Veaches Bank, which wa: organized: in 1856 under the name of Millers and Miners Bank, closed its doors this morning ; the cause of the failureis the shrinkage of values on real estate and the inability to readily realize on commercial paper.The liabilities of the concern are $100,000, assets unknown.Theimmense dry goods store of Veach & Sons was also closed to-day on a writ of attachment, YouNesrowN, Ohio, June 15.-Appli- cation has been msde for a receiver for the Himrod Furnace Co, liabilities $180,- Died at Sea, PHILADELPHIA, June 15\u2014When the steamship Lord Gough, from Liverpool, reached her wharf to-day, Mr, Geo.W.Childs eargerly scanned the faces of the passengers in expectation of seeing lady who was to be the guest of Mr, Childs at their country seat.Captain Hughes.informed him that the lady, Miss Margaret Jones,of London,had died at sea on the 9th inst and that her body had been consigned to the ocean.Miss Jones was a prominent and wealthy lady of the English capital and was a near relative of the late Lord Caithness, who died about a year ago in New York, The unexpected news was quite a shock to Mr.Childs, as prepara\u2019 tions had been made by him for a round of enjoyment for the distinguished lady.The President\u2019s Reception.WASHINGTON, June 15.-The White House never presented a more brilliant spectacle than to-night on the occasion of the first official reception given by President and Mrs.Cleveland, The decorations were on the same grand scale as at the President\u2019s wedding, with the exception that tkere were more tropical plants and ferns and finer flowers, The walls of the east room were hidden by plants and garlands of smilax and evergreens were festooned from the chandeliers and cornices.The mante's were banked with rare exotics and the window recesses filled with palms, The decoratious of the other parlors were of a similar description, The scene when the reception was at its height, with the rich toilets of the ladies, the aplendor of the costumes worn by some of the diplomats, and the bright uniforms of the officers was most brilliant, ~~ INegal Deflling.BELFAST, June 15.\u2014It is stated that the injunction of the Grand Master against drilling by Orangemen during the continuance of the troubles in Belfast, does not prevent the Orangemen drilling at Rich Hill, in Antrim county, where it is alleged 12,000 Loyalist continue to practice military tactics regularly.Mr: Gladstone\u2019s Opponent, LoNponN, June 15,\u2014The Conservatives have selected Col.Campbell Walker to oppose Mr, Gladstone.In his address he reminds the electors that Mr, Giadstone, who appeals to their feelings on the score of age, enunciated thirteen years ago the principle that sixty years should be the outside age for all who sought to hold responsible positions, He contends that the Premier\u2019s present kaleidoscopic proposals are a singular proof that Mr.Gladstone\u2019s judgment is no longer what it was.The strength of the Scotch party is due to Mr, Gladstone\u2019s concessions- CONSUMPTION CURED, An old physician, retired from having had placed in his hands by an Eagt India missionary, the formula of a sinple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Consumption, Bron chitis, Catarrh, Asthma and all throat and Lung Affections, alco a positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility, and all Nervous Complaints, after having tested its wouderful curative powers in thousands of cases, has felt it his duty to make it known to his suffering fellows.Actuated by this motive and a desire to relieve human suftering, I will send free of charge, to all who desire it, this recipe, in German, French or English, with full directions for preparing and using.Sent by mail by addressing with stamp, naming this paper, W, A.Novss, 149 Power's Block, Rochester, ractice \u2014 MARINE INTELLIGENCE.BY THE RIVER AND CANAL.The receipts of the Cuetom House for yesterday were $17,078.91.The schooner Sea Bird with a cargo cf flour left yesterday morning for Quebec.The steamship Ontario of the Dominion / Line arrived at Liverpool yesterday morning.The depth of the water in the ship channel in Lake St.Peter yesterday was 29 ft.6 inches.Steamship Advance left yesterday for Sydney, C.B., where she w:ll load with coal for this port, The Cambridge left this port yesterday loaded with a cargo of deals and bound for South America.Schooner New Z:aland left yesterday morning for Quebec.She brings a cargo of flour ana grain consigned to J.Renaud.The steamship Sarnia of the Dominion Line was signalled yesterday morning st 7.30 at Father Pointand witl probably arrive in port tc-day.The steamehip Polynes:an, of the Allan Line, arrived in port yesterday morning at 10a.m.The captain reports that the ship was detained 6 hours near Cape Race owing to a heavy blizzard, Joseph Duval, laborer, was arrested yesterday afternoon by the harbor police charged with stealing a quantity of tea from the steamer Grafton, He was safely lodged in the cell at the Harbor Police Station, where he will remain till this morning, when he will be brought up before the Police Magistrate.The steamship Vancouver, of the Domi~ nion Live, sailed yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock.À few hours previous to departure eix of her seamen deserted.After hours of diligent search the harbor police found them drunk in a tavern on Commissioners street and immediately brought them back to the Vancouver, where they were elosely watched till the ship sailed.PORT OF MONTREAL.Arrived\u2014Jane 15.Steam:hip Wetherly, 1381, Lewis, Cow Bay, water ballast, J.G.Sidey.Co Steamship Polynesian, 2023, Ritchie, Liverpool, general, H.& A.Allan.Barge Princess, M.T.Co., grain.Barge Kate, Dobell, lumber.Barge Emma, Amiand, cordwood.Barge Virginie, Bertrand, Chrdwood.Barge Union St.Joseph, S¢.Armand, cordwood.Barge Hirondelle, Larame, cordwood, Barge Dalhousie, M.TP.Co., grain.Barge Emery, Cormier, grain, Barge Ireland, Paradis, coal.Barge Negotiant, Charland, grain.Barge Harry, Murphy & Co, lumber.Vessels in Port.STEAMSHIPS, Lake Huron, 2646, H.E.Murray.Polynesian, 2023, H.& A.Alia.Carnbrae, 1167, J.G.Sidey.Ashdene, 733, H.Dobell & Co.Alcidee, 2344, R.Reford & Co.Bonavista, 835, Kingman, Brown & Co.Grafton, 1158 J.Burstall & Co.Trojan, 1970, J.G.Sidey.Grandnolm, 993, Carbray, Routh.Dominion, 2031, D.Torrance & Co.Romeo, 1482, J.G.Sidey.Circassian, 2345, H.& A.Allan, Harold, 672, J, G.Sidey.\u2026 Wetherly, 1381, J.G.Sidey.BARKS, Sofia, 280, Anderson, McKenzie.Aladin, 524, Wulff & Co.Tin, 536, J.Buretall.BRIGS.Salvator, 406, Glenelli.c Moss Rose, 371, Anderson, McKenzie & 0.Aleda, Munderloh & Co.Rosebud, 340, Munderloh & Co.SCHOONER.Jeanotte, 197, D.Shaw.Arrived via Lachine Canal-Jnne 15, Berge Olive, from Ottawa to Montreal : 3 brla potash, H Dobell; 7 cs eggs, Chaput, Fils and co; 1 tub butter ,and 2 cs eggs, G Wait; 4 cs eggs, Thos Gilday; ! cs eggs 8 tubs butter, O Hanna; 978 bxe cheese; Aver and co; 70 bxs cheese, Dominion Line Steamship Co; 66 bxs cheese, J T&F H Warrington; 97 bxs cheese, W A Johnston; 56 boxes cheese, M Hannan; 143 bxs cheese, Hodgson Bros, Barge Gatineau,from Ottawa to Montreal 13 green cow hides, John Price; 62 bxs cheese, D A McPherson; 1 tub butter, Bell Simpson; 5 bxs eggs, Jos Ward; 2 bxs eggs, Jos Dalrymple.Propeller Ocean, from St.Catharines to Montreal \u2014300 brls flour,W T Benson; 500 sacks flour, W T Benson.Barge Siren\u201420,193 bushels wheat, R Haig, .Barge Bismarck\u201416,200 bush corn, J R Esdailes 783 bushels wueat, R D aig.Barge Mona \u20145,900 bushels corn, J R Esdaile; 11,350 bushels wheat, RD Haig.Barge Alice Pacy\u20143,750 bushels corn, J R Esdaile, 12,612 bushels wheat; R D aig.Barge Besuport\u201420,318 J & R Esdaile; Steamship Ivy, from Kingston to Montreal, 35 bxs cheese A A Ayer; 155 do Hodgson Bros; 65 do J Warringtoz; 69 do M Hannan; 3 cs eggs, 82 tabs butter W Donohoe&co; 6 tubs butter J Vaillancourt; 1 do W Lawse; 39 do J Dalrymple; 6 do, 84 ca eggs J Hamilton; 8 tubs, cs eggs Geo Wait; 10 bbs butter, 82 cs eggs Thos Shaw; 22 bxs cheese D McPherson; 1 tub batter Jos Ward; 4 do McLean&C; 3 bbs butter J H Howard; 68 bxs cheese W M Fuller; 84 do Thos Rose; 7 brls oil Montreal Oil Company.Barge Harvest, from Kingston to Montreal, 15500 bu corn Crane & Baird.Barge Toledo, 21650 bu corn Crane & Baird.Barge Chicago, 19700 ba corn order.Barge Maggie, 23552 bu wheat A D Thompson & Co.PORT OF QUEBEC, [SPECIAL REPORT TO THE RERALD,) QUEBEC, June 15, ARRIVED.Steamship Otter, May, Eequimaux Point, À.Fraser & Co., fish, &c.; Schooner D.Cronin, Lemarquand, Anti- costi, Wm.McPherson, wreckage.Schooner Etoile du Matin, Garrat, Pabos, King Bros., lumber.Bark Saltee, Clancy, Cadiz, Price Bros, ballast at Penticost River.Schooner Fleetwing, Blouiu, St.Ann, C.B., for Montreal.Steamehip Gallena, Harper, Boston, via Sydney, for Montreal.Steamehip Eastern Star, Fox, Cow Bay, for Montreal.CLEARED, Ship Premier, Ronneberg, Liverpool, J.S.Murphy & Co.Bark al Visitor, Dahl, Greenock, McArthur Bros.| Quebec SE.Co.Barge Mar:a S:ella, Rivard, Sorel, master.Schooner Kate, Miller, Verret, Stewart Co.NOTES.The brig Henry 18 reported at hand .The steamship Eastern Star will leave for Montreal at 2 a.m.to-morrow.The tug Boston has gore to River des Piairies for a square lumber raft, The tug Florence is reported inward with the bark Skein in tow for Batiscan.The tug Canada arrive] from Nicolet with a saw log raft for G.B.Hall & Co.Steamship Miramichi arrived from Mont- reat at 9.30 a.m and preceeded to Pictou at 2 p.m.; The steamers Spartan and S:.Lawrence are to be put on the Ssguenay route next Week.The tug steamer Auz'esea left for Montreal last night with the schooner Fieetwing in tow.Tuesteamer Gulnare: left this morning to resume surveying cperations in the river below.Bark Gunhild arrived from Three Rivers at 10 pm.in tow of tuz Victor aad anchored.The bark Lake Leman arrived from Moutreal at 10 p.m.in tow of tug Margaret and anchored.The ship Kate C.Maguire will dock on Saturday, working night and day discharging cargo.The steamship - Ashdell, trom Barrow, with rails for the Lake St.John Railway is out sixteen days.The tug Champion is at hand with a loaded bark in tow, reported to be the Carl Hasted, for Montreal.Toe crew of the ship Kate C.Maguire were taken into custody to-day for refusal of duty when the vessel was at Sheet Harbor.The steamer Riva! was docked thi® morning to bave her hall inspected.The vessel is also being furnished with new cabins.The steamships Cacouna and Gallena both proceeded for Montreal at 4 p.w.The latter vessel takes a return cargo of cattle and grain.The tug steamer L.N.G.has been chartered for the season by Mr.Davis, who is building a bridge for the Canadian Pacific at St.Ann\u2019s Rapids.The schooner D.C.Cronin, which arrived to-day, has a cargo of goods and material from the wrecked steamship Brooklyn.They will be attached for salvage.Pilot Brown, who was in charge of the eteamship Aviona when she went ashore ou St.Valliere shoals, was to-day suspended for four months and coudemned in costa of trial.INLAND NAVIGATION.Port CoLBorxE, Ost., June 15.-~Passed up\u2014Schooner G.M.Case, Charlotte to CLicago, coal ; Nevada, Charlotte to Chi- cag), coal ; Gleniffer, Kingston to Toledo, lgnt; M.Stalker, Oswego to Tol-do, light, eneral ; Franz Sigel, Oswego to Toledo, ight; T.H.Howlaad, Sodus Point to Chicago, coal ; F'ellowcraft, Kingston to Port Burwell, light; H.Dadley, Kingston to Toledo, light ; Rival, Oswego to Detroit, light ; Halsted, Sodus to Chicago, coal ; Flora Carveth, Kingston to Cleveland, light; Erie Belle, Hamilton to Ashtabula, light ; steam barge Lincoln and consort, Kingston to Toledo, light ; Erin and consort, Kingston to Toledo, light.Down\u2014Schooner F.D.Barker, Toledo to Kingston, corn; J.G.Worts, Marquette to Kingston, timber ; N, C.West, Uleveland to Murray Bay, coal ; steamer Metamora and coasorts, Marquette to Kingston, timber ; propsllor Pacific, Chicago and Milwaukee to Ogdensburg, general cargo.Cieared\u2014Tug W.A.Moore, for Lake Michigan with the schooners E.À.Vickery, E.M.Ellsworth, Tnos.Howland, American, Unioa, Nevada and Monticello ln tow.Arrived\u2014Tug Castle, she will leave this evening with the schooners Halsted, G.M.Case, T.B.Uardaer and City of Green- ay.Wind southwest, light ; weather clear and warm, Marinelets.The Allan steamship Manitoban, from Glasgow, passed Fox River at 8.10 am.on Tuesday.; The Red Star Line steamship Belgenland sailed from New York for Antwerp with 110 passengers.The North German Lloyd steamship Fulda sailed from Nsw York for Bremen with over 250 saloon passengera.The North German Lloyd steamship Elbe, from New York for Bremen, sailed June 9th with 260 saloon passeagers., The Allan \u2018steamship Austrian, from Glasgow for Philadelphia, passed the Capes of the Delaware at 3.30 p.m.on Tuesday.The North German Lloyd steamship Elbe, from Bremen for New York, hus arrived with 50 ealooa and 350 steerage passengers.Tne North Garmaa Lioyd steamship Ems, from Bremen for New York, has arrived with 90 sa:oon and 500 steerage passengere.The Beaver Line steamshio Lake Winnipeg, from Montreal on the 3rd inst.with a thipment of 462 head of cattle, arrived at Liverpool Tuesday, the 15th, with the loss of one head.Tue Dominion Lice steamship Ontario, from Montreal June 3rd with 342 cattle, ariived at Avonmouta Dock to-day, and landed all her live stock 1n good condition without a loss, FATHER Poisr, June 156.\u2014Steamship Sarnia, of the Dominion Line, from Liverpool, arrived inward at 11.10 p.m.with 13 cabin, 13 intermediate and 164 steerage passengers, The Donaldson Line steamship Colina, hence on the 3rd inst., arrived at Glasgow on the 15th inst., and landed her entire shipment of live stock (369 cattle) in good condition, with the exception of one head, which died on the paseage, 0 An Editors Friend.New CasTLE, Pa., March 27, 1885.\u2014I bad a painful affection of the liver, and let it alone, until it got a firm hold of me, Taok seven or eight bottles of Warner's safe cure, and am perfectly well, without pain\u2014PF, J.MezaNer, Editor Clarion, \u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014 If you once try Carter\u2019s Little Liver Pills for sick headache, biliousness or constipation you will never be without them.They are purely vegetable; Smalr and easy Lo take, all druggiets sell them.trs 131 2 TRADE AND COMMERCE, BANK DIVIDENDS\u2014IEME(-ANNUAL Books Booker À : sy PL Payable Close Open.d Armes, report this morning\u2019s Wall street Qommers, , 34 2Ju:iy.1TJune.24uly.gossip as follows :\u2014 - Townships 2July.15 pp y.London arbitrageurs bought stock late MISCELLANEOUS\u2014QUAR ws B * a yesterday in the anticipation of a higher Books O0: 3 P C.Payable.Close.Open.market in Europe to-day.The Hoffman Mont.Tel.2 2July.14 June, 2July ANNUAL MEETIXGS\u2014BANKS.Lesosne cart enn08 18 June 12m.- \u2026\u2026\u2026 18 June 12m.18 June 12 mn.vireo.186 June 1pm co 16 June 12 m.FR ace 18 July 12m.FINANCIAL.Tae Horaup OFFICE, Tuesday evaning, June 15, 1866, The Montreal Stock Market, The stock market was generally dul to-day, and transactions were for the most part at fractionally lower prices.Bank stocks were inactive, only a few Oae share of Montreal sold at 208, 40 Ontario at 1154 1 Molsons at 130, 25 Merchauts at 123 and 30 Commercs at 123 for 5 shares and 122% for 25.The total transactions in bank stocks wers ouly 97 shares.The transactions in miscellaneous stocks were confined to Western Uaion Telegraph, City Passenger, Canadiana Pacific and Richelieu.500 shares of C:ty Passenger sold at 160, Western Uaion sold at 61% in the forenoon and 62} in the afternoon, Canadian Pacific at 65 and 65% and Richelieu Thera were no transactions in small lots cManging hands.at 734.bonds.The total transactions in miscellaneous The aggregate of to-day\u2019s sales was 1,347 shares, as fol- stocks were 1,250 shares.lows: MORNING BOARD, 40 Ontario At.1 Molsons at.\u2026\u2026\u2026\u2026.\u2026.sasrs0ovu.130 [ger stock for Chicago account, neverthe- 300 W.U.Tel.at.\u2026.\u2026.GLÉ less they said the market was too firmly 400 City Pass.at.ouo0s cree 162 held, and the demand for stock too great.300 Cao.P ac.Bree Porn 654 The following were the fluctuations in AFTERNOON BOARD.prices and the sales made in New York 1 Montreal at.\u2026.208 Tuesday, 15th June, as specially re- 25 Merchants at.123 |ported for Tux HERALD by Macdougall 5 Commerce 8l.ceovereve sone 123 25 do At.0c0soonsccs000s 200 W.U.Tei.at.50 City Pass.at.\u2026\u2026\u20260.160 c+scoeceu0ss 00 1154 ce vacoucun 624 THE 4, Missouri Pacific §, West Shore bonds §, Canadian Pacific §.Unchanged-\u2014Lake Shore, Ohio & Miss, Central Pacific.Messrs.Frank Bond & Co., 14 Place] : following are bullish and say thers is a better demand abroad for Ameriean properties than for any other class of securities.The foreigners believe that the period of depression in trade and the labor - troubles have passed and that within the next year or two the United States will recover the business status which has been the chief character since 1882.The room traders who have not sold out their stocks were talking higher prices for the entire list last p.m., but the bear element claimed to have detected some very good selling 1|of St.Paul, North-Western and Lake Shore which continued the day through, and which caused Kinkner, Wadsworth & Raymond traders, to increase their own lines of shorts.Mr.Cammack continues to talk bearish, but his operations on the short side of the market are very limited.'{He sold some Western Union and put out a few thousand Union Pacific and Lake Shore, but the people most closely identified with him say he will probably take these stocks back unless the market shows better evidences of decline.The shorts in Telegraph ran the prices up to 624 and the specialists thought the Gould party was inelined to 811 this stock around 62} and 62.The demand for stock was so good that an offer to sell 5,000 shares was quickly taken, and the next block fetched 62%.lhe rise 1n Erie was partly due te manipulation which was assisted by a report that the earnings for the first week in June had increased about $30,000, Messrs, Fellows, Davis & Co.were considerable buyers of this stock, and it was reported that in the recently formed pool to bull bonds Mr.8, V.White,was prominently represented, Commission people were advising their customers that there was evidently a great deal of selling of Gran- Brothers, stock brokers, St.Francois Xavier street :\u2014 S899 21% 8 25 Richelieu at.Lécssencu nus 734 23% dE E .; \u201cl= F1 518 The following are the closing quotations STOCKS, Ela Ri: of the stock markat as especially reported se: |: |: | : for Tae HeraLp by D.Lorn MacDougall West Union.Si 62 | elf a, 4200 & Co., Stock Brokers, 11 Hospital street: [Lake Shore \u2018| 55°] sr ai oh 2100 Eris.1 2831 28 28% 11600 S125) of oF Erie bas 954 =} 9 | 9 + 1100 BE 42%/ 5 8494 Erlepret.waeel 83 1634 634 63F.£2 2° 5 53 52 |Obio& Miss Jag.lL 2tE 500 STOCKS.38 17g FR TR |*North-West.\u2026.1124112 112/1124 15000 To [Bem i & |: TP *North-West pret Joos 1413 LLL ddl LLL ; \"5 tn StoPaul.«| 923 92) 924 934 33200 Bank of Montreai.\u2026.$200 2 p.C.| 2073) 207; Sh paul.A : sree 1224 Se: Ontario Bank.| 1015 pro 16 1158 IN.J.Centrai.\u2026.:1.u.2] 854 55 65}.7000 Bank B.N An & 2 Plant ani N.Y.Central.068 vil 10441014 2:03 Banque \u2018a uple 19 0 |A pe Lei, Laek & West .\u2026.\u2026!130ÿ 1804 1344 1804 23800 Molsous Bank.180 |4 poo.Del.& Hudson.| 954, 88}; 98 | 98} 700 Bank of Toronto.3 Roek Island 124] 11251 200 Bank Jacques Cartier,| £513 p.C.ill, Central.SEE sg Merchants Bank.| 100 Sipe.Chilo & Q 184 1343 134] 1854.1900 Bank d\u2019Hochelaga.,| 190 $ Fe Wabash .© 100 East'n Township B'k\u2019| 80 HB.Wabash proto 20 Quebec Bank .60 [1 pe.Union Pacifc.\u2026.| 534 534 525 6834.6100 Banque Nationale | 30 |à pe.Reading.| 244 24 | 23E 24 2200 Union Bank.50 134D,C.Kansas & Texas.| 25 28% 29 | 29 14400 Can.Bk of Commercel 2 5pe.Canada South.,.| 434; 481 43F 485 Dominion Bank .100 [4 poor\u201d St.Paul & Omaha.47} 474, 471 48% 9600 Bank of Hamilton 100 [3tp.c.l; st Paul & Omaha prof.Lif LIZ LL LL | 2000 C.ivnnan sipicl nver to sescsuouj sens I fasse 00007 Standard Bank \"| © (ba: Northern Pac.sons] 571 a oi sh 100 Federal Bank.| 190 [4 pe.Northern Pac.pref.| 59 | 68 : 8990 Imperial Bank.Untario & West.18% 18%.0 183 100 MISCELLANEOUS.Ohio Cent .e0 hee Intercolonial Coal Co.| 10 |.» 20 14 |Erio& Western evens O DONdS.0.100 0it +cfrunner I 2 slags Montreal Telerph Col \u2018\u20184)'|4 p.c.| 124 123} Louisville & Nas 381 38% 38 Doms.Telegraph Co.| 50 3PC-| 62H @& CCC.L.sal Yestern Union Tel Co] 100 pc.cera Eexas Pacigc\u2026 118 1 Rich.& Ont.Nay.Ce.) 10 a ere) 1604| 160$ Missouri Pac.109 109] 109$ 109 g Xv, = 1 Montreal Gus Co .40 {6 pc 1854 15 Su baul, M, \u20ac M crojenseisess New Engld Paper CG 19 iene, Oregon TTANS.vy esses EEE 14700 Canada Paper Co.\u2026| 100 |5 P.0.|.2.130 West Shore new bonds.1044 1043 104 1044.8:00 Canada Shipping Co.{ 14 2ip.c.874 45} Canada Pac.654 65 654) 664 500 Dundas Cetton Co.Exchange .; Mont Loan& Mort'gCo MOner.\u2026.sa.\u2026s10.00 ont Lives &Bidg Ce Exchange.ÿ an.Ins.Co., .gotresl Cotton Co.There was a better demand for sterling Eochelaga Cotton Co.to-day, and the market was strong 0atlcoo.otion Lo.3 Merchants Mant.Co.at yesterday\u2019s quotations.New York Bell Telephone Go.funds were 1-16 discount to par between Le 0.0 + hs : .Accident Ins C.of N.A | \u201c5 banks and § to } premium over the Canada Conti y Bug.ue 114 \u201cue counter; sixties were 9% /@ 94 between .Pau .R'y.100 |3ip.C |.bank .- Dominion Catile CO.-|.nn sl-rnsaohrvanerlouense ks, and 93 over the counter; de Canadian Pacific RB.ao fp.c.| 653 65; mand drafts were 9F@10 between banks nt.7p ¢.Stock.0 |.Lescojresces Canad» N W Land Col£5stg|.\u201cès éd 7ia 9à and 104 over the counter; and cables Gon.Posie LGB.EE lor | 108 were 104 over the counter.Cattle bills Ex dividend.The New York Stock Market.Prices at the opening this morning were with a few exceptions fractionally lower and the market was inclined to weakness, but after the first hour a better feeling was displayed and prices became firm and then advanced.The highest prices of the day were reached shortly before the close, after which a fmall frac- The market closed from # to 1 per cent.higher than at the opening, with Enie, Erie 2nds, tional deocline took place.Lackawanna, St.Paul & Omaha pre ferred, and Missouri Pacific from § to § lower than at the opening.Pacific Mail Erie preferred, Delaware & Hudson, Reading, Texas Pacific and West Shore bonds closed at the opening figures.The market was not active, the total transactions as reported by telegraph, be ing 178,900 shares, The net advances to-day were Weatern North Jersey Central 3, New York Central §, C.B.& Quincy , Union Pacific §, Kansas & Texas $, Canada Southern }, St.Paul & Omaha 3, Northern Pacific §, do.pref.1, Louisville & Nashville 3, 0.C.C, & L §, Ore- Union 3}, Lake West I, St.Shore 3, Paal A gon Trans §, Can, Pacific ÿ.The net declines were Erie §, Erie 2nds 4, Del.Lack.& West 1, St.Pagal & Omaha pref.}, Missouri Pacific §.To-day\u2019s closing prices compared with those of yesterday show the following ehanges :\u2014 Advanced\u2014Pacific Mail §, Erie pref.§, North-West §, St.Paul 4, Jersey Central 4, New York Central }, Rock Island §, C., B.& Quiney à, Kansas & Texas §, Canada Southern §, St.Paul & Omaha 3, Northern Pacific {, ido.pref, §, Ont, & Western §, Louisville & Nashville }, C C., C.& L 4, Oregon Trans.§.Declined\u2014Western Union #, Erie À, Erie Znds 1, Del.Lack.& Weat §, Del, & Hudson }, Union Pacific §, Reading i, St, Paul & Omaha pref, }, Central Pacific are at 91@9% for guaranteed drafts.In New York the posted rates for sterling were unchanged at 4.88 for sixties and 4.90 for demand drafts.The r:tes for actual business were 4.87 for sixties, 4.883@4.89 for demand drafts aud 4.89% for cables.Commercial bills were 4.85}@4 85%.Continental bills were quoted as follows, viz.: Franes 5174@5184 and 515§ @516}, reichamarks 955@95{ and 952@ 95%, guilders 401/@40$ and 401 @40f, Reported specially for THE HERALD by Brais & Jackson, stock, grain, and foreign exchange brokers, 10 Exchange Court :\u2014 In NewYork Patd Actual.\u2014\u2014In_ Montreal\u2014 Junels.Bet B\u2019ks, Counter.N.Y.Funds'|-16 dis@pr Jai 4.88 4.57 @ (Sig.60 d\u2019ys.9§ à 4.90 (130708 Do.Sonya 2 @ 10° lot eres 4.5912 |Do.cables .|.104 Financial Notes.-} There is no.change in loanable funds and rates of interest and discount rule unchanged.Call loans on stocks are 31@4 per cent., and discounts of good commercial paper are 6 to 7 per cent, Money on call at the New York Stock Exchange to-day was 2,24 and 2 per cent, closing at 2 per cent, The rate of discount at the Bank of England is 24 per œnt.The open market rate for money in London to-day was again unchanged a: 1} percent, The following are the quotations cabled to-day from London, 12,30 p.m.\u2014Consols, 101 1-16 for money and the account; United States 3 per cent.bonds, 1133; Erie, 29}; Canadian Pacific, 67; New York Central, 1062; Illinois Central, 141%, London, & p.m.\u2014Consols, 101 1-16 for money and 101} for the account; Erie, 29%; Canadian Pacific, 67}; New York ., Central, 1064.Cable quotations from Paris for3 per cent.renfes were as follows ;\u201412,30 p.m.\u201483£.150; 1.30 p.m.\u201483f, 25¢; 4 p.m,\u2014 83f.40c.The transactions in Canadian Pacific at 00 the quantities would be still larger if the MS3NTREAL HERALD AND the New York Stock Exchange to-day were 500 shares at 65 and 655.The closing quotations to Messrs.Brais & Jackson ware 65} asked, 65} bid.The closing quotations for St.Paul & Manitoba were 116} asked, 115% bid.PRODUCE AAD PROVISIONS.MoxTREAL, June 15th, 1886.Breadstufhe.FrLoun\u2014There is more business doing at lower pricas and quotations of some grades)are reduced.The sales reported on Change this morning were 200 barrels superior extra at $3.90, 125 extra at §3.75, 115 fancy at $3 523.The sales reported to the HERALD were 1,000 sacks Canadian strong bakers\u2019 for export on p.t., 652 barrels Manitoba strong bakers\u2019 at $4.50, 400 do.do., on p.t.We quote :\u2014 Extra Superfice.3 Fancy .oeeve covers corasas 3 Spring EXtrA.\u202600+0000000.3 Super UG.0000 +s0o00 0000 0 Strong Bakere\u2019, Manitoba.0 Strong Bakers\u2019 [Canadian].0 Strong Bakers\u2019 [American].4.0 0 0 1 1 1 Fin0.o\u2026voue sa00csoucce Middlings.\u2026.\u2026\u2026\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.Pollard8.++.\u2026.veovoce.Ontario bags [medium] b.i.\u201c sé [spring extra] s \u201c [superfive] .I.City bags [delivered].\u2026\u2026\u2026.3.OATMRBAL\u2014Quotations are :\u2014 ODIO - © Granulated, per bbl.$4.50 @$4.70 \u201c bags.eo 2.20 @ 240 Ordinary, per bbl.coee 420 @ 4.40 se bags.2.05 @ 2.15 CornMRAL-\u2014Quotations are :\u2014 White, per bbl.$0 00 @$2.75 \u2018 & «00 seeess 0.00 @ 1.30 Yellow, per bbl.0.00 @ 2.65 \u201c DAZ.0.00 @ 1.25 Wasar\u2014The market continues dull with quotations unchanged, We quote : Canada white winter, No.2, 83c@84c ; Canada red winter, No.2, 83c@84c ; Canada spring, No.2, 83c@84.Coarse Grains\u2014There is a small movement at quotations.We quote: Corn, 4b6jc @ 466 in bond, and 58c@60e duty paid, per buskel of 56 lbs, ; pese, 69e@70c per bushel of 66 lbs.; oats, 33c @ 34c per bushel of 34 lbé.; barley, 45c/©58c, according to quality, per bushel of 48 l1ba.; rye, 50c@60e per bushel of 56 1ba, Mare, \u2014 Quotations are :\u2014 Western 70c/@80¢c, and Montreal at 85c@90c per bushel of 36 lbs.in bond, according to quality.Mins Feep\u2014Bran and shorts are rather firmer, the demand being in excess of the supp.y owing to present low prices, We quote: Bran, $11 ; shorts, $12 ; provender $23.British Breadstuffs and Provisious Markeis.Yesterday's Mark Lane Express in its weekly review of the British grain trade says: Grateful showers have helped vegetation.All crops are remarkably backward, and a late harvest is inevitable.\u2018Wheat is weakening.Flour is dull and cheaper.The trade in foreign wheat is of the merest retail character.Foreign flour is lower.American spot flour is 1s cheaper.There were eight arrivals and two sales, Five cargoes were withdrawn and one (California) remained.Trade forward is lifeless.New crop California wheat is offered at 34s, with no takers, There will be no market Monday.The latest advices from India are to the effect that large arrivals of wheat are being recived at the shipping ports, and railways were equal to the demand on their traffic.In answer to the request of the farmers of Holland for an import duty on corn, the Government has declared that such a measure would be detrimental to the general welfare and to agriculture itself, Mr, Russel L.Engs, firm of Engs & Walker, who arrived at New York on Sunday on the Etruria from Liverpool, expresses the opinion that there is but little prospect of any immediate improvement in the foreign wheat markets owing to present and prospective liberal supplies, ; Harris Brothers & Co, London, in their grain circular June 3, state that it is difficult to see what can raise the price of wheat to any extent except bad weather in more than one great centre of production, Flour is more depressed on the whole than wheat, and home millers continue to complain of fbreign competition ; anyhow, sales are being pressed at lower rates, and our market at present is crammed full of nice American flour, which pleases comsumers well.The following are Beerbohm\u2019s cable ad- vices to-day :-Cargoes off coast, wheat, slow ; corn, nothing offering.Cargoes on passage and for shipment :3Wheat, glow ; corn, quiet; farmers\u2019 deliveries of wheat during the week 40,000 to 45,000 qrs.Liverpool: Wheat, spot, quiet, but steady; do, corn, weaker; do.mixed maize, 43s 5d; do.Canadian peas, 5s 5d; weatherin England, cool for time of year.Liverpool, 3.30 p.m.\u2014Prime western lard, 32s 3d.Press Association cables the receipts of wheat at iv- erpool for the past three days at 62,000 centals, of which 56,000 centals were American, The receipts of corn for the same timpe were 4,200 centals, The weather was fair.Wheat in the Liverpool markets was quiet, the demand being poor with few offerings.Corn was quiet with a poor demand.Red wia\u2018er wheat was quoted 1d higher, Other quotations for grain were unchanged, Quoo- tations from the provisiors market were 3d higher for lard and unchanged for other provisions.June 12, 11.30 p.m, Junels, 113) p.m 8.d 8 d.a d sd report Spring whèst.\u2026.6 8@ 611 6 80 610 Red winter.,.6 9~ 6100 6 9~ 70 No.1 California.6 8\u2014 61i| 6 8 = 611 No, 2California : 00-00 09-00 _ >\u2026 45-00 45\u2014 00 Is Ug 55-04 82 0 082 6-0 2 8 00432 83-00 29 29 5/29 9-2 9 5 86-00 6-00 Chicago Visible Supply of Grain.Wheat, bush.0.32,458 631 Corn, bushivees saree vers 9,387,290 Oats, bush .oveee vores eerane 3,595,298 Rye, buëh.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.304,328 Barley, bu8h.\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026\u2026.\u2026.244,476 New York Visible Supply of Grain.Wheat, bush.e.vases 32,424,186 Corn, bush.+.9,386,886 Oats, bush.0o0osss 3,596,881 Rye, bush.304,650 Barley, bush.0.0.245,227 Chicago Markets.\u2018To-day\u2019s latest cash prices for grain and provisions in the Chicago markets were as follows :\u2014Wheat, 7230; corn, 34jc; DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZET1E, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16 oats, 27ic; pork, $8.75; lard, short ribe, $5.45.$6.00 ; compared with those of Messrs, A.Geddes & Co., Chicago, representatives of Messrs.MacDougall Broe., of this city, brokers and members of the Chicago Board of Trade, telegraph as fol- and provision markets as follows :\u2014 CHICAGO, June 15, 1836.CANAL RECEIPIS.The following is a etatement of re- Ca104G0, June 15.To-day\u2019s c'osing option quotations )ceipts and shipments for the Lachine esterday and Canal for the half week ending June l5.h, hose on June lat were as follows :\u2014 1886 :\u2014 June Yester- ro 2 RECRIPTS, 1.: 7.Wheat, bush 37,850 July wheat .7 7 71 , tetetiettsreta senses , August wheat \u2026 ja 75 741 Corn, bush.14,318 September wheat.76 TôF T54 p Peas,bush.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.vo 31,877 2 = Oata, bush.7,600 September corn.#8 5 8: | Flour, Brl8.eee soonsennonnens ve 650 Ju gosta 0.æ 3 7 Cornmeal, bris.126 uf \u201c fais pork.88 8 80 8 65 Butter, kega.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.ecuse 82 August pork.= a 3» 875 Shen BES gus crnncncenna cernes set September pork.8 52 venu s0c000 ass 00 000 36 Try 18.chron one 588 sly sun ork, bbls 60.August lard.600 + sl SHIPMENTS.Sept ber lard.87 July Tits ees 5 so 6 47} 8 45 Flour, brle.\u2026.\u2026ovscccvesose 913 August ribs.58 5 50 6 47} Pork, bDI8.0.00sons000 000004 80 September ribs.\u2026.53 $55 581 Corn, busii.eeeese PE ru 800 MUVEMENTS OF GRAIN AND PRODUCE.lows respecting to-d 1y\u2019s markets :\u2014 Recerpts.Shipments, Curcaco, Ill, June 15.-\u2014The oppres- Flour, bris.,.12,246 5,162 sively hot weather with indications of Wheat, bush., he 2 9,253 rain gave our wheat market a heavy de- .332.0 0 244,000 pressed tone.Late in the day we received Dats, bush, revere 0 000 Saat a cable quoting Liverpool firm with con- g¥% we NES 2000 4000 sumptive demand improving, end 1d Pork UBR «crocs \u2019 \"664 higher on Indian and white wheats, while jard._ 110 338.790 1.177.187 red was a shade lower.There is a better Cutmeate_\u2026 .\u2026.287,100 3.078849 export demand reported in New York M ee \u201c5 see 15 , Rta and Duluth, but nothing is taken here, ILWATKEE, June 10.i and our market closed atthe bottom Flour, brie.19,492 2,485 prices of the day.The \u201cbears\u201d still seem Wheat, bush.48,360 465 to have the best of it, though the short Corn, bush.1,920 \u2026\u2026.side looks most dangerous to us.Pro- Oats, bush.9,000 0 visions are easier.Pork declined 20c parler, bush.«L180 2,300 and lard 74c.The local bears are taking 7°» DUBR.00000002 vence 480 courage to sell again on the weakness iu Tozepo, June 15.whea: and the hot weather, Corn is Wheat, bush.4,702 21,414 rather lower and weak.Corn, bash.76,800 500 A.Geppes & Co.Oats, bushleeee cove waren 4,500 E.McLellan, 22 St.John street (West- DETROIT, June 15.ern Chambers), reports the Chicagu grain Wheat, bush.\u2026.5,940 978 SEABOARD POINTS, New York, June 15.5 2 than yesterday\u2019s.were 6,600, The market was steady.Grain Option Markets.prices :\u2014 New York, 3.38 asked August, 31c nominal September.73%c July, 75,c August, bid September.29¢ cash, 27c August.August, 794c September.Provisions.Do.Canadian.00.083@ 0000 Haws, uncovered, per 1b.00.114@ 00.12 Hams, canvased, per lb.00.12 @ 00.13 Hams, picnic.00.094@ 00.10 Bacon, per 1b.00.10#@ 00.11 Shoulders, per Ib.00.08 @ 00.09 Tallow, per Ib.00.06 @ 60.05 Patry Preducts mand which absorbs only a proportion o the receipts, English markets precludes any exp-:rt de Townships, 14e @ 15¢; CHEESE\u2014To-day\u2019s cable from Liver export orders in the market, but buyer are offering to sell their holdings.market to-day was weak and 6ic®7c wa were asking Tic.cording to quality.Liverpool Butter and Cheese Markets.in their provision market report, 5th Juue, 1886, say: \u2014 BUITER\u2014 There is nothin, the way of American and at 40s to 503 per cwt.Crerse\u2014H.tion.Finest ol of new cheese have met with a stead this week.Eggs to-day and the market was firmer, quote llc@llie vance, to-day at $5.25 per 100 lbs, and No.tares; no transactions in seconds; No.lbs, | -To-day\u2019s prices were 5o@l5c higher CATTLE\u2014To-day\u2019s receipts of cattle The following were to-day\u2019s closing p.m.\u2014Wheat, 83}c asked June, 83fc asked July, 83jc asked August, 84ÿc September, 85ÿe nominal October, 86$c nominal November, 87$c nominal December,88{c nominal January, 89%c nominal February, 82}c asked May.Corn, 44tc bid July, 456)c %id August, 46c September, 463c nominal October, Oats, 338c June, 3350 asked July, 31%c Milwaukee, 2,30 p.m.\u2014Wheat, lose, Toledo, 2.15 p.m.\u2014Wheat, 773c@80c cash, 77%c July, 78}c asked August, 79¢ Corn unehanged.Oats, Detroit\u2014Wheat, No.1 white, 804c cash; Michigan red, 794c cash; No, 2 red, 79c nominal 784c bid July, 784c bid The demand for hog products to-day was slow and the aggregate of sales was small, Values are steady and do not undergo any change; We quote :\u2014 India mess beef, per tcs.$20.00 @ 22.00 Mess beef, bbls.12.00 @ 00.00 Montreal, 8.C.pork.13.00 @ 13.75 Western S.C.C, do.13.00 @ 13.75 Western Mess do., new.1260 @ 13.25 Lard, Fairbanks\u2019, perlb.00.083@ 00 09 BurTER \u2014There is a moderate looal de- The low price prevailing in mand and the market here is slow and easy at unchanged quotations, We quote :\u2014 Western, 9c @ 13c ; Eastern Mornsbarg and Brockville, 13c@15c; Greamery, 15e@16c, pool is again unchanged at 40s 6d per cwt.Business in this market is consequently dull, although thers are a number of will not pay holders, aad some exporters \u2018he the top price for finest, while holders We quote 5c@7e, ac- Messrs.Hodgson Brothers, Liver ol ated in stock in anadian butter to quote upon, excepting some small lots of etale, which is nominally quoted olders have been willing to concede about 1s on finest* old cheese, the demand being steady at the reduc- i white and colored sell at 423 to 433 per cwt, The small arrivals demand at 42s to 43s for white and 41s to 423 for colored.There is little or no medium and low-priced cheeses offering The market continues firm at the ad- Sales of No, 1 pearls were made earls at $4.25, We quote:\u2014No.1 pots, $3.35@93.40 per 100 lbs, according to pearls, 95.25; No.2 pearls, $4.25 per 100 2 a Receipts.Exports.[HR i & Flour, bris.15,767 3,565 ë 2 & Flour, sacks.cove \u2026.0e0 200 : : Wheat, ousb.357,600 24,083 à Corn, bush.34100 75,835 WHEAT\u2014 07 Oats, bush .\u2026.136,750 949 0 5) Cornmeal, bris.1,460 818 07: Cornmal, sacks., 2,485 e\u2026.084$ Maltbrls.\u2026.12,350 roc.354 Rye, bush.8,300 PAPER 0 36¢ Barley, busa.eevee aves 0 Pork.ceeseeescens 943 167 0271, Béef.000 0000000 463 a.0 26: Cutmeats.\u2026\u2026\u2026.4,069 .\u2026 ul 865 Lard, bris.3,423 73,960 July.8 80 880 86 8 65 Whiskey.vevaseses cesses os AUR train from Montreal, at 7 a.m., for Ottawa very small cottage might answer.Address MARKET LINE.office, 48 and locality, MF.Herald! Steamer PRINCESS for St.Andrews and - Carillon, &c., from Canal Basin WEDNESDAYS, 6a.m.Houses to Let Steamer DAGMAR for Rigaud Village, on WEDNESDAYS, 6 street, and Windsor : Hotel.SUMMER ARRANGE ENT, 1836, MONTREAL AND QUEBEC, on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, an on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, at 7 o'clock p.m.from Montreal.For Port Arthur, Manitoba, and the North-West.Oneofthe magnificent Clyde-built steamship Alberta and Athabasca is intended to leave Owen Sound at 4 vm.every WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY on arrival ofthe Canadian Pacific Fast Express Train from the East, leaving Toronto at 10.45 8.m., and will run direct for Port Arthur [calling at Sault Ste.Marie, Mich, on ih where they make close connections with the Through Solid Trains of the Canadian Pacific Railway for WINNIPEG and all points in the Canadian North-West.Sleeping Car accommodation can be secured on board the steamers.Shortest Route.Lowest rates.uickest time.Through Bills of Lading.No Customs troubles.No Overchargirg by this line.These magnificent steam-hips were bul't ex- pressely for this route and trade, and are the staunchest, fastert, and best equipped and farnished on the lakes, and are LIGHTED BY ELECTRICITY.Tickets, rates, and all information can be had from any agent of the Canadian Pacific.See that the tickets read via Owen Sound.W.C.VAS HORNE, Vice-President C.P.R., Montreal.HENRY BEATTY, Manager Steamship Lines 105 and Lake Traffic, C.P.R\u2019y, Toronto.QUEBEC STEAMISAIP CO THE S.S.MIRAMICHI, CAPT.A.BAQUET, Will sall from Montreal.on MONDAY, 28th JUNE, for PICTOU.calling at FATHER POINT, GASPE, PERCE, SUMMERSIDE and CHARLOTTETOWN.N.B.\u2014Port of destination in full must be plainly marked on ali goods.Initials are not sufficient.Goods will not be received after three o\u2019clock on the afternoon of day of sail- i ng.Has excellent accommodation for vassen- gers.For Freight or Passage, apply to DAVID SHAW, Agent, Commissioners Street, Montreal ; A.B.CHAFFEE, JR., Ticket Agent, 202 Bt.James street.Arthur Ahern, Secretary, Quehec ; 8.Veit, Gaspe; Valpy & Le Bas, Perce: J.Schcoman, Summerside; Carvell Bros., Charlottetown, or C.Dwyer, Pictou.June 15 n OTTAWA RIVER NAVIGATION CO.From May 18th until further notice steamers of this Line will run as follows: FOR OTTAWA, Steamer will leave Lachine, on arrival of and intermediate ports, Mondays, Tuesdays, Fridays and Saturdays.SHOOT THE RAPIDS on above mentioned days.Take 5 pm, train for Lachine.Fare 50e.The usual excursions to Carillon, &e., on these days.a.m.and on SATÜR- DAYS for St.Andrew\u2019s and Carillon.Tickets at Grand Trunk offices, 164 St.James W.Q§EPHERD, Jr, Manager.May 18 106 Richelieu & Ontario Navigation Co, \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 The Steamers of this Company between Will commence running regulsgly on 2th APRIL, as under po The steamer QUEBEC, Capt.R.NELSON The steamer MONTR «AL, Capt.L.H.ROY.STEAMERS BETWEEN 1474 St.Catherine street.etc.street.\\0-LET\u2014T wo nice, large, nice wardrobes, comfortably furnished, in a private family, no children, cautifully situated, at 148 135 O LET, furnished and unfurnished apa t- ments, with or without board.Apply airy rooms, with as, bath, rallways from the West and Northwest, and nguinot with Steamers or Niagara Falls, Buffalo, &e., MONTREAL AND TORONTO now run daily (Sundays excepted) from the Canal Basin at 9 a.m., and Lachine on the arrival of the train leaving Bonaventure Station at noon, and at Coteau Landing by the 5 o'clock train from here, tor Prescott, Kingston and Toronto, connecting there with 111 Union Avenue.and St.James Club.Address X., Herald office, Beaver Hall.ROOMS Large double front room, bath room flat, suitable for young married couple or two gentlemen.Terms moderate.m ELL FURNISHED ROUMS TO LeT (for gentlemen) in a charming locality facing the Mountain, in view ot the Wi, dsor Hotel References exchanged.m 138 TS LET, fine large furnished front room ; b.and W.c.Apply 126 St.George street.ROS Furnished bedrooms, with or without sitting room, tor gentlemen, 11 m passing by daylight THE THOUSAND ISLANDS; calling at Alexandria Bay, Thousand Islands Park, Round Island and Clayton, both up and down trip.STEAMERS BETWEEN QUEBEC AND SAGUENAY.The steamer UNION, Capt.LECOURS, will commence to run on the 4th May, leaving Quebec at 7.30 a.m.on Tuesdays and Fridays, for Bay St.Paul, Eboulemenis, Murray Bay Riviere du Loup, Tadousac, Ha Ha Bay and Chicoutimi.- Two LARGE BEDROOMS, to two gentlemen or married couvle, with or without board, in a private family on St.Catherine street West, near Guy.No other boarders kept.References required.Address w., The steamers 8ST.LAWRENCE and SPARTAN will commence their dally trips on 23rd June.Steamer BOHEMIAN, Capt.BAKER, will leave for Co:nwall and intermediate ports Herald office.\u2018pe LET\u2014 Large stree m 137 T° LET\u2014Comfortably furnished front rooms.22 McGill College Avenue.138 well furnished Bedroom.Apply at 87 Union Avenue, 138 NO LET.\u2014Fuiniched rooms at 84 Cathcart 1 M0 LET\u2014_New Detached repair.32 Durocher si conveniences, street.office.House, in $horough mi treet.RUoMs\u2014Two nicely furnished rooms, suitable for gentlemen, with all modern and in a higoly respectable locality ; short distance above Sherbrooke References required.B.221.Herald 185 every Tuesday and Friday at 12 o\u2019clock noon, commencing on opening of canal.Bteamer THREE RIVERS, Capt.COLLETTE, leaves for Three Rivers every Tuesday and Friday atl p.m.Stmr.CHAMBLY, Capt.J.CHAPDELAINE, leaves fer Chambly every Tuesday and Friday atlpm.°° Steamer TERREBONNE, Capt.LAFORCE, leaves daily, commencing 26th April, (Sundays excepted), at 3.30 p.m., Saturdaÿys at 2.30 p-m., for Vercheres, calling at Boucherville, arennes and Bout de L\u2019Isle.For L\u2019Assomption and St.Paul l\u2019Ermite, on Mondays Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Saturdays, an for Costrecœur on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thnrsdays ; for Lachenaie, on Thursduys and Fridays.GENTLEMEN whose seaside can be accom table board near Beaver Hall familles are at tho modated with good .EV, Hen to Boucherville, Varennes and Vercheres, CHEAP EXCURSIONS, Commencidg 15th May.Every SATURDAY leaving at 2.30 p m.arriving on Tetarniog at w RR out 830 p.m.Special SUNDA NS, leaving every Sunday morning at 7 o'clock for Contrecceur, calling at intermediate ports, reaching Montrea.on return at 9 p.m.COMPANY'S TICKBT OFFICES :(~R.A, Dickson, 1364 St James street, oprosite St.Lawrence Hall; J.J.McConnliff, Windsor Ho.el ; Robt.McEwen, Canal Basin, and at the Com- any\u2019s Ticket Office, Richelieu Pier, foot of acques Cartier Square.ALEX.MILLOY, J.B.LABELLE, Traffic Manager.General Manager.General Offices, St.Paul Street, Montreal, June 1, 1886.05 À FHiscellaneons.| WEEKLY CAKADIAN SERVICE BETWEEN Montreal and Glasgow.The Steamship ALCIDES, 350 tons, Oapt.Rollo, is intended to sail from MONTREAL FOR GLASGOW ©N OR ABOUT THE 17th JUNE.Agents :\u2014Donaldson Bros., 165 SL Vincent street, Glasgow ; Robert Retord & Co., 23 and 25 8t.Sacrament street, Mont: eal.TEMPERLEY LINE, FORTNIGHTLY SERVICE BETWEEN Montreal and London.\u2014 The Rieamship OCEAN KING 2500 Capt.Denharn, is intended to sail from MONTREAL FOR LONDON ON OR ABOUT THE 23rd JUNE.Agents :\u2014Willlam Ross & Co., 3 East India Avenue, London, E.C.: Temperleys, Carter & Darke, 21 Billiter street, London, E.C,: Robert Reford & Co., 23 and 25 St.Sacrament street, Montreal.THOMSON LINE.MONTREAL \u2014 AND \u2014 NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE SERVICE VIA LONDON.The Steamship CARMONA, 38% tons, Capt.Halcrow, is intended to sail from MONTREAL FOR LONDON ON OR ABOUT THE 24th JUNE.BRISTOL SERVICE, DISCHARGING AT Avonmouth Dock.The Steamship ESCALONA, 2,000 Tons, Capt.Anderson, is intended to sail from MONTREAL FOR AVONMOUTH DOCK ON OR ABOUT , THE 26th JUNE.Agents, STARES & CAIRNS# Newec:stle-on-Tyne.ANDREW LOW & SON, : 27 Leadenhall 8t., London, E.C.H.R.JAMES, Queen Square, Bristol.WILLIAM THOMSON & SONS, Dundee, Scotland.ROBERT REFORD & CO., 23 and 25 St.Sacrament street, Montreal.tons, ; All the vsssels of the above Lines are A 100, highest ciass at Lloyds, and have been built expressly for this trade, and possess the most improved facilities for carrying Grain.futter, Cheese and Cattle.Superior accommodation for a limited number of Cabln Passengers.THROUGH BILLS OF LADING granted by any of the above Lines to any point in Canada or Western States, And by any of the CANADIAN or WESTERN RAILWÆYS to an oint in GREAT BRITAIN, IRELAND or OPE at LOWEST THROUGH RATES.Special attention given to the HANDLING of all PERISHABLE and other cargo, For fnrther particulars apply to ROBT, REFORD & C0, 23 & 25 St.Sacrament Street, MONTREAL, March 27 74 DOMINION LINE.OF ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS.LIVERPOOL SERVICE.DATES OF SAILING.FROM QUEBEC.TORONTO.Friday, *VANCOUVER Thursday *SARNIA.Friday.MONTREAL Friday.*OREGON.Thursday Bristol Service for Avenmouth Dock.DATES OF SAILING FROM MONTREAL.TEXAS., + Ilth Jung DOMINION 18th Jun®.QUEBEC.2nd July ONTARIO.I6th July.Rates of Passage from Quebec \u2014$50 to according to steamer an accommodatiêr! Second Cabin.$30; Steerage at lowest rates.*These Steamers have Saloon, Staterooms, Music Room and Bath Room amidships, where but little motion is felt, and carry nei her cattle nor sheep.Passengers for 8.8.MUNTREAL, TORONTO and S.IA can emba:k at Montreal ; also those for the steamers sailing to Avonmouth.Prepaid Intermediate and Steerags Tickets issu time lowest rates.1yin Li 1to For fre Or passage, apply in Liverpoo » Maln & Montgomery, 24 James Street ; in London to McIlwraith, McEachran d Co.5 Fenchurch Street; in Quebec to W.M.Macpherson, and at Gran: Trunk Railway Offices, or to \u2019 D: 0'BRIEN.St.James street.DAVID TORRANCE & CO., General Agents, Montreal.June 5 78 Black Diamond Line.8.8.CACOUNA 2000 tons capaoit, 8.S, BONAVISTA, 1650 * wo 8.8.COBAN, 1350 of \u201c The above new A 1 Iron Steamships will run regularly throughout the season.The 8.8.BONAVISTA, Friday.June 18th; The 8.8.COBAN, Thursday, July 1st, \u2018Will sail for CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I., PICTOU, N.S., and ST.JOHN\u2019S, Nid, : ELIEVE M OXI E N ERVE FO 0 D S8.CACOUNA, Saturday, June 19th, BVA PEPE DIZZINESS, roe For SYDNEY and INDIGESTION, FLUTTERING The Great South American Remedy for a NORTH SYDNEY, C.B., AUNDICE OF THE MEART, Prostrated Nervous System.Will make you Every accommodation has been provided ERYSIPELAS ACIDITY OF * | Bat, Diink and Sleep without the use ofany [for passengers.Elegant Saloong, Ladies\u2019 SAUT RU THE SToMAc, mesitne Claus Baik Boome Sine oh a2 45 HEARTBURN \u2019 DRYNESS CH, @&-Ask your Druggist for MOXIE and ©, ort Freight and Passage, apply to Peake HEADACHE, I OF T SODA WATER.It makes a Pleasant and Bros.& Co., Charlottetown i Noonan & Davies, \u2019 ; HE SKIN, Refreshing Summer Drink.For Sale Every Ploton; Herve Eloy éydnern % ould And every Spectes of ge prisin where.Price 40 cents per quart botile.$ Bros, Sydney, or to ; MILBURN À CR BLOOD.DOMINION DEPOT: 1780 NOTRE DANE ST, | 2 ENEMES PECES $000 T, MILBURN & CO.ro nent, May 13 D W I 9 Juuels ue A AAI BT - mom 4 Si Tet À en 2 FE Mas SE SSD The Hansa Steamship Co., of Hambarg, = AND \u2014 The White Cross Line, of Antwerp, Under Contract with Dominion Government, Steamers of the above Lines will sail as follows :\u2014 8.8.BAUMWALL, on or about 5th Juve srom Hamburg, and ob or about 15th June from Antwerp for Montreal.8.8.GRASBROOK, on or about lst July from Antwerp for Montreal 8.8.KEHRWIEDER, on or about 5th July from Hamburg, and on or a\u2019 out 15th July from Antwerp for Montreal.8.8.BAUMWALL, on or about 5th July from Montreal for Antwerp.8.8.GRASBROOK, on or about 21th July from Montreal for Hamburg.8.8.KEHRWIEDER, on or about 5th August from Montreal for Antwerp.8.8.WANDRAHXM and other Steamers will follow, giving a monthly service between Hamburg and Canada, and a fortnightly one between Antwerp and Canada.Through Bills of Lading granted in Hamburg and Antwerp to poi.ts Fast and West, For rates of freight and other particulars apply to AUGUST BOLTEN, Hamburg; GRISAR & MARSILY, Antwerp, Agents Hansa Steamship Co.STEINMANN & LUDWIG, Antwe , Ageuts White Cross Line, Orto MUNDERLOH & CO., Montreal, General Agents in Canada.June 15 8 a moy ES GUION LINE.UNITED STATES MAIL STEAMERS LATLING WEEKLY BETWEEN New York and Liverpool, calling af Quoonstown PROPOSED SAILINGS FROM NEW YORK, \u2018Wisconsin.Tuesday, May 11, .Tuesday, May 18; Alaska.3.00 p.Tuesday, July 20, 7.30 a.m.Alaska .Tuesday, July 27, 1.30 pm.Wyoming.Tuesday, Aug.8, 7.00 a mA.Arizona.Tuesday, Aug 10, 1.30 p.m.These steamers are built of Iron in water» tight Compartments, and are furnished with every requisite to make the passage across the Atlantic both safe and agreeable, having Bath- rawing-reom, Piang and Library, also, experienced Surgeon, Stewardess and Caterer on each 4teamer, The State-rooms are all upper deck, thus insuring those greatest of all luxuries at Ra perfect ventilation and light, CABIN PASSAGE $50, $6), $80 and $100, according to location, &c.INTERMEDIATE.This in a class that affords peeple of noders ate means a respectable way of tra selling, Beds, Bedding ash-basing, &e., together with good food, separate Dining-roem from either Cabin or Sterrage being provided.Pas sage.$35 aingle; F6 round trip.teerage at Very Low Rates, Apply to A.M, UNDERHILL & CO.29 Broadway, New York.J.Y.GILMOUR & CO! 8354 St, Paul Street, Eontreal, May 10 - 1 LANE ROUTE.The Ounard Steamshi Company (Tdmited between NEW YORK and ERPOOL, ealling at CORK HARBOUR, FROM PIRE 40 N, R.NEW YORK.FAST EXPRESS MAIL SERVICE, *ETRURIA;.Baturday, June 19, 7.00 a.m SERVIA., Saturday, June 26, 12.600 m *UMBRIA .Saturday, July 3, 6.00 a.m GALLIA .8aturday, July 10,12.00 p.m Ships marked * will not carry intermediate and steerage passengers.FROM BOSTON.PAVONIA .8ails Thursday, June 17 SCYTHIA .eees82118 Thursday, June 24 CATALONIA .Sails Thursday, July 1 CEPHALONIA .Sails Thursday, July 8 Sails Thursday, July 15 Cabin P«ssage:\u2014$60, $8 and $100; interme- a .Steérage tickets to and from all parts of Europe at very low rates.For freight and passage apply to VERNON H.BROWN & 00.4 Bowling Green, New York, or to CUNARD STEAMSHIP CO, Limited.99 State Street, Boston, Orto THOMAS WILSON, Agent, 17 St.Sacrament street, Montreal .su.June 16 Calling at Cork Æarbooi, Ireland.CARRYING BRITISH AND AMER] CAN MAILS, PROVIDED WITH EVERY MODER IMPROVEMENT.NOTICE.\u2014The steamers of this Line take ified routes, according to the seasqus of the year, which inciude the Lane Routes, recommended by Lieutenant Maury, ! Sailing between NEW YORK and LIVERPOOL, via Queenstown, are appointed to leave as follows :\u2014 FROM NEW YORK.rmanic.Thursday, June 17, 4.00 p.m Soeltte.vee pu .Thursday, June.24, 11.00 a.m Britannic .\u2026\u2026\u2026\u2026.*Adriatic.\u2026.Fhursday, July 8, 11.00 am Germanic.Thursday, J 15, 4.00pm *Celtic.va.Thursday, July 22, 9.00 a.m Britannic.Thu:sday, July 29, 309 p.m *Adriatio.Thursday, Aug.5, 9.30 a.m Germanic .Thursday, Aug.12, 300 p,m *Celtic.esses .o.Thursday, Aug.19, 8.00 a.m Britannio .,.Thursday, Aug.28, 2.00 pom *Adriatic.se «+.Thursday, Sept.2, 8.0) a.m * The steamers \u201cAdriatic\u201d and \u2018Celtic\u2019 have very superior intermediate accommoda~ tion.Bate, $35.00 ; Excursion, $65.00.CABIN RATES.New York to Liverpool and Queenstown, $60, $30 and $100.Return Tickets, $1.20, 8140 and $180.ts to London, $7, and to Paris, $22 adanional.Oildren between ong any in $32: years, half-price.Infants free.THESE STEAMERS DO KOT CARRY UATTLY SHEXP OR F168.STEKRAGE RATER Montreal to Live 1, Londonderry Quocastomn, Glasgow, Belfast, London, Bris tol, Curdiff, Belmullet, or G w, includ ing Railway Fare to New York, ai lowes rates Passe booked, via Li 1, to all pmsl nda enemy For er 0! n apply rË Ju Ou 1518, Agent, 17 Broadway, FA or B.J.COGRLIN, SOLE AGENT, a nt A oi es 2 £1 83% Paul Street, Montreal, June 14 ie Thursday, July 1, 4.00 p.m | SPRING AND SUMMER ARRANGEMENT.THE CANADA SHIPPING C0.'S LINE OF STEAMERS BETWEEN MONTREAL and LIVERPOOL Oomprising the following F'rat-clase, Clyde built, powered Iron Steamships : Tons, LAKE SUPERIOR.+045, 209 LAKE HURON.,, 4,1 LAKE WINNIPEG,.LAKE NEPIGON .LAKE CHAMPLAIN.,.\u2018Will sail as follows :\u2014 FROM LIVERPOOL, calling at Queenstown to embark passengers for Quebec and Montreal connecting at the latter port.by direet Rail for ail points in Canada and the United Btates, and to which Through Tickets are issued.Lake Champlain «vss.Tuesday, May 25 Lake Huron ., Tuesday, June 1 Lake Nepigon Tuestay, June 8 Lake Buperior Tuesday, June 15 Lake Winnipeg .Tuesday, June 22 FROM MONTREAL.\u2019 Lake Winnipeg.Thursday, June 3 Lake Champlalw.Thursday, June 10 ausesaus 4, Lake Huron.Thursday, June 17 Lake Nepigon Thursday, June 24 Lake Superior.Thursday, July 1 ES SE com ents and ef spec or the North A tante trade.In the passenger departments the most perfect provision has been made t ensure the comfort and convenienoe of all, the Staterooms are large apd alry.The Steer- © is fitted with the most approved Patent anvas Ferths, and is fully ventilated and heated by steam.Ax experienced eon ig carried by each er, also Stewardesses to aitend to the Wants of females and children.RATES OF PASSAGE: Cabin\u2014Montreal to Liverpool ; return, : $90.Steerage at lowest rates.$30; ! for Freight or other particalars, apply: In Belfast, to A, A.WATT, 3 Custom Rousse Bquare ; in Queenstown, lo N.G.SEYMEUR Water 8.1 In Baebes tH, SonERTs: 21 » 3 in Quebec .H.SEWE.eter street, or to \u2019 ' LL H.EB.MURRAY, Gererai Manager, 1 Oustom House Square, Montreal.May 28 71 ROYAL MAIL STEAMER FOR QUIENSIOWN AND LIVERPOOL Carrying the United States Mail, PROPOSED SAILING.Raltie.Saturday, June 13, 2.00 p.m- C.of Richmond.Saturday, June 19, 4.00 p.m.City of Chester\u2014.Saturday, June 26, 1.60 p.m.City of Berlin.Saturday, July 3, 4.00 p,m.City of Chicago.Saturday, J uly 10, 1.00 p.m, Baltic .Saturday, July 17, 4.00 p.m.C.of Richmond.S8aturday, July 24, 11.00 am.City of Chester.Saturday, J uly 31, 4.00 p.m, City of Berlin, .,.Haturday, City of Chicago.Saturday, Baltie.Saturday, C.of Richmond .Saturday, From Inman Pier, foot Jersey City.Steerage at very low rates, Intermediste passage, $20, Round Trip, 360 RATES OF PASSA GE\u2014$60, and $100, according to accommodation, a; having equa saloon privileges.Children between 2 and 19 years of age, nalf-fare, Servarts, $50, Special Round Trip Tickets at reduced rates.Tickets to London, $7 ; and to Paris $15, and $2) addional, according to route selected Saloon, Statercoms, Smoking and Bathe rooms amidshpis, These steamers\u201d do not earry Cattle, Sheep or For freight Or passage apply te Prrer WRIGHT & BoNs,General Agents, No.1 Broadway, New York; or O, O, MCFALL, 148 8°, James Street, or J.Y.GILMOUR & CO., 354 St.Paul Sireet, Montreal, March 31 165 of Grand Street, SERMUDA AND WEST IADIES QUEBEC STEAMSHIP COMPANY, Sailiux frem Pier 47 North River, New York.Royal Mail for Bermuda :\u2014 88.FLAMBOROUGH, Thursday, June 17.For St.Kitts, Antigua, Dominica, Martinique, St.Lucia, Barbados and Trinidad :\u2014 SS.TRINIDAD, Tuesday, June 15.For freight, passage and insurance, apply to A.BE.OUTERBRIDGE & C0, Agents, 51 Broadway, Now York, 5 ARTHUR AHERN Secretary, Quebec.une o NORTH ATLANTIC Steamship Company, ((LIMITED.) BETWEEN Miramichi, Charlotietowr, Prince Edward Islana, and Great Britain.Z2he A1 S.S.CLIFTON, 2665 TONS, CAFT.WADE, will make regular trips on the above route from the opening to the close of navigation.This route offers special facilities for the shipment of FISH, CATTLE, and other produets from the North Shere of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.Good accommodation for a limited number of Passengers.For Freight, Passage and other particulars, apply to R.À.& J.STEWART Chatham, Miramichi ; FENTON T.NEWBERRY.Charlottetown, P.Ë.L., STEWART BROS.or .3 Fen Court, Fenchurch st., London, E.C.April 28 6m 85 THE HERALD BINDERY I8 WELL EQUIPPED For turning out all kinds of BINDING, RULING, &o.Prompt Atiemtion given to all erders Yes eontract with the (Governments of Uanada and Newfoundland for the eonveyar-ce of the CANADIAN and UN LED STATES aile 1886-Summer Aorangements-1886 This Company\u2019 Lires are compesed of the following Double-engiued, C:yde-bailt IRON STEAMSHIPS, They are built ia water-tight compartments, are unsurpassed for strength, peed and comfort, are fitted up with all the modern Improvements that practical experience can suggest, and have rade the fastest time on record :\u2014 Vessels, Tonnage.Commanders.Numidian ++.6100 Buiiding.Parisian 5180 Capt.James Wylle Sardinian , 4000 Lt.W.B.Smith\" R.N.R, Polynesian 4100 Capt.Joseph Ritchie Sarmatian +2600 Capt.Hugh Wylie Circassian 400 Capt.W.Richardson Peruvian .3408 Capt.Nova Scotian.33m Capt.R.H.Hughes Caspian.320 Lt.R.Barrett, R N.R.Carthaginian .4800 Capt A.MacNicol Siberian.4600 Capt.R.P, Moore Norwegian.3531 Cap-.J.G.Stephen Hibernian.3448 Capt.John Brown Austrian .270) Capt.J.Arabury Nestorian .2700 Cspt.W.Dalziel Prussian .3000 Capt.Alex, McDougal Scandinavian .3010 Capt.John Park Buenos Ayrean, 3800 Capt.J.Scott Corean.,.4000 Capt.C.J.Menzies Grecian.++ 8609 Capt.C.E.LeGallais Manitoban .8150 Capt.R.Carruthers Canadian 2600 Capt, John Kerr Pheenician 2300 Capt.1), McKliilop Waldensian 2600 Cayt.D J.James Lueerne 2200 Cart.W.S.Main Newfoundland.\u2026.1500 Capt.C.Mylins Acadlan.,, 1350 Capt.¥.McGrath \u2014\u2014 The Shortest Sea Route Between America and Europe, being only Five Days between \u201c Land and Land.The Steamers ¢: the Liverpool, Londonderry and Montreal Mail Service, Salling from Liverpoo! on THURSDAY and from Quebec on THURSDAYS, calling = Lough Foyle to receive on board and land Maiis and Passengers to and from Ireland and Scotland, are intended to be despatched FROM QUEBEC.\u201cSardinian sous sas c000 0 ++.Thursday, June 10 Polynesian .,.,.Thureday.June 24 *Parisian .Thursday, July i *These steamers carry neither cattie nor shee; Pp Rates of Passage from Quebec, Cabim.560, $70 and (Aceording to ac 3 mind $50, Intermediate .,.,,.weed Bloerage.i.eus can cave nu un $20 The Steamers of the Liverpool, Londonderry, Quebec and Montreal Extra Service, sailing from Liverpool and Quebecon Fridays and calling at Derry to receivc on board, and land passengers to and from Ireland and Scotland, are intended to be despatehed FROM QUEBEC Thursday, June 18 Thursday, July 9 Rates or Passage from Quebec.Cabin .c.ocevvinnrernnnnnn, » $50, $60 and $70 According to accommodation.$ Intermediate.$30 | Steerage.$20 \u2026.\u2026.The Steamers of the Glasgow, Quebec and Mont real Service are intended to sail from Montreal for Glasgow, as follows :\u2014 Buenos Ayrean.,.About June 10 OfWegIan.o.ivsiiaiseennias.About June 13 anitoban .,, sive About June 22 Hibernian ., «seas About June 27 Corean .ser About July 4 Buenos Ayrean., seen About July 11 \u2014memee The Steamers of the London, Quebec and Mox treal Line are intended to be despatched from Montreal for London, as follows :\u2014 Phœnician .\u2026.\u2026.\u2026.About June 10 Nestorian.+\u2026.About July 1 The Steamers of the Liverpool, Queenstown, St.Johns Halifax and Baltimore Mail Service are intended to be despatched as follows :\u2014 FROM HALIFAX.Caspian.,., +e «.Monday, June 21 Carthaginian .,.,.Monany, July 5 RATES OF PASSAGE BETWEEN HALIFAX AND ST.JOHNS: Cabin.4 .$20.00 | Intermediate 000 $15.00 teerage.,.$6 The Steamers of the Glasgow, Liverpool, London- derry, Galway, Queenstown, and Boston Service are intended to be despatched as follows, from Boston for Glasgow direct :\u2014 FROM BOSTON.Canadian.veers About June Waldensian ., About June 23 Prussian., About July 2 The Steamers of the Glasgow, Lendenderry and Philadelphia Service are intended to be despatched from Philadel phia for Glasgow :\u2014 : FROM PHILADELPHIA.Austrian .\u2026sses-s asc soune About June 23 Scandinavian .About July 14 THROUGH BILLS OF LADING Persons desirous of bringing their friends from Britain ean obtain Passage Certificates at Lowest Rates.An experienced surgeon carried on each vessel.Berth not secured unti: paid for.Through Bills of Lading granted at Liverpool and Glasgow, and at ntinental Ports, to all points in Canad and the Western States, via Halifax, Boston, Baltimore, Quebec and Montreal, and from all Railway Stations in Ca-ada and the United States to Liverpool and Glasgow, via Baltimore, Boston, Quebec and Montreal.Nor sreigns, ago or cther information apply to JOHN CURRIE, 21 Qual d'Orleass avre; ALEXANDKEE HUNTER, {4 Roe Gluck Paris; AUG.SORMITE & 0,, or RICHAR BERNS, Antwerp; Rurs & Co, Rotterdsm O.Huao, Hamburg ; JAMxs Moes & Cc., Ber deaux ; FISCHER & BEHMER, Schurselkor Ko.8, Bremen; CHARLES Foy, Belfast JAMES SCOTT & Co., Queenstown : NONT GOMFRIE & WOREMAN, 36 Cracechuroh street London; JAMES & ALEX.ALLAN, 78 Grea Clyde street, Glasgow; ALLAN BEOTE xg James street, Liverpeel : ALLANS, Ra,t & Uv Quebec; ALLAN & O0., 112 La Balle gireet, Cl 0ago ; H, BOURLIER, Toronto: THos, Cony SoN, 261 Broadway, New York, er toG.W ROBINSON 1364 St, James Street, vppo is St.Lawrenve all, H.& A.ALLAN, 8 State Street, Boston,and 25 Common Street, Montreal June\u201d, 1888 20 > Excellent Storage Apply at - ASHES INSPECTION' OFFICH a If you want a Clerk\u2019s position advertise in The Herald frees& If you want a General Servant\u2019s place advertises in The Herald, free. H TTT Tew -\u2014 we me \u2014\u2014 = \u2014\u2014 \u2014 - \u2014_\u2014 - - \u2014 \u2014 - THE MONTREAL HERALD AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY JUNE 16 , tRMY OF 5 ( , Montreal can afford both to admire and to case wamant the belief that any impro-|of principle or spirit he would not have] 7\u201d - 9 ; [ b Adverthisewents, Amuse TERMS OF SUBSCRI PTION Lave and they should be amongst the first priety was there, but on the other hand a 8llowed them to \"go uuder his eyes and im Aduverfisements, Mew ry - ments.M sntresl Daily Harald, perannnm, - $6 00 do do half year, - - 3 00 do do three months, 1 50 Montreal Dailv Harz!3, single copies, 3 cts, Xantreal WeekivHeraid, per annum; $1 00 do de halt year, - = 50c ds da th-ee months, 25c Anccir! Rates for Clabs es applicutin NOT IC.AWAll correspondence for THE HERALD except businessletters) should be addressed o the Editor, Mg.JomN LIVINGSTON.Business correspondence is to beaddressed to THE HERALD COMPANY, (iimfted); offices in Victoria Block, corner of Victoria Square and St James Street West, Montreal; HoN.PETER MITCHELL, President; MR.ALBERT MURRAY Becretary \u2018Treasurer.The Woulreal Herald.WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 16 eo THE NOVA SCOTIA ELECTIONS.The advices from Nova Scotia are to the effect that at the general election fer the Proviccial Assembly, held yesterday, the city and county of Halifax, the commercial heart of the Province, elected by a large msjority the Secession ticket headed by the Provincial Premier ! Further advices show that the Province as a whole has voted for Secession! The result reveals the deep-seated character of the opposition to Confederation, but it shows, perhaps, still more clearly, the strength of the opposition to the Dominion Government, Dominion party lines are rigidly adhered to in Nova Scotia in the Provincial elections, and the unpopularity of the Dominion Government was such as to strengthen their opponents of the Provincial Guvernment, even when handicapped by the Secession cry.The Dominion Ministers did not treat this elcction as an ordinary Provincial election ; they went into the fight themselves, relyizg upon their personal and political strength ; and the consequences are before ua.The result in Nova Scotia ought to set the Government and its supporters at Ottawa a\u2014thinki: g.Perhaps they willnow begin to see that while they are putting forth all their energies to promote the interests of their \u201cboodle \u201d\u2019 friends, they are neglecting many things which, if attended to in time, would make for the peace and prosperity of the Dominion, but which they deliberately put aside until danger threatens.The interests of Mr.Beaty, Mr.McCarthy, Mr.Riopel and the rest may be very important; the subsidizing of railways and the bribing of con- gtituencies may seem to be matters of the greatest consequence; an extra duty on pig iron for the works in the Fivance Minister\u2019s village may be legislation of the greatest moment; but after all, when the Nova Scotia secession resolutions had been before the country for a couple of years, the Government might have taken Steps to prevent the mischief that has now been done We might say a good deal more under this head, but we have no desire to embarrass the Government, which finds itself in a serious predicament, the gravest that it bas had to face for many a day.We Lave just this to say, however, that we hope that when Sir John Macdonald takes counsel with his friends as to the course to b: pursued in dealing with Nova Scotia, he will not permit guch a played-owt politician as Mr.A.W, McLelan to share those counsels.The trail of this serpent is clearly traceable throughout the several stages of the difficulty, and the sooner the Premier ride himself of such selfish, cold-blooded advisers the better.The result of the elections, we repeat, is most unfortucate.Secession is not to be seriously thought of, and yet many thousands, we dare say, voted yesterday believing \u201cthat their vote was aiding to carry their provirce out of the Confederation.ff VANCOUVER IN ASHES! The sudden calamity that has fallen on the city of Vancouver must arouse the sympathy of Canadians everywhere, But yesterday Vancouver was rejoicing in its strength, It had made most remarkable, almost unprecedented, progress.A city had sprung up in a few months,\u2014a city with its churches, its newspapers, its hotels and much of the equipment of advanced civilization, Its people were hopeful of the future, The Conadian Pacific was about to be opened for traffic; a great trade was about to spring Up ; property had gone up in value; and a great future seented assured.While the inhabitants were meditating upon their prosperity the blow fell.The fire swept their city out of existence and with the loss of measly all their property, there was joined the appalling loss of about fifty precious lives ! This is really the saddest feature of the whole affair.Such loss of life would be exceptional in the case of acon- flagration a hundred times greater than this, and itegreat extent in connexion with the Vancouver firs has not yet been explained.The relatives of the victims will have the heartfelt sympathy of the Canadian people.| We hope the citizens of Montreal will take immediate steps to give their sympathy with our devastated end youngest sister city a practical form.He gives twice who gives quickly.The people of Vancouver are not a peeple to succumb to such a disaster ; those who can are already rebuilding their homes and places of business, Such pluck merits admiration and should by no means arrest the generoushand.The citizens of to reepond to Vancouver\u2019s appeal for aid.Let a movement be at once commenced.Let the Mayor summon the people, and let the response be such as to show to the people with whom we are now being) brought into more intimate commercial, political and social relations that the heart of the commercial metropolis of the Dominion is in the right place.In another place we republish some interesting data, recently collected by a San Francisco journal, that are calculated to show how suddenly Vancouver grew up and how vigorously the building of the city went on, up to the day of the conflagration.\u201cThe sound of saw and ham- \u201c1aer,\u201d says the journalist, \u201cis to be \u201cheard in every direction and on every \u201cside, and the carpenter\u2019s work bench is \u201cthe most frequent sight to be met with \u2018as you pass through the streets.\u201d All the labors of the aspiring merchant, the mechanic, the professional man, have been swept away, and now, before the ashes are fairly cold, the saw and the hammer are again heard on every side, and the work of rebuilding has commenced in earnest, The inhabitants of the little city are exhibiting a spirit which Canadians everywhere will applaud and they are deserving of the assistance which, we trust, will go to them from every part of the Dominion.oe ea THE MINISTER OF THE INTERIOR IN CARDWELL, The Minister of the Interior\u2019s speech at Mono Mills is very much what anyone who knows Mr.White would have foretold who bad attempted to forecast it.It was an epitome of the discussions on the several leading topics of the past sessi@.That is to say, each of the greater questions were touched upon, with the attitude of the Government and Opposition on each contrasted according to Mr, White.It was a tolerably good stump speech, in that it set up the Opposition party in convenient position for Mr, White to knock them down again, and adjusted the condition of public affairs in such a manner that they might be seen in the light in which Mr.White wished them viewed.But it told the country nothing which they did not already know was capable of quite a different telling, and in- one direction its explanations wereso totally irreconcilable with knowledge painfully acquired, that even the most devoted admirers must have felt uneasy at his temerity, His manipulation of the public figures was good, and probably effective, before an audience quite unable to pick it to pieces for themselves, What the result might have been had one of the professional financiers of the other side been present is quite anether thing, With a little preparation the columns of figures in the trade and navigation tables may be made to say anything, and when a practiced juggler in finance\u2014we mean nothing uncomplimentary by this remark\u2014like Mr.White thinks it worth while to go through his performance and indulges himself with the blue books of the past years as far back as 1873, there is practically no trick known to the profession that he or any other financial prestidigitateur could not perform.But reasonable men are not convinced by this, however much they may applaud a clever performer.They know the proverbial mendacity of figures, Fortunately, the common sense of the multitude protects them from evil results ; they car.tell whether millions are being wasted or whether they are not ; they know whether they are paying a dollar for an article they should buy for fifty cents, and they form their financial judgment accordingly, without reference to all the clever hanky- panky which the professional men think beguiles the ignorant.They know, for instance, that five million dollars\u2014and no one yet knows how much more\u2014 was wasted because the Government persisted in disregarding the condition of the North-West ; they know they are paying two prices for many articles of household use in order that {friends of the Governmens may make fortunes, and they see with some astonishment that economic laws are such that the first flush of success being over, the burden they are bear- ingis not permanently benefiting those for whose aggrandisement it was intended.They perceive all this and they are not to be deceived by the mere juggling of selected figures, Mr.White, of course, dealt with the scandals that have been brought to light during the past session ; or, to be quite accurate, weshould rather say, he avoided mentioning them at all, but confined his allusions to the subject of improprieties on the part of members of Parliament, to those cases that, so far as is known, are without harm.He showed that Mr.Taylor, of Leeds, had applied for a timber limit for a former constituent who wrote from a distance atkiog him to do so, but he omitted to make mentien of Mr, John White, M.P,, or Mr.Rykert.He exposed the hollowness of the charge against Mr, Small but curiously enough forgot all about Mr, Beaty and Mr.McCarthy.And so on.He £ell into the error, also, of using language concerning Mr.M.C.Cameron, which should have been reserved for that gentleman\u2019s presence, if used at all.We quite agree with Mr.White in what we must presume, from his language, is his opinion that charges, of the kind preferred by Mr.Cameron, against members of Parliament should not be made without very strong supporting evidence, but in nearly every case Mr.Cameron was careful to say that he gathered his information from official documents which he named as he referred to them.These may not, and probably did not, in every simple denial, where denial was posei- ! ble, was all that was required.It is remarkable that violent language directed against Mr.Cameron is invariably timed when that gentleman is absent, or ia prevented by some rule from replying to it.However, it is but seldom that Mr.White stoops to the level of personal abuse.On the subject of the North-West troubles aud the halfbreed grievances Mr.White rose to the empyrean of party disingenuousness.To attempt to follow him in that flight would involve the printing of columns full of evidence which he calmly ignored or flatly denied.There had been two or three petitions, he said in effact, from some 258 halfbreeds, and when the commission came to settle with them 177 were found to have had scrip in Manitoba, The Government had surveyed the Saskatchewan country in rectangular townships and the Ontario settlers \u2018were delighted with it, and Mr.Pearce had obtained affidavits sworn to bythe nalf- breeds of the St.Louisde Langevin neighborhood declaring that they had not feared disturbance at the bands of the Prince Albert Colonization Company.Wegive Mr, White all credit for his effort to hide the faults of his predecessor ; they were none of his own, but this attempt to make it appear that the halfbreeds had nothing to complain of is rather overdoing a friendly duty.The halfbreeds petitioned for the scrip or land in 1878 ; it was given them in 1856, after the rebellion, as Sir John Macdonald explained, compelled it.He said he yielded in this matter only to the necessities of the case.In 1878 the North-West council, knowing the justice of the halfbreeds\u2019 demands, passed a resolution \u201crespectfully and strongly urging \u201d\u2019 the attention of the Government to this matter, and recommending certain grants to be made.The Government paid no attention to this, until after the rebellion broke out, The Lieut.-Governor of the North-West wrote a despatoh urging the Government at Ottawa to deal with this question, explaining the dissatisfaction of the halfbreeds at the manner of their treatment.Later in the year the halfbreeds sent a deputation to the Governor on the same subject.The Deputy Minister of the Iuterior made a memorandum justifying the demand of the halfbreeds and recommending setting aside certain lands for them.In 1878 Archbishop Tache follows up the subject in the same view; Bishop Mec- Lean in 1878 does the same, and in 1879 a clause is put into the Dominion Lands Act to enable the Government to satisfy these claims.Nothing was done that year, and report, recomwendation and and petition followed one another down from Prelate, priest and Government official, as well as from the halfbreeds, who, complaining not merely at the lands being withheld from them, set forth what they considered due to them in the necessities of their position in the country.It is almost an endless string of prayer and neglect for seven years,and until the threat that their complaints were to be answered with bullets, drove them to arms, When neglect, delay, contemptuous treatment and disposal of some of their lands to a colonization company bad driven these people into rebellion the Government, seven years after their own officials had recommended immediate action, complied with the requests and sent a commission up to do justice, and with the knowledge of this fresh in the country\u2019s mind, the Minister of the Interior had the courage to pose before a public meeting as the representative of a very much injured Government.As to the value of the statements, made at the request of an emissary from the Department at Ottawa, to the halfbreeds whoee friends were buried at Batoche or in prison in Manitoba, and who knew this envoy or his masters only as their destroyers, intelligent men can form their own opinion: We feel sure that Mr.White must have winked the whole way home after making his speech, A ROBTH-WEST JUDGMENT.The Government maintain that Lieut.- Governor Dewdney\u2019s appointment was the best they ever made, This is scarcely complimentary to other officers, if the Edmonton Bulletin is to be believed.It says :\u2014 \u201c His Honor Edgar Dewdney will soon cease to be Lieut.-Governor of the North- West.With little experience and less ability\u2014except the ability to be agreeable \u2014his elevation to such &n important office was and is yet a mystery to both friends and opponents of the Government.The only reasonable solution is that he was chosen to act rather as a buffer in the collisions that were doubtless expected to take place between the Ottawa authorities and the North-West consequent upon the altered policy entered upon at the io- ception of the Pacific Railway scheme, then as an administrator cf constitutional government or a commissioner \u2014in the proper sense of the word\u2014of Indian affairs.For such a purpose he wae peculiarly fitted ; he had plenty of work of the kind to do; and if he was not successful the fault was oot his so much as that of those who thought to govern 1n such a manner with euch a tool.During his term of office discontent among the original settlers of the couutry, the half- breeds, began and culminated in a bloody and costly rebellion ; and the whites are accused of being very much of the same mind and intention ; the Indians throughout the length and breadth of the country have been taught to look upon the white man and his government as their enemy, as they never did before ; the police force deteriorated from the figest in the world to a nondescript institution, neither fish, flesh, nor good red herring; and the prohibitory law, which before his advent had been an unmixed and acknowledged benefit, became little better than a farce and was brought into utter disrepute.It would be nonsense to tay that he was responsible for all these things, aithough nominaily under his con- with bis full knowledge without demanding either that proper measures be taken by those who had the power or that he be relieved from the aprarent responsibility.He did neither.e misrepresented the Government to the people of the North- Weet and misrepresented the people to the Government, with the resalt matters went trom bad to worse until the explosion came aud the country at large was put to untold cost and logs, His appointment was a calamity, hie administration a criwe, its results disaster, and his retirement his most acceptable act.A PRIVATE CORRESPONDENT, a well- known Montreal citizen, writing from Regina, says :\u2014\u201c I am glad to be able to report most favorably of the crop appearances, and the universal reports from al] points around here are to the same effect, My information comes from direct communication with the farmers themeelves and my own personal observation.A party of about forty Scotch crofters arrived this morning and are leaving by teams for a distance of about 17 miles north-east from here, where some land has been specially prepared for them and a certain amount of seed put in for them.These people make capital settlers, and it is to be hoped many more will come.À shed is badly wanted at this point for settlers, and I have written to the Hon.Mr, White about the matter.* * * I am perfectly delighted with the climate here and never felt better in my life.Regina is progressing steadily, and it does one good to bear the sound of the hammers ou the prairie.The stores here are all doing well, and there is an air of comfort about the whole place.re THE \u201cGAZETTE\u201d IS ANXIOUS THAT what is known as the $1,500 scandal should be ventilated.Good ! This returning consciousness of its dutiesas a public journal is comforting to observe.Now, shall we look for the light of our neighbor\u2019s lantern on the covered heaps that are to be found in obscure corners, as well as in the Ministers\u2019 offices at Ottawa, Our neighbor has knowledge to aid it, and we shall see some rare roguery exposed.\u2014_\u2014\u2014 Mg.McLELAN, TEE FINANCE MINISTER, has been telling the people of Nova Sco- tia that it was very unprofitable work for men to neglect a successful business to go into politics.This he said oratorically, as one who knew.As Mr.McLelan thinks thus of politics, and as politics has some answering sentiment about Mr.McLelan, the early retirement of that gentleman would seem to be in order.SPECIAL NOTICE.AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENTS AND MATERIALS IN GREAT VARIETY.NOTMAN & SONS, 21 BLEURY STREET.June 16 DEATHS.At7 Argyle Avenue, ¢n Saturday evening, tbe 12th instant, Wim.J.Patterson, Secretary of Corn Exchange and Board of Trade, in the 71st year of his age.Funeral from his late residence, 7 Argyle Avenue, on Thursday, 17th inst., at 2.30 p.m., to the American Presbyterian Church, and thence to the place of interment, Mount Royal Cemet-ry.Pn flew _Advertisements, THE COMMERCIAL Grain and Stock Exchange, OF CHICAGO, ILL.BRANCH OFFICE, 1691 Notre Dame Street Stocks, Bonds, Oil and Provisions bought and sold on New York ard Chicago markets.7% Direct private wires.June 18 m 144 PAISLEY & ROSS, Suceessors to J.D.Anderson, .4 206 St.James Street.A SERCES, HOMESPUNS, Halifax and Scotch Tweed SUITINGS! Inspection Invited! Junc 16 144 Valuable Residence FOR SALE.I arh instructed by the executors of the late J.E.Major to offer for sale the valuable spacious Residence ard Grounds situated on Guy street, immediately below St.Catherine street.The House isin perfect order\u2019 and the Grounds are lovely and abound with Fruit Trees, &c.Terms extremely liberal.p.emises at my office.R.K.THOMAS, Real Estate Agent, 30 St.John street.m 44 WANTED.A highly educated young German lady, speaking fluently French, desires a position as independent manager of a household, in order to turn to account her knowledge of housekeeping.Please address: 8.von Buelow, Berlin, W.Buelow str.32a, (Ger- Permits to view June 18 #NAVY BLUE THE BELL TELEPH NE CO, OF CANADA, Dividend No.9.The usual Quarterly Dividend of TWO PER CENT, will be paid, on 15th July, to Shareholders of record uth June.CHAS.P.SCLATER.Sec.-Treas.Moatreal, June 14th, 1888.16,19,23,26,30F 8,7,10,147 144 The Merchants Bank of Canada, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a dividend of 3) per ceut.for the current half- year, being at the rate of 7 per cent.per annuum upon the Paid-up Capital Stock of this Institut on has been deciared, and that the same will be payable at its Banking House in this city, ou ard after TUESDAY, the first June next.The Transfer Books will be closed from the 17th to the 31st May, both days inclusive.The Annual General Meeting of the Shareholders of the Bank will be held at the Bank on WEDNESDAY, 16th June next.The caair to be taken av Twelve o'clock.By order of the Board, G.HAGUE, Geueral Manager.Montreal, 2ith April, 1886.16J w 99 BANQUE VILLE MARIE Notice is hereby given that a Dividend of Thr-e and One-half per cent.(3}) upon the paid-up capital stock of this institution has been declared for the current half-year, and that the same will be payable at its: head office, in this city, on and after THE FIRST DAY O# JUNE NEXT.The Transfer Books will ba closed from the 2Ist to the 3lst of May next, both days inclusive.The Anual General Meeting of the Shareholders will be held at the Bank on WED- NEsSDAY, the 16th day of JUNE next.The Chair will be taken at noon.By order of the Board.h 167 mwf 128 The Montreal Gas Company, 30) 8 mtn May 28 Holders of the New Stock of this Campany, issued 1876, are notified that the FIFTH IYSTALMENT OF 10 PER CENT.on the same has been called, payable et the office on the 15th June, 1886.J.F.SCRIVER, Secretary.25M 5,187 123 SPECIAL NOTICE.:0: Just arrived by recent steamshipour Spring importation of the very latest designs in Brocatelle, Raw Silk, Tapestry, the various shades of Satin and Silk Plushes and Trimmings, English Morocco and French Roans of the newest shades of Bottle Green, Maroon and other new .colo-s of this Spring\u2019s styles, from Messrs.Cowlishaw, Nicol & Co., the largest and best house in their lize in Lon- Montreal, 25th May, 1866.on.We are just receiving cur Spring consign- men's of French and German Tapestry, Brocatelles, Mohair and Crushed Fmbossed Plushes of the various new shades which when completed in a few days, will ferm a most complete and recherche assortment for our num rous customers to select coverings for some of the very newest Parlor Suites, Easy and Reclining Chairs, Platform Rock- e:s, solid Mahogany, Cherry, Black Waluut and Ebonized Corner Chairs, Divans, Tete-a~ tetes, Ottomans and Couches of not less than twenty-four different styles, mavy of them being entirely new designs ofthe past Winter.The above, with the very best select'on of Easels, Cabinets, Fancy Tables, Ladies\u2019 and Misses\u2019 Parl:.r Desks, Work Tables, and the largest general stock cf Chamber, Dining Room, Lirrary and general Honsehold Furni- tureever osin view in Montreal and now complete in every department, forms the most eomprehensive choice in Canada of bigh class goods.ur elevator, for the convenience of customers, is now ished, conveying purchasers to every department of our large ware- rooms, which now consists of six flats, each reached without stairs.This improvement will be found a great convenience and is the first yet introduced into a furniture store in the Dominion.The very large and continuous increase, however.in our business during the last twenty years demandedevery fac lity for the better accommodation of our custom ers and we are determined to leave nothing undone that will place our wholesale and retall furniture business beyond any in Canada and equal to any in the United States, both as regards style, finish and extent of stock.A proof of this is to be found in our many medals, diplomas and prizes gained during the past 39 years.our first being the Pacis Exhibition of 1854, the latest being that atthe Antwerp Exhibition, 1885, where we received the silver medal for the best display of general furniture, and the bronza medal for our upholstered exhibit, part of which sold there at our prices and the balance has gone to the great Colonial and Indian Exhibition now being hz!d in Lon- on.Soliciting a call of inspection of price and quality from our old customers and the public generally who may want anything in our line, we refer again to our old motto, dating back from 1843, strictly adhered to, that of \u201cQuick s.les and light profits,\u201d and as we urchase all our stock for cash and buy in arge quantities, we can sell at prices the like cost many in the trade.OWEN MCBIRVEY & Sn Nos, 1849, 1851 & 1853 Notre Dame St., Cor.McGill.June 12 12,16 J 141 For Dyspepsia or We ak Digestion drink St.Leon Mineral Water after each meal.For constipation take it before Breakfast.ST.LEON WATER C0, 4 VICTORIA SQUARE, HERALD BUILDING.135 WANTED, Carsieys Advertisement TUESDAY, JUNE 15th, 1886.NEW SEASIDE JACKETS NEW SEASIDE JACKETS NEW SEASIDE JACKETS NEW SEASIDE JACKETS NEW SEASIDE JACKETS NEW SEASIDE JACKETS For the largest and most varied assortment of Black and Fancy Cloth Jackets, see 8.CARSLEY\u2019S.NEW TRAVELLING WRAPS NEW TRAVELLING WRAPS NEW TRAVELLING WRAPS NEW TRAVELLING WRAPS NEW TRAVALLLING WRAPS NEW TRAVELLING WRAPS For Newest Designs, in most fashionable materials and trimmings, ses 8.CARSLEY\u2019S.MILLINERY AT S.CARSLEY\u2019S.GARDEN HATS, RUSTIC HATS, BOATING HATS, FISHING HATS, COUNTRY HATS, SUN HATS, SHADE HATS, S.CARSLEY, OSTRICH FEATHERS! OSTRICH FEATHERS! WHITE FEATHERS, CREAM FEATHERS, EROWN FEATHERS, BLACK FEATHERS, BRONZE FEATHERS, PINK FEATHERS, All Reduced! All Reduced! CHILDREN'S LACE BONNETS ! CHILDREN'S LACE BONNETS ! MISSES\u2019 NEW STRAW HATS! MISSES\u2019 NEW STRAW HATS! LADIES\u2019 NEW STRAW BONNETS\u2019 LADIES\u2019 NEW STRAW BONNETS! MOURNING MILLINERY! CRAPE BONNETS, CRAPE HATS, CRAPE VEILS, WIDOWS\u2019 CAPS.S.CARSLEY.JONAS BRuOKS & BROS.Parties requiring the very best Sewing Cotton, for hand or machine use, should ask for Brooks\u2019 Spool Cotton.It is the popular Sewing Cotton in England for manufacturing purposes and private use, and has been for generations past.Ever since Messrs.Brooks & Bros.have reduced the price down to the same as ordinary Spool Cotton the de mand has Kept steadily increasing.E>TABLI-H- D 1870.WIDOWS\u2019 CAPS, box BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.\u2018porjooxo Joaou 3nq poyegrarr Æjjuon MONTREAL, 10,000 MANILLA CIGARS 10,000 Manila Cheroots! 2728~ The above are very fine and large.PHILIP HENRY, 134 St- James Stroet- Road Department.Tenders for Construction of Intercepting Sewers, SEALED TENDERS, addressed to the Road Committee.and endorsed * Tenders for Construction of Intercepting Sewer,\u201d will be re: ceived at the office of the City Clerk until noon on WEDNESDAY, the 23rd June inst.Specifications and Plans can be seen, and forms of tender obtained on and after WEDNESDAY, the 16th inst:, at this office, where all necessary information can be had on application.The lowest or any temder will not necessarily be accepted.The Road Committee reserve the right cf accepting tender for one or more of the sec- ons.(By order.) PERCIVAL W.ST.GEORGE, City Surveyor.CITY SURVEYOR'S OFFICE, City Hall, Montreal, June l4th, 1886.m 143 Fire Department.Winter Clothing, &c SEALED TENDERS, ac\u201cdressed to the undersigned, and endorsed * Tender for Winter Clothing, etc., Fire Departme:t,\u201d will be received at the City Cierk\u2019s Office, City Hall, until noon on FRID Y, the 25th June inst, for the followirig articles of Winter Clothing etc, for the Fire Brigade, viz.:\u2014Coats an Pants for 15 Guardians and 66 men, and Fur Caps for 3 Officers, 15 Guardians and 66 men, equal to samples to be seen at the office of the Chief of the Fire Department, between the hours of 9 and 12 every morning.Parties tendering to furnish made-up sam- pees of the required clothing Unaccepted samples will not be kept.The lowest or any tender will not necessarily.be accepted.(By o:der ) CHS.GLACKMEYER, Civy Clerk, Crry HALL, Montreal, 14th June, 1896.u 143 NOTICE.The Co-partnership heretofore existing between MORRIS & GRIFFIN, Saiimakers, was dissolved this day by mutual consents All debts due to, and by said firm, will ba received and paid by J.W.MORRIS, who i8 alone authorized to do so.The business will be carried on as heretofore, in all ita branches, by the undersigned.J.W.MORRIS.Montreal, June 14th, 1836.PROVINCE OF QUEBEC TURF CLUB, _\u2014 ., Sumo te 6! ** FASHION COURSE,\u201d BLUE BONNETS, MONTREAL.Thursday aad Saturday, June 17th & 19tk, Hon.President\u2014His Excellency the Marquis of Lansdowne : Hou.Vice-President\u2014His Hon.Lieutenant.Governor Masson.President\u2014Andrew Allan.Vice-Presidents\u2014Jos.Hickson, Esq, John Crawford, Esq.Stewards\u2014James P.Dawes, Esq .Dr, Craik) Lieut -Col.Ouimet, M.t., Hon.M.H.Coch- rane, James O\u2019Brie: , Esq., Hugh Paton, Esq., Duncan Melutyre, Esq., Chas.Cassils.Esq , Hon.Treasurer.Hugh A.Allan, Esq., Hector Mackenzie, Esq.FIRST DAY.THURSDAY.17th Jane, No.2\u2014 N* 4 \"50 guineas, gift of Her Msje-ty the Queen, for Forme foaled, raised and trained inthe Province of Quebec, aod that have rot previously won public money.Distance, 14 miles.No.3\u2014The MERCHANTS PURSE, $225.Mile heats.No.4\u2014HURDLE RACE, $200, Distance, 14 miles SATURDAY, 19th June, No.5\u2014 ROKERS\u2019 PURSE, $200, 1} miles.No.6\u2014[Dominion Stakes] CANADIAN DERBY, for thrre-year-olds, foaled in the Dominion of Canada, a sweepstakes of 32 each, 310 forfeit, with $300 added, $100 to 2nd horse.Distance, 1} milas No.7\u2014HURDLE RACE, handicap, $200.Di tance, 2 miles.No.8\u2014CONSOLATION RACE, handicap, 1 For particulars see programmes.Entries close Saturday, 12th June, and must be addressed to the Secretary of the Province of Quebec Turf Club, St.Lawrence Hall.DUNCAN BOBERISON, Secretary.June 12 141 THEATRE ROYAL.Sparrow & Jacobs.Proprietors and Managers.Week commencing June 14th.A BIG BLACK BOOM ! Kersand's Famous Colored Minstrels, Headed by the original BILLY KERSAND.25 ARTISTS 23 WAILIACE KING, The World®s Greatest Tenor, composer of the beautiful ballad, * Cricket on the Hearth.\u201d EVERY AFTERNOON & EVENING.Admission\u201410,20 and 30 cents.141 SPARROW'S Great Royal Pavilion.EGYPTIAN OLYMPIAN GAMES ! A Consolidation of the World's Greatest Arenic Celebrities.LAST WEEK OF THE GREAT SHOW ! Price reduced to TEN CENTS.Two Performances Daily, at 2 and 8 p.m.June 14 tf 190 Mt Association of Montreal, Gallery of Paintings and Sculpture, PHILLIPS SQUARE.Open from 10 a.m.to 8 p.m.Admission :\u2014Non-members, 10 cents.SATURDAYS FREE.111 Tem Adnertisewenis, RICHELIEU | The Prince of Table Waters.Orem Families who wish to get a pure, wholesome, natural Table Water, ask your Grocer for it.Ææ#\" For sale by the leading Hotels, Clubs, Restaurants and Grocers.J: A.HARTE, 1780 Notre Dame Street.Telephone 1190.March 20 mws 237 FOR SALE, To Arrive This Week, 50 PUNS.CHOICE NEW Barbadoes Molasses.J.& R.McLEA, S Common Street, MONTREAL 81 HAND GRENADE FIRE EXTINGUISHERS The cheapest and most effeo- tive means of extinguishing fire.Always ready for use.Never get out of order.Hermetically sealed and do not deteriorate with age.Perfectly harmless to person, clothing or @ the most delicate fabrics.Every publie building, mill, factory, hotel, store and private dwelling should be sup- 8 plied with these invaluable safeguards against fire.sole Agent in the Province of Quebec for the Harden Hand Grenade Fire Extinguisher, v anufactured in Chicago, asd of the Globe Hand «renade, manufactured in London, Ont.Price, $9 per dozen.All orders promptly filled by JACKSON RAE, tf187 30 St.John Street.NOTICE TO CONSIGNEES, THE ALLANS R.M.S.POLY NESIAN, JOSEPH RITCHIE, Commander, from Liverpool, is entered at Customs.Com signees VAL please pass their entries without delay H & A.ALLAN, gents.Montreal, June 14 1886.m 145 NOTICE TO CONSIGNEES The Dominion Line SS.SARNIA, Capt- Gibson, from Liverpool, is entered at Ci a toms.Consignees are requested to pass the entries without delay.x «co RANC ., DAVID TOR Sons May 22 CONSIGNÉES Æ 4.=, The Beaver Line SS.LAKE HURON, wm Bernson, master, from Liverpool, is ee tered inwards at Customs.Consignees will please pass their entries without delay.Canada Shipping Oo.H.E.MURRAY, hs A Female Feeder.Apply at HERALD Press trol or supervision, but had he been aman many.) U room.139 - ee _ mer es \u2014 EE General Manager.June 14 m lid huge pts de is \u2014_\u2014 ._ =\u2014\u2014\u2014_._\u2014 »\u2026- \u2026- A éd bed rn sy \u2014 a - -\u2014 +> CED dD) rE OS hy pe Ay + ee mit - = Tha om oF rhe O San 0 © - ve et ed i fi ~~ OS \u2014 \u2014_.le e Tr \u2014 oo eg 4 \u2014 Vm will er, 14d \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 re ER \u2014 THE MONTREAL HERALD AND DAILY COMMERCIAL GAZETTE, WiDNESLAY, JUNE 18 à = -\u2014 THE QUEBEC LEGISLATURE.YESTERDAY'S BUSINESS.Quesko, June 15.The Ascembly went to work ceriously this afternoon to clear the order paper and dispo e of the remaining business of the session with a piew of prorogation if, possible, this week.Hon.Mr.Taillon, moved the third reading of the Health Bill: Mr.McShane moved to recommit the bill in order to amend it by providing that cu)y in time of epidemic the members of tbe provincial board should receive any 18y beyond their travelling expenses, and that in all cities, towne and incorporated villages where there is a local health beard every physician shall immediately report to the board ali cases of smallpox or chclera coming under his treatment or knowledge, and shall also cauee to be taken the necessary measures to prevent the contagion epreading until the locsl board has had time to act, and that in all cases where no physician is called in the head of the family shall report tke case.Mr.McShane\u2019s amendment was lost on division and the bill went through its third reading and was passed.The iwo kills giving eflect to the Government\u2019s new railway policy also passed on divieion, but without debate, and the bill respecting the echool teachers\u2019 pension fund went tnrough®without objection or amendment.Then tue massacre of the innocents began.Two of Mr.Spencer\u2019s bills, one of Mr.Mercier\u2019s and one of Mr.Gagnon\u2019s were dropped.A number of others received their second reading, but will probably share the same fate at a later stage.Before six o\u2019clock the Attorney~General moved, and it was agreed, that henceforward to the end of tbe session the House hold two distinct sittings daily beginning with this eveuing\u2019s sitting.; During the afternoon the treasurer laid on the table a statement of receipts and payments of the province from all sources -for the ten months from the lst July, 1885, to the 1st May last past, According to this statement there is already a deficit of over $45,000 on the operations of the current fiscal year.The total receipts for the ten months are given at $3,211,735.37, and the total payments at $3,670,869.When the House resumed at 6 o\u2019clock the treasurer submitted the supplementary estimates to a total amount of $133,480, apportioned as follows :\u2014 Library of Legislature, to buy new books, &c, $5,250.} Civil Government, to pay services of extra clerks, $1,500.Educational grants, $2,500.rovincial Health Board expenses, $5,- Vaccine farm, $1,000.Colonial Exhibition, $6,000.Provincicl Rifle Association, $300.Arts and Manufactures, $2,600.Richmond Agricultural College, $1,000.Yeterinary School, $750.\u2018Fo establish a provincial stud.$6,000 a year, for five years.Insurance on the buildings of the Farn- ham Beet Root Sugar Factory, $900.Montreal Botanical Garden provided 50 acres of land are furnished, $1,000.Bridge over the Richelieu, between La.colle and St.Thomas, $2,000.Aid to the Berthier Beet Sugary Factory, $3,000 a year for four years.Agricultural societies, $200, Colonization roads, $8v,000.Public buildings, including Spencer Wood, $2,940.Charities, including, $1,400.to the Hotel Dieu.Montreal, $1,540, Protection of forests against fire, half to be reimbursed by limit holders, $5,000, Deschamps list of parishes and municipalities, $2,000.To the sufferers by the Hull fire, including the $1,000 already granted, $3,000.A discussion relative to increasing the salaries of police magistrates ensued.When the motion for going into supply was put Mr.Whyte moved an amendment declaring That the House noticed with regret that the statement given in answer to an order of the House on the 5th 1nst., was not a correct statement of the debt of the Prc- vince up to the 20th April last, the debt as stated in the return being $12,203,545.74, that is the statement is misleading, because it does not include the amount of $100,000 advanced by the Jacques Cartier Bank, and stated to be so due by Hon.Mr.Chapleau\u2019s deposition in the hands of the Public Ac- \u2018counts Committee, and in a letter of Hon.Mr.Ceapleau, dated 13th September, 1882, in reply to a letter of À .Deejardina, dated the 28th August, 1882, in which Mr.Chap- leau states that © Hon.J.G.Robertson had paid the $100,000 to the Montreal Bank when tle Jacques Cartier Bank had the prior claim;\u201d also because the statement does not include the amouat lost by the Government in the transactions with the Exchange Bank, the amount at the credit of the Government in the Exchange Bank 88 stated in the public accounts, being sixty thousand dollars.The Exchange Bank has failed and is now in liquidation, but will only er about sixty cents in the dollar, the overnment has expenses of suits taken againet the bank to pay out of amounts coming from the liquidators which will reduce the amounts to atout thirty thousand dollars, making thirty thousand dollars more to be added to the debt of the province.For the reasons Btated the amount of one hundred and thirty thousand dollars ought to have been added to the debt of the province and should have shown that amount to bs added to the deficit of the financial year 1884 and 1885 The member for Meganti ted thi amendment, Banc supported this The amendment t re was defeated by a vote A tecond amendmont moved by Mr.Girouard referred to the Gale defalcation.This amendment was also rejected by 42 The House then went into committee and adepted about half of the suplement- ary estimates, The bill for the relief of the students ho took part in the North-West expedition in 1885 next passed its third reading and the House adjourned at 12.30, _\u2014\u2014 Horroway\u2019s PrLLs.\u2014Enfeebled Existence,\u2014This medicine embraces every attribute required in a gereral and domestic Temedy; it overturns the foundations of ISease laid by defective food and impure arr.In obstructions or congestions of the liver, lungs, bowels, or any other organs, these Pills are especially serviceable and fminently successful, They should be ept in readiness in every family, as they are a medicine without a fault for young Persons and these of feeble constitutions, Ey never cause pain or irritate the most Sensitive nerves, or most tender bowels.olloway\u2019s Pills are the best known purifiers of the blood, and the best promoters of absorption and secretion, and remove all poisonous and noxious particles from th solidsand fluids.Tr ee Mr If you want a Nurse's place advertise in Th plac © Herald THE WORLD OF SPORT: The Province of Quebec Turf: Club.Entries for the Summer Meeting at Blue Bonnets.The Royal Scots Athletic Games \u2014Presentation of Prizes, The Summer Meeting OF THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC TURF CLUB THE ENTRIES FOR BOTH DAYS, The entries for the Summer Meeting of the Province of Quebec Turf Club meeting, at the Blue Bonnets Fashion Course, to-morrow and Saturday, have been closed.There is every indication that the meeting wilt be a great success, as the following entries will testify :\u2014 THURSDAY, JUNE 17th.NO.1, TRIAL PURSE, $125, Toronto Stablesb g Willle W., by Prince ton, age 5 years.W.E.Owens\u2019 Felix.'W.Hendrie, Jr.¢ h Inspector, by Berlin, dam Lottie B., aged.HM.Gorman\u2019s b h Kisber, by imported Billet, dam Miss Knight, 6 years.: M.Gorman\u2019s b g Cooperstown, by King Alfonso, dam Simplicity, 4 years.W.Carson\u2019s ¢c g Tantrum, by Great Tom.dam \u2014, 4 years.No.2\u2014QUREN\u2019S PLATE.50 guineas,the gift of Her Majesty the Queen, for horses foaled, raised and trained in the\u2018 Province of Quebec, and that hav: not pre- ously won public money.Distance 1} miles.Dr.Craik 8 ch.m.Iolanthe, by Helmbold, d.fap.Sweetbread, 5 yrs.J.K.White, b.m.Belle P., by Astromer, d.Neli M., 5 yrs.J.Alex.Strathy, b.g.Bird Catcher, by Tubman,d Minnie, aged.J.R.Woodward, ch.m.Charmette, by As- tromer, d.Flirt, 6 yrs.No, 3\u2014MERCHANTS\u2019 PURSE, ($225\u2014Mile heats).W.E.Owens\u2019 Phenix.John Forbes\u2019 b.g.Geo.L, by Vigil, d.Zea, aged, M.Gorman, b.h.Kisber, by imp.Billet, d.Miss Knight, 6 yrs, a Carsons\u201d ch.g.Tantrum, b.Great Tom, , yrs.No.4.\u2014HURDLE RACE-$200, distance 1} miles.W.E.Owen\u2019s Spectacle.T.Bennetl\u2019s ë g Minto, b Longueuil, d by Don Juan, aged.Chas.R.Bryant, g g Little Jack, by Hunter Lexington, d Songstress, aged.Lachine Stables, br g Vigilance, by Virgil, d Bonnie Kate \u2014.W.M.Henry, b h Insp:ctor, b Berlin, d Lottie B, aged.Toronto Stables, b g Willie W., b Princeton, d \u2014, 5 years.J.B.O'Neill\u2019s ch g \u2014, b Hyder Ali, d \u2014, 6 years.H Strathy\u2019s bg Bird Catcher, a Minnie, aged.J.R.Woodward's ch g Wizard, b Ventilator, d Jennie Allman, #ged.M.Minogne, ch g Barrister by Judge Curtis, d halfbred, aged.SECOND DAY, SATURDAY, JUNE 19TH.No.b.\u2014~BROKERS' PURSE\u2014$200, one and a quarter miles.J.K.Whites b m Bell P, b Astromer, d Nell M, 5 years.W.Cars n\u2019s chg Tantram, b Great Tom, \u2014-, 4 years.W.E.Owen\u2019s Felix.John Forbes\u2019 bg Geo.L,, by Vigil, d Zes, aged.M.Gorman\u2019s b g Belchmore, b Creedmore, d Amanda aged.M.Gorn an\u2019s b g Cooperstown, b King Alfonso, d Simplicity, 4 vears, Toronto Stables, Willie W., b Princeton, d \u2014, 5 years.- Na.(\u2014[Dominion Stakes] CANADIAN DERBY, for three-year-olds, foaled in the Dominion of Canada, a sweepstake of $25 each, $10 forfeit, with $500 added, $100 to 2nd horse.Distance 13 miles.Dr.Craik, Montreal, be.\u2018 Harbinger,\u201d by Tubman, d.Maud Cutler, by O.N.Cutler.Hugh Paton, Montreal, b.f.\u2018Sky Lark, by Aerolite,d.imp Sweatbread.J.P.Dawes, Luchine, b.f.¢ Lydia,\u2019 by Tubman, d.Bonnie [Half-bred]., = | Bellevue Stables, Montreal, br.f.* Albani,\u2019 by imp.Highlander, d.Lalla Rookh, by Wag- ram.Wm.Hendrie, Hamilion, br.o.* Wild Bruce,\u2019 by Bill Bruce, d.Wild Brier, by imp.b Tubman, Australian.\u2018Wm.Hendrie, Hamilton, ch.f.* Biight Star,\u2019 by Big Sandy, d.Beautifal Star, by Harry Bassett.Alex.Finkle, Woodstock, b.f.\u2018Moonlight,\u2019 by Princeton, d.Simoon.B.Burgess, Woadstock, b.c.\u2018Fred B., by Princeton, d.koxaline.Major Peters, London, ch, c.* Lord Gros- venor,\u2019 by imp.Lord Byron, d.Fleetfoot.John Dyment, Orkney, bk.f.* Rosabelle, by Inspector, d.Nett e.T.D.Hodgens, London, ch f.Bruce, by Bill Bruce, Athol.by Longueuil d.* Maggie d.Tolima, by Glen John Forbes, Woodstock, ch.g.\u2018Woodstock, by Bill Bruce, d.Galvantress, D.W.Campbell, Milton, br.f, \u2018Miss Rose, by Princeton, d.Nellie Lyall.D.W.Campbe 1, Milton, br.f.\u2018D.W.C.,)) by Princeton, d.»tolen Kisses.No.7, HURDLE RACE, hand'cap, $2)0\u201411stance 2 miles.Lachine stables\u2014Br.g.Vigilance, by Virgil, d.Bomniu Kate.W.Hendrie, jr., b.h.Inspector, by Berlin d., Lottie, aged._M.Mini gue, ch.g.Barrister, by Judge Cur- \u2018tis, d, Halfbred, aged.T.Bennett, g.g.Minto, Don Juan, aged.W.KE.Owens\u2019 Spectacle.J H.O'New\u2019sch, g., by Hyder Ali, d.6 vears.J.A.L.8trathy, b.g.Birdcatcher, by Tub- mad, d.minnie, aged.No.9.CONSOLATION RACE, handicap, $100.3th Royal Scots, DISTRIBUTION OF PRIZES WON AT TOR LATE TOURNAMENT.Last evening a number of memboars of the 5th Royal Scots assembled at their armory to assist at the distribution of prizes won in the tournament lately held in the Victoria Rink.Among those present were Captains Gault and Miller, Lieut, McLennan and Adjutant Lydon.After a few well chosen remarks frora Captain Gault, who congratulated the regiment on the success of the recent entertainment, Mr, Walier Goldsacks was elected chairman for the distribution of prizes.The following is a list-of the successful competi tors and the prizes awarded them : Two mile race in drill order, open.\u2014Ist prize, silver «ake basket, won by A.Jones, of the Garrison Artillery; 2nd prize, silver pickle dish, wou by Private Gifford of the Oue mile, open.\u2014Ist prize, silver pickle dish, awarded 12 T.Moffitt, of M.A.A.A : 2nd prize, bronze lamp, won by M.Shaw, of the Shamiock Lazrosse Club.Quarter mile hurdle race\u2014list prize, fine glass cruet stand, taken by W.Kerr, Scots; Zod prize, a silver cruet stand, Pie.Cormond, cots.; Half mile regimental race,open to members of ths regiment onlv\u2014Ist prize, rilver salver, Stewert Uuthbert; 2nd prize, photo of the company, W.Kerr, of the Scots, Quarter mile, heavy marching order\u2014Ist prize, an Inkstand, Norman F etcher, of the Victoria Rifles; 2ud prize, a silver cream and sugar bowl, J.Jones, of the M.G.A Wheel race\u20141st prize, silve- cup, Corporal L'ndsay, of the Field Battery; 2nd prize,Corp, Conway, of the 5th Royal Scots, Three-legged race\u2014list prize, sleeve buttons, P.Taylor and W.Goidsack: 2na prize, pair of vases, Watson and Brown.Tag of war\u2014Prize, the regimental cup,won by the 5th Royal Scots.On the prizes being distributed, a vote of thanks was tendered to Capt.Bezket, who acted as starter, end .K.Reid, who was referee in the tournament, after which a most enjoyable evening was spent by the regiment.NEW ENGLAND PIPER CO MILLS AT PORTNEUF.Office and Warehouse: Nun's Building 21 4 23 DeBresoles st, Montreal, MANUFACTURERS OF News, Manilla, Brown, Grey and Straw Wrappings, \u2014 ALSO \u2014 Kanging, Sheeting and Roofing - uh Papers and Card Middies.Dec.19 Sm {1s 308 \u2014 \u201c a A 3 BUFFALO, IN.¥.Organized with a full Sta of eighteen Experienced and Skiliful Physicians and Burgeons for the treatinent of all Chronic Diseascs.OUR FIELD OF SUCCESS.Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Throat and Lung Diseases, Liver and Kidney Diseases, Bladder Diseases, Diseases of Womon, Blood Diseases and Nerve ous Affections, cured here or at home, with or without seeing the patient.Come and sce us, or send ten cents in stamps for our « Invalids\u2019 Guide Book,\u201d Which gives all particulars.Nervous Debility, Impotency, Nocturnal fosses, DELICATE and all Morbid Conditions caused by Youthful Foi.DISEASES.lies and Pernicious Solitary Practices are s eedily _ and permanently cured by our Specialists, Book, post-paid, 10 cts.in stamps.Rupture, or Breach, radi- cally cured, without the knife, RUPTURE.without dependence upon trusses, and with very little in stamps, pain.Book sent for ten cents PILE TUMORS and STRICTURES treated with the greatest success.Book sent for ten cents in stamps.Address WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N.Y.The treatment of many thousands of cases of those DISEASES OF diseases peculiar to WOMEN he TE INT » at the Invalids\u2019 Hotel and Surgical Institute, has afforded large experience in adapting remedies for their cure, and DR.PIERCE\u2019S Favorite Prescripti 18 the result of this vast experience.It is a powerful Restorative Tonfe and Nervine, imparts vigor and strength to the system, and cures, as if by magic, Leus corrhea, or \u201cwhites,\u201d excessive flowing, painful menstruation, uns natural \u2018suppressions, prolapsus or falling of the uterus, weak back, anteversion, retroversion, bearings down sensations, chronic congess tion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, internal heat, and \u201cfemale weakness.\u201d It promptly relieves and cures Nausea and ealkkness of Stomach, Indigess tion, Bloating, Nervous Prostration, and Sieoplessiiess, in either sex.PRICE $1.00, OR 6 BOTTLES FOR 5.00.Sold by Druggists everywhere.Send ten cents in stamps for Dr.Pierce's large Treatise on Diseases of Women, illustrated.World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main Street, BUFFALO, N.Y.SICK-HEADACHE, Bilious Headache, Dizziness, Constipation, Indigestion, and Bilious Attacks, promptly cured by Dr.Pierce\u2019s Pleasant Purgative Pellets.25 cents a vial, by Druggists.ly mwf 113 ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo.P.Rowell & Co., Newspaper Advertising Buresu, 10 Spruce St., New York.Send 10cts.for 100-Page Pamphlet.6m DW ss 92 PIRES SHIRTINGS WE BEG TO CALL THE ATTENIION OF THE RETALAN COUNTRY TRA To the Fact that the SHIRTIEGS made by us are much Better Weight, Faster Colors and More Durable THAN ANY OTHERS in the MARKET The experience of those who have used them for the past eight years, and an examination of the goods, will prove the correctness of this statement.They are for sale by all the leading Wholesale Hous2s.WN, PARKS & SOW, Limited ST.JOHN, N.B.May 24 M law DW 29 MR.WM, CARTER SMITH, SOLICITOR, &C., 8: COLLINSISTREET WEST, Melbourne, Vic'oria, Australia, Commissioner foradministering Oaths in the Sunrerge Court and Exchequer Court of Canada, Parlliamentary Age:.t, Commissioner for taking acknowledgmetits, Commissioner for affidavits for New South Wales, Queer-land, South sustrauda, India, Cape of Good Hope an 1.Debtors\u2019 & Creditors\u2019 Agency.For the negotiation of settlements between debtors and (Creditors, and Jor amicably are r ng matters of contract in dispute.a investigating and advising debtors in difficulties with respect te their estates, and for submitting true reports to their creditors.For procuring capifal, securing loans, and the promotion of companies.For all matters of business appertaining to that of accountant, assignee, valuator and agent.All business confidential, and personally attended to by E HN LIVINGSTONE, Jo \u201cMall?Bwildings, Toronto 281 trs YOU HAVE A PAIN IN THE BACK, chest or side, and you want to get rid of it at once.It may result from & common cold or mav indicate some deeper trouble.In either case apply Beason\u2019s Capcine lusters, which will relieve or cure in a few hours.The ordinary porous plasters are useless save as a mechanical support, Benfon\u2019s are highly medicinal, and during the epidemie of pneumonia in the winter of 18845 they proved very effective as a preventive and palliative.Canada Life Assurance Company.Hen Advertiscwenis, Tre Directors beg to announce that the New Assurances accepted for the year to 30th April last amounted to $5,445,956.00.A.G.RAMSAY, PRESIDENT.June, 1886.r 141 COME AND SEE The Reliance Air Compressor, A most ingenious novelty, by which a constant flow of PURE ST.LEON MINERAL WATER is secured.ST.LEON MINERAL WATER, Cool, Refreshing, Effervescent.Just received a fresh sup\u2019 ply of the celebrated ST.LEON MINERAL WATER.Sold by the glass, bottle or gallon, at No 4 Victoria Square.Families and the trade supplied, wholesale and retail.THE ST.LEON WATE?CO.4 Victoria Square.June 8 RESERVE Steam Coal! BEST QUALITY FRESH MINED BUNKER COAL supplied to Steamships in Port of Montreal, or at Company\u2019s Pier, Sydney, C.B.Very best Fresh Mined and Screened RESERVE STEAM COAL, also Screenings, for sale, ex ship or delivered, in lots to sui CONSUIErs.F.C.HENSHAW, Agent, 4 Custom House Square.Telephone No.638.ay 26.SPRING HILL COAL FRESH MINED, Screened Steam Coal, arriving daily in BOX cars, dry_and free from dust.CUMBERLAND RAILWAY & COAL COXPANY J.R.OOWANNS, Hooretary, 137 OHESTERFIELD RCOMBERS, | \\s Alexis Street.Oot 31 ive SILVERED PLATE MIRRORS, \u2014;-\u2014 ENCOURAGE HOME MANUFACTURES, We are now prepared to tarnish Mirrors of any sise.Silvering Equal if not Superior 10 English or French and guaranteed stand untarnished.to the Trade.A.RAMSAY & SON, 37 to 41 Bocollet St, and 12 to 22 Tuspector St IMONTREAL, : March 11th, 1886.81 W.MeLBA WALBANK, BA Se, Architect; Land Surveyor, Civil Enginser and Valuator, \u2018214 St.James St., Montreal.Water Works and Drainage a + pecially.Consultation hours between 12 and I'p.m.daily.April 81 DAVID J.CRAIG, ACCOUNTANT, J.P.AND COMMISSIONER, FOR QUEBEC AND ONTARIO, 110 St.James Street MONTREAI.Special attention given to the mavagement of Insoivent istates, Estates of Degeased or Absent Persons, and frust matters g3neral}y.May 1 3m 104 DR.MAJOR, Specialist to the Department for Disgases Of the Nose and Throat, Montreal General Hospital, will be absent in Europe until September.: 83 UNION AVENUE.: May 26.1y 110 > Help Wanted \u2014Male FOREMAN CUTTER\u2014Wanted immediately an experienced practical man as Foreman Cutter.Liberal salary.Apply to Gallery & O'Neill, Merchant Tailors, 2114 Notre Dame street, Montreal.cl4 Situations Wanted\u2014Male.WANTED, a situation as storeman or assistant; good penman and quick at figures ; can give vood references and security ifrequired.Address H.W., Herald office.141 Rooms To Let O LET, furnished room or rooms.T Mrs.O\u2019Nell, 64 Cathcart street.me LET, furnished rooms, double and single, also unfurnished, a 49 McGill College Avenue, m 144 O LET, furnished front parior, suitabie for one or two gentlemen, on first floor; also single room.Fourth door from Windsor Hotel.136 Peel street.m 144 CCOMMODATION, comfortable and convenient, for strangers visiting the oy > aiso, permanent board.18 Brunswick st.144 COUNTRY BOARD.Superior accommodation and board for four or five adults during the summer months.Mountain air and vic jg LIL an hour A807 Low Prices and Special Discount |.and a half of Montreal.Address A.M., Herald Office.9% ae lès tn A till.mn a er A reg terns ee Rew Xdusriisements, Rich, Novel and Elegant of Large Variety Styles and Patterns to Select from.Office and Factory : SE, 85 & 90 Grey Nun Street, MONTE FIAT: sr Samples mailed to the Trade on application.Our new samples for 1886 & '87 are now complete and in the hands of our travellers.June 18 u Ts ws M 830J 114 McINTYRE, SON & CO.IMPORTERS 13 Victoria Square, Montreal October 18 MONTREAT, WALL PAPER FAGTORY, COLIN, McARTHUR & CO.Wholesale Dry Goods, &e., 248 New Designs for (886-\u201987 are now out and Travellers on the Road.mets res ter Large Variety of Colored Window Shades on Hand.Samples to the TRADE on application.\u2014\u2014\u20140\u2014_ IS to 21 Voltigeurs Street, MONTREAL.(FORMERLY MOLSONS COLLEGE.) June 12 1M 141 LEOPOLD GALARNEAU, AGENT IN CANADA FOR Sandeman, Buck & Co.(Pemartia), Xerez, « + + .Sherries Sandeman & Co., 81e 0 Oporto, .22 = Ports Delbéck &Co,.Reims, «+ + + Champagnes Leacock &Co., .© Madeira, .Madeira Wines Gordon& Co.+, .London, « Gin and Orange Bitters Seurin Freres, .Bordeaux, + « + + Clarets P.Clermont &Cis.,,.Bordeaux, .Clarets Alex\u2019r Seignette, ee La Rochelle, .Brandies W.Msingay, .BRolterdam, .Gins L.Rambaud & Marliagues, .- Apt, .Glaces and Crystallized Fruits Hy.White & Co, .© - London, ca Red Heart Rum DePossel Fils, .Marseilles, ce Olive Oil 350 St.Paul Street, Montreal.May 13 dm 114 CAMPBEII\u2019S BEWARE © ; OF COUNTERFEITS, NÉ agreable % Q oO adapted for the relief and A cure of that class of disorders attendant upon a low or reduced } state of the sy stem, and usually accompanied by P aller, Weakness and Palpitation of the Heart.Prompt results will follow its use in cases of Sudden Exhaustion arising from Loss of Blood, Acute qr Chronic Diseases, and in the weakness that invariably accompanies the recovery from Wasting Fevers.No remedy will give more speedy relief in Dyspepsia or Indigestion.) ished Blood, Loss of Appetite, Despondency, and in all cases where an EFFECTIVE and CERTAIN STIMULANT is required, the ELIXIR will be found INVALUABLE.* C ic oO, Or % % Sota by ail Dealers in Medicines.DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO.(Limited) SOLE AGENTS, yet potent preparation is especially + or Impover- &° & > &F urned uatil this morning, when convicts Munday and Dagenais, the two last, will be tried.\u2014_\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 AMUSEMENTS, Theatre Royal.Packed houses greeted Kersands\u2019® Minstrels last evening.The troupe in every respect is firet-class,and the singing of Wallace King, Billy Downe, Kersands, and \u201c\u2018 The Sextette,\u201d* is something worth hearing.Tothose who have already heard them, a treat is in store, as the entire programme will be changed on Thursday.Sparrow\u2019s Royal Pavilion.Quite a crowd witnessed the performances last evening, of Prof.Gleason and his wonderful trained dogs, M.Orville, Prof.Silvo, the Morello Brothers, the trick ponies, with Fred Runnells as clown, are well worthy of a vieit.It will close on Saturday, so the opportunity ought not to be missed.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 THE JURIOR CONSERVATIVES.The Junior Conservative Club met again last evening at the St.Lawrence Hall for the purpose of preparing for the coming local campaign, Mr.D.Sinclair moved that the selection of Mr.C.J.Doherty as Conservative candidate in Montreal Centre be ratified.Messrs, Mc- Cormick, Archambault, Curran and Bedard supported the motion on the ground that their president was entitled to the nomination, and expressed the hope that he would carry the day.The motion being put to the meeting was unanimously adopted.Mr.Doherty delivered a brief address mn reply, in which he accepted the nomination.The meeting having finslly disposed of Montreal Centre turned to Montreal West, but they were informed that the special committee appointed to canvass leading Conservatives in the con~ stituency with regard to the selection of a candidate were not ready to report, and consequently the meeting adjourned until the 23rd inst.POLICE COURT.Before Judge Dugas.Yesterday morniog His Honor rendered judgment in fourteen cases which had occupied the greater portion of Monday, being those of Capt.John Hill, of the ship Cambridge, who brought against sevea of his crew, Fred.Clarke, Ernest Hendersen, John Hesse, Richard Brown, Andrew Neilsen, Walter Kura and Charlie Daniel- sen, for refusing to obey lawful commands, aad in which the prisoners were each condemned to two weeks\u2019 imprisonment.The other seven cases were those brought by each of the above seamen against the cap~ tain claiming that the articles of agreement be declared cancelled and that they be paid their wages and discharged, on the grounds of bad aud insufficient food endangering their respective lives if compelled to remain on board for the balance of the voyage to Buenos Ayres, All these latter cases were dismissed\u2019and the articles declared still good and valid.Mesers.Sexton and Pagnuelo appeared for the seven seamen, and Mr.C.L.Gethiogs acted for the captain.A Fortunate Escape.Mrs.Cyrus Kilborne, Beamsville, Ont., had what was supposed te be cancer on her nose.She was about to submit to a cancer doctor's treatment, when she concluded to try Burdock Blood Bitters, in~ ternally asd externally, a few bottles of which entirely cured her.SQUARE AND UPRIGHT second hand pianos in great variety to be scld or rented.Apply toN.Y.Piano Co., 228 St, James street.m,ld4i.DIOCESAN SYNOD.The Opening Services Yesterday.An Unusually Large Numbersof Delegates Attend.Lively Proceedings at the Afler- noon Session.The 27th annual session of the Montreal Diocesan Synod was opened, yesterday, by appropriate services in Christ Church Cathedral, The service, which commenced at 10.30 o\u2019clock, was attended by His Lordship Bishop Bond, the clergy of the parish of Montreal and a very fair attendance of the clerical and lay delegates to the Synod, After the devotional exercises were concluded the Rev.T.A.Cunningham, M.A, of Aylmer, P.Q., preached a most impressive sermon from verae 9, 36th Psalm, \u201cIn Thy light shall we see light,\u201d At the close of the sermon the religious exercises were coicluded by His Lordship administering Holy Communion.THE OPENING SESSION.The first business meeting of the Synod was opened at 2 o'clock in the Synod Hall, the chair being occupied by His Lordship Bishop Bond.After the opening prayer the Secreiary colled the roll of delegates.Among the dignitaries and delegales who answered to their names were :\u2014Very Rev.Dean Carmichael, M A., D.C.L.; Ven.Archdeacon Leach, D,C.L., L.L.D;; Ven.Archdeacon Lonsdeli, M.A.; Ven.Archdeacon Lini- say, M.A ; Ven.Archdeacon Evans, M.A ; Rev.Canon Anderson ; Rev.Canon Du- vernet, Rev.Canon Ellegood, M.A.; Rev.Canon Henderson, D.D ; Rev.Canon Norman, M.A., D.C.L.; Rev.Caron Davidson, M.A.; Rev.Canon Robinson, M.A.; Rev.Canon Empson, M.A; Rev, Canon Belcher ; Rev.Canon Mills, BD; R.v.Canon Mussen, M.A ; Rev.Cavoa Fulton, M.A ; Rev.R.Lindsay, M.À., Rural Dean ot Hochelaga ; Rev.J.Rollit, Rural D:an of St.Andrews; Rev.W.H.Naylor, M.A, Rural Dean of Clarendon; Rev.H.W.Nye, M.A ., Rural Dean of Bedford ; Rev.J.Smith, Rural Dean of Brome ; Rev.J.F.Renaud, Rural Dean of Iberville ; Rev.W.B.Longhurst, Rural Dean of Shef- ford.Christ Church Cathedral\u2014Rev.J.G.Norton, M.A., rector; Rev.Canon Henderson, M.A., Rev, J.A.Newnham, M.A, Geo.A.Drummond, Robert Evans.Grace Church\u2014Kev.Canon Belcher, rector; W.McWood, George Outram.St.George\u2019s Church\u2014Very Rev.J.Carmichael, D.C.L., Dean of Montreal, rector; A.F.Gault, James Hutton, St.James the Apostle\u2014Rev.Canon Elle- good, M.A., rector; George Macrae, Q.C., J.W.Marling.Church of the Redeemer, Cote St, Paul \u2014Granville Gilmore, E.B.Meyer.St.John the Evangelist\u2014Rev.E.Wood, M.A, rector; Rev.W.Wright, M.D., Rev.A.French, B.A., J.H.Plummer, J.L.Lawplough.St.Jude\u2019s Church\u2014Rev.J.H.Dixon, recior; J.H.Redfern, G.L.Wight, St, Luke's Church\u2014Rev.George Rogers, B.A., rector; W.R.Salter, Thomas Lamb.St.Martin\u2019s Church\u2014Rev.J.8.Stone, B.D., rector; Strachan Betoune, Q.C., A'ex.Gowdey.St.Mary\u2019s Church, Hochelaga\u2014Rev.J.D.Borthwick, rector ; Thomas Hawkins, W.J.Whitehead.St.Matthias\u2019 Church, Cote St.Antoine.\u2014Rev, Canoo Normao, D.C.L., rector ; Rev.E.W.King, M.A., Capt.R.T.Raynes, Col.Sweeney.St.Stephen\u2019s Church.\u2014 Ven.Archdeacon Evans, M.A., rector; F.McCulloch, John Tough.8t.Thomas\u2019 Church.\u2014Rev.R.Lindsay, M.A., Rural Dean, rector ; Waiter Drake, Robert Slack.Trinity.\u2014Rev, Canon Mills, B.D., rector; Chas, Garth, P.A.Crossby.L\u2019Eglise de Redempteur.\u2014Rev.L.N.Tucker, B.A., Rev.D.Lariviere, B.A,, Rev.T.Hood; Napoleon Picard, Henry Tucker, B.C.L.City Missionary\u2014Rev.H.J.Evaus, WA, Secretary of Synod\u2014Rev.Canon Emp- son, M.A.Lachine.\u2014St.Stephen\u2019s and St.Paul\u2019s, Rev.R.L.Macfarlane, B.A., rector; ld- Wilgress, B.C, Thorneloe,James Stephez- son, E.W.Strathy.Laprairie\u2014St, Lambert, Rev.W.J.Dart, M.A.; Dr.Alexander Johnson, Henry J.Dart, James Mattinson, James Bourne.Longueuil\u2014St.Mark\u2019s, Rev.J.Gilbert Baylis, B.D., rector; Wm.Cooper, H.J.Gear.The Rural Deaneries of Bedford, Brome, Clarendon, Iberville, Shefford and Si.Andrews were also fully represented.The Rev.Canon Empson was re-elected Clerical Secretary, and Mr.W.R.Salter was elected Lay Secretary in the place of Dr.A.Johnson, who isabsent in Eogiand.Mr.J.Hutton wae elected treasurer, and Messrs.C.W.Simpson aad S, C.Fatt, auditors, The Rev.Mr.Sweeney, of the Diocese of Toronto, the Rev.Mr.Holding, of England, and the Rev.Mr.Smith, of the Diocese of Huron, were invited to seats on the floor of the House.The election of the various committees resulted as follows: \u2014 Committee on finance\u2014Canon Ellegood (convener), Reve.R.Lindsay, J.Rollitt, J.G.Norton, J.W.Garland, Messrs.James Hutton, F.Wolferstan, Thomas C, Garth, Hon.T.Wood.Committee op canons\u2014The Dean of Montreal, Archdeacon Lindsay, Revs.R.Lindeay, J.G.Norton, Canon Henderson, Canon F'ulton, Canon Anderson, J.Constantine, W.R.Brown, Messrs, S.Bethune, Q.C.(convener), L.&.Davidson, G.Mac- rea, Q.U., T.P.Butler, M, M.Tait, Q.C., Rev.W, B.Longhurst.Committee on church provision for the lumber districts\u2014Reva, W.H.Naylor (convener), H.S.Fuller, J.Rollitt, W.P.Chambers, E.E.Cunningham, Messrs.R.W.Shepherd, C.R.Smith, Rev.H.Plaisted, Mr.John Crawford.e Committee on foreign miseions\u2014Rev.R.Lindeay (convener), Revs.Canon Mills, J.Ker, Canons Du Vernet, Norman and Anderson, A.Bareham, À.French, Messra.E.P.Hannaford, R.W, Shepherd, John Molson, L.H.Davidson, Rev.Mr.Nye aud Oanon Davidson, Rev.H.Hackenley and Rev.W.Windrow.Committee on Education\u2014Rev.\"Canon Norman, (convener),Archdeacons Lindsay and Evans, Reve, Canon Ellegood, Canon Anderson, Canon Henderson, H.W.Nye, E.Lindeay, Canon Mussen, E.McManus, J.J.Scully, Canon Robinson, W.H.Nay lor, J.D.Borthwick, Canon Mills, Canon Davidson, Rev.J.G.Norton, Rev, J.8.Stone, Rev.A.French, Rev.W.B.Long- burst, Rev.W.P.Chambers, Rev.5 Smith, Rev.H.W.Nye, Principal Tucker, Messre.L.H.Davidson, J.Holton, Principal Hicks, Dr.Johnsor, E, R.Smith and D.R.McCord.Committee on Sunday-schools\u2014Dean \u2014\u2014 \u2014- a .Carmichael (convener), Ver, Archdeacou Lindsay, Revs.IR.Lindsay, 1.W.Mus- sen, C.P.Abbott, Canon Davidson, Archdeacon Evans, Rev.1 Norman, Rev.J.I'.Renaud, Canon Mills, Mr.Wm.Salter, Rsv.J.W.Garland, Rev H.Kerr and Rural! Deans Baldwin and Weaver.Committee on Works of Mercy\u2014 Rev.R.Lindsav (convener), Revs.J.G.Norton, J.H.Dixon, J.S.Stone, R.D.Smith, J.F.Renaud, Canons Norman and Hender- aon, J.D.Borthwick, J.A.Newnhaiwn, H.J.Evans, Dean Carmichael, Canon Elle- good, Messrs.W.Salter, W.D:ake, (George Macrae, F.Wolferstan Thomas.Comittee on Printirg\u2014Messrs.J.Hutton, Jackson Rae, Rev.T.W.Mussen [convener], Rev.F.H.Clayton, J.Rollitt; Mesers.C.Garib, Revs.P.DeGruchy, Canon Robinson.Committee on Superannuation Fund\u2014 Archdeacon Lindsay, Rev.Canone Nor~ man and Davidson, Archdeacon Evans (couvener), Rev.Canons Belcher, P.De- Gruchy, \u2018Ÿ.W.Mussen, R.Lindeay, W.L.Mille, J.8.Stove, J.C.Garrett; Msasrs.J.Hutton, F.W.Thomas, L.H.Davidson, W.Hackwell and Brayley.Committee on the Diocesan Library and ou Books and Tracts\u2014Archdeacous Evaus and Lindsay, Rev.-J.G.Norton, Rural Dean Naylor, J.Fulton, Canon Norman, Principal Henderson, Canon Empson, Rural D:an Musser, W.B.Longhurst, J.J.Stone, H.W.Nye, R.Lindaay, F.R.Smith, J.Ker, Messrs.Dr.Johoson, L.H.Davidson (convener), Alex.Roberison.Diocesan Board of Domestic Missione\u2014 Revs.Canon Belcher (convener), J.F.Renaud, W.L.Mills, Archdeacon Lindsay, Reve.Canon Carmichael, J.8.Stone, J.À.Newnham, Rev.J.G.Norton, Messrs.the Chancelior, Charles Garth, J.Hutton, B.T.Wool, Hannaford, James Stephen- sou.Committee to carry out the Canon on Deacouesses\u2014The Dean (convener), Archdeacon Lindsay, Rural Dean Lindsay, Canon Norman, Messrs.L.H.Davidson, Thomaë White, M P., Chas.Garth, the Chancellor, Wm.Salter, Rev.J.G.Nor- toa, Rev.Canon Ellegood, Dr.T.P.Butler, Rev.J.S.Stone, Rev.W.Hall.Commit:ee on French Work\u2014Arch- deacons Liudsay [convener] and Evans, the Dean, Reva.Canon Davidson, W.H Nye, Canon Mussen, Tucker, Canon Norman, J.J.Roy, B.P.Lewis, E.Wood, Canon Anderson, l, E.Cunningham, Messre.L.H.Davidson, C.Garth, À.F.| Gault, T.P.Butler, G.F.C.Smith, Rènaud, Radford and Lightbound.Committee on Statisticz\u2014The Archdeacon and Rural Dean, and Rev.Canon Mussen, Archdeacon Lindsay [convener].HIS LORDSHIP'S CHARGE, Immediately on the selection of the committees, His Lordship proceeded to deliver his annual charge.The charge was a lengthy and eloquent one, and a complete resume of the principal events conuected with the church during the year.Want of space this morning prevent: us from giving more than a brief summary of His Lordship\u2019s address, which was frequently interrunted with enthusiastic applause.His Lordehip first thanked Almighty God for permitting him once more to meet the members of the Synod.He congratulated the delegates that the business before them was of a routine nature and therefore was not likely to cause any lengthened discussion.His Lordship then reviewed the history of the Synod meetings since the first in 1839.At that time there were no fine, he might say luxurious, churches to worship iu, there were only five churches in the city and ten clergymen, of whom: three were living at present.In the rural deaneries there were 61 churches and 38 clergymen, At that time various church schemes were devised and liberally supported.Thus the church prospered.(Applause.) It was in the first half of this quarter of a century of which he spoke that the first missionary schemes were proposed, and he assured his hearers that such enterprises were evidences of healthy growth, and that never in the history of the Church of kingiand was she more prosperous or stronger or more united than she was in Canada at the present day.The Reva Rural Dean Naylor, .P.Chambers, J.Greer aod others have by their diligence and earnestness of spirit brought within the church many settlèrs in remote districts.He then asked what should be done with those accessions.The missionaries have opened up the work, but without great assie- tance they can not efficiently maintain it.These men require effectual euppoit, and he pressed the matter on the earnest consideration of his hearers.Before leaving this subject he reminded his hearers, that from this time every clergyman ou being licensed ig expected to subscribe to the Widows and Orphans Fund.Through the mercy of God he had bzen enabled to make his usual visitation of the Diocese, he having visited 100 parishes, missions aud stations, exclusive of the city churches.He had ordained 12 priests and 8 deacone, consecrated 8 churches, 3 bnrying grounds and 1 font, and confirmed 228 men and 357 women.He then explained the system he followed in making his pastoral visits and said it was much better to go at a stated season then to remain in the city and go whenever called upon by the clergy of the various parishes.His Lordship thea referred to the Montreal Diocesan Toeological College bill, which had provoked so much discussion.He referred to the affiliation with McGill University, and spoke of the unpleacant position he was in in being & Vice-Presi- dent of the Lennoxville University, He wished, he said, in this matter to speak as & father to his sons, counting on their loyalty to him as their father and Bishop.(Great and continued applause).Immediately on the conclusion of His Lordship\u2019s charge, the Rev.Dean Carmichael moved the suspension of the rules of order to enable him to bring ina resolution naturally arising out of His Lordship\u2019s cLarge.On being put to the vote, it was passed unanimously, It was then moved by the Rev.Dean, seconded by Archdeacon Lindsay, ¢ That it is the desire of the Synod, and in the interest of this diocese, that the power to confer degrees in divinity on graduates of recognized uuiversities should be granted to the Montreal Diocesan Theological Col- ege.\u201cThat the Synod approve the actien of the said college in petitioning for the said degree conferring power.\u2018That this Synod recommends that the said petition be renewed; and that the Bishop and secretaries of this Synod be, and they are hereby authorized to petition the Legislature, in the name of this Synod, to grant to the said college the said degree-conferring powers.\u201d This motion raised quite a storm.1t was received by some with applause and by others with the reverse of applause, Mr.Davidson endeavored to speak, and said that this motion had been sprung on the Synod with the object of rushing 1t through.Here his voice was completely drowned.Mr, Wolferstan Thomas endeavored to support Mr.Davidson, but he was immediately called to order.Mr.Davidson again secured the floor, and said they were not ging to force their motion on the meeting without à thorough consideration.Mr.Davidson then moved 1n amendment to the motion that the dig- cussion of the question should be postponed until ten o'clock this morning, (Lioud cries of no, no, and question.) W.Robinson, Canon to a suggestion of one of the delegates ] J 1 the opinion, should this be carried out, it The Rev.Mr.Brown epoke in support | of the ameadment.| ; \\ The Rev.Rural Degn Smith, in answer that the discusion of the origi- pal motion should continue, as there were none of the deiegates absent,said that hie delegates had asked him if any thing of importance woull come up at the first session, and as he had told them no, they would not be present until the morning session.Messrs.Thomas, Crawford, and several other delegates then epoke some in favor and others against the motion.The Rev.Mr.Stafford then asked if any good would arise by postponing the discus- gion.The R:v.Mr.Allen did not wish an immediate vote, and he compared the meeting to the British House of Commons, but be believed in all parties getting fair play and thereupon favored the amendment.Several other delegates spoke in the same strain.It was then left to the Rev.Dean if he would press his moiion or consent to 1:8 postponement, He said that when he introduced the resclutioa he had in his mind several precedenis for such a sus~ pension of the r.le or order.One was last year, immediately after the charge.À motion of Sympathy w.th the Presbyterian synod, thea in session, was moved, and this motion might certainly be caleu- lated to bring on a heated discussion.However, if the matter was already understood, that his motion would come up at 10 o'clock this morning, he would consent to its postponement until then.\u201chis was agreed 10 by the delegates and the motion was consequently withdrawa.REPORTS OF COMMITTEES being the next on the order sheet, the following committees handed in iheir re- rts : \u2014 Mr.Edgar Judge read the repoit of the commiitee on the Quebec scheme.The principal features in this scheme, briefly stated, are: \u201c\u2018That the Dic- ceean Board receive the contributions of the mission to the stipends of the clergy and charge itself with payment in full of those stipends directly to the clergy at quarterly periods, The committee were of would relieve the miseionary clergy from all anxiety as to the payment of the stipends and would enable tiem to give their undivided attention tothe work of the ministry.EDUCATIONAL COMMITTEE.The report cf the Committee on E luca- tion was then read by the Rev.Canon Norman.It showed that the educational establishments of the Diocese were in a highly satisfactory condition, and that steps were being taken to secure power frora the Quebec Legislature to place them even on a sounder civil basis.The Rev.Canon then gave notice that he would move for the adoption of the report at a future session.REPORT ON SCHOOL LAWS was then read,concurr.ng in the intention to introduce religious instruction in the publie schools.Iu autumn the Protestant schools would be opened with the reading ot a portion of Scripture and the Lord\u2019s Prayer, The clergy will still retain the privilege of visiting the public schools, as above only refers to the Protestant schools and as the Catholic priests will still have the power to select the text books in the Catholic school:, it is not probable that the matter will receive any opposition from the Roman Catholics.The report of Bishops College, .Lennox- ville, was then received.REGISTRATION.The report of the committee on registration appointed at the last Synod of the Diocese of Montreal, was then read.BI-ENNIAL SYNODS, The Rev.Mr.Stone then read the report of tne Committee on Bi-ennial Synods, which stated that it is not desirable to in - terfere with the present annual meetings of Synod.A report on Foreign Missions was then read by Dr.Reed.THE IMMIGRANT CHAPLAIN.The Rev.Mr.Dixon then read his last report, a8 he has resigned his position as Immigrant Chaplain.REPORTS OF RURAL DEANS.Reports were then read and handed in by the following Rural Deans : \u2014 Rev.J.F.Renaud, Rural Dean of Iber- ville.Rev.W.B.Longhurst, Rural Dean of Shefford.Rev.H.W.Nye, M.A., Rural Dean of Bedford.Rev.W.H.Naylor, Rural Dean of Clarendon.The report of the Rev.Mr.Greer was also read.The following parishes had contributed to the mission fund:\u2014Aylwin, Bristol, Clarendon, Portage du Fort, and Thorne.In the Deanery of Clarendon, 30 years ago, there were only two parishes.Now there were 14, and room for two more; 22 years ago there were only 223 communicants ; one parish alone now reports 340 on iis list, and the whole number 1,171 ; 30 years ago there were only four churches, and now there were 22.It was moved by the Rev, Mr.Dixon, seconded by Rev, M.Longhurst, and resolved, : \u201c That while this Synod recognizes the true principle of each of our missions be- log educated up to the point of self-support, it bz hereby resolved taat before reducing an existing geant, an Archdeacon or Rural Dean, shall, at the request of the Executive Committee, visit the parish or mission, and at a vestry meeting called for the purpose, fally discuss the feasibility of the reduction, It was moved by Rev, R.Lindsay, seconded by Judgs Armstronge, \u201c\u2018 That a committee be appointed to prepare a report for general distribution,much on the plan of the Church Society Report, with short accounts from each mission, with such matter from the Synod Report as will be generally iateresting, with information about the domestic and foreign work of the Church in Canada, with short noticea of the foreign mission work of the Church of England as may tend to promote a deeper interest in missions.That it be referred to the Bishop for his appre- val, and the additional expense reported to toe Executive Committee for its considera- ion,\u2019 Some further discussion ensued, and it being after four o\u2019ciock, the Synod adjourned to meet at ten o\u2019clock this morning.\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 PERSONAL, Mr.Andrew Robertson, accompanied by Mrs.Robertson, will sail, to-morrow, from Quebec on the steamship Vancouver on an extended tour in Europe where they are to meet Mr.Alex.Robertson, their eldest son, who has been on a tour around the world.Mr.Robertson takeswith him the plans for the proposed General Hospital im prove- ments and will submit them to experts in England.re THE GREAT SOURCE of Consumption and many wasting forms of disease is scrofula lurking in the system.The true specific for this condition is found in Burdock Blood Bitters ; that medicine purifies the blood and builds up the enfeebled system .NEvER DRUG the \u2018stomach with rausest- ing aûd weskening expectorants and opiates; Hagyard\u2019s Pectoral Balsam 18 pleasant and reliable in its effects, and safe in all throat and lung complaints that, if neglected, end in consumption {hey ingpected the 53rd Batt, and are \u2014\u2014\u2014 CITY NEWS, Besr PIaxo tinin by applying to N, James street, and repairing d .Piano Co., 223 st m.l4}, Tue Mosr RertasLEe \u2014Oli smokers gy.the most reliable tobacco in town is Hirsch ** Perique Mixture.\u201d It does no: burn the tongue nor parch the mouth.In ting at Hirsch\u2019s (opposite Post-office), Try itl Excursioy.\u2014The employes of Mes Smith, Fischel & Co.(manufacturers of the \u2018 Gladstone \u201d cigar) intend holdin their annual excursion to Ste.Rose où Saturday next.An enjoyable time is anticipaied.Hymax's CELEBRATED Crt PLrg (medium strength) and Hyman\u2019s extra mild cut plug (exceedingly mild) putu in one pound and one-half pouad tin boxes warranted to keep fresh.for any length of time, prepared and cold by 8S.Hyman 180 Bt.James street, (City \"and District Savings Bank building).RESOLUTION oF SYMPATHY.\u2014A meetin of the members of the Cora Exchange hey been called for to-morrow to express re gret for the death of their late secretary.Mr.W.J, Patterson, and todraw up resolu, tions of sympathy to be ent to his relatives aad friends.His funeral will take place to-morrow at 2 o'clock from his late residence, No.7 Argyle avenue, Tue QUEENS CORCNATION.\u2014There will be a full service next Sunday in St.George\u2019 Church in celebration of the day ou which Queen Victoria wascrowned.This service which is specially appointed in the prayer book for use ou that day, is a most interesting one, and i3 specially 8a in view of the troublesome times in the old country.The sermon will be preached by the Dean of Montreal.AN ACTION DISMISSED WITH Cosrs\u2014 Yesterday morning the Hon.Justice Gill gave judgment in the case of Gilbert vg, Gilman, The action was instituted by tha former against the latter to recover $60), being portion of an amount charged for a $15,000 security which was required by the Government for the successful carrying out of the Galop Rapids contract.The action was dismissed with costs against the plaiutiff, Howogine Mar.Fapre.\u2014The clergy of the Archdiocese of Montreal have named the Gth ot July as the day on which they wiil meet and extend their congratulations to Mgr.Fabre on the occasion of his elevation to the dignity of Archbishop.It has been considered advisable\u2019 to appoint that day as His Grace is now on his pastoral visits and the numerous religions feasts at the end of the present month will exclude the possibility of having it at an earlier ate.THE FEDERATION LEAGUE\u2014The Montreal branch of the Imperial Federation League have elected the following office-bearers for the ensuing year: Mr.Henry Lyman, President; Mr, McLennan and Mr.John Lewis, Vice-Presidente; Mr J.Murray ; Treasurer; Mr.A.McGoun, Jr., Secretary; Messrs.\u2014 Thomas, W.W.L.Chip- man, À.D.Nicholls, George Hague, James Stepheneon, A.H.Lyman, G.R.Beers, R.KR.Grindiey, E.Judge, R.C.Smith and D.Johnston and Major Oakes, members of Council, BrocxinG vP SIDEwALRS.\u2014Considerable inconvenience 18 felt by pedestrians on Commissioner and Common streets, by tne way the sidewalks of these thoroughfares are obstructed by teams and waggons which are backed into warehouses to re ceive goods.Those coming along are obliged to take the middle of the street and this, at any time, especially during rainy weather,ls anything but pleasant.The debris of che recent fire on Commissioner 18 still left in statu quo, and is not only a source of annoyance to passers by, but of great danger to passing vehicles.Attention has been called to this before by the police authorities, but so far nothing hss been done in the matter.2 HERE AND THERE.The Fire Committee are to visit the different fire stations this morning, A very successful entertainment and social was given in the lecture room of St, Bartholomew\u2019s Church last evening.There are three annual bank meetings to~day here, viz., the Merchants and Ville Marie at noon and the Jacques Cartier at 1 p.m, There will be a general review of the police force on Friday afternoon at 4 o\u2019clock in presence of the Police Committee.A highly successful entertainment ws oan cn PA | Ing Air given at Nordheimer\u2019s Hall last evening In aid of L.A.6,292.Addresses were delivered by Messrs.Cloran and Warren.Lieut.-Cols.Van Straubenzee and Mat- tice have returned from Sherbrooke where highly pleased a: the efficiency of thé Corps.À meeting of the volunteers who were [ in active service during the Fenian Raid of 1866 is to be held this evening atthe Armory, corner Dorchester and University streets.Krew The Liberals and Independent Coaserva: {gop tives of Yamaska have selected Mr.Gladu as their candidate at the coming local elections.This gentleman was only defeated by 46 votes at the last election.In view of the neglect of the City Counel to grant the City Passenger Railway I's ; to extend their line along St.James strée west, work was, vesterday, commenced 0: the switches on Notre Dame street west.The Mayor, City Clerk and severd aldermen left by the Quevec bost evening for Quebec, where they will upon His Eminence the Cardinal to-ds and compliment him in the name of city on the high Honor which hes conferred on him.err.THE WEATHER.MONTREAL, June 15, 1 Temperature in the shade by Stand Thermometer, observed by Hearn & BX rison, opticians snd mathematical 1n@FU\" ment makers, 1640 and 1642 Noure Dam® street :\u2014 M, lpn 6 P.M > 61° HE MAX.MIN, MEST 64° 50° 57 [By Standard Barometer.} 8 A.M, 1P.M.6 pM.29.85 29.85 23,79 METBOROLOGICAL OFFICE, } ToroNTO, Ont., June\u201d.5, 1 am.There has been a slight decrease iu Ÿ pressure over Canada and an increase 0 the Western States.The centre of dep! sion is now over the western part of lake region.The weather has been erally fair and warmer.Probabilities.Lakes\u2014Light to moderate winds; mol fair weather with thunder storms if} ties ; not much change in temperature.Upper St.Lawrence\u2014Moderate wa: mostly fair, warm weather with #: thunder storms.Lower St.Lawrence and Gulf\u2014Mof to fresh winds; fair to cloudy w with locai rains ; higher temperatunt À Maritime\u2014 Fresh winds; mostly ® westerly ; mostly fair, warm weather Ad April oon; fre, * Tel "]
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