THE MILLS OF MONTREAL Tho Hocbelaga and St. Anne Cotton Mills [Special Correspondenct of Toronto Truth Therecent visi t of the Ontario Press Aasocia- tion to the U ochelaga Zktton Mills renders the present a fitting occasion to notice the cotton manufacturing industry of Montreal. Hocbelaga, as most western readers know, is the chief eastern suburb of Montreal, and the Hudon Mills, situated on St. Mary street, some xlistance beyond th*' city limits, are the largest, as well as one of the oldest cotton mills in the Dominion. The building is of brick and is five stories high. From the front it has the appearance of great mag- nitude and activity, and an inspection bears out the appearance in both respects. It is 700 feet long and 75 feet wide, irrespective of two large wings in the rear and there are over 400 windows in the front of the build- ing alone. The motive power which drives this immense establishment consists of two pairs of compound engines, made by Woods, of Eolton, England, and exerting together 1,500 horse-power. The principal fly-wheel is 32 feet in diameter, its companion 30 feet in diameter, and each weighs 30 tons. They are supplied by 10 steel boilers of Canadian make, and 6 of Eoglish make. In another part of tha building is an engine of 200 iiorse-power, devoted wholly to the bleach- ei'v. The building is supplied with 4,000 or •J.OOU feet of hose, giving nearly l.OOOfeet to eacii flat, and there are So hydrants from wliich the hose can operate, irrespictive of tiie system of automatic sprinklers. Steam power, for tire txiinguishing purposes, sup- plies four steam j.unips, vvhicti, iMiKl'EM.K.Nl' CF Till-; OKiilNAI.V I'Kl-.SSCKE tro.-a the city waterworks, can throw a stream over the top of the buildiDgfrom the ground. Each flat is provided with auto- matic sprinklers on which theie is aiwaya a pressure of 60 lbs. per inch, so that ia case L'f a, tire starting in any cue of the main looms this should be sufficient to put it out under ordinary circumstances. Tuo luleiior arrangements of the factory from a sauitary point of view are very satisfactory, the place • ting well lighted and ventilated and pro- vivlud with good closets. Its airy situation imr;it;di:itely overlooking the St. Lawrence 13 .1 5(ieat point iu its favor, from a sanitary i'j give an idea of the vast capacity of tills mill it may be mentioned that it con- buaus 300 bales of cotton in a single week, and turns out 25,000,000 yards of n.anufac- tured cotton per year. There are 1200 hands employed, more than two-thirds ot whom are v» ;men, and the spectacle of the crowd whict turns out at the noon hour re- minds one of a circus day in town or a pro- cession day. While speaking of the em- ploy es I may remark that the wages appear to be very good, l wenty five cents a day is the lowest wages paid to the smallest children, but the average ol all classes is between §." and •'Jij a week, and there are numbers of skilful women v\lio can earn as hii^ri as §10.50 oer week, 'i he amount of wages depends of coui st- upon the amount and skill of the work done. The bleaching and starching is carried on in the ground floor. All the work here IS DONE r.Y M\('UI.VERY, from the immersion of the cloth to the fold- ing; of it into pieces, and the gumming of the labpls and printing of the mill-mark preparatiTv to ship^iiug to the wholesale hou3-„t\ Tne blcDcliing is admirably done, and the cloth as it falls down in waves from a folder has that delicate tinge of blue-green which pure snow assumes under certain phages of reflected light. In another de- pirtment there are 5 openers, 9 scutchers, and eleven finishers â€" machines which pre- pare the raw cotton for the carding machine. These carders supply the railway heads, drawing frames, slubbmg frames, and inter- mediate and fine roving frames, which pre- pare the cotton at length for spinning. The work of these machines is more elaborate than a spectator would imagine, since in the process of "doubling" each of these unspun strings are doubled 14,970 times, and some kinds more than that. In this indeed lies ti;e great art of cotton spinning, for the oft- ener the fine strands are doubled the more even is the thread which is finally turned f)Ut from the spindle. There are G6 revolv- ing-tcp flat cards with "railway" attach- ments, by which the carded cott('U is carried to the machifles above mentioned. These cards are ustrd for tine work and the regu- larity M.itn which tne steel comb â€" moving with tlie rapirlity of the humming bird's wing -picks ofl' the film of cotton is admir- able. Tiiere are also 150 cards for ordinary work, turning out 120,000 lbs. of carded co'i.n per week ready for the spinners. Tr e are 40,000 ring spinning spindles (by H'l.wird and EuUoughs, Accrington, Eng in "'iH flat, which spin the warp; and in the next irj 30,000 mule spindles (by Curtis and S .1,.-, Mauchest'-r), on which the filling or â- wtf IS spun. All kir.ds of thread ia spun on li.e-o machine from No. 4, which is the coarsest, to No. 40, which is the finest spun in Canada. In another flat are the looms upon which the yam ia wovpn into cloth, and of these there are 120(1 One feature of this department is the loonis for weaving grain bags. There are 60 of bucn looms, and they weave the bags complete and â- without a seam. They are capu.t)le of turning out 2400 bags a day, and it is needless to say a ready market is found I jr all they can supply. There are a num- ber of looms specially made for WEAVING COTTON SHEETING, of double the usual width, so that a sheet can be made in one piece. The width of cloth produced by these looms is 72 inches. Some 300 looms are engaged on canton flan- nels, of which the Hocbelaga mills are now making eight or nine varities in both bleached and greys. This is comparatively a new departure in cotton manufacture here, as bleached goods in this line have never yet been produced in Canada. Almost the whole of the Canadian market is supplied by these mills, and the leading merchants to whom samples of the new bleached canton tl,ini;e)s have been sent, have pronounced i them .superior to anything they have seen ill 'his country. Theie are now 600 of the lionis engaged ou bleached goodsin general, I whicii may now be said to be a specialty of j this m;li, and they turn o;it 120,000 yards a I wt k, makipg six ditlerent ([ualities. These goods, T am told, are rapidly displacing H irrock's goods and the American cottons i If cm our market. Stiil anotlier new fea- tureof the Hocbelaga mill.i, is in the- manu- facture of shoeduck cotton, for thelioing of boots and shoes. They now produce 6,000 yards a week, and the material seems to be of a fine quality, both for appearance and strength. Altogether, some FOETr DIFFEBKlfT KINDS OF COTTON CLOTH are here manufactured. The Hocbelaga mills were opened in 1872, when there were only three other cotton mills in Canada â€" namely, the Merritton mills, the Dandaa mills, and the Stormont mills at Corn- wall. To Mr. Morrice, of D, Morrice Co., the manufacturers agents, and one the principal owners of the mills, â€" and to Mr. W, J Whitehead, manager, and James Jackson, superintendent, the press party were indebt- ed for the courtesies shown them during their inspection of the works. In this connection it may be worth while to mention that not far from these mills in Hocbelaga, and also on St. Mary street, is one of the most recently finished of the Can- adian cotton factoriesâ€" ,namely, the St. Anne mills, which were opened last Jan- uary. This new mill is excellently planned and well constructed, and turns out an ex- cellent class of grey cotton goods. It em- ploys 500 hands, has a like number of looms, and has 20,000 spindles. It turns out nearly 8, 000, OOO yards of cotton per year. Messrs. D. Morrice Co., are the principal owners, and the manufacturers agents of this mill also. From these facts it will be seen that the cotton making industry of Montreal is a very important one, and its establishments take the lead of all Canadian factories of this kind for the variety and probably the quality also of their work. Common-Sense in Temperance Reform. An editorial in the September Century dis- cusses " The Temperanse Outlook " with the following conclusions " That the temper- ance question should be made a political question is moat desirable. No question more vitally concerns the whole country with respect to its highest welfare. We should liave temperance men in office and 'empsranee laws enacted. But temperance must be temperance. It must be a sensible ami practical scheme that sensible and prac- ti al men will support which shall bring a!ioiit the desired reformation. It must be a scheme which the great majority of moral men will recognize to be sound its logic and even in its justice. Anything else than this may, under pressure of an excitement, achieve a temporary success, but only this will be a permanent cure of the rampant abomination. The liquor men are now more defiant and more numerous, in proportion to the population, than in any former period. They work their criminal mills openly in the face of all, and we see the streams of vice and crime pouring forth from these sources to lay waste the community and overwhelm the dykes which philanthropy has erected. The courts, the police, and the public oflicers generally, seeing the bold mien of these dis- turbers of the peace, find it easier for their weak natures to humor them and to connive at their wicked works than to oppose them. The great majority of the community are thus oppressed and tyrannized over by his minority, who laugh at law and hound [the defenders of law. The onl}- end of this enorm- ity will be in the union of the majority, and this can never be effected by extreme measures or fanatica Ipronounciamentoa. Dis- crimination between liquors that are hurt- ful and those that are (in moderate use) healthful discrimination between modes of drinking, as treating and drinking at meals discrimination between places for drinking only and places for lunch or dinner dis- crimination between drinking on the prem- ises where the liquor is sold and drinking it at home discrimination between day and night in the sale, â€" these and other like dis- criminations are to be made in place of the sweeping demands of the ultra men if a union ot the temperance forces is to be con- summated. Without this union the evil must go on propagating itself daily, and on the so-called temperance leaders must rest he blame. They have constituted an un- reasonable shibboleth. When they abandon that tiio enemy will be conquered, unless meanwhile the enemy shall have conquered all the ground and made our land a moral desert. Admirable laws, exactly suited to diminish the curse and destroy the political power of the rum interest, have been intro- duced into the New York Legislature, and would have been enacted but for the solid vote against them of the so-called 'Temper- ance' constituency at home. This class of reformers will have their zeal intensified by the action of Kansas and Iowa, and they may carry a few more of the States. Would to God t eir success was really success, that the I urn interest were striken to the heart by it Bat not until the reaction takes place, and these men are convinced of their error and are ready to build on truth and not on impulse, can we expect the union of all good elements which will finally dig the grave of Rum and bury him beyond all resurrection,' Satan's Work. Little Mabel and her mother were beard- ing during the sumrter on a farm. About the house were several currant bushes loaded wit' fruit, of which Mabel was excessively fond, and, despite ber mother's repeated in- junctions, she would eat the currants until they made her sick. One day her mother caught her in flagrant delictu, and proceed- ed to try the effects of moral suasion, "Why do you persist, my child," she asked, "in doing what I have so often foibidden?" "Satan tempts me, mamma," replied the precocious offspring, "and I can^t help it." " Well," said the mother, "when he tempts you again you must say to him, 'Get thee behind me, Satan,' and then he -will leave you alone." The next day Mabel's mother again discovered the little girl iu the bushes, and, hastening to her, began to rebuke her for her repeated aisobediencs. "Mabel " said she to the startled child, "diJn't I tell you yesterday to say to Satan, 'Get thee behind me '" " Yes, mamma, " responded Mabel, "and I did, and as said it Satan got behind me, and pushed me right in " The spirit i riots, moie or occurrence. insurrection is abroad and less puli:icil, are of frequent Friday Ust riots took place at Kar.staiit and Sussex in Croatia on Tues- day list a mob paraded the streets at Tri- este, crying "Dj«a with Italians and for- eigners. Long live Austria." They attacked the Itahan gymnasium and newspaper of- fices. At Agrani a mob threatened the rail- way, the custom house and the Archbishop's PaXCG* I AN AtUGAIOB WOWS IN TKATBXRS. WHat s Woman who hott 17 of her 20 UhUdren Fonnd In her PUlow. Hundreds of people have viaitcd the house of Mrs. John Smith, on McLane aye«ne. Pittsburg, attracted by stones of witohcratt in connection with the death of a num^rof her children. Mrs. Smith, a woman of fair intelligence. teU» the following remarkable story, which is vouched for by her neigh- bors " I have been married for nineteen years, and in that time have become the mother ot twenty children. Of the twenty only three are now living, the births and the deaths having averaged one a year. The last death occurred a few weeks ago, the child being an infant. A week or so ago a neighbor, Mr. Caffrey, who had been si-jk for some time, found a curious formation of flowers, roses and crosses in the pillow of his bed, n ade of feathers. After finding them he became better. I came home and looked through my pillows and feather beds. My husband had been ailing for some time, and in his pillovr I found au alligator woven out of feathers. It was about fifteen inches long and two inches wide, and the feathers were so tightly woven that I could hardly pull them out. I did not know what to make of it, and asked some of the neighbors. They said it was the work of a witch. I kept the curious i eces of feather work for a day or two, until 1 became annoyed by the hundreds of people who called to see it. Some wanted to buy it. I burned the alli- gator, with all my bedding, yesterday. I don't know whether io account for the death of my seventeen children through this evil influence or not, but I think there is some- thing in it. The superstitious are all agog over the de- velopment. There are not less than three witch doctors in this city who practice strange mummeries, and they have a large practice. Strange to say half a dozen simi- lar cases have occurred in the last six months, one case resulting in a suit in court. The story of the Smith woman regarding her nuTierous and fated progeny is as much a novelty as the witchcraft story she tells. Mil »--^^--«*^â€" Vera Sassulltcb. Vera Sassulitch was born in 1S50, accord- ing to the (apparent) most trustworthy authorities, and in 1867 was shut up in a Lithuanian prison for the offence of being a schoolmate of the sister of Netchieff, the political conspirator. Her imprisonment lasted two years, and she had scarcely been liberated when she was re-arrested on an ad- ministrative order of exile, and hurried away â- from her mother's house so rapidly that she would have perished of cold but for the com- passion ot a gendarme, who covered her with his cloak. For some years she was passed on from town to town as a "suspect," until, having spent the best years of lier life in prison, a victim to the INSOLE^•C'E AXD BRUTALITY' OF THE POLICE, she had learned to pity those who were simi- larly afllicted, and to desire to avenge them. In 1878 she learned of the brutal ill-treat- ment of a prisoner, Bogolubeff, by General Trepoft' "prefect of the town," at St. Peters- burg. The general had entered the fortress and was exasperated on beholding Bogolu- boff and a ;:ompanion walking together and conversing, as, not being convicts, but merely accused men detained on suspicion, they had a right to do. To a harsh ques- tion as to why this was allowed, one of the two volunteered an explanation. "I do not address you â€" to your dungeon "' shouted the general furiously. The two prisoners walked on quietly, when Trepoff, crying ' 'Hats off " aimed a deadly blow at Bogolu- boff. The prisoner's hat fell off, but Bogolu- boff picked it up and put it on, whereupon the general ORDERED HIM TO l',E FLOGCJED. A romatic version made it seem that Vera Sa'sulitch had been acquainted with Bogolu- boff â€" had even been his mistressâ€" but there was no truth in the story. She read with in- dignation of the outrage, and waited some time to see if the Government would pay any attention to it. When no action was taken, she resolved to do vengeance herself, and on the oth of February, 1876, went to thegene- rals reception-room with a petition,and when he stretched out his hand to receive it, shot him through the body. She made no effort to escape, and said tnat she had fired upon the general premeditatedly, without caring whether she killed him or merely wounded him, since in the latter case her end would be attained of calling attention to his brutal- ity. She was brought to trial in April, 1878, and defended by M. Alexandroff, The jury selected was composed of six members of the Civil Service, two merchants and a nobleman, a school inspector, a student and an artist, and it acquitted her promptly, amid the applause of the audience, despite the evidence, her avowal, and the speeches of the judge and the prosecutor. The ACl^CITTAL TROVOKED A GENERAL OUTBURST OF APPLAUSE from the press throughout Russia. On the 3rd of July, 1878, Vera Sassulitch appeared at Geneva, where she was received in triumph by Rochefort and his friends. She gave out that she had been re- arrested but permitted to eacape. It was reported for some time that the Vera of Geneva was an impostor, and that the Russian Charlotte Corday was really m Siberia, but finally all doubt? as to her Identity ceased. In December, 1879 she pubhshed a statement to the effect that her attempt on the General's life had been made m pursuance of orders from ths Revolu- tionary Committee, and that she had been designated by lot as the avenger. In Febru- an^, 1880, her arrest was said to have been effected in St. Petersburg, but the report proved false, and she was repeatedly heard of thereafter at Geneva and Paris, pushing on the Ninilist propaganda, and active as one of the editors of the Narodoa- Vo'ia, a well-known Nihilist review. He who receives a good turn should never forget It he who does one should never re- member it.~Chanon. The Spanish troops cannot be very expert marksmen, judging from the manner in which they managed to slaughter, at a few paces distance, the unfortunate sergeants who were the other day condemned to death as mutmeers Three volleys, we are told were required to finish the job, and even o„^° Ti^^r*^® P"""" '^etches raised himself and called for mercy, as the firing squad, deeming its work done, was passing by The Spanish troops evidently need practice aW:"nemT"'" ' "" with any Lrnid- ARTIFICIAL LMSV-P^*^ l|.^rL^vS^/xSio^-^^^^^^^^^^^ IN A Nl on application. Satisfk^nl^"" T^^'uBW^"" on application ' Address .i"^ll?fktion PKOOF,^easily'^p^',,DUABLE\\ Felt cemen*" ' â- *^ "" "" â- "' ' H.WILLI.-, ...„„^,..,.„, Feu roofing materialsr.i;i^,..^^^^ OF easily put on "'^DtrL^ nted to^Khcr for pf°"'l«'e^ J,'^. fVT* â- SINDT£S S£Ii£ Ir YOU WISH To y I V and best three- run Flour Mill in C "^-ture^--.p^| ntO0»'Tf of Foreign, Dox Item*- FOR THE Kidneys, Liver, and Urinary Organs.' THE BEST BLOOD PURIFIER. There is only one way by which any disease can be cured, and that is by removinsi the ^Sse-whereveritmaybe. The Kreat medical i S^thorities of the day declare that nearly every disease is caused by deranged kidneys or liver To restore these, therefore, is the only way by j which health can be secured. Here is where WAKNEB'S SAFE CUKE baa achieved its great reputation. It acts directly upon the kidneys and liver, and by placing them in a healthy condition drives disease and pain from the system. For all Kidney, Liver, and Urin- i ary troubles for the distressing, disorders of women for Malaria, and physical troubles eenerally, this great remedy has no equal, ae- i ware of impostors, imitations aad concoctions said to be just as good. „.„«™».a e.kvv For Diabetes ask for WAKNEB S SAFE DIABETE!!^ CI'BE. For sale by all dealers, H H. WARNER CO Toro nto, Ont.. Bochester. W.Y.. tondon. Eng. ILLEH'S MAY-APFLfcJ TUMO yool TIVKLY cures Liver Complaint and Uys pepsia. Write for free pamphlet, or mail 50c. per package._E^MILLER CO., Dresden, Ont. S ""TOOK FARMFOn SALE. TlIK FINEST StocK Farm in Missisquoi County, Que., situated at Dunham, consists of 00 acres. Sugar Bush of -J.OOO Trees, 100 acres in Wood- land, 150 in Meadow balance in Piough Land and Pasture. Buildings worth the price asked for the farm. Never failing supply of water Send for circular srivi^g full description. K. K. THO.MA.s, Heal Estate Agent, 31 St. James St., Montreal, Que. ree- run custom" '^^^EXp^ did Boiler aHd-K"Sn^^;;'^^ f feS in the mil). Town^oT], Jf "' »«» X ularsatonceto A. SHEPHR'^J'te forfe trolea^ambton County. Ont '^^ I SOp p Engraving ror all Advertising n. ^^^â- jg^-^ii â€" Pltby, Conctse DOMESTIC. The G. N W- 'J^elegraph Burdock BLACKSMITHS' BELLOWS PORTABLE FORGES. BABBET METAL, The largest assortment in the Dominion. William Darling Co., HARDWARE MERCHANTS, MOXTBEAL, P. Q. 38th ProvmciSlxhilJ or Tin; â€" Agricultural and Arts Assocife TO BE HELD AT GUELPfl I'N T(iK «4tli to 2J)Sli or SoiKonilcr, 1883,| Entries mr.st Ve WKde \Niih ihe .â- ^fcretarr •â- Tcronlo. en cr Ufore -.he uL,:tr"e'v' date.s, viz: "â- '-cu^cEf. Horses. Cattle. Sheep, ?\v:rn Pcr'trr w cultural Imp. eiiitnis, on or beioic "t'" Aii;just 2."l!. " "• '"'i^.. Grain, Fie r] rirots and other Farm Proc-i Machinery and .Abinufaetures u-eiieiallv Trr before -Saturday. Sopteniber It ' HorticuiU:r;ii Products, Ladirs' Work Ft. AUd.etc.on or before taiuraay, Scpi'eate vince or to HKXHY WADK, .Secretary, .J Arts Asiotiatior:. Torontr. D. P. McKlXXOX â- â- â- â- .\3ricr.:teral it IVcsidei.t. SicihFircb, Dominion Line of Steanfiships. Running in connection with the Grand Trunk Railway of Canada. Sailing from Quebec every Saturday during the summer months, and from Portland every alternate Thursday during the winter months. Sailing dates from Quebec :â€" Torsnio, 1st Sept. I Onl:ir|i|l/ 22nd S«pt. *.sarnia. Hlh " I -orogoli. aotli 'â- Montreal, l.'itli " Uoniinlon, Vlli Oct, Rates of passage Cabin, Quebec to Liverpool $50, $60, $65. $80; return, $90, $108, $117, $U1, according to steamer and berth. Intermediate $40, Steerage, $24. The saloons and staterooms in steamers marked thus: are amidships, where but little motion is felt, anl no cattle or sheep are carried on them. For further particu lars apply to any Grand Trunk Railway Agent, or local agents of the Company, or to UAVII* TOBBAACK t ro.. General Agei.ts, Montrea Professor Lispinard's SKIN BEAUTIFIER. This elegant Medicated Cream is warranted a Sure €urc for all Hlniples. Blach Spots, Blotclies, and unsightly Eruptions on the face, neck and arms. It positively removes all such imperfections in a few days, leaving the skin clear and smoo'h. It will cure the worst case, though all other means have failed. For benutifylng the complexion it is unrivalled. It makes the skin soft and white, and removes Tan, Freckles, and 8alIowness. This is the only preparation recommended by physicians warranted perfectly harmless and Us use can- n°- be detected. One package lasts a month. Price, ($1) one dollar. Sold by Druggists or sent by mail in plain wrapper, post-paid, on re- ceipt of the price. Sole proprietors for Canada, Address, THE LISPINARD COMPANY Box 285, St. Catharines, Out. !( THE CRZAT CUBE FOR BARB WIEITTEiNUISq: A:-A :.:; co:r^;.-.:r.t.- of a Uheuir.aiic netur;. RH£:'J."1*T;.\E U r.; a scvereigr. remedv i« "«i. tro i;;-, t:at I'le-^h ij heir to," b'-t fjr EL' Ra:.:-,I.\, S. 'ATiCA, RlIEU-M.vnSiU » coiaplaints of Jiheumatic nature. IT IS A SURE CURE Sold by all druggists. The RheuinatineMaB ufacturing Co., Niagara Falls. Ont. Meser! NorthroD Lyman Wholesale Agts., Toroctc [lliss3 PAVIN Lyman Barb awarded first prizes at Kxhl bitions held at Montreal and Toronto 1882 foi i.xcellence in Qualitv and Make. It is made from the best of steel wire specially dri^fo? the purpose. Our facilities enable us to^ake the Lyman with barbs 4. 5. 6, or 7 inch m Sifart as customers desire. The 4 and 5 i^h ?nrh wire.is used principally for smtu stock or low 16 t'^r ^2 fl???- ^^i\ inch^ake ruis Vrom lb to 16 1-2 feet (one rod to the pound. All of fo^^ KTiaranteed equal in strength to any wire fencing made. Send for circula? and nnWa to your nearest Hardware Agent or to BOMI.VIOSf BABB WIBE CO moStrf*! tr^aPo-u^^'n'io'^lf ' ^«-"d car" Yt^Mon- Sl'^or5Jif°aT^:I^T/^°f.^f ^°o^«toc-k TRADE MARK. The most remarkable Remedy of the 3*,- The only preparation that will cure spa' ' A valuable remedy for cure of Liiiiient^i. Removes swellings and intianiiuations- Ellis's Spavin Cure does not bli-ter or f'"^^,. We furnish positive evidence otabsolutt cu^^^ We send undisputed testimomali oi =t» removed. ,. ,_j Rinc- Ellis's Spavin Cure will cure aplmts ana iu« bones. „.-t fref. Descriptive books with testimonials .u' Anv Sportsman- reader may secure ir« y phlet. J tons. Owners of lame hornes send postAi C"'",^^ Hundreds of cures described in our poo^- Read carefullv and you will "C."onvincwj^,,,,, We only ask a fair trial for I*-""' ^^pHnofCi"' We prepare Condition Powders aca am â„¢ent. „.,i Co'« Heave Powders, Worm Powikr. anu Powders. ,,;, Harness All these on sale at Drus Mores aua Dealers. i,^t'e Price of Ellis's Spavin Cure .«H per b-' ^.jj;e For further particulars, free booKs, l^'-.. to ELLI SPWIV ri'BE CO.. No. 50 iiiidbury St., ««'"'"' i'wVo^" IIPHTHERIA NEURALGIA. CROUP, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. NEUB,..^ Johnson's Anodyne *;\^|riUl (for Internal and External use/ ^i instantaneously relieve tJStWllI rible diseases, and will pow^jjll jntfreebymaa Jg^l CO., BOSTM^S^SI /office at SDonewall, Mar rradingon the Emerson, p P E. is nearly comj be"' ,, u- 1 J y jf. S sbippt-d lZ' of coal to Boston, AJas [Sooecjaw, N.W.T.,ist flfuch of the clover in Uteen attacked by a ept' [great damage has been d Le Ottawa district. "contracts have been let .f pnseand post office at Me The Marquis of Lome aci jve Canaua October S A drunken woman in M; atenced to two years' i Jang her husband. Anew Presbyterian chui at Moosejaw, N. W. T. opacity of 300. Fabian Breou, of Cocagc. ,rri€d fifteen months e i (Jren at two births. Rev. Dr. Youne, presidet ethodist conference, is sti ID. Sol. White, M.P.P., has indsor from an extended â- est. Selkirk, Mac, expects a It of the opening ot ihe to be expended on the st Archbishop Tache is on ,oman Catholic missions i ,e Northwest. Eaglish capitalists liave ;eimer Stein hoff for S14,C ployed on the upper lal Final arrangements has 1 sfer of the Napanee an ay to the Grand Trunk. An unoccupied hotel at lyW. H. Xesbitt, has be icendiarism. The steam saw mill at pith 60,000 shingles and s_ er, lias been destroyed by A hired man named Lig aond. Oat,, and Miss Bell 6, living at Maxwell, Out ightning on Wednesday n The C. r. K. Co. gave a laturday to 1,500 ot tht lading their friends, fr Itonewall, where a picnic Henry Macfarlane, cf menccd an action for Si lorpordtion of St. Casair done on the railway to tha It is btated that tlie (.)tt Dte d to renew the ma iUan line of steamships Dwntrs of ocean vessels aro Andrew Weaver, of Botl tfi:ial information that I50,OCO left by his great g nany. The Colchester reef ligl Like Erie has been al)an( tractors, the works bavins aged by the storm. Mr. Collinghwocd Sci: linger, Hon. Mr. Trutc Jones, are making a tour Dmbia sections cl the C. P Amos Rowe, of the Wit â- oight the Brandon, M ^ill henceforth be edite Brooks, late city editor of There is trouble amon; Jolice, arising out cf thi eing charged with sleepii B. Battery are cai;ip roint, near Kingston. Hon. Isidore Thibauce «:tion for SI"), COO agaii t^acific railway to recover 'fainstthe Canada Cent 'ow owned by thesyndica .Margaret Leyens, aged R'n, only a week from N commit suicide by drown i ^M rescued with ditficu •fe m Western Ohio. A Windsor justice of tl «Qsubstantially that the 1 "e arrest of a drunken premises is too sweeping, wecase in which the .n is discharged. ,y^- Dobbin, wife of ^«ly arrested at Morri ;JWge of forgery in Outa; ;^ truth of the charge. K'^ition to malice, and ' husband a personal ir jTte building of an i iX commtnced at Point J^es Joseph and Rosse £»ed after the late Jol ""J^d, who located it as Ctoib?- ^^--aham's barn, t i^°?li8bara, atNorwoo ^8BtorehouEe, atMaxw jT?. at Seymour, and Jc »itWu"'^erealldest "" their contents, on T UNITED STi the r â„¢" *^ causing « FOt«lio crop in New pj^ceHohenlohe and *y to the North- West. ,^. Hamilton, of Gk •SSSSJS^^^'"' "'â- ' I'to!^" ^^"«'" " declare .^1^^ A^tampede ^eprioeof pottery is «S«*E. Withers, o S!2*'««*«d Grand Mj LirofSanFrancisc ^»t'l*.*"»n Lnmbe *» DoUanrille, Mich