The Montreal herald, 15 septembre 1900, samedi 15 septembre 1900
[" me mm mere © err gp 2e 0m 0 0 0eme 0m me ao re - \u2014\u2014\u2014 me promu _\u2014 = rp ._ , .FIRST SECTION.| N ° +; FIRST SECTION.i \u2018 PAGES 1 TO 8.4 d : e PAGES 1 TO,8.- _.- -\u201c- : a > 2 ' «> TINY) IY .rv oc ~ VEN x 5 93RD YEAR Nu 219.MONTREA.,, SATURDAY.SEPTEMBER 15, 1900.Ç _ = = _ ue SES me \u2014\u2014 oo sm Sr ES = = nm COMMENDS THE | A THOUSAND \u2018: CANADIANS WHO W [SH COPYRIGHT Law BIG SIHIK GINS STILL WANTED \u2014_\u2014 i ~ q -\u2014 » = \u201c Our .| : 20 | awa, September 15 \u2014Bpecial.) \u201cThe Mr.Robert Kerr, passenger trafic mab- im 3 1 on London Ties hay Joined the lis: of Engil:n Scranton, Pa., Sept.15.\u2014 There Is no lon- ' fger of the Canudiap Pacific Ruallway, has A A Neg oe , ATE Ç y ' > , | Devers which Lave cummend-d Hou.Ryd ger any question 88 lo w general, if pot létélved further advices from the North I\" y she rp w ye GS Le uey Fisher, Minister of Agriculture, for his complete, tie up of the wlnes lu the Lacka- on und Munltota to the effect that a \u201c \u2018 sdimirable detdewent of the Canadian iy pusaud luborers are still required for CS \u2018 ; _ > ye v \u201c \u201cu cop) wanna reglon Monday mornlug.Yesterda lhrestiing and harvest work, The CPR.[ Lord Roberts Has Been In:@ 7, -d That Those Not rau question.In ie course of a recon \u201c \u201c \"will run auother excursion on Thursday \u2018The Demonstration in Honor of Sir Wilfrid Laurier in \u201c¢ .Part le upon the subjeot the Lond a Times 10000 of the 33,000 miners were on strike; text for the benefit of harvest bands, the ET ; - mvs.\u2014 Ad the begl Le -u!llerles we returu fare to any part of Manhoba belong M Ming to Serve [onver ast be Sent : \u20ac beginulog of tuis vear a toll LL of the 07 culllerles were forced Into tdle- pus, .>.D ea) Le brocgt foward by the Minister of ness, apd by woon today, according to the \u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014 Sohmer I ark Will be the Greatest griculture, within whose depuartigent copy ï N - - .- : com received ln the .; HON.MR.MARCHAND IMPROVING.Back by October 15th.T.gait busine : } Ceplious.Every Liberal Club in the city Street, aud those from the East End\u2014Chenier oe ee of the enviuy for nore than one ear, and the pen, or pets tv Mr.« ham and district will be represented, and all are Club of Huchélagu, Mercier Club, Cartwright i Ma espion, are to he ghoen an opportu ey to ron pue vues wish, Gen ; : Working Cnerg-tically to udd their share to Club, Papineau Club, Liberal Club of St.[| ot opinion here, however, 1s that the eat mari of thm wl'l elret to walt the success of the demonstration.Euscbe Jarish, Leellier Club, Tarte Club, wind come Lowe together, as the wal appeas tu be vdrtualiy wou, } Sir Wallrid will airive In the city at 6.55 East Eud L:vioral Giub\u2014and the Liberal Con- omen ee \u2014 rm em nr ?+ p.m.by the Canadian Pacific fast train, sad tractors\u2019 Club will meet it at the Monument : : will be driven to the Windsor for dinncr, National.The members of the Club National | y ' I ON | r My { + It was at first Intended to have him stay will assemble at the Monument National end i L ) el J .$ al the Place Viger Hotel, but as he could sot loin the procession in carr.ages, accompanied 4 4 rg J .1 vomme dowu Ut the afternoon train, it wus by the Victoria Itilles Band, precediug the - \\ = \u2014 x ç yy found that this would not be feasible.students.The combined clubs \u2018will then % à 2 8 } The Ltberal Clubs of the westorn part of march to Sohmer Park, by way of St.Cathe à i i | + th6 ctr\u2014tbe St.Heort Liberal Club, the erine, Visitation, Craig and Panet Street $ + Marcoand Liberal Club of Ste.Cunegonde, With torchlights and fireworks.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 1 _\u2014__ + 3 the Lib.ral Ciub ol SU Guiricl, the Bicher- Mayor DPrefoutaiue will preside over the Mr Jul p ! f th a nur th la ; ih the city has * dike Club, ILe West Eud Liveral Club, asd niceting there, and will present the Premier 3 s > mnnicre, anager © ne contre: à large wo 1e ClT3 uN .,Ï \u2019 bp vi or Sn prie ao utter to CE HE Wo Sa Lal be Cahn 3 the Gvoñrion Club\u2014will all meet at their re- With an address in the name of the citizens Hletber Too the olan deen of the Market Pi.U; cet dd CN : s Jed.Pace + + epective balls and proceed to the Wiudsor.Of Moutreal.The speakers, so far as known HC, votes, av pre \u2018 nities, wh se ai « veaun hat if :bey are sucess + : The Liberal Club and the Keformn Club will at present, will be Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Hon.various booaborgs be odet> To fight for vue a 0 es 2 cannes Los tar en ; , i \u201c errr .| + year for 1 per cent loss than the foare ur.Po 5 Tew bas prep fe lo carry { 3 proveed from their rooms to the same pla-e, George H.Murray, Hon.George W.Ross, now being ped the Koral Pueeire Cou ba eff Loa eae Near oe : In the meantime the Liberal Studeats\u2019 Asso- Hon.J.Israel Tarte, Hon.M.B.Bernier, pany.er, if = cottrae for five years as 54 ee \u2018 pot a \" Et dt + flatlon-\u2014composed of studeuts from ali the and the Liberal members of the district.ore .vi ooh T ceci fuit : \u201c0° a dintounetd tx .ee I, a He He trl ed v ie » > des - | ; te ms in eut ?colleges 1D the clty\u2014wil! assemble at Laval Scats will be provided on the platform for tn thos oder In 15008 toe Lacolne Hirctrie od Leon th nears 000 ar Mero vy as anne .University, and at seven o'clock sharp wili ladies, and cards for them will be distributed Company obtained a contract from the city 1 ep \" OF tte tan , Les \u201c0 LE ' secte $ start, headed by the \u20ac5th Bart.Band, for tke umong the clubs.Special trains will leave for ene or Hop thy viele pacino LL pani 1 WY GA VE EN Ps | ?Windsor, to act as the Premier's guard of Sorel St.Jerome, SL.John's, and St.Hya-' a.dos trie ompant, which ! voy oly JR a vod Leth , , had a ten-vear contraet for efi the Covjerny elzc ven mon as aga Is nw pet + + Honor.At balf-past seven the western see- cinthe cariy in the evening, and returning, piréets, Whose date of expiration 1e eee Ms tes, ar, citer 1 his becn A \u201civercd, + + tion of the procession will leave the Windsor will start at midnight from Montreal.ber 31, T9, mamta ned that the con oo.6 far hor de wu b'ovessoned by ta: \u20ac + slot MTerded nn infringenent of fs rhs Le us ly LF eet | ; : that not otoy did 1 lave the etemusive sont re a + | te provide light for the strests, which ne CITY Luo-ING MONIY., : ; $ AU TOMOBILES FOR , vie disputed lait that {ft also had the sol, PV , .Cn M: B-cbene © clitmm< aan ac the pres + + cight to lohiing all city trmstidines - ut the expiration of its ote car contraet, NY We ye pana eed) Ï : | TH E POS ( OFFICE.nb the Lachine Company was refased furher | Lobe tee .RES aud M: 9 ab + + ; Dusirese, the Cry Couneil aprreins the Pt IT TE HS 1 I + * Following the example of the Imperial Bevat Ficetrie mys view of he nae ae ét TL bees | phe : i Ps: Office in Lond n tae Pos: Office Da.Fr.y > aaehine company they i) ve ewe 2° ' To ' ° b sv Cr 1 \u2018 on pI Ct HE SNA Fi pt ME cu et pet > nm .> par men: of thls city yesterday made a test Congratulates Laval and McGill .rr oa .on | Das re is I te HN dope + of the cfficiene f Autommabl ervice for : eplnfon from three lavyers Mr Ro .; TA à ; _ , dv + ; po uteinoblie service foi ¢ 2 Sith, Me $.beam at rue rate Mr ER TN PT ad à $ | Ie deltveriug of watls and the coîleetton of Students Last Night A rien, or June So Isesamreed men ae WG TL deer a Joel soy ! + \u2018eivres from letier boxes.More than two tra vien ; | = Co Woe we ge ine emmiecon we > * ave élapsed since the an'acar tes , Upon evan n af the whole conte LA + A ;, ui : + years have éiapsed since the an'o-car test ON THEIR GOOD FEELING (that of the Boral Piretrie Coupes ne 0 ve dr fa the ely Toere woh + + was mode wlh .1 1 a tee whose names \u2018Have heen 80F attack he had ever.made on French- erences rather n por de AT TMS bas fs Lun ro sn me cgis wy Lon\u201d .~- 1 Pptp ser he \u2018 fer\u2019 ue a vb; \u2018 Co va : i \u201c a ane | TE ; A an G-Tmary au d ae ee, ER A Le tar punssmrlt us aduin legislation on this ques «0 | La ol N Max » li Ho KET OUR I.ir Cp pe at I a tomrshed Ti deat.bout ned onthe sworn d clatati oof Fore Canadians.The speaker deriared that Mr, C a a! 3 Uomo ly var a.es ar re Mama es Sept Lap ar loads 3 antity astonis he deal oN ds , ; vies ., at the close oi the wor howren ! La Hot \u2018, Fan vas .ve | er bu he made à bargair for them.Four man Sade and among here a at Bn ! Faster was far too clever a man to make - o ccna STILL OT - IT SES tue?7 : Hv \u2018 = ! .ve a ; ; Û al, eX Nad] SL LEFRC IETS Sol .: a » Ne ; Japan, and chia rd pan stators ; STILL THE I'MPRESS, | ' H ps aa EL RSS Te fee ru the bo ANT dove a ervards.the seller appeared ABUR, 4 pt in Farcher- wil he summened to give an attack himsslf, hut be had hirelinge do os a cists ana wen eee OR [ ET ee EE EE eines, CIE 35 unt te be inferred, Low (DiS Sort of wok.The case was nied of on hn Queting crise 04 there has be Ces ar th - \u201cous at Pok no and i | sas taux! awe the Boone Cine 7e Lu wo wen a qd TN ever, that the broadening ont of the inves: Mr.Hetherington, the d'ouserva Ive organ- PRÉCISE CEE ae fe Tes Huet ad the ether St ! ate von, lnas 0 \u2019 pda wer ell, ora 1° tu ton depends ent rely on the possibile api .* * thing In SE PESDIRE rar RAGE died oe [ames re 1 k 7 and una : Whar © tna mem wen a amv al rire da | - ; WO brine he great minis of our nation to ¢ ier comms:d.desir us «ff remanicg is |, Le 04e pana na) ween GOOD FOR CLARY BARTON She's off for WA EMBARRASSING think serlously on the matter.In this an Ets gustas go cman) Roun Africa, eater hie approve of Tee fo Forme ard NA Ar p, or Guivestoz 10 hop the muffer ts.S grat country of ours there are @i} races x ; _ | Comnander-dadnl-t, I i Ta Yasue hath t 1 darg ip BR - And all drnominstions, and the only way ; ro .d 4 cee] ai] TUS ea cn practien © THE LATUST from ue pue i «tte world te \u2014\u2014 \u201cto get a'ong is 10 renmin the friends we .Surprus \"ca v 0 wil he ausembni ai PSI \u2018 \u201ctue news \u2018hat Mre MeCoy hu Mr.MevVoy Wrodetock, September 15 \u2014(Special)\u2014 | 876 At preeent.And.my friends of MeGNIL, J NB.a a dute Ad dur 1t 0 AION AN w ._ ; over tLe Lead w.,th a whiskey bottle Le.the example vou hate «hewn ta night, whl 1 - VOWSS k led Sardar while A- ., > se .ra =.\u201ca .\u2018 = milite .: T arcanged by tue Pons sn officer © mmagpe pre Lem Mew Ierney cage hs , a.=~ Mogsra Fed, \u20181 Woraatock.18 prosat- 11 dn not don, bear grrat fruit, Just as As ; 7 lz, ze 1 mize 894 :.port sn the fitness HD The °p TU from a'iwerd ng J NOW RDEF-FED.Jleng-haired, mud-be.Iv BY avesse to the srele'y of the Oppo: {yon have jooned yonree'f to the French 1 | LoL ox : 4 Toy = up ; ; ines SSmaron L Cantet, p'ern-vosutet.Eroken-nosed, sore- site sex, but it 19 à mâtier of ex rome d mix Etiidenes of Laval, 1 kw «e wi'l the prople a st es Por fur he: Mm.a7) serv 5 ol: N+ Br | _ JEred Rien o! the pigskin, advance \u201c33 he her he en) yal the adventure he hal of the other provinces join with the people Tut \u20ac > Ter r.\"= rc : .- _ {f m ae p pu nt \u20ac ' a : Fe a now and , Tein tell us we are pot in ft! THE AUTOMOBILE has been à great sue.+ r th j !: wl 2 ve , mn ! , ™ =a el nr Prey Len «ni 5 ri 1 offic-ra and % a \u2018 = ES wa Lave na | roms, cu tng the mail from the boxes : 1 ste\u201d .: ~oay ow ote TT Tod \u2026 -a- pete.Sat + >.\u2014 ue = ; , \u2018 i : ; ; i.n a thr (jel STTiS- 1 DR AON va.Can Wella La To, ree., aroun antral : haën't run over anv- 0: .JOHN + ui i] at Cor a t Se T= In=nesassr wi ad as Reg mx 1 TTA 25 AE t ne Ha harcied te pre y aids much foster tian borse£-ah.: - 4 ° Lite , i oT \u201c ER \u2018 fe 1 2° ye CRE A ex\u2019 amed of (eave of aheonce je grant se me qe n° rer à * .BEER ï 2 \"I je ' Ve vo .ua vy Leu 15 Irae an =n La A PAIR OP STOTRING © waa tha enla crite + - ~ .n ve \u2018au ia: : woken oe tring efi on Nor me ._\u2014 BL 40 te not Lae rot 1] ow Cob.a ac ed in (Rows Canadian fg.cr 1 ve peedae 8 nie lame + The ?.Mowiïng cpon te'egram was the morning address d ts the Hon.i i .« -, Lrag-ns uc°s 19 n No4wiaber , ; a wii À Tadd + Hush J ; | br .\u2018 \u2018 co .Wok vpn Sr W 1° M ;- PL 1 et 1 ! nc a are ot Tor TORANTO Tmare Sac .zh John Maedenad by Han.TL Tarte, Mini-ter of Puiue Works, in RER a ° - \\ .> * Lo \" i _\u2014\u2014 ' ' \"RANT Uma \u20ac tats trys , - pp Ca E.: 5 one qu mar: } \u20187 4 vit :f \u2018A rat is an ana Selon ; connection with the charges of diclovalty wh.+h are being made by that gen- tug 1s Se a te Co t = ~ ; ton MARRIAGES, no 1 7 ce Roars FTN.rumen tual + Was à vegetitie ay) ¢ teman: tery to dhe fg Lf » } ri LPFORNEYHOUSH - LIVERMORE \u2014 Ja te Hee cv eut Cp an = : Cy wi ne TT on a-munt of : Montreal.Sept.15, 1000.LA Sue i w vs su\" OOMART : - : y on 5 EL ear the wos : La.L CTTUF lo rats we = of \u2018 ; .arpa an fra «2° 0 TOOMART A PPTTFR REFORD s 07, VE act va: ro toa as th, A FAIR EXCHANGE + \u201cI sre that th» Hon.Hugh John Mardona'd is accusing me of having \"= : : ; ; ler Porta hr des .sh me Som .- .ne ee ee | Los oA er sur) Tons Jimena a Eu Or the Rev A LT He found ise l wie \u201come of Mr.and : made disloyal speeches in France.Tell him thet T would be most happy to bn res e.7 T OH v.- ny \u201cvd Lona Nona an Imig or = -.; sai , .ee oo EB .2 Lee sie 1 : a Mre Jr \u201ceph A Paul, ; ; \u2018 .Flume pore ie apne ~ Cora oe et ter Po TE Me setae fa Fe COTES = \u2018erneyhio.FI wa TE mn Ae of Onslow.was filed $ TPE: him befor.an Ontari audience and to piove to him that his a~cusa- COner ar cy a hy 40 feel dn woh A ww En mn BE TE fe RY cee to Emiir se ond daughie- of Mr Wales _ pue \u2014 BN 5 Ÿ to overiowing on the Ÿ% t: ms have no foundaticn.I have said in France what I have said over and es and pais ow rome fees were > en T tev ont for nf wep Crm: at of ths ay : THE RÉCENT TI RNAIO mass t made ary | evening of August 72, ¢ av he H f CES fau Ph y can tte NET are | case copy m anh erm Les ae trem he R7A TrOMPI5 at 5 ci0ck 4 ver again in the Mouse of Commons.I am sorry that Mr.Macdonald is FE\u2019 \"30Yy Nev w'! ¢ @F (2c cromara lb mo vn?.\u201c ri ; Eog.and, papers 5 Py ; om or tu Ma Yona | Er £ Frank E Fenn of © tring to set race aguns: race.Why did he not accuse me in Quebec as he PTT AE MM MSN ee ET NT RSS Ve RE Dr Route Fe ke Cr tl.© arence and Me Car- : d 6 LIRA x le noa ecertt 4 LOTT A 2M norccet op the US 4e cm Lota he > OT AT CH} tv .\u201c A.Merely that Mr.Foster, while a clever political lecturer, is not the jeast of Mr, anxious, just gt present, to let the people ! understand the true tendency of the Fielding tariff, in so far as it effects their pockets, ra NOTE AND COMMENT.- Canada 1x well satisfied with Laurter, ; \u2014 \\ Sohmer Park, September 20, 1900.Don't forget! : \u2019 \u2014\u2014 Any Ingenlous Conservative who can pus- zle out an \u2018agreement between high protection and reciprocity\u201d In preferences will Please comusunlenté with this office, dt Protection Is possible; reciprocity In trade preferences may be possible, though it does not look like It.But they are not both possible at one and -the same time, - \u2014 , Sir Charles seems never to be happy unless he Is able to offer his supporters a choice.He has Pamphlet No, 6 and Pamph.let- No.2, He has protection and reciprocity, He even offers them their choice of teaders, himself or Hugh John\u2014that is, he lets them think so.nn JUST FOR FUN.\u201cTwo of a Kind.\u2014\u201cA woman doesn\u2019t always have the last word, docs she?\u2019 \u201cOu, na!.Sometimes she la talklug to another aoman,\u201d\u2019 He Reflects.\u2014\u201c Destiny,\u201d eaid the pensive boarder, \u2018la like a chicken\u2014It Isn't everybody who can carve it to his entire gatis- faction.\u201d : : ! A Rad Case.\u2014Mr.Rosin Box\u2014'\"\"My friend, you don\u2019t look well.\u201d .; Mr.Violln-\u201cNo; I'm completely unstrung.\" The Difference.\u2014Toæmy\u2014\"Pop.what's the difference between à tragedy and a comedy 1° \u2019 Temmy®s Pop\u2014\u201cThe way It le acted, my son.\u2018 .What's In a Name?\u2014Muste la sometimes divided Into two classes, sacred and profane.For particulars as to profane music, go to a \u201csacred concert.\" Probably.\u2014\"I see that somehody was had.fou the other day.\u201d \u201cWhat was the matter?TMA he insist on calling his brasste a \u2018stick\u2019?\u2018 Appropriate.\u2014~Great Actor\u2014'1 propose ki fa 11 tout th inces.What play would you advisers Po\" Critlo\u2014*' \u2018Much es About Nothing * ~ \u2019 TROUBL * MR.DOOLEY ON THE ES OF A CANDIDATE \u201cI wisht th\u2019 campalgn was over,\u201d sald Mr.Dooley.- \u201cI wisht it'd begin,\u201d said Mr.Hennessy, F nlver knew annything so dead.They ain't been Bo much as a black eye glve or took In th\u2018 ward, an\u2019 it's less thin two months to th\u2019 big day.\u201d J \u201cTwill Hven up,\u201d sald Mr, Donley, \u201cI begin to sce signs fv th\u2019 good thes comin\u2019 again.\u2018Twas on'y th\u2019 ether day me frind Tiddy Rosenfelt opened th* battle mildly be ioslnuatin® that al) dlminyerates was ars, horse thieves ap arnychists, \"Tis thrue he apologlzed fr that be.explainin\u2019 that \u201che didn\u2019t mean all dlinmyerats, hut side, an\u2019, says he: \u2018Mike, put on a plg- tail, an\u2019 a lLlue shirt an\u2019 take a dillygation Iv Chinnymen out to Canton an\u2019 congratulate Mack on th\u2019 murdher lv misslon\u2019ries In China.An\u2018 he says, \u2018ye might stop off at Cincinnati on th\u2019 way over an\u2019 arrange f'r a McKinley an\u2019 Rosenfelt club to Het th* British consul Ita prisidint an attack th\u2019 office Iv th German newspaper,\u201d he says.Mark Hanna rings fr his sicrety, an° says he: \u2018Have ye got off: th* letther fr'm George Fred Willums advisin\u2019 Aggynaldoo to pizen th\u2019 wells® Yes, sir.\u2019 \u2018An\u2019 th secret communication frm Bryan found on an arnychist at Pattherson askin\u2019 him to ou\u2019y those that wudden't vote fr Mack: manny weeks, A ladin\u2019 dimmyerat ray- former has suggested that.Mick, though ,& good man f'r an [dJlot_ \u2018Ig surrounded he th vllest seoundhrels {ver seen in public ilfe since th\u2019 days Iv Joolyns Caesar.Th\u2019 | Blerety lv.th* threearury Las declaréd that \u201cMr, Bryan, in sayin\u2019 that silver ls not con- | vartible be th* terme Ir the Slathry bank- ' (n° ave iv 1870, an\u2019 th\u2019 slcond clause iv th i threaty 1v Gainsville has eommitted th\u2019 on\u2019pard'nable pollytical ein iv.so con- sthructin\u2019 th\u2019 facts as to open up th\u2019 possibility Iv wan not knowin\u2019 th® thrue posl- tion iv affairs, misundersthandin\u2019 Intirely.If he bad him outside he'd call bim a liar.Th\u2019 raypubllcans \u2018have proved that® Wil Jum Jennings Bryan 46 A tbraitor he th* i | Apirators goes down fetther written be Dr.Lem Stoggins, th* eillybrated antl-thought agytator iv Spooten Duyvfi to Aggvnaldoo, in which he calls upon him to do pawthin® till he 1 hears from th\u2019.doc.Th\u2019 letther was sint \u2018through th\u2019 postal authorities, an° as they have established no \u2018postoffice in Aggy- naldoo\u2019s hat they cudden*t dellver it, an\u2019 they opened !t.Upon r-readin' th\u2019 letther Horace Plog Iv White Horse, Minn., has wrote to Wlllum Jennings Bryan, declar.In\u2019 that If he (Plog) tver wint to the Ph'lip- \u2018eens, which be wud've done dut Pr th* way th® oats was sproutin\u2019 In th® stack, an\u2019 had been hit with a bullet he'd ixplct th\u2019 cor.\u2018oner to hold Bryan to the gran\u2019 jury.This was followed be th® publication Iv a let ther fr'in Oscar L.Swub Iv East Persèpalls, O., declarin* that his glster heerd a cousin Iv th' man.that washid stable In Canton say Mack's hired man tol\u2019 him Mack'd be hanged bhefure he'd withdraw th\" ar.rmy fr'm Cubla.- .\u201cOh, I guess.th\u2019 campaign Is doin\u2019 as well as cud be Ixpleted.I sce be th\u2019 ray- publican pa-apers that Andrew Carnegie bas come out f'r Bryan an° has conthrih- ated wan-half iv his Income, or five bun- dred millyon dollars, to th\u2019 campaign fund.In the dimmycratice pa-apers 1 t\u2019read that Chairman Jim Jones has tn- thercipted a letther frm th Prince tv Wales to Mack congratulatin® him on his appintment as gintteman In waltin® \u2018to th Queen.A dillygation Iv Mormons has started fr'm Mmmyceratic Leadquarthers to thank, Mack f'r his manly sthand in favor |v polr-.gamy, an\u2019 th\u2019 raypublican comity\u2019 hag yun.dher con-siderätion a letther fr'm long- term criminalg advisin\u2019 their colleagues at large to vote fr Willum Jeunings Bryan, th\u2019 frind Iv crime.\u201cIn a few short weeks, Hinnissy, \u2018twlll not be safe f'r another iv th\u2019 candydates to come out on th\u2019 fr-ront porch till th waitin\u2019 dillygations has heen sarched be a polisman.\u2018Tis th® divvle\u2019s own time th* la-ads that r-runs fr the prisidincy has since.that ol! toy Burchard broke loose égaln' James: G.Blaîn.Sinitor Jones calls wan Iv his thrusty hinchmen to his buggles in a Jivery 4 blow up th\u2019 white house?\u2018It\u2019s in th hands Iv th\u2019 typewriter.\u2019 \u201cThin call up an imply- mint agency an\u2019 have a dillygation Iv Jesu- Îtes dhrop in at Lincoln, with a message frm the Pope propasin' to bur'rn all Prot- ! estant churches th\u2019 night befure ilictton.\u2019 LOT tell ye, Hinnissy, th* .candydate is ; Kept movin\u2019.Whin \u2018he sees a dillygation i PIkID® up th' lawn he must be r-reads.He makes a flyin\u2019 leap f'r th\u2019 chairman, selzes him be th' throat an\u2019 says: \u2018I thank ye fr th* kind siutimints ye have conveyed.I am, Indeed, as ve have remarked, th\u2019 rip- risintative iv th\u2019 party iv manh66ä}Mhonor, courage, liberality, an\u2019 American thradi- tions.Take that back to Jimmy Jones an\u201d tell bim to put dt in his pipe an\u2019 smoke ft.\u201d With: which he bounds into th\u2019 house an\u2019 locks th\u2019 dure, \u2018while the baffled con- to a customer \u2018an\u2019 changes thelr disguise.If th\u2019 füture.prisi- dint hadn't been quick on th' dhraw he'd been committed \u2018to a polley 1v sthrangin® all girl bables at birth.an\u2019 \u2018twud be no aisy Jah if th\u2019 game iv pho- tygraphs was th\u2019 on'y wan th\u2019 candy.dates had to play.Willum Jennings Bryan Is photygraphed smilln® back at his smilin* cornfields, in a pair Iv blue overalls, with a reyvthe in bis.hand borried fr'm th\u2019 comp'ny that\u2019s playin* \u2018The OI\" Homestead\u2019 at th\u2019 Lincoln Gran\u2019 opry-house.Th' nex\u2019 day Mack Is scen mindin\u201d a rustic chair with a monker-wrifch, Bryan has Rr pitcher took in.th\u2019 act iv puttin\u2019 on a shirt marked with th\u2019 union label, they'se another photrgraph iv Mack carry.ln\u2019 a scuttle iv coal up-th® collar -stafrs, An\u2019 did ye iver notice how much th\u2019 can.dydates looks.\u2018alike, an\u2019 how much both iv thim looks like Lydia Pinkham?Thim wondlrful , baardin\u2018-house smiles that our gifted leaders wears, did yo iver sce annythin* ro enthrancin'?Whin th' Jas\u2019 photygrapher has packed his ar-rms homeward I can sce th\u2019 gr-reat men retir- in\u2019 to their rooms an\u2019 lettin\u2019 théir facos down fr a few minyits befure puttin\u2019 thim up again In curl pa-apers f'r th* aixt day display.Glory be, what a relief \u2018twill \u2018be f'r wan iv thim to raysume permanent-, Iy th\u2019 savage or family breakfast face th° mornin* afther .llliction! What a- rellet \u2018twill be to know f'r sure that th\u2019 man at th\u201d dure-bell is on'y the gas collector an® len\u2019t loaded\u2019 with & speech iv thanks in behalf iv th\u2019 Spanish gover'mint! What a re.lef to snarl at wife an\u2019 frinds wanst more, to smoke a seegar with th\u2019 thrust magnate that owns th\u2019 cidar facthey near th\u2019 station, to take ye'er nap In th\u2019 afthernoon undis- thurbed he th\u2019 chirp Iv th\u2019 snap-shot! \u2018Tig th\u2019 day afther iliction I'd Hike f'r to be a candydate, Hlonlssy, no matter how it wint,\"! : .\u2018\u201cAn\u2019 what's become Iv th\u201d vice-prisiden- tin] candydatea?* Mr.Hennessy asked, \u201cWell!* said Mr, Dooley, \u2018\u2018th\u2019 last I heerd iv Aldr I didn\u2019t hear annythin\u2019, an\u2019 th® Ias\u2019 I heerd iv Tiddy he'd made application to th\u2019 naytional comity f'r th use iv Mack as a soundin\u2019 board.\u201d id A ' 4 \\ .= TA À 794 va, ar?+» vy n » In Competition with th World, our Exhibit at given in this class, H.R.IVE Sa A DESTRALS awarded SILVER MEDAL, the highest prize MANUFACTUR«BS, Queen St, Montreal.(MSTABLISHED 1850.) HIGH GRADE BRASS e Manufacturers of the PARIS, FRANCE, was S & CO, WHOLESAL ONLY.\u201c® \u201cNo, \u2018tls no alsy job bein\u2019 a candydate, .an° rt CE PURES CARE PAST Ope wp 2 _\u2014rmmmme {repars TRE MONTREAL NAILY HERALD, SATURDAY.SEPT.1%, 1900.Where trying to plegss you ; .à mot \u201ctrouble\u201d We are Both .Learning.Already more people are coming to the new store than we counted on\u2014they are finding more than they expected! You are finding out that our statements are in most cases below the facts, never one over them.We are discovering how alert and responsive you are.It shall be our earnest effort to more and more deserve your confidence.| Terms cash.One price to all.Fall Flannels.The New Flannel Store occupies more yards of space than it did feet in the old store.Net it was ever a helpful store\u2014gathering worthy goods where best they could be bought \u2014making little savings for you on every yard.The New Flannels have arrived.We only mention a few of them.New Fancy Eiderdown Flannels, for Morning Wrappers and Dressing Jackets, 22¢ a yard.Co Blouse Flannels, new designs, handsome colorings, at 49c, 55¢ and 59c.Blouse Flannelettes, from 10c up.- \u201cBlankets.Better decide quickly what replenishing your Blanket stock will need.Chilly nights ahead.Let these two items help you.White Blankets, 5 Ibs., $1.49 a pair.Grey Blankets, 5 1bs.,\" $1.39 a pair.Comforters.\u2018Handsome\u2019 enough, certainly.for daylight Bisplay.You'll be glad of their warmth these chilly nights.Wadded Comforters, good size, new patterns, $2.19.: : .The New Jewellery Store.This is a very practical Jewellery Store.It includes all the useful, needed things.But in spite of the little prices, there is not a trashv article in the lot.: ' + We-.aré sclling a Men's size Watch for 95c.It is a good looking watch, keeps excellent time.A wonder at the price.All the Ladies are wearing Gun Metal Watches now, but there never was a chance to get as good a one as this for : Such a price.\u2018Swiss movement, -stem wind and sct.The regular $6.00 kind.For $2.75.Nickle Alarm Clocks, good dependable clocks, American movements, 95e each.Silver Plated Tea Spoons, plain or designed handles, $0c the halt dozen.Silver Plated Forks, $1.00 the half dozen.Table Knives, 9c each.Emblem Hat Pins, in enamel, 25¢ each.Silver Plated Salts and Peppers, in neat designs, 10¢ each.; : Ladies\u2019 Patent Leather Belts, with black buckles, 25¢ each.\u2018 Ladies\u201d Book Purses, metal corners, 35e each.W.H.Scroggie.- Cor.St.Catherine and University Streets.IT will be the part of wisdom for you to come here for the Diamond Ring.The stone will beas perfect as possible, the setting will be superb, and thé price - will be lower than you can buy elsewhere : .A.SCOTT & CO, \u2026\u2026.\u2026.1548 St.Catherine St.pe\u2026o++eet +00 +06 +04 40-00-0004 House Drainage Tested by Smoke Apparatus, Sanitary Ware of Latest Makes.Electric Bells.Electric.Light Wiring.Brass and Bronze Castings.C0000 000-09 work are appreciated.10 SPEND IME WELL on pt te i WHAT THE MEMBERS RECEIVE By Association With the Admirable Institution Which is Doing Bxeelleat Work on Dosainion Square.\u2014 \u201cWhen the Days Work is Dons,\u201d is the title of an interesting little book in which the sdventages and benefits to be derived from membership in the Mont real Ypung Men's Christian Association, the educational facilities and the Soporte nities afforded for physi \u20ac are e Jained in à Way b attracts and sue tains the attention of the reader.The brochure justifies its publication by the fact that many th tful men feel that the association hy of £ e Greatest value h ishes to give a ion bo a ma tiers wh it\u2019 treats.lu and its paragraphs phraseology ia ET ort and to the pur tances are aad te modest élaim that it is worth pose.reading will be generally accepted.It Eamounces the plans and work of the as sociation for the coming year; it gives particulars as 10 the privileges and cost: of membership, and it extends an invitation to every young man in the city to call and gee the building, to examine these things for himself and to join.When the day\u2019s work is done, says the writer, young men have time on thelr hands.\u201cSome more.Some less.It is a d thing to spend that time well.ne argument for leisure time is recreation.Men need it.Recreation is not dissipation.Another argument 18 self-improvement.Men meed that.To read is good.To study is better.Not too much.Enough to get ahead, It is the only way to succeed.so In the effort to succeed good health is half the battle.That depends on a sound body.To have a sound body you must take care of it.That is the reason for physical exercise, It wards of disease and gives strength to resist it.A man needs the right kind of companions and right principles.To form right principles early in life is of vital importance.Clear headed business men have shown their confidence in these associations by putting over twenty million dollars into buildings and equipment on this gontinent.The large and handsome building on Dominion Square, erected through the efforts and generosity of both members and citizens, was designed and built expressly for ihe use and well-being of the young | men of the city.On May 1st there were 1699 paid up members.showing that the building and its .The association is now in its fiftieth |- year It is the oldest of its kind on \u2018this continent.man of good moral character, Any young | ut rd to nationality or form of without Fr \u201creligious belief, may become a member and enjoy the privileges on payment of the stated fees.- K Particulars are given of the general equipment of the institution, the large recep: tion hall with open fire place, the reading room large and well lighted and supplied with 150 papers, the libr with over 3,- 500 volumes, the correspondence table, the parlors, roomy and well furnished and the boarding house register., Then there are the employment bureau, the evening educational classes conducted in English, French, German, electricity, mechanical drawing.architectural drawing, elocution, arithmetic, short hand, bookkeeping, penmanship, English literature and lectures on practical subjects; the well equipped gymnasium, with horse: buck, high and low.parallel and horizontal bars, travelling rings and so forth, bowling alleys, plunge ahd swimming baths and tub and shower baths, clubs for those interested Gn.bicycling tennis, atl Jrtics baseball, philosophy, religious mectings and classes for Bible study and summer camp at Lake St.Joseph, near te.Agathe, open from July 15th to September 1st.On the social side every evening from 6.30 to 10 o'clock the reception hall and parlors form the centre of attraction.Groups of men with common interests gather here, You have the camera club men, the gym.leaders, the bicycle men, the junior leaders, the camp enthusiasts, and the men from the various committecs.Surely no more attractive spot -could be found.The open fireplac.greatly adds to its: comfort and cheer.You must spend your evenings some where.The important question is\u2014 where?A young man\u2019s whole future life is often determined by the manner in which he spends the evenings of a single winter, Here vou have all that is help- .] ful im healthy social companionship, recreation and personal improvement, \u2018apart from dissipation or temptation.The educational classes of the association \u2018are designed to help men who help themselves.They are held in.the evening.The teachers are men who know their work and do their best for the students.The subjects are practical and the practical side of the subjects is emphasized.No difference when you left school, you will reccive as much attention as the man who is fresh from school.No reexaminations are required for entrance.At the end of the season, you may take an examination, and if successful, receive JOHN DATE, creer.a diploma which is worth a good deal to you.Over a hundred of the leading col- \u2014 Besides our fine Diamond Mountings we show a great variety of very pretty rings ranging in price from $5.00 to $1500 in which the fancy * stones now so fashionable are combined with pearls.stones Amethysts, Turquoises, Opals, .Peridots, etc, and the mountings are all solid fiftecn karat gold.HENRY BIRKS & SONS, Phillips Square, Montreal.Moderate | Priced Rings.«A The include Almandines, AO and universitios of America accept for the subjects covered, .The cost per subject is small This is account of the co-operative feature of work.If you were to take any one the studies privately from the same mabe To, TE go Te me are e have five hundred men in the classes this ear.The coming together with these men is an education iteelf.Think it over.yourself: would I be benefitted by any of the subjects taught?The i is Fight à week.The result\u2014well.others received large increases in as 2 ult of what they learned in the classes.The study of Shakespeare is a new fea- in our English Course this year.The Merchant of Venice has been selected as a text.Introductory lectures will deal with the story of the play, its characterization, moral temper, eto.Attention wil also be given to the age of Shakes- eare.The richness, variety and force of style, Difference between Elisabethan and Victorian English in meaning cf words and structure of sentences.Shakespeare's independence of modern grammatical rules, his subordination of form to meaning.Fa- ry gs à miliar quotations and sayings-iu this and other plays.During the study of \u201cThe M t of Venice,\u201d reference will made as need ariees, to the personal life of Shakespeare apd to the more important of his other works; the grouping of his plays into early comedies, historical plays, the great tragedies, the later comedies, and the leading characteristics of each group.: * The religtous and Bible study departments are special features of the institu\u201c The maxims for young men published in this little book are worth perusing and preserving.The observations on thé physical department are also worthy of serious considération by all young men engaged in city lite, Social and Personal.Mrs.James Reld has left for England.Mrs.J.E.Bulmer has left for England.Dr, Roddick, M.P., has returned from Ottawa.: Mre.Agnew and her family have returne from Prent's Neck.y ere q Mrs.Pennell has returned from Tadousac to town.Prof.and Mrs.Borey have returned from Little Metis.y Mr.and Mrs.John Dun'op return to morrow for Eng'and.Mr.and Mrs.Vere Gould are on the Lake Megantic inward bound.Dr.Wyatt Johnson returned from England by the Corinthian.: Dr.Withrow, of Toronto, arrives from England by the Corinthian.Mrs, M, W.Cooke has returned to town from the Lower St.Lawrence.Miss Campbell, who hax spent the sum.wer abroad, arrlvés in a day or so.Mrs.Allan Cassels 18 on hier way out trom Euglomd by the Corinthian.Miss Annie Galt, daughter of Lady Galt, Is visiting her brother at Lethbridge.Dr.and Mrs.\u2018Gates have closed thelr house at Cacouna and returned to town.Dr.Ami, of Ottawa, is the guest of Mr.and Mrs, G.B.Burland, University street.The first Hunt breakfast will take place at the Kennels next Saturday, Sept.22nd.Mr, R.M.Liddell and Mrs, Lidded sailed Stone, have returned to Westmount from Ste.Agathe.: Mr.Harry G.Fenlin, of Lachine, saîled on the steamship Lake Champlain for the Paris Exposition.st Mlle.Hesmlone De Rouville has arrived from New York to Visit ber father and mother, Mr.and Mrs, Henri De Rostvllle, St.Denis street., .The wedding took place at Emmanuei line Owens and Mr.John Stewart Norrls, The ceremony was performed by the Rew, Hugh Pedley, The only bridesmald was Miss M.Rarwick and the best man wns Mr.Fred Muôfiy.Upon thfelr return from spendng thelr wedding trip In the prin cipal Amerlean cities, Mr.and Mrs.Norris wlib réside on Upper St.Urbain street.Amgongst the prominent people who at.teraed the marriage on Wednesday of | President McKinley's nlece to Dr.8aer were Secretary and Mrs, Gage, Poarmaster- General and Mrs.Smith, Adpt.-Gen, aud Mrs.Corbin, Controller: of the Treasury Dawes, Surgeon-Gen.ana Mrs, Sternberg, Rear Admiral and Mrs.Crowninshicld, Quartermaster and Mrs.Luddington, Gav.ana Mrs.W.A.Stone, Misu Helen MeKzi- ley, Mus Grace MeKiniey, Miss Mary Dar- ber.Miss Sarah Duncan, Mr.and Mrs, Charles R.Miller, Mr.and Mrs.John Wilty of Caîiton, Congressinan and Mrs.; ohfn Dalzeh, Mr.and Mrs.William Gihann, of Pittaburg, Mr.and Mrs, Benjamin Che- acy, of Boston, and Frank A.Munsey.+ BIRTHS, MARRIAGES.DEATHS.| + BIRTHS.OVERING\u2014At Rt.' Stephens parsonage, Buckingham, Que., on Sept.6th, the wife of the Itev.R.Y, Overing, of a son, CARLIN\u2014At 68 Hermine street, on the Tth inst.the wife of E.N.Carlin, of u dauehter.CROCKETT\u2014At Ar.hur street, Trnrs, N.S, Sept.8th, to Mr.and Mrs, J.D.Murray Crockett, a daughter ; HULME-DAVIES\u2014A: 160 Mansfield street, on the 13th Inst, the wife of EF.Hulme- Davles, of a daughter.PRENDERGAST\u2014On Sept, 12, at 120 \u2018Granêl Trunkstreot, Point St.Charles, the wife of J.J.Prendergast; a -daughter, MARRIAGES.HAGERMAN-MINTO\u2014 At St.James the Apostle Church, on Wednesday, Sept.12th, by the Rev.Chas.G.Rollit, Ashford L.Hager- \u2018man, of the Ontario Bank.to Helen (Nellie), youngest daughter of the late Alexander Minto.; .218x FERNEYHOUGH - LIVERMORB \u2014 At the residence of the bride's father, 72 Ander- gon street, on Sept.12th, by the Rev, A.Murrman, Melbourne J.Ferneyheugh to Emlly Livermore, both of Montreal.BIGG-HOLROYDE\u2014On Sept.12, 1700, at the Cafthedral of the Holy Trinity, by the Rt.Rev.the Lord Bishop of Quebec, ansisted by the Rev, F.(.Scott, M.A, rector of St Matthew's Church, the Rev.Henry Reginald Bigg, A.K.C., incumbent of S.Geo ge Beauce, son of the Rev.Thomas Frederic Bigg, vicar of Isleworth, England, to Emly, daughter of Walter James Holroyde, Esq., of Winnipeg, Man.DEATHS IN THE CITY.MARTIN DIT PALOUCEUR\u2014At St.Lam- l bert, on the 14th Inst, at the- age of 24 years and 9 months, (Teorges ypollte Martin dit Ladouceur, Sub-deacon of the Grand Seminary of.Montreul.Notice of funeral later.LACAILLE\u2014In this city, on the 13th inst.Marie Octavie Mercler, wife of Charles Lacaile, wholesale grocer, aged 68 years.Funeral will take place on Monday, the 17th inst., from 276 St.Dents street, at 8.45 a.m., to Bt.James\u2019 Church, thence to Cote des Nelges Cemetery.Friends and acqualntinces are respectfully invited to attend withfout further notice.ET\u2014At Nanaimo, B.C., on Sept.8th BRON A.O.Brunet, son of Alfred Brunet, ¥sq., of Montreal.Funeral from his father's residence, 907 Sherbrooke Street, on Saturday, the 16th inst, at 2.30 p.m.218x BECKET\u2014At Niagara Falls, N.Y:, on the 11th inst.of appendicitis, Francis Kirby, beloved wife of Frederick M.Becket, M.A., tormerly of Montreal.\u201c Coax DEATHS ELSEWHERE.DAVIDSON \u2014 Accidentally killed, at Selkirk, Manitoba, on the 11th September instant, Wilberforce B.Davidson, manager of Selkirk Biectric Works, only son of Rev.Canon Davidson, D.C.L.rector Frelighs- burg.Funeral at Frelighsbure, : P.Q., Monday, 17th September Instant, at 2 p.m.2:9x À The Queen Declines mt re timer \u201cre or ee De trifling, The time is only a few | this morning tor England by the Vau- couver, Mrs.Stone and her son, Mr.Edwin | Church on \u2018Wednesday evening of Misa Eve: - CGO 00 000 0000000000000 00 0G 00000000000 Ravages of Consumption While va inercass.À Cure Now Within the Reach 0 of Every Suffever, 7 C0 R SLOCUM the famous hose lectures and demons in New York and London this sea- sou have ascounded medical circles, has at last perfected nis now system of treatment for absolute cure tuberculosis all pulmonary diseases.This triamph- ant Victory over the dcadly bacilli is reaching in its effects.for their is no longer room for doubt that the gifted speclallst fiven to the world a boon that will save mil ons of precious lives.Dr.Slocum's system of treatment is both solentific and progressive, gaine as it does to the very source of je isease and performiug the cure step P- First Step.\u2014Killing the life destroying armas) which invest the body.Second Step.\u2014Ton'ng the entire and roathening the nerves the veins with tingling new life.Thied .\u2014Buliding healthy flesh and fact tying against future aitacks.The Slocum Spstem curas grip and Hs painful after effects, dangerous coughs nchitis and every known form ol pulmonary disease.It makes weak lunes sound, strengthens then against any ordeal, and gives endurance to those who have foherited hollow chests, with their long train of attending dangers.To enable despairing sufferers everywhere toobtain s y help before too r.Slocum offers FULL FREE TREATMENT To every readerof thie paper, Simply write to THE T, A.SLOCUM CHEMICAL \u20ac0., 1s King 8t.West, Toronto, Ont.gtving office and express of th medicine $ Mice address.and the Slocum Curse) will be promptly seut.Sufferers should take 1 ad fthis geu proposition, and when writing for them always meution this parer Persons fn Canada secing Slocum's free offer In rican papers laboratories, Jue taking t Le too late.will please sand for samples to the Toronto Let no previous discouragements prevent advantage of this splendid free offer before Sabbath Observance.Under the Auspices ,of the Protestant Ministerial Assoclation ; of Montreal.The Rev.J.G.Shearer, B.A., Field Secretary of the Ontariq Lord's Day Alliance, will address meetings as follows: \u2019 Saturday, September 15th\u2014 Conference\u2014Y.M.C.A.Hall, at 4.30 p.m., to which all interested are invited, Sunday, September 1gth-\u2014 11 a.m.\u2014In Knox Chugch: .7 p.m.\u2014In St.James\u2019 Church.8.15 p.m.\u2014Mass meeting li Emmanuel Church.Monday, September 17th\u2014 > 4 ° Conterence\u2014In Y.M.C.A, all, at 4.30 p.m.Mass Meeting\u2018-Y.M.C.A.Hall, at 8 p.m.It is hoped that all of tlié above meetings will be largely attended.\u2019 J.L.GEORGE, ROBERT HOPKIN, \u2018Secretary.~ President.nt I was cured of Rheumatic Gout by MINARD'S LINIMENT.- ANDREW KING.Halifax.; I was cured of Acute Bronchitis by MINARD'S LINIMENT.\u2019 Lt.-Col.¢.CREWE READ.\u2019 Sussex.1 wag cured of Acute Rheumatism by MINARD'S 'LINIMIENT.C.&, BILLING.OF PAIN\u201d Markham, Oat.0000000006060 00606000000000 Famous Active Range MADE 10 LAST TIA YEARS.- 8 ecial cast gsused * for top.Special castings for body.Special castings fur linings.Special castings for oven platcs, Each part - , mado of the iron that will suit the purpose best and stand the usage to be given it.R.& W.KERR, Balmoral Block, , \u201c1908 » 1940 NOTRE DAME ST.Your Fall Suit.If its a problem with you come to us for a solution.Our $16.00 made-to-order Suits are worthy of inspection.SMITH & CO., 185 St.Peter Street.JONES & HENRY Plain and Decorative Painters, Wall Papers, Etc.5 McGILL COLLEGE AVE.Bell Tell.Up 2452.MONTRBAL SPECIAL NOTICE.REDUCED FARES, For those.who wish to visit the Cemeteries\u2019 or to enjoy the: beautiful trip Around the Mountains, the Park and Island Rallway Company have reduced tRe fare to 15 cents vember sk to use poor gelatine\u2014lady charlotte ls best.fcturn, good from September 15th to No- MINING, KINGSTON, ONT.0 QURRE'S CHIVERMITY).Offere courses fee de in Misiog Em lnceriags Chemis- ry, Assaylng and Mincralogysand Mis- eralogy and Geology Matriculation in ston, Bept.30th.Un.matriculated Btudents or tarssLua0us ST.JEROME\u2014Lv.19.00 a.m., 59.15 a.m., 11.45 p.m., 15.30 p.m., a6.15 p.m.Ar.18.30 a.m., 19.50 a.m., 1§.45 p.m., 59.48 p.m, \u2018 .STE.AGATHE\u2014Lv.29.00 a.m., §9.15 a.m., © 11.80 p.m., 15.30.p.m.Ar.g8.40 a.m.19.50 a.m., 6.45 p.m., $9.45 p.m.| LABELLE\u2014Lv.9.00 a.m., Tues.and Thurs, 11.30 p.m., 16.30 p.m.Ar.g8.40 a.m.19.50 a.m., 6.45 p.m., Tueg and Thurs.Daily.{Week days.§Sunday only.iDally except Saturday.xDally, except aDaily, except Saturday and Sunday.iSatur- day only.vSaturday and Sunday only.gMon- days anly.aren ed) CANADIAN RI oF N41 ZF [ ~ BXHIBITIONS.MONTRPAL to OTTAWA and Return.September 15,16, 17, 19, 31 .8$3.850 September 18 and.20 .\u2026.\u2026.2.60 Retur: Limit September 24th, 1900.OTTAWA TRAIN SERVICE FROM MONTREAL: Leave Windsor St.Station, *9.80 a.m., 10 a.m.,, 4.05 p.m., 6.15 p.m., *10 p.m.Leave Place Viger Station, 8.30 a.m., 5.40 p.m.tL ARRIVE OTTAWA: Central Station, 12.25 p.m., 6.80 p.m., 9.40 p.m.Union Station, 12.40 p.m., *1.10 p.m., 9.45 p.m., *1.40 a.m.- FROM OTTAWA: Leave Union Station, *4.10 a.m., 845 am, °2.30 p.m., 5.45 p.m.Leave Central Station, 6.15 a.m., 8.50 a.m.\"4.25 p.ms ARRIVD MONTREAL.\u2019 .Windsor St.Station, *8 a.m., 9.35 a.m., 11.10 a.m., *6.10 p.m., 6.45 p.m.Place Viger Station, 12.55 p.m., 9.55 p.m.*Daily.Other trains week days only.SUNDAY TRAIN SERVICE.Lv.Windsor Bt.10 a.m.for PLANTAGANET and intermediate stations, feturning arrives Windsor Bt.at 9.46 p.m.Lv.Place Viger 9.15 a.m.for 8T.JEROMH \u2018and STE.AGATHE, returning arrives Montreal 9.45 p.m.; tv.Place Viger at 9 a.m.for ST.GABRIEL DE BRANDON, returning arrive Montreal 9.15 p.m.Return fare Montreal to St.Gabriel and St.Fellx de Valois, $1.50., City Ticket and Telegraph Office, | 129 §T.JAMES STREET.next Post Office.GRAND TRUNK S457 EXCURSION TO NEW YORK SEPTEMBER 27, 1600, Round Trip PH 1 O.G 5 Mate from Montreal \u201c Tickets good going by all trains Sept, 27 and valid rcturning from New York on or before Oct.7, 1900.; .\u2019 EXHIBITIONS.MONTREAL to OTTAWA And Return.September 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 21.B3.50 Septeraber 18 and 20.+.oo ce Return Limit, September 24th, 1960.Improved Train Service Between Montreal and Ottawa.Leave\u2014 Arrive\u2014 .Montreal ° 17.45a.m.Ottawa $11.30 a.m, oe 111.00 a.m.Li 13-35 p.m \u201c 14.10 p.m.7.385 p.m.2.17-50 p.m « t10.15 0m \u201c - 15-50 p.m.* $9.10 p.m Ottawa 16.10 a.m.Montreal 19.50 a.m.con $9.00 a.m.« $11.20 a.m.\u201c 13-20 p.m.\u201ce., 18-19 pue \u201c 7.00 p.\u201c 110.10pm.\u201d $8.00 a.m.* .$11.00a.Note\u2014tDaily except Sunday.§Sunday only.EB : F _ \u2018CITY TICKET OFFICES, 1287 St.James St.and Bonaventure Station, NTERCOLONIAL © RAILWAY On and after MONDAY, JUNE 18, trains will leave and arrive at Bonaventure Depot, Montreal, as follows: THE MARITIME EXPRESS will leave dally, except on Saturday, at 12.00 noon, for Hall- fax, N.S., The Sydneys, St.John, N.B., and other points in the Maritime Provinces.THE MARITIME EXPRESS from points as \u2018above, will arrive daily, except om Monday, at 7.30 p.m., and daily from Riviere a Loup.THE LOCAL EXPRESS will leave dally, ex« cept on Sunday, at 7.40 a.m., due to arrive at Levis at 1 p.m., at Riviere du Loup at 5 p:m., and at Little Metis at 8.25 p.m.THE LOCAL EXPRESS will leave Little Metig daily, except Saturday, at 4.25 'p.m., Riviere du Loup at 7.40 p.m., and Levis at 1145 p.m., due to arrive at Montreal at 6.30 a.m.ACCOMMODATION FOR LEVIS leaves daily, except on Sunday, at 11.30 p.m., due to are rive at Levis at 7.30 a.m., and connecting with accommodation for Campbellton, N.B, ACCOMMODATION LEAVES LEVIS .at 11.48 a.m.dally, except on Sunday, due to arrive in Montreal À = Le ; CCOMMODATIO R NICOLET 1 Ada.except Sunday, at 4.20 p.m.caves CCOMMODATION FROM NICOLET arr Be Montreal daily, except Sunday, at 10.48 m.Kg Vestibule trains, with lugurious Sleeping es the Maritime Express.a Through Sleeplug Cars Between Montrea) and Halifax.Dining and Sleeping Cars on Local Express, D.POTTINGER, .General Manager.Moncton, N.B., June 15, 1900.H.A.Price, Assistant Genetal P Agent, 143 St.James St, Montreal: James Hardwell, Assistant General Agent, Room 113, Board of Trade Bldg.CITY TICKET OFFICE.; 143 St.James Street, Montreal .| \u201cThe Chinese Question.Where can wé buy RICE suitable to Chinese requirements?Have you tried the \u201cMount Royal Mills\" new MANDARIN\" RICE D.W.ROSS C0., Agents.THE METROPOLITAN STOCK EXCHANGE MAIN OFFICE, BOSTON, MASS.Incorporated under laws of Massachuseits, Capital, $100,000, fully paid.& ST.FRANCOIS XAVIER ST.Stocks, Cotton, Grain and Provisions bought bas #0ld on margin or for cash.: Bell Telephone Mala 416, Monday.1900, GANADIAN PACIFIC \"some very shrewd Chinamen upon the eximordinary enmity to the mirdonaries| Sti]] po Action Against the Issuers of False \u2018Warehouse Receipts\u2014 8 | THE MONIEEAL DAILY HERALD, SATUEDAY,SEPT.-15, 1800: - \u20ac PEOPLE WONDER- How we can afford to sell colored shirts so much cheaper than other stores.Never mind the reason, goods are here exactly as advertised.For a short time you get them still cheaper, 20 per cent.off the regular marked prices.Zephyr, Cambric, Percale, Flannel, Flannelette, etc, 177 St.James Street, e J e | 2387 St.Catherine St.,, West.: 9 \u201c5 1553 St.Catherine St, East.+ \u2014 \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 = _ - \u2014 - .conclusion that no women should be sent .: or should go with our missionaries to China.It is the women who innocent! cause a great fraction of the miachie If any women are permitted to go to China they should only be such as under- | stand Chinese etiquette, customs and ,prejudices, and mean to defer to them.\u2019 \u201cYou are absolutely right,\u201d said the .\u2018 .ve o b \u20ac 3 g So Says Julian Ralph in an Article Which Has \u201choe vite vas Chinese woman.Now, what about the men?\u201d \\ ie : : \u2018a \u201cMen.\u201d I replied, \u201csh be sent - Created Much Discussion in English marely because tady are SIE to 80 ! .Th h t should be of ex- Church.Circles.\u2019 ceptional amd peculiar ability, for } know : .of no mare delicate and difficult task than - : really Christianising\u2014I mean genuinely a + w London, Sept.15.\u2014A recent article by and faces.Fancy, then, the effect upon! _: ; ; ; Julian Ralph in the London Daily Mail the Chinese of \u201cseeing \"their wives and sympathy should Le men born ith act on the missionaries in China has created misters of the missionaries dressed as they ground them.They should be very broad- much talk here.Mr.Ralph\u2019s honesty of would appear at home, in garments which yinded; and should approach the Chinese purpose is generally admitted, though closely - follow the lines of the bust and with respect for their great qualities and many take exception to his views.hips.; : : wonderful history and achievements.They Antedating the Boxer outbreak in China WOMEN MISSIONARIES., n à À ta t by many years were the frequent and j are by no means a decayed or slagnan wridespréad assaults upon and manifesta- Aud, now, as to the relations of the Face like the people of India.They are tions against the Christian missionaries.xes, omen of good repute keep 3n- .ar i Though foreign interference in Chinese af- doors\u2014are kept in, if you \u2018please.The as they are te me, polite, (formal, and fairs brought the soreness against for-| Missionary women roam freely about as rlonaries should be able to blend their eigners to a head, that irritation began they will.Kissing is regarded as a vie | manners with those of thelr neighbors.with antagonism to the missionaries.The 30US and an unspeakable act, yet our mis- | Thev should learn the languages (both Chinese officials worked upon this hos sionary women kiss their husbands and ; written and spoken), master the religion tility to bring about the present out-.brothers in the streets when they meet and know as much as possible of the his- break._And the chief victims and suffer- after being parted for a ime.In Chima, | tory and traditions of the people, in or- ers by this uprising heve.been the mis- hen a bride is about to | qurried i MCT der to discuss intelligently every new prin- sionaries and their native converts, flowery\u2019 (her bridal chair) to the bride- elle they advonate , isti «| groow\u2019s house, she has to be borne to the I i chou coe hurches $Tervwhere chair by her father.No other male rela- But in the first sentence I spoke all : ; tive has ever touched even her hand for that I think.Our missivnacies should be will do so, in order to arrive at a means : - \u201chi i i i g w n infan sent to meet the needs of the Chinese, of conducting their labors in the future D iayed none the hen It date and not to satisfy their ows needs.Such in such ways as to minimise the irrita- father, a brother or an uncle may take men Will know how to talk with men\u2019 of tion they must cause among a people so h libe ri the office of lift- the governing.classes (nqw seldom ap- conservative and tenacious in preserving the liberty and perform the office of 1 ; ; Thoin custome nd superstitions ths ing her and carrying her away\u2014because proached) and how to manage or, per- Chinese p as it could not be imagined that any girl haps.to leave alone the pare of he chil- as ; : would leave her, home and people of her] dren\u2014which latter work is almost as pr y! was told in China that I had studied |.5 wn free will, even to be marred, .ductive of misunderstanding and trouble the relations of the missionaries to the \u201cWhen people have such notions and as the presence of the missionary women.\u201d natives so as to be able to present the \u2018ustoms what do you suppose they think My friend agreed with me and entreat-d Pet in a light in which they had not upon seeing our men and women shaking me to make these views known.That en viewed y the sponsors for the mis- hands, walking arm-in-arm, helping each was six years ago.I .have hesitated \u201call slonaries of Christendom.\u2018It was urged |i} \"cer muddy roads, and fondling or that time for fear \u2018of wounding many that much good would come of it if I handling one another as our husbands good men and women.But if there is would make public my views and IMpreS and wives are free and right in doing?ever to he a time for frankly discussing | Thé following is an extract from à resens of the Timber Christiansing\u2014the Chinese.The mis- \u2019 still intellectual, quick, and shrewd; and.+ CANADIAN TIMBER sumber Trades Journal: \u201cOf all the different Government tions in the Forest Pavilion, none have attracted the attention of visitors as the attention of the public in general as that of connoisseurs and thoss capable of judging, than the exposition of the Cena- dias \u201cGovernment; the organization and ent im ex on is due Mr.; M.Macoun, of Ottawa, Naturalist of Canada.Contrary to the other expos tions organized in view of representing forestry, scientific snd Susoraa oi rations, and the growth wood in the forests instead of the practical use of the different kinds of woods, the Canadian Expesition is |\" really a commercial exhibit.showing the practical and commercial side of the ques tion as being of first importance.Natur ally, we find there the immense trunks indispensable to all expositions of timber, es pecially the gigantic Douglus fir, the one exhibited here is seven feet in diameter, but the principal feature of this fine exhibit is specially composed of samples well known in the trade; there is also a fine collection of manufactured articles.\u201cThe space allotted to this exhibit, which may be found almost at the extremity of the Forestry palate, on the left side, oacu- ies in the neighborhood of 1,000 square feet; a great number of samples have also been installed in the Canadian pavilion at the Trocadero.\" : STRATIICONA FOOTBALL CLUB.Thee following players are requested to turn out at the Annex to-day nt 2.15 sharp to play the intermediate and senlor matches with M.A.A.A.: Denman, Healy, Brown, Holland Lambton, Messer, Carpenter, Conll, Stewart, Porter, Gillard, Douglas, Turner, Gllmour, Freer, Blnck, Robinson, Cruby, Orr, Angus May, Sohey, Popham, W.May, C.Grown, Fryer, Johnson.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 A HANDSOME BOOKLET Telling About \u201cSemi-ready\u201d Idea.\u201d How Good Advertising Made a Success of a Good Thing.A very bright and original booklet has just been issued by the \u201cSemi-ready\u2019\u201d Clothing Co.of Montreal.The booklet is beautifully illustrated and tritely written.; The firat page tells in a dozm words of the astonishing growth of the \u201c\u201cSemi- ready\u2019 idea in a little over two years.At its inception \u201cSemiready\u201d was sold in two stores, one in Montreal and one in Toronto, employing about fifteen salesmen and others.To-day there are eight stores aclling \u201cSemi-ready\u201d exclusively and it is being made in a big factory in Montreal.The total cmployecs is now about The Company\u2019a records show that something like 40,000 men are now wearing \u201cSemi-ready.\u201d\u2019 All this has been accomplished in twenty-nine months, The Company claims that it has so succeeded because it deserves it, \u201cSemi-ready\u201d.being equal to the best custom-made and very much cheaper.No small share of ' the Company\u2019s success is traceable to its advertising which has been pronounced by leading American experts as among the best clothing advertising on the continent.This department is handled by J.P.McConnell, the Canadian Advertising sions.It was a sage, a vigorous and a ; is » present undertakers, Messrs.Dumaine & (Vo, who own the furniture and pay for the lighting and heating of it.' To show how little knowledge the city authorities have of.the place Messrs.Du- | maine were this year call'd upon to pay a business tax for running'a morgue, and also.to pay water taxes for what is practically a City building.Needless to say they considered this too much of a good \u2018thing, and the Cornncr settled the matter with the proper authorities.Messrs.Dumaine receive nothing from the city, and all monies received up.to the present come from the Provincial Government.Under the present contract made with the Government for one year.Messrs.Dumaine & Co.are allowed $2 for every corpse removed to the morgue, $1 for ko'ping it.whether for a 'day or for a month, and $2 for rental when an inquest takes place.As the contract is only for a year at a time it is impossible for then to make the improvements they would like to, and ths entire blame for its present condition is laid on the shoulders of the city for net coming to some arrangement with the Government before now.~ CITY PAYS NOTHING.The only instance in which the city is called upon tn pay anything is in the titions thick with dust, and, pneurtained \u201d windows add to the squalo th» situation.To \u2018the right -of the passage is a larga~tack room running the length of the house, containing a large iée box in which the bodies are placed in the hot weather.The sight is at least: ungainly but fortunate the one has not to go furthur, for the further one goes the worss the conditions.~The next room, if one may judge front its aspect, is evidently the one in which autopsies are performed when done on .the premises.A long table with a tin | cover on which the body is p'ared is certainly a gru.some sight.yet th: objects round about siem fit companio:x to it.A table with a numier of jus, and.scattered on it are suggestive in- | struments which give one the , A dirty sivk Would be a fit climax to the veri ious if not that a scapu-,! lar Las boen left hanging on à nail, telling ! the story of how little some poor unfortunate was allowed to bring along with him.| 18 still another room, containing two i stools for coffins, but one hard!:- notie- es it in their hurry to get «ut of the .place, to free onc's Jungs of the unpure Al, to rid ons inind of the gloomy influence and tive vent to obinions of the from the Board of Heilth.case of unclaimed bodirs, A burial permit is first granted hy the Coroner, and the city is h>!d vesponrible for the burial.It is not oblized to take any undertaker in prrtienlar.but out of congid-ration the work is usually given to Messrs.Numaine & Co., for which they are \u2018allowed on an average $i0.CÜRONER MeMAHON°S VIEW, Coroner MgMahon, in an interview with The Herald, said that the city should try | to come to some arrangement with the Government as soon ua possible.Such a building in order to be suited to the purpose, should in his opinion be a sep-r- atc one and be c:ntrally situated not far building wuuid cost at th: outside 815., 070.When the building itself had been procured the best and most economical way of conducting it would b> to have undertakers submit tenderé for the furnishing and conducting of it for 10 years.| Such a contract wh'n granted for such a period would not cost the city and, Government rove thin 41,0% or\u2019 81.270 annually, If this was don: the Coroner be- lievea that Montretl witht eaxily.have a respectable morgue of its own within | oi months, .: A propr 1 It is difficult to trace the sequence of ideas that has led to the recent\u2019 scare of an attempt to invade us in November next on the part of France, rays the Pall, Mall Gazette, for if there is one period of the year more than another in which no such danger, except after adequate warning, can possibly threaten us, it is during tbe month our scaremongsrs have chosen.À very elementary acquaintauce with the recruiting, machinery of th: French army\u2019 ought to have sufficed to prevent this mistake.impression that any member of the House of Lords could not well be ignorant of the fact that in the last days of Septem- b ber all the young soldiers in France who arc dismissed to their homes, and during the latter half of October the new recruits are enrolled.As a consequence, the efficiency of the whole army is for the moment at its lowest.ebb, and the pro: portion of trained soldiers with the: flag at its minimum.During the summer .months, when\u2019 the \u2018last joined recruits have completed their company traimng.some 33 per cent.of reservists suflice to bring the units up to à war strength.and.indeed, the units are strong enough at any moment to take the ficld without any reservists whatever.In October, Ncvem- ber, and on to April, not less than 66 per cent.from the reserve would be required, and if a unit swamped by one-third ita strength of reserve men is, as a fighting body, eminently undesirable, one with two-thirds of comparative strangers to d!- | gest must be very much more so, | The question, then, arises whether, for the special conditions an invasion of England would involve, any calling out of the reserves would be needed at all.Would it not be many times better, and gain all the advantages of surprise.to take the field with the troops as they stand during those months of the ycar when their efficiency is at its gust and September = STATUS OF THE MEN, At that time the men are in ideal condition for rapid marching, and the units themselves are thoroughly in the .hands of their leaders, who have had time to become \u2018thoroughly hoquainted with ai] \u201che men under them.he companies, enly about 140 strong, are far more manageable and, as a consequence, better adapted for work in our closed and intersected country than,the overgrown war strengih formation of 230, and the officers present with the colors sre all professional, long- service soldiers; there are none of the reservist amateurs.The advantage of surprise it is almost impossible to overrate.Indeed, it may\u2019 be doubted whether any French staff officer exists who believes in the possibility of any invasion of this country if time enough be given us to get our flects to rca; and emoe it ia certain that the French are ready to fight us if the need arises, it follows that their plan of cam- \"paign must be based on surprise, and surprise only.READINESS OF FRANCE.The - French have long ago attained an equal degree of readiness, and since they have everything to gain and nothing to lose by movi against us with smal, handy units thoroughly welded Sog ther under officers known to the men and \"each other, we mey reasonably conclude I was at least \u2018under the | have completed their three ycars\u2019 service | Jighest\u2014that is, Au- © WHAT IS THE POSSIE Sram 9 0 that If a deieent on our shores is ever means, as the drift of his\u2019 article weuld attempted Tull advantage w.li be taken of this readiness for immediate action, - Of ane tinng we may be certain: achen the time comes there will be po previous | concentration of arnty corps at Chartres or clsewhere.To mass troops around -al-doubtedly preparing for war.It would\u2018 solicitude, railway centre is not the way ts facihitate a rapid movement to the coast fine; to de | lead one to suppose, preparing for an ag- | gressive war with England.NO APPREHENSION IN BERLIN.In a sense, of course, France is un- be strange.indeed.if France, alone am ng the powers, should not be doing 1 umané Methods for Disposing of Animals In all parts of the world the sufferjrigs of tho dumb anitnal have excited the Kympathies of the peuple.and in almost every centre there is a society for the pre- ! vention of erueity.to animals.No particu- i lar animal is made the object of exclusive but the horse and the dog, by reason, .perhaps, of their greater useful- ro would be about ag sens ble ax tout her best to strengthen ats army, and navy.Mess to man and because of the gencral fic from Watertwe from a single platform Pat the sune tune.\u2018Lhe actunl distnbu- + pMimetry of War\u201d is showing a dispomtion to \u201cwaste its store of ammunition\u201d \u2014what tempt to forward the whole holiday traîsi It is even a fact that \u201cthe parsimonions acceptance that they.are his best friends 2) + a, , are given more attention.Provision is tion of the troops m peace as already .«al- would Mr.Emerson Neilly say to this made for the alleviation of their suffer- : eulated to guarantee the greatest rapidity ; of traueport in ant required direction; i to alter it just before the outhreak of hos titties would requize a thoreagh ree n- struction où all, the existing railway, time tables) the very last piece of (folly the { French staff ix likely to be zuilty of afier the leseons of 1870.+ Unfortunate! our existing arrangements are not designed to meet tlus sudden danger, and the French staff can caleulatr, with perfect précision the numbers our, aged .by the Government.Nothing has dispenses with life.- svstem of roads and railways will allow: been heard, however, of these measures, | us to place in their path between London | having caused apprehension in\u201d Berlin, and and the sea, and the result 1s not cnoush | to inspire them with respect.| troops were so distributed in peace that, no matter how suddeén'y the attack was made Upon us.even 8,000 men could he of london, this line of least resistance would be closed and even the maddest Frenchman cease from contemplating invasion.THE FRENCH POINT OF VIEW.The Paris, correspondent of the paper senda the following: I have discussed the articles, \u201cThe French l'reparations* and \u2018The Invasion of Enghal\" with a number of French: men.4 us difficuit.ta induce peuple on this < ol the channel to give serions {.theught oo what is held to le a mare's nest of a proierted invadon of Eng'and.When it was firat reported that such a posmbiity.was leiñg discussed an England people were incredulous or amused, and they were astonished when Lord.Salisbury was found to consider the matter sufficiently serious to cali for a rcasaur- ing refermer.One fact may be stated positively.If the French Government are \u201cplotting the invasion of England, the, dis closure of their intentions wiil come as the greatest surprise of his life to the average Frenchman.If: told that a hos tile exnegdition to.the [linet Mars was in contemplation he would hardly be more \u201cdwmfounded.\u2018Tt is, indecd, an irony © fate that France should be credited with such purposes under het present Government.lt may be doubted whether a Oub- inet less likely to attack England has ever cxisted.Unless M.Yves Guyot were to be Prime Minister no Cabinet from which kn land would acem to have less ta fear conk he imagined.With the portfolio of Minister of Marine in the : hands of a former President of the French i ranch of the Entente Cardiale Sxsety, ; the prima facie likelihood of the maintenance of peaceable relations should =urcly he great.And T refer, of course, \u2018to but one consideration out of a thousand that point in the same direction.Fven the -author of the article, * The French Preparations.\u201d admits that \u201cwitli the present Government in power there is indeedr no danger.\u201d It is difficult to reconcile this admission with the author's opening statement, \u201cthat the French Government ave jreparing for war there can be no longer any doubt\u201d provided always that by vrevaring for war the writer | ; charge on extra ntle practice?But it is a far cry from this cireurnstance to the invasion of England.ln France, as elsewhere, the results of the Transvaal war have convinced the\u2019 military'authoritivs of the importance of accurate shooting.Cre- ditis for fresh ranges have been granted, and.pending their cons.ruction, the most {is being made of those that.exist.The private ritle associations, too, are show- | ing great activity, awl are helng epoour- \u2018 it is difficult to see why they should be lt is the same with the grave matter © : the \u201cgroups of horsemen\u201d who \u2018are to be met with in all sorts of eout.of the way t cise.\u201d\u201d The mero existeuce of a new \u201csccuting exercise\u201d would seem to be a sufficient reason for its practice.After all, the necessity of good scouting is only another of the leesons taught by the Transvaal war.THE REAL RISK OF WAR.Deliberately hostile designs on the part of France ag.inet Fugland are onc thing, Vand the possibility of \u20ac war between the { two countries is another.I belive that ; DO serious evidence can be brought for- ; ward in favor of the contention that France is preparing to attack England.On the other hand.it is.quite uudeui- able that France is making efforts not to be unprepared in the event of a war with England.that this fact should lead to hostilities or betoken their likelihood than that the French armaments in view of Germany of a struegle hetween the two nations: The English \u2018apprehensions.of a French aggression he had their exact counter- pait on this suie of the channel.A few months ago there was much talk in France of the dark dexigna cherished by ingland.At the close of the \u2018l'ransvaal war the home-going English troops were to break the journey, certainiy at Mada- gaecar, and probably at Morocca as well.In other words, there was a widespread popular belief that England intended.as soun as her hands were free, to force a quarrel on France.Therg are signs that this hotion has lost ground of late, but it still cxiete tu some extent.If the truth were known it might, perhaps,\u2019 be found that tether Lord Sa'iclary nor M.Dell carse cithor purposes or fears a deliberate aggression.On the other hand, it is obvious.that the hour is a critical one, and that French and English interests may easily come into -coniliet.Happily this might havpen without a war resulting, but those who know France will agree that, should there he a second Fashoda incident, peace would be very sericualy threatened, The poayi ghility of such an incident occurring is at once the ronson of the risk there ie of war betwoen England and France, TCA.should ba read to mean the.imm:nence | French preparations and the mesure of - ingz« and in the annual reports of the so- ; ciety is generally\u2019 found under the heading of \u201clow to Mercifully Kill Dogs\u201d instructions to that end.This might be called-the dispensary department, not because of the association of curative and pajn-soothing drugs.but because by it man dispenses with the dog and the dog In New York and Boston and other citiés- of the United States, a dog whose\u2019 \u201cIf our: looked upon with suepicion in London.days of usefulness is done, finds an easy death in the large gas tanks of the S.P.C.A., in which all nuisance animals are des- massed in time, some \u201cthirty miles south | places practicing the new scouting exer- troyed.In Mantreal, too, every dog has\u2019 its day, and when an account of infirmity, old age.disease, or because the owner will not tag it with a municipal license, it becomes a nuisance, it devolves upon | the authorities to destroy it.In this | work, it may easily be imagined.the &.P.take an active part.So far the meagre funds of the association have not permitted it to place its work on a par with sister associations across the border, and the general method of destroving dogs in Montreal is shootirg them.This though somewhat repugnant in itsclf, is : It ie no more necessary considered the most rapid and least pain- | Ç ful way of ending their existence.i © HOW TO SHOOT DOGS.« The question of how to shoot dogs sn \u2018as to cause immediate death has been carefully studied by\u2019 the S.P.C.A,, and the following note is found on page 31 of the annual report for 18:9: \u2014 .\u201cPlace the pistol muszle near the head, aiming à little to one side of the centre: of the top of the skull and shoot down.warde, ro that the bullet shall go through the brain into: or towards the neck.Do not shout too low or directly in the middle because of thick bones.\u201d No one is specially appointed to do.the work of shooting dogu If you want vour dog destroyed call up the n arest police station, or notify the S.PO.A., or if your heart does not forbid shoot the animal yourself.When the affair ie over notify the health department and Mr, O.H.Lesaze.who has the contract from the city for the removal of dead animals.will cart away to the incenartor at Back River, all that remains of vour canine friend.Before -ho-ting \u2018was adopted as the most expediflous and m.reiful method of «leatroviuz animals, dogs qrore usually hanged.- There were two principal places of ex:cution, No.4 Police Station.on On.| Point St.Charles.The average \u2018number of hangings per day during the months of | July and August \u2018was e-ght, but sometimes there weré so many as 5) dogs exccuted in one day.Some weie hanged by force and very much against the good will of the dwner.This was because the owner would not take out a license.No \u201cphye sician attended the last mèments of condemned.dogs and they wer: sometimes lit hanging for several hours.UNCERTAINTIES OF HANGING.Mr.Lesage has had many strange experiences with \u2018\u2018hanged\u2019\u201d dogs.He re- his \u201cberling.\u201d which is the name of his cart for removing dead animals.Among the victims at the station was a little rat terrier which had ben a nuisance to his ; master, Mr.J.Bross.au, of St.Lawrence | Street.and a plague in his neighborhood.| The dog had been hanging for seven hours.It was \u2018cut down and thrown most un- sage then started to\u2018the next station.Ashe passed'alông Ontarie Street, near Cad- and turning around, he saw the iirepres- -sible terrier, which.having raise! the cover of the \u201cberling.\u201d was running down the street like mad.with the rope still round his neck.That same evening there was terrible hawling at Mr.Brosseau's door.Subsequently the hanging proceedings had to be repeated.Mr.Lesage thinks a dog is very hard to kill.In some respects, he says, the dog has a more justiliable c'aim-to the proverbial nine lives th\u2018n the members of the feline family.Hanging was a slow method of destroying dogs and was most uncertain too.Mr.Lesags tells anothep had been hanged in Neo.0 station.The execution had: lasted several hours.To all outward appearances the dog was dead, It was thrown into a corner of the yard to await removal in the \u201cbering.\u201d Next morning when that conveyynce acrived the dog was gone.Four.months aîtere wards it was found in Longueuil., Of course those were exceptional cases and the hangings as a rule were successful, But, it will be concoded, it wis not a merciful method of relieving th: dog of his worries.Now.however, escape ie impossible.With great precision acquired by practis: and experience the policeman or inspector of the X.P.C.A.s:nds à bullet through the dug's brain and all ie over.~~ AUST PAY THEIR LICENSE.City Treasurer Robb hax taken a decided step towards making real cstate agents take out the £30 liconse which haa been imposed upon that class of business men.In 1599 the first imposition of the kind was made when real estate agents were asked to pay a tax of a\u2019 similir amount.The large majority of them, however.ohject to the form of the demand, and it was this year modified in the shape of a license.Some of them do not object to paying either à on a rimilar footing.But | a number avojded the authorities.The pers centage.thôuyh.is calen'ated to be as out of, the 17 who dd not pay actions have been taken aminst 11.The remaining \u20ac cannot be found.There were 82 in all assessed last year.So f « tario Street, and No.9 Police Station, in vent year 77 have talien cut thes Ln fn\u2019 all departments vet this colohy being.they are withont this hzaistanee In their 3 se lates that vie Morning, three years ago, he arrived at No.4 Polics Stition with: story of à large Newfoundland dog which | Wagrons.and ploughs last | \"In conclusion T may say that all T have\u201d ceremoniously into the \u201cberling.\u201d Mr.Le- ieux, he heard a strange noise in hie cart.tax or a license so long as all are placed ce wpe WR .Wi hat K.row ledge | Means \u2018 - Oppressed classes, + Prefect.whenever the ; refoct is short of money, he _ young mandarin \u2018 must .recoilect tuat he bas ben bred upon « , THE MONIREAL DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY,SKEL.16, 1800 pre er A \u2014 eg ot peated pra tre pt i ee SS i at Dre archy-Sources From Which They Come Por Fri to dispose?a r ispose?That is a question which must have oe- curred to the thoughtful reader when per- ing the reports of the trial at Monza ing Humbert\u2019s assassin.The fact was brought to li in the course of the ings that Bresci -at the time he À ticket\u2014a sum which enabled him to lve comparative luxury and idleness during the two months that intervened between his arrival in Italy and the committing of his crime.t was likewise proved in court that each of the twenty ellow anarchists who sailed from the United States at the same time as Bresci | had about the samme amount of money.That is to say, Bresci and his fellow anarchists at the time they quitted the United States for the avowed puipo-e of murderi King Humbert, and ssibly some of brother monarchs, had about $12,000 among them-+a relatively large smount whet it is borne in mind that the anarchists are not very numerous, and that the interests which they allege they represent and champion are these of the most poverty stricken.destitute and those, in a word, who been driven to desperation by the misery of their condition.Where did that $12,000 come from?It ls rid'eutous to believe that it was raised by subscription among ithe Italian\u2019 mill hands and working people of onc kind and another at Paterson, or even in New York.The Italiane are among the most thrifty of all Furop:un péoples, and among the closest in money matters, their F eva \u2014_\u2026 anarchists \u2018derive the ample | \u2018tions of their ly attitude toward their church and foward charitable organizations for the Henefit of their own race in this eoun- nts or the land of his birth.But he loves his own personal interests more, and it is posterous to imagine him squandering his hoard by contributing in so lavish a fashion to mecure the assassination of ome or more of the Old World monarchs from \u2018whose death he can derive no material advantage.Indeed, the liberal manner in which Bresci and his fellow anarchists were equipped financially when they sailed from the United States affords conclusive evidence that the funds placed at their disposal did not come from the eavings or subacrip- fellow countrymen, but .from some other source.\"THE CULT HAS NO RICH MEMBERS.Where, then, does the money come from?The supposition that it is derived from the munificence of certain wealthy members of the (ult must be discarded\u2019 as untenable.Kor, while there have been a few rich men who have affected enthusiasm in behalf of socialism.I have never known any one of them, with the solitary exception of the learned son of the late Duchess of Galliera, to allow his sympathies.for the cause to carry him away to the extent of putting its teachings into practice by distributing his fortune in accordance with the doatrines of tlie cult; and as for the anarchist moves ment, which is entirely distinct from socialism, the only reputed rich men and women belonging thereto are those who are rich no longer.The 'wreek of their fortunes has brought them to the mame level of desperate emmity to the existing order of things as that of their fellow anarchists recruited from the less well-to- do clases, : It is evident that the funds of the anarchist party, like those of the nihilists and of the Mafia, aré derived from crime, pure .and aimple\u2014terrorism, blackmail, robbery, fraud, arson and murder being among the agencies employed to fill the exchequer.Some twenty years ago while engaged in a thorough investigation of the Nihilist movement.I was led to turn my attentitm to the question of the origin of the ample funds of which the Nihilist party appeared to dispose.At the time the Nihilist movement maintained - agencies in Berlin, Paris, London and in various Swiss towns.where -members of the cult were fraternally received and provided with money and the necessaries of life, Vera Sassoulitch.and other equally noted Nihilists whose acquaintance I then made in Switzerland, lived on the borders cf Lake Geneva aud at Zurich in comparative afluence, without any apparent means of livelihood.The great trial at Moscow resulting ftom the con.fesstons made in prison by the notorious Nihilist leader, Netchaieff , brought to light some curious facts concerning this question of funds.; One of the accused, a girl named -Tdalia Polheim, acknowledged that she had.received orders from the executive commit tee to entangle the affections of a wealthy him and rob him of his riches for the sake of the cause.A student named ltuschin was forced to admit in the fade of cor- h roborative evidence that he had been one of several Nihilists who had persuaded a 16-year-old boy at Moscow to nurder and rob his own father and then to hand the Plunder over to the executive committee.ubsequently I likewise ascertained that each recrudescence of the Nihilist movement was invariably accompanied by an extraordinary increase in the number of fires in Russia.Thus, in one summer month alone thirty-five hundred fires were officially reported to have taken place in Nt.Petersburg, Ovenburg, Kos- low, Irkutsk and Uralsk, destroying property valued at 12,000,000 rubles.Only nine hundred of thiowe.fires could he properly accounted for, and the remaining twenty.six hundred were proved to he of incendiary and in many cases of Nihilist origin.The police were apparently unable to prevent these fires.Small .wonder, then, that when two wealthy St! Petersburg merchants of my acquaintance received letters from the Nihilist executive committee: demanding sums of 20,000 and 30,000 rublas resnectively, and threatening them with the destruction of their property by fire and even with d-ath in the case of refusal, they hastened \u2018to pay the money.They replicl to the inquiry as to why they had not sought the protection of the Government with the following pertinent and wholly unanswerable counter-ques- tion: \u201cJf the Chief of Police is unable to protect his own person from attack, or to prevent the arson that ix the order of the day, how can we possibly expect effi- old landed proprietor and then to poison .facturer, «o rich and influential aa to be cient protection?\u201d v It is known that the Italian Mafia ob | tains by analogous methods the ample dispose, and through which, conjointly with terrorism, they are able to control wending to the National Lerisla ture ot R ti Ste he island, but the Mafia.The anarchists resort to the same vices.i e main by terrorism and blackmail.A eur- ious illustration ,of this js fucnished in America he was earning good wages as oe weaver in.the great Micheli silk.these mills was the Florentine banker, .Martinelli.Breaci, who made no attempt cause.held the banker in such a state of fear for the safety of the mills and for mary to proceed to the United States in fhe interest of the movement, it was Mar- passage to America and furnished him with money.Called to account, the | rorized into furnishing Bresci with the means of departure, and he cited the old to provide golden bridges for the enemy who is in flight.: ' funds of which ita lcaders are able to the Parliamentary ions of Bicily, who \u2018rep interests\u2019 of the ; de cy obtain their money in th Bresei's own cusc.Before coming to mills at Lucca.The chief \u2018proprietor of | -to conceal his devotion to the anarchist his own life that when he found it neces tinelli himself who paid for the man's bankdr explained that he had heen ter-: proverh according to which it is prudent Now, if Martinelli, a banker and manu- able to secure the removal of all the judicial and.police obstacles in the way of the departure of such a well known .stance appears to have heen insane vanity anarchist und ex-convict as Bresei, who had spent from 1894 to 1390 in a Sicilian penitentiary, could be forced to do so.it would be powerless, and.inasmuch as the \u2018 + i pelled by fear to contribute to the funds of the anarchist party.who stands to reason that other manufactur enjoys widespread prosperity.Trade and industry are fourishing there.Every factory is at work.It would be interesting to ascertain how many of them are com- RECRUITED IN NORTHERN ITALY.Curiously enough, it is from these pros perows northern provinces of Italy, and not from the poverty stricken south, that the khown perpetrators of anarchist outrages have heen recruited.Cesario, the assassin of President Carnot, was a.Mil- anes, a skilled workman commanding good wages, So, too, was the murderer of the Spanish Premier, Canovas, Luccheni, iled the Empre-s of Austria, was well paid as an officgrs servant.Bresci\u2019a father, a North Italien, like the others, left several thousand dollars, besides some laud, to his children when he died.In no case was the crime of any of those men provoked by the desperation of want or starvation, a point which it is well to bear in mind.The motive in each in- und a craze for notoriety.Without funds the anarchiat movement Singe the an exist without the assistance of crime, all within hounds is to laws with sufficient energy to enable them to serve their purpose of preventing rather than of punishing crime.to enforce the law of the judiciary an tribute more than anything else to the development of such movements archy, a fact which it would be well for peovle, not alone in the Old World, bus money by means of which the anare ers, ere and moneyed men of ons are alone able to carry on their kind \u2018and another, leas minent aod not merely against the monarchs of .unable to command the influence and good rope, bot likewise against capitalists, will of the police and of the magisterial erty owners and every defender \u201cof authorities to the same extent as Bignor present order of things throughout the Martinelli, can be terrorised and \u2018black- parts of the civilized world, is obtai mailed to a still greater extend than him- exclusively by crime, it is ridiculous to self.; .describe the anarchist movement as à po The entire northern portion of Italy, diff- litical organization or to insist upon the ering from the southern portion of the king: neceswity of adopting exceptional and ex- dom, contrary to the general impression, | treordinary legislation for ite suppression.movement cannot that is necessary to keep the movement apply the existing Neglect on the part of the authorities, an co tion of the potice, con- ikewise on this side of the Atlantis, to bear in mind.It is true that Clause No.3 of the extradition treaty hetween Italy and the United States provides that shall be no extradition for political offences.Tt is also true that most universally construed as a misdeed.But, maintained exclusively ; money obtained through crime, like Mafia, the anarchist movement\u2014a foreign growth abusing American has assuredly mo right to ask indulgence for ite outrages by pleading that they are, after all, the \u201cpolitical offences\u201d indicated in Clause No.3 of the Lalo Americen exs there regicide is al- litical by the ee I read In your issue of the lst inst.an article, \u201cWill Bulgaria and Roumania involve Europe in War?\u201d The writer tries to lcad our sympathies toward Roumania instead of Bulgaria by telling your readers Low prospercus Roumania is under her illustrious King Charles.: + 1, a born Roumanian,.and now, thank \u2018God, a British subject, would ask you to insert in your valuable paper that the 1l- Justricus character he gives to the country and king is utterly false and without foundation.To enable the \u2018publie to under stand that my statements are correct, I must make my readers acquainted with that country.\u2018 Roumania is divided into districts.Fach: diatrict is governed by a governar called a with his subordinates.\u201d The reli | .A : .~ Yes à 0 gion ci the country is the Greek Or:hcdox * ~ ' Church.No anybody who does not: belong to that church, be he Jew, l'rotéstant, or ! ta ; .\u2018 Mohammedan.is called stroin or foreizner, ! The Preievt in his d.strict_is a viri:ual .\u201cKing or autocrat.Do it often happens that \u2018Ç \u2018issues a deerce that these foreigners must, leave his district ér a part of ir.1 cften ; Most of the clerlsied n strums of the Western .reformer \u2018have heen tried and found \u2018wanting In China in the course of the ages.As the \u2018lines > proddiy print cut, competitive «xatinat:on bus Leen the m ans of recruiting the public service for a thu | sand.years, \u2018hut {re resUlta are hardy such | \u2018as to recommend the system.ast ic wo k- - «ed there, fur generu! adaption, \u201cquent | 1 ie 17 youth happens that not only the man himself, but his father and grandfather, were bern in \" that district, and he could claim no other country for his birthplace: but to the Pre- feet he is à strein, a foreigner, and :o0.he must lcave.On the foreigner is imposed the heaviest taxes.If he has children, they have to go and serve the country as soldirs; but he has no voice in the government whatever.It often happens that the on'y son of his parents is taken into the army and when their child is away serving the country.an order comes from the Prefect that these poor.people must leave their place within twenty-four hours: and.when the time has expired, they and their gouds are Jaded on wazgons and taken outside-oi the village aud left there, under penalty of impri-cn- ment should thiev return to their homes.; Cant a British subject have the least idea what this means?For'example-à I wall state Tor you herg svine facts which them into the gutter.« this der, that it is all tn al to tim, ard \u2018that the class to which he Lolonzs depend fur their existence upon the maintenance of the sys-em of examination and.subse- selegtisn it now stands, Some writer on Chana hais sad that no face eyer ns Cware a mere contrmntuous exsres-ion than that of the younz mandarin as he \u2018passes along the street op Iooks ont from\u2019 the Inte tieed window of the tea house.Scated In ID has been 1 pis offielat chaîr.and surrounded by oa said that the Chinese smandirin resembles | groser retina of noisy at:endante, bearinz no English type so much as the Univers Ly Don, aud, allow.ng for all the differences of the insignia of office or making a discordant | ciang of sounding brass, the man \u2019aria ap.environment, there Is à grain of truth, !n ; peare the very incarnition of human arro- the pleasant'y.The Chnese 2raduirte ! as a supreme contempt for the iliizerate warld, which \u2018he holds to Incinde nog only the conlie crowd of his aren bLinad, hut all the barbarians who tive heyanl the four seas He telieves :B no \u2018Carnire that \u201c= not found: ed on the Chinese els =.not know, to paraphrase the Gxisrd tag, is not knowledge, .What Ties does ! : fn | D .on or about Sept.21 GLENARM HEAD .6n or about Sept.2 BRAY HEAD .\u2026 .on or about Oct.10 TEELIN HEAD .on or about Oct.16 BRAY HEAD ., .on or about Nov, 15 TO DUBLIN.RAMORE HEAD .on or about Sept.20 .BENGORE HEAD/,.on or about Oct.13 .DUNMORE HEAD .on or about Oct.30 .BENGORE HBAD .on or about Nov.18 To bo followed By other steamers about fortmgRtly, (rom St.John, N.B, \u2018A limited number of cabin passengers ear.ried on above steamers at moderate rates.Through.Bills of Lading granted from an points in Canada.For freight and other ruculars apply to G3.HEYN & BONS, Hel.t, Managers Ulster Steamship Co., Limited; PALGRAVE, MURPHY à& COQ.Dublie; HAROLD KENNEDY, Quebec.McLEAN, KENNEDY & co.BOARD OF TRADS BUILDING.Western Agent, Meatreai.F .C.Thompson, 23 Wellington St.Toronto, Chicago Agency\u2014J.T.Sickel, 234 Lasalle St WEI ULMER ©, LM St.Lawrence Line.88.\u201cCAMPANA.\" 1,700 Tona, et Next Salling from Momtreal, MONDAY.84th BKPTKMBER, AT 1 P.M, mm mm 0 ca 9n ne 2 Ca manon wna season, leaving Quebec the following day ot Noon \u2018tor FATHER POINT, GASPE, MAL BAY, PERCE, CAPE COVE, ORAND RIVER, SUMMERSIDE, CHARLOTTETOWN AND CTOU.Excellent accommodaÿon for pas- Bere, No ea received he 1 Fry sailing day.For freight, passage and staterooms; apply te J.@.BROCK & CO., Agents, 211 Cemmmaioners Street, ONY.- Tunisian, 10,376 tons, Twin Screw.MONTREAL, QUEBEC & LIVERPOOL ALLAN LINE - ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS, 34 Steamers, \"aggregating 141,265 Tons.NEW STEAMERS.Bavarian, 10,375 tons, Twin Screw.Corinthian, 8,000 toms.Sicilian, 8,000 tons.- From .From From Liverpool.Steamer.Montreal.Quebec.30 Aug.Numidian A ve ee o.13 Sept.15 Sept.6 Sept.Corinthlan ., ., .23 Sept.22 Sept.13 Sept.Parisian ., .29 Sept.29 Sept.37 Sept.Tunisian .13 Oct.13 Oct.~40ct.Numidian = ee 2.200ct.20 Oct.pee Special attentign is called to the sailing of the New Twin Screw Steamer Tunlslan, The Tunisian is the largest, finest and fastest Steamer ever: built for the Canadian route.The saloons and staterooms are in the central part, where least motion is felt.Electricity is used for lighting the ships throughout, the lights being at the command of the Passengers auy hour of the night.Music rooms and smoking rooms on the promenade deck.The saloons and ctaterooms are heated by steam.RATES \u2014 Cabin, $30.00 and upwards.A reduction is made on Round Trip Tickets, except on lowest rates.Second.Cabin \u2014 To Liverpool, London or Londonderry, $35 to $40.single; $66.50 to $75 return.Steerage \u2014 To Liverpool, London, Glasgow, Belfast or Londonderry, including à plentitui supply of provisions, cooked and served, and every requisite for the voyage, $23.50.GLASGOW & NEW YORK SERVICE.Calling at Londonderry (trom New Pier, foot of W.Zlst Strcet, New York).From - From Glasgow.Steamship, Now York.30 Aug.Californian .,.15 Sept, # a.m.\u20ac Sept.Laurentian ., .52 Sept., § a.m.13 Sept.Sardintan ., .20 Sept., 1 p.m.el Rates \u2014 Firat Cablo, $40 and ypwards; return tickets, $80 and upwards.Second Cabin, to Glasgow or \u2018Londonderry, $30.00; return tickets, $57.00.Stecrage.$3.50.Steamers on this service have exceilent ao- commondation for all classes of passengers.The Saloons are forward.Staterooms near the centre of the ship.Promenade deck the satire width of the vessel, and two-thirds ot the length.Electric.lights throughout, and tlectrio bells in every stateroom.H.& A.ALLAN, \u2019 25 Common Street; Montreal.med .AMERICAN LINA FAST EXPRESS SERVICE ml) ELDER, DEMPSTER & CO.\u2019sS BEAVER LINE ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS .Weekly Sailings between Montreal ; and Liverpool.Calling at Queenstown both ways.- From : From Liverpool, Montreal.31 July,.Lake Megantle ,.Aug.17 7 Aug.Lake Superior .Aug.24 14 Aug.Lake Ontario .Aug.81 2 Aug.xMontfort .Sept.?28 Aug.Lake Champlain, new, 9.000 tONS .eecees.Sept.14 4 Sept.Lake Megantic .sess Sept.21 11 Sept.Lake Superior .a+.Sept.28 WINTER RATES NOW IN FORCE\u2014$47.50 and upwards, according to steamer, location of stateroonis and mumber of occupants.Second Cabln, to Liverpool, London or Queenstown: Singles, $33 and upwards; return, $62.70 and upwards, according to steams er, location of staterooms and number of occupants.; Third Ctass, or Steerage, to Liverpool, London or Queenstown, etc, $22 and $23, accorde ing to steamer.MONTREAL TO AVONMOUTH.(Bristol.) Memnon ., .Friday, Aug.17 xMonteagle .\u2026 Friday, Aug.24 Degama .ee a.secasess Aug.81 xCold storage.\u2019 These steamers have very comfortable ace commodation for a limited number of first cabin passengers.Rate, $50 single, $90 return.MONTREAL TO LONDON.OCOANO v0 8.op ve evececeseces nos Aug.15 AFNARO .:e 0 +6 40 envovosccossooccus ÂUR.35 Montreal vo ee eo or ve secocvoccessocuc ÂUR.SA ELDER, DEMPSTER & CO.9 St.Sacrament Bt, MONTREAL.Chicago Agency\u2014JNO.E.EARLE & CO, 12 Sherman Street.Toronto Agency\u201450 YONGE STREET, \u2014\u2014 LEYLAND LINE MONTREAL ANTWERP, Steamers of this well-known line are fitted up with all the improtemcnts for carrying Live Stock, Butter, Cheose, Grain and ev New York\u2014Southampton\u2014London.description of general cargo, and are intended Calling Westbound at Cherbourg.- to be despatched as follows: Salling Wednesdays at 10 a.m.From .From New York.Sepl.19 Now York.Oct.19 Antwerp.Steamer.Mo Bt.Paul.Sept.38 51.Paul .Oct, 17 Sept.7.8.8.ALBANIAN J\u201d ., SPL 8 Louis.Oct.31 St Louils.U0t.2 | Sept.15.8.8, ASSYRIAN .Oct.6 RED STAR LINE Bept 29.8.8.ALMERIAN ,, we ».Oct.9 Mew York\u2014Antwerp\u2014Paris Salling every Wednesday at 13 acom.ington.Nept.18.Frienland.Oot.8 NT Hope.30 | Southwark.Ot 3 These steamers carry Cabla and Thirg class passengers at low rates.' i INTERNATIONAL NAVIGATION oa Piers 14 and 15 N.73 Broaéway, New Yet wu rd 116 Bt.Ri Street, ' Oct.13.8.8.ALBANIAN Nov.3 A limited number of cabla passe gers ried on above steamers at moderate rates Through Bills of Lading are\u2019 issued to and from all points in Canada and the United States by the Grand Trunk Railway, Cana dian Pacific Railway and their agencies, op from ' : FRED'K LEYLAND & co.200 Board of Trade Bulldlng, MONTREAL, ce » \u2014 tt YEAR NO.219.| 93RD & il es 000000000000000000006005500000dDdd 006 THE A> MONTREAL.SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1900.Kl BY A WOMA +\u2014ee-ee \u2019 Madge Merton's Weekly Talk with Her Herald Readers, An Englishman who has a good business as a ladies and children's outfitter, told a story of a most unreasonable creature 1a the shape of a would-be customer.She was a etranger to the outfitter and a stranger Ip the city.She wanted three little dresses like the pattern she brought, for a four-year-old girl.She wanted them cheaper than the usual rates.She wanted them {mmediately or quicker, and she wanted them charged- until she should come back from ber summer holiday up north.She didn\u2019t get them, but she was furious because she didn\u2019t, and the outfitter was furious \u2018because she wanted them.Isn't it curious that a woman should wish to embarrass the woman who does work for her, by neglecting to pay her bills or by being unwilling to pay cash directly she has the value recelved?.Many a girl who ls beating her poor ttle .hands against the cage of her too monoton- _ ous life, cries out that she wants to be independent.It is not always that.A girl may need to earn money to feed and clothe herself., Another may choose to add to her fncome or devote her earnings to some cher- Ished ambition.Another wants \u2018to\u2019 be independent,\u201d sometimes because she feels her \u2018maintenance ls grudgingly given by ~ her parents or relatives and often because she only fancies so.Most of all, girls need mental interest.Glve a woman something to do\u2014something she likes to do\u2014something she feels is worth doing, and the querulousness will go out of her volce, the rebellion out.of her heart.She will work as hard and as faithfully for her success as a man works for his.Women's work has been so long considered an aside\u2014just keeping house or just teaching school, just needlework, just bringing up children, just this ,or that, or the other, that it's small wonder they begän thinking apologetically of It themselves, and once, in that altitude, it is also small wonder they began to rebel against these common tasks which all men and some women looked down upon s0 heartily.But, it is surely changing\u2014this state of affairs.Women are beginning to see possiblities in all kinds of simple, homely, and, hitherto despised, isks.They are going back to them, and taking their freedom and Independence, their education and health of mind with them.And the world looks on and savs approvingly: \u201cIt Is better that they should.\u201d \" To the girl who Is restless, who wants | \u201cgq career,\u201d the world says softly, \u201cBe pa- | tient, be very sure you have it in you to be Hired without resting, to work without, winning, and, sometimes, to hunger without eating.\u201d He does not say \u2018don\u2019t do it,\u201d but he points to tle near-at-hand tasks and, says \u2018try them first,\u201d and If, as is often the case any task will give fhe outlet required for energy and ambition, the girl who had wild dreams of a future far away, settles quletly in to her own circle, dignifies ter round of tasks, influences, helps, cheers, ahd sweetens lifé for those.she comes In contact with.N \u2018People talk of summer cottages as it they were pure lazy from top to toe,\u201d sald an irate visitor the other day.\u201cYou'd think to hear them tell us what a good time we had that we never did a thing but swing In hammocks and go bathing and sit in the moonshine, I'd just like them to see the pile of hem-stitched linen sheets and pillow slips and the barrelg of canned fruit and Jam I brought home, and there isn\u2019t a button missing from any of the garments belonging to the family nor an un- darned pair of hose in the whole house.\u201d She looked so well, too, with the five-hour tan on her face and hands, and the clear eyes which a Good digestion and an easy consclence brings to people.I know how the fruit looks.It Is clear as crystal, for lt was chosen and weighed and cooked and put away exactly as it should be.There was Do make-shift, no excuse, no carcless- ness, Do slip-shod work of any kind.Her hem-atitching Is even and not puckered and the carefully embroidered letter as neat as it Is possible for it to be.And I'm sure this busy woman enjoyed her summer.She has care enough to kill a cat with her nine lives, but it doesn't ever ruffle the brow of this busy woman who comes home \u2018rejoicing with her pack of bedilnen and her barrels of jam and preserves.Golden rod and asters, thorn-apples and wild cherrles, à few draggled buttercups an daisies and maple leaves beginning already \u2018to be speckled with gold and flushed with red\u2014that is the autümn bouquet.How short a while it seems since we were coming carefully down the mountain paths sheltering the first of the blood roots and he- paticas from the rough-edged spring winds.All through the summer the land has rlot- ed In wild blossoms, and now, purple and white and gold and red our autumn spoil chefrs us with its splendor though we fall to find the sweet promise which the April and May blossoms held \u20acor us.There are breezes which promise us stinging fingers bye and bye.They hint of the cold very gently indeed, but we know what Is theant.We have heard the note of warning 80 often that we recognize it and elaborate it in fancy till, still in fancy, we shiver around our fires.And wWe'ze very foollsh for the whole of the splendid sutuma is before us\u2014the days of ripe nuts and colored leaves; the days of the first hoar frost and the bracing air from the northiand; the @ays of clear skies and the days of the Indian summer when mellow with sunshine and dreamy with soft purple mists, the days of unspeakable jovellness lure us into the dreariness of the early winter.It is ours day by day\u2014the autumn.It may be last time.We may never gee another summer together\u2014you and I.Let us make the best of the golden days that come so swiftly tous.Let us bask In their sunshine and drain the cup of Nature's loveliness to the very last drop, .The men who have been getting breakfasts all summer and dropping egg shells behind the stove out of sight; who have been dusting with the finest serviettes and using the souvenir spoons to stir porridge with, are getting into plenty of trouble.They are learning that thelr sins do find them out, and they had an Idea that only a Sherlock Holmes could ever discover their iniquities.Something smells horrid,\u201d crles the housekeeper, as the husband.stands by with his thumbs In his armholes and a smile of triumph on his face, \u201cI haven't left anything in the sink, emptied coffee grounds and egg ahells and decayed peaches out every day or two.\u201d \u201cIt's here,\u2019 - she sniffs, going over to the pantry.He follows apprehensively, and looks astonished when she holds a cup at arm's length and goes straight for the kitchen door.\u201cThat's my soup,\u201d he explains, and she gives it to him.He doesn\u2019t want It, however, and after a visit to the garbage cam, he tries to tell her how many or, rather, how few days the soup has been waiting for him.\u201cHow could you live in the place with that stuff.there?\u2019 could I tell it was there?\u2019 \u2018Didn't you smell anything?\u201d \u2018Yes, once or twice, but 1 thought it wasn\u2019t anything In particular.\u201d She wonders what a man\u2019s nose is for, seeing that It isn't always handsome, and thelr servants when they come sniffing and fidgettlng around like that.He sulks a little, too, for he thinks his- housekeeping [has been found fault with.\u201cI had the shirt walst fever this year,\u201d sald a woman who has just returned to town.\u201cReally, it must have been a dis ease, for I couldn\u2019t leave the papers alone tll IT had seen the advertisements of bargains and novelties.I went to town on purpose to buy material, and, directly I percale, I bought it at once and set to work to fashion It inte shirt waists.Any remnant that I had, or my friends or the .hopkeepers had were made Into shirt walsts, too, and certain material and soft pillow stuff were begrudged to thelr right And lawful uses.Now, at the end of the season, I have enough shirt walsts to last me two years\u2014light and dark, pretty anil ugly, faded and unfaded, this year's fash- fon and last year's; but I've not pald attention to the other details -ôf my.wardrobe.T'm almost out of shoes.My hats are a sight.My lingerie has been neglected.I've.fallen Into the careless hahit of twisting a ribbon with pinholes and a crease or two around my throat.I haven't a single pretty stock that's really clean, and my glove box and handkerchief case need replenishing.And It's all on account of my shirt walst fad.When a woman has only a certain sum to spend she must keep her expenditures balanced, and if she goes perfectly crazy over one part of her wardrobe, some other part will be sure to suffer for it.\u201cBut \u2018you've all the shirt waists,\u201d some one suggested.: .\u201cYes, and they're a bargain lot, and I'll rell \u2018em cheap,\u2019 sald the shirt waist girl.they would probably have sald things abont extravagant women, untdl some one who knew thelr failings asked them why they had a whole drawer full of partly worn and perfectly new tles, and how In the werld they eame to buy so many more collars than they needed of assorted sized and shapes.There are many woetul-faced shirt waist girls just now, hut all the sins of the\u2019 wardrobe do not come under the head of shirt walsts.Most of us have our little failings.If we cannot discover them for ourselves, our best friends or worst eneinies will doubtless he delighted to give us lists of a few of the most apparent ones.Speaking to à téncher the other day of fittle children and thelr faults and virtues, she sald that home training came to school with the little children, and it was scarcely possible to eradicate it.Children who are obedient at home are obedient at school, and It Is an easy matter tn teach a child to read and write 1f only it has heen taught to do as It Is told and to be patient and truthful.\u201cWhen parents send thelr spoiled bables to us and expect us to make them over Into happy.polite, studious little ladies and gentlemen, they are hoping for the Impossible.When a child with a well- curbed temper comes to school when It is truthful and unseifish and docile, \u2018we have a fair chance, and those children we love very quickly.The others are only pot- bollers.You can\u2019t be Interested in them, because they are so positively hateful, And it's odd, too, but we teachers have certain families black-fisted.We know what to expect when a younger sister of an elder thorn in the flesh appears.I've refused some children, because though thelr parents are wealthy and they are good pay and well dressed, they are.so unruly\\and have such bad habits of speech and are no fll-mapnered, that it Is not fair to the other pupils, and not worth the wear on our verres to have them jn the school.\u201d - Poor little bables\u2014handicapped at the very first step Into life by the neglect of their parents.It Is not of supreme Importance that they ghould read their first books before they are three, but.it Is of Importance that they should do sas they are told without sulking, that they should have re.there shall never come another autuinn to s.\u20ac May have passed us for the spect for their elders and perform the little acts of reverence and graceful attention ~ \u201cHow.he doesn't wonder women have trouble with saw a pretty plece of muslin or linen or\u2019 If men had overheard the conversation,\u2019 a which mark the well-tralned child.It 18 only a small matter whether they know bow to count more than the number of helr dolls or marbles or the coppers in thelr banks, but it is Important that they should know how to use a handkerchief preperly and to eat quietly and without disgustingly messing thelr fingers and faces.Bchool teachers might possibly undo the bad training of careless hones If they had a five-year-old for five years as many hours a day as the mother or the nurse had it, but to expect evil to be eradicated and good to be planted and nourished and an educational foundation laid in a few short terms of five days a week, with.three hours In each day, is very optimistic Indeed.More and more it must be preached to the mothers of to-day that they are not doing thelr duty.by their children when they allow them to acqulre evil habits and to be less than the obedient, sweet-tempered, happy children they might every one be if we lived our company manners before then at home, and our religion seven days a week, ! 6-6 06000000 +o 4 SS50000000 + + .+ CORRESPONDENCE | 8° \u2014 + AM readers are welcome to these 4 columns.Handwriting is delineated; 4 apd drawings of the palm of the hand, showing the principal lines, will also be read.Character will be read from photographs, wi®:h will be returned If stamps are enclosed.\u2014Ad- dress Madge Merton, Editor Woman's Department, The Herala, Montreal.i +++.Much More\u2014Perhaps you were scarcely in fault, and yet a man fs not always to blame Jf an entertainment happens to be objectionable in some paris to some people.It is impossible to tell, before-hand, and then again, people view things from euch varying points of vlew.If you were rude, or did not appreciate his dtificulty, I think you might try now to atone for it by that neglected Invitation.| You are sensjtive, fairly diligent, a little indecisive, warmhearted and sincere, .+ Pattence\u2014The difficulty 1s that so long a time is required to attaln any proficiency worth while in either musle or drawing.I wish I could help you, but you see so few of the circumstunces are known to me, Why not do As: your friends wish you to.That wlll not require a life time for study.and you will then always have a means of livelt- hood at your finger ends.It is better te have some speclalty, and you are wise not to allow yourself to settle down to general work.The main ghing is to do something sure of your livelihood.\u201cSlocan\u2019\u2019 13 a brave purse who Is wont An what she calls the \u2018wooly west,\u201d Sue has of Indian life and yet she has a warm spot for us away down here In Montreal.Isn\u2019t it good of her to remember her cast- ern friends and to want her Herald every week.\u2018St.Lamberts, she savs, *\u201c\u2018woujd be quite a large city beside hier Il tie town.\u201d Think of it.Little St.Ldmberts over there across the bridge where the sun-streak ls so long and bright and golden these love ly autumn days.Our correspondent Is sympathetic, sincere, very persistent, very gen- crous, intuitive and warm hearted and, per haps not quite so hopeful as we should {lke to have*her.Chateau Frontenae M\u2014I'm glad to have your letter.If a man and a woman care very much for cach other they are sure to wish to marry, but If there Is any impediment to thelr marriage, it has been proven possible for them to malntain a close friendship with perfect purity of thought and all decorum\u2014a friendship extendinæ over many years and sometimes terminated only by the death of one of the friends.It may he hegging the question to call it \u201cfriendship\u201d at all.It may be that we should call It love and he done with.It.Your writing shows candor, self control, cansecutive reasoning power pnd good judgment.I should not be surprised 1f some of Clare, you are cold.You are neither, bat you are very independent and Very reserved.Van Buren\u2014 Scrub your face with a flesh brush, after bathing It with warm water.then sqaeeze the little particles af waste matter out.Bathe again, and use a few drops of alcohol or lemon ju'ce in a clans of water every day.Dabble It on with a soft cloth.Do not use powder, and be unremitting In the use of the flesh brush.The first thing to do is to empty the enlarged pores, the next to keep them empty, and the third to assist nature in contraciing them to their norma) size aud confining them to thelr normal functions.You want them to continue to cœude the wastes of skin, but not to harbor dust and sand and grains of powder and sealed up persplra- tion.2.Your wrlting Indicates some lm- potuosity, much generosity, fair endurance.i \u2014_\u2014 Falr Play writes\u2014Dear Madge Merton, \u2014 I lave often thdught of wr ting to tell you how much I enjoy your page.1 find we have many Ideas in common, but I have put it off from time to timé and if ! had not read the letter signed \u201cPro Hono l'rl- lico,* perhaps I never would have summoned up courage to write, hut no one knowing \u2018anything about the musical profession in Montreal could let such a letter 80 unanswered.I am not a musician (although I love it dearly), so I have no axe to grind, but it is quite evident \u201cPro Bono Pubiico\u2019 has.I am quite sure there are at least a \u2018bal\u2019 a dozen\u2019 men and women ln Montreal who bave spent most of thelr lives studying music (some of them ahroad), and are quite capable of teaching, ghd for your correspondent to attempt to eviticlse them ls a great picce of impertinence, and only shows how very narrow and provinelal he or she is.We all know that there are some poor girls who have to earn their living and think because they can play a few pleces, they are capable of teaching, but to clase the music ans of Montreal with em only shows how very ignorant *\u2018I'rd Bono Publleo\u201d is.y en : A correspondent writes:\u2014\u201cThe correspondent who writes under the signature of \u2018ProsHono l\u2019ublico.assumes-n great deal, many of his remarks contain sound advice which parents ahd guardians would do well tq follow, vis.: obtaining the best instruct possible In all arts, or any branch of egucation for those under their charge.Are e right In taking for gated that the wrl- ter Is a musician and an artist?P.B.l°.says \u2018there is only one pedagogue of the inno In Montreal, to the actual knowledge of the writer.Is this an actual fact, or mere hlatant xssuinpiMon® 1 would suggest that this pedagogue take linmediate steps to enligbteu the Montreal pubile by deil- + + \u2018 better than other people can.Then.you are.seen much of western life and the novelties | your friends call you proud, and some de-, © = vering a course of lectures on musle as an art; also glve a recital and let the music- lovers have at least the one opportunity ot hearing a master of the planoforte, ana alse of beholding this \u2018temple of true ari, this edifice complate,\u2019 as embodied in this agogue of music.1 would also enquire f the writer and the pedagogue have heard Montren\u2019s best musicians, or have they secn any of our artists\u2019 productions-?Have (Des the entree \u2018to art circles, the opportunity of judging the talent of our fair clty?- If su, we yleld to, and are quite ready to render due homage to the assumed superiority, when proved to be such.I would bid the wniter and the pedagogue remember that \u2018aes longa, vita brevis.* R.\u2014~There are two days in July sald to be unjucky for wedding days, namely, July 5 and 19.January bas a long Black lst and you must not \u2018choose the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th, 7th, 10th or 13th.April days are lucky, except the 6th aud 11h, Brandon.\u2014It\u2019s much more a question of WhAt not lo do wll your daughters.I'm afraid you plague them so about improving thelr minds that they wish they'd been born idiots.Last year going down the Hudson there was a woman ou board who had a bad- tempered girl of fourteen or go, and a sick bushanud.The husband annoyed her a good dead, but she bothered the child oven more.She wouldn't let her sit still and be happy In a girl's way, and be interested in what she could understand, but she insisted upon dragging her from one side of the boat \u201c19 the her to see the gulde book sights,\u2019 Matters reached a head when the mother cried: Henrlette, where is lentetie, There, now, you 4 right down there and look at Grants* Tomb.\u201d Poor IHenrleite didn\u2019t see It for teams, for she \u201cbad been hadgered und« prodded with queries and poked \u2018up with remonstrances, till she must have hated the sight of-the lovely reaches of the Hudson and the woman whom a cruel fate had given to her f'r.a mother.Can't you Interest them in study without forcing them to &é100] or 1o le\u2014s-n#?Isn\u2019t there \u2018sume- thing wrong with them or with you, If they \u201chate eveything good.\u201d I'm sorry if you think me nusympathetie.I'm no-lim bitterly sorry for vou.bit don\u2019t blame thew in such wholesile fashion.Jako\u2014Read Ruskin\u2019s elements of drawing.I think you will enjojy Ms way.of looking u! \u2018nature, and; too, that you will b> espe.wlally Interested in the advices he givhs.as to what artists ought to study and look n:,aud what buoki to read.*Hurt.\u2014I'ir afraid of that kind of a wo man.She's worse than a snake or.a wild cat, depend on it.If un woman talks of other people ta Fou, you are pretty safe In assuming that she talks quite as un- irnshifully or eritleally about you to other people.Besldes, If a woman cecuples herself very much with the concerns of others vou may be sure she hasn't very mueh that ls worth while to de of tosthink about and & Woman whose head machinere wbirre npround empty is not the most uplifring klnd of n companten to have, Don't think you can cure her of gossiping, Yow may pre vynt her talking «lander while she is with you, tart she Is so much older, so much more worldly wise than you, that Fm -a ttle afrald you are unt yet strong enough to in- \u2018Avence her much.Ketter let her go ner way, and you go yours, choosing a better path than one which is strewn with gossip.Jackson's Polnt.\u2014Yuur reading has heen very carefully chosen and you will have cinse all through your: lite ¢o -thank the wise mother who led not drove you through the pleasant, helpful pueths of literature.2° The proity maple drssing tables look well with a brass bedstead.Aside from the necessities it is well ta he carefil what you put 4nto a wed chamber, Most of uy would he healthler, 1 think, if we breathed purer alr, and If our Lelroms had less furndiure and fewer draperies we shouid be able and willlng to keep them freer frou, Just, and therefore tn à condition lv give less dust to the av when disturbed, 3° Your [dea about the paper Is good, but why not paint the floor and then lay down Japanese rugs.They cost very little and after they: have been shaken eut-doors And the painted floors washed clean, jour room ls cleane- than it ever can he after the tra week your carpi Is nailed down.And.uot only that.Your rugs are beaten.ont of doors and the dust I£ not switehed up on vont Wallgaund into every erack and fibre of the furnishings of your room, \u2018Frink It over, * No one who hae ever known the luxury of rugs, goes willingly hack to floor cover.nus ndtlet down.Taut, In ¥seif, ly a geod recommendation, 1 My English Dadsy.-Ambitlous, intuitive, decisive, carnest, and warm-hearted, _\u2014 Wate: Lly\u2014Affrciinate, generous, cm phutiè-aud hopefux, .\u2018 .\" 0 Allee\u2014 Persistent, chicerful, un
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