I am Greeted Every Day with: Th.,ru a brig Iii, (and '!i.th a sing!e exception n ow include I pears under a rich variety of aepecte. of eglantine and ivy. m comi:s. down with a leap .a111 t [no ed1fi~e of earlier date than the ~5th cenPicture after picture presents itself, each clear strea._ ror, with most steeped in those rare atmosphei·ic Lfi'tcts a rush. Here a silt011t valley <Jpens rn1 .J tu ry. rhey tl:!em, h .1we1 for "'hich the west coast 1s famoun-~!"11, the heart uf the 11louutai11s 1wd suggesis I " interesting histt1ricn1 a.nd antiquarian ' tho mind visions <Jf dim, haunted r o· associat ions ; nnd they still form , in a "My, what lovelj patterns you have in loch and mountain; ltiafy hull uws and ceases. On the tranijpareut t ide t he wild pic~orial respect , s.u?h an imposing aero· Wall P per, and h ow cheap, t oo. You verdant knolls; windin~ paths, wovded duck floateO. and the mirror frtqu en tly rw polis a.s very few c1t.1es of the ~vorlcl have \ r t ceeses, hung with birch and rowau and have the best selection I have seen." I filled with the cea~e l ess voices of the flt cted the shadow of passing uirds th:.t cv~r poss~ssed. \V1th .th~ assistance of a f guide we mspect the prrnc1pal apartments I waterfalls. It is uot a very old towu, till the air with the only mus tc that could 1 dating back only to l 7!ll, and its history be endurnd in this ' 'halluwtJd region. ' At i i,cluding the Royal p ,,!ace, the r esidence Just so, that is my ir1tention. is not eventful. 'fhere Me a number of the other end, approached from Loch L o· of the kings and queens of Scotlan.d ; the large and splendidJy ·appdnted hotels, mond, the laud8cape is les8 beautitul. ~es~ room whe!·e Q t~ecn Mary gave birth to THE NE \VEST, seven churches, two weekly ncwspapere, va ried, but perhaps uut l11sa 1mpress1ve. James VI 1~ 15G6; the cr? w.n r oom where a handsome hydropathic institution. The silence Bt!ems deeper, the solitude ar~ ~he ancient regalt" ot ::;cotland, com'l'HE PRET'l'IES'I'. and Oban is not without lit erary associat ions, more cr1mpJ.,te. The wild grandeur and pnsrng crow 1~, sceP,tre, sword of~tate and for it Ins been celebrnted "l)y Alexan:ltir, ,savage splend or nf the place are not sub somo Hoyal Jewel<; St..Margaret~ Cl1:;"lfJf l and at the ri;;·ht price. the poet, 'Wm. Ill'lck, the n1Jvelist, aud dued by :my softer elt!ments. All is b~rn the oldest and ~1:ialle, t church .m .Sc<1tProf. Blackie. The latter quaintly M11ys : and bleak and desolate. The moun tams hnd ; t he <Jld I · 1son that had m it the are covered with brok en rocks iind houl· Earl c1f Argy le, the Marquis of Argyle, "l<'or Obnn is a dainty place; dere· tJ.e rav in es tha.t cltiave their flanks Principal Car stA irs, L ord Balc:1 rres and In distant or in nigh la.nd~, nre ~nrelieved by the i-:race of luxuriant man:y other illustrious CM>~~Vf~ ; the ? Id No town delights to tourist r!lce Like Oban in the Highlau<ls." fuli age; the int ervening hollows · are tilled Parha~cnt Hall ; the l"-mg s Bast10n We attended a political meeting in t he with no gree·n leas and smiling meadows, contmnmg the famr-us oli monster cannon The very finest quality of evenin17, called in the int erests of the bilt with heathtiry moor~ ; the hauks of called Mons M eg ; t he Citadel, Govcrn, , Conservative ca ndidate, Col. Malc )lm, the lake are steep, dark, abrupt and rude, ment H~u.se? &c. Our. v1s1t 1i:cluded also Arthurs Sea~a.t .vho has eince been elected . We have at- repelling the limpid wave instead of woo _,qua! t o any shown in Toronto, at a price tended noisv political meetin~s in Canada, ing it. T he associations of the place iu-0 an attitude of 822 faet. Holyroo~ Pab~~ rnong1 1te once aris tocrattc but nev er have we witnessed such dis· suited to its natural character. It was and Abb~y. U< surprisinp-ly low. eraceful conduct before. Hooting, yell- the land of the Macgregors, and the scene Edinburgh, .Tohn Knox's H ouse, St.Giles ing, groans, hisses, " You' re a liar," cater- of rnauy of the daring exploits of Heb Cath~dral, ~anon gate 'r~lboo_th, the Heart Pfain Gold, from :Jae. whauls, whistling, ·etc. , formed a large Roy. A small steamer couveys passen· of M~d~othian,, the Antiq.uanai~ Museu!11, Windcw Blinds in linen, fancy. part of th e program. Sir Willia.m gers from end tu end of Katrine. We and I rmce.s ~treet., th~ hnost m the city Thompson, the scientist, was the leading saw EJ!eu's ble, ' 't.he islet rock" instipar- an~l contamrn~ the (,ardens, Waverley Large Variety of Patterns. speaker. ablv associatfid with the sweet memori es Br1dg~, S cotts Monument? G _he Art On a promontory, in a boldly rc.mantic of the Lady of the Lake, where t h" herr,ic G:all, n es and the Ro.yal Ins11t ut1011, and Pictures Fra med at lowest rates. _ s itu at i~n near Oban, st.atid3 I he ruins of F~llen Doul(lass C)nveyed the Kn ight of ma~y placed of les_der 1mpo~t1mce. ~ome old..cI:ro1 i,1 cJe.rs :iss1 gn ed to. Ed mDunstaffnage castle, the ancient seat of Snowdon, while hill gallant dogs fo llowed 1 the Dalriajie kings. In some places the in the wake of the fairy skiff. A par t, bnrgh ttn °11 ¥1 11 ne~;rly co-eval with t he Willis are 50 feet high s.nd 10 feet thick, however, from Scott, the island has a cer· t emple of. Solomon , uutl ::Ill~ of t~1cm, Ebrank.e, a and are mounted with brass guns fished ta.in interest as t.lie a ncient aaylum of th~ Johg_ Haidy nf?· speaks of. tam, who bmlt th~, Maiden up from the wrecks of the Spanish ar- · women and children (!f th e Clan Alpine, ruler of B1-1 These rnadn. Here was kept th e famous Coron- or Clan Gre ·or when their homes were Cast~e, now ca~le? E d mbum;h. ire idle ta}eg, s:1mlar to the fables l.o~g atio n Stone prior to its removal to Scone. rava.,ed b ifs 1;umerous and persevering E - -BowMANVILLE, FRIDAY, A UG. 6. "'· YW e Ie ft tllfse sa c red wate·" curreut r espectmg i;lmost all old c1t;es There is an old proph ecy respecting this eneuues. ·" wl10se early rec· .·rds are 1ost; and t hey, at ~tone which runs: an d h aII owe d groun d s an d r e t urne d t c> b O-<t , can mea.11 on.y 1 ti Ed' l iat m b urgIi ca.tea Small -parcels can now be sent from Ca 11 an d er bya coac h -an d -f our, wh ere we f . - d k tl · "Unle·s the fates are faithless grown, proceed by rail tu the old historic town ot ~om some )Jerw un ··own to au 1en tic Ce.nada to the old country, and vice versa, And prophet's voice in vain, St 1· lust ory. Some traces have been found, Where'er is found th;s sacred atone by parcel post, at the rat" of 35c. No er. mg. . on or near its site, of partial occ upancy The Scottish race shall reign ." Downy ~ TEMPERANCE ~omrn, } both by tho ancient Calodonia.na and parcel ot greater weight than three pounds Du uolly Castle, Loch Awe, Loch E live, STIRLI~G, J uly l.>, 1886. t·specially by the Romaus ; but these are will be Hent. Pass of Awo and several other places of We reached this ancient town about 9 f:ither so fain t or so uncertain as t o aff ·rd note are found in the locality. p. m. yesterday and found comfortiible 110 evidence of th e exist ence of 1 1 town. The violators of the Scott Act have After n good night's rest and a big row lodging and good fa re at the above The chief relics of ·he ancient Culeduuian again felt the hand of the law. Convic- wit h the -proprietor of t he King's Arms hot!:!l. Stirling is ono of tho most pie- times are well-work ed lironze weapons, d of Scottish towns. Its presumed by 111 a ny antiqu;u·iPs to have tions have been secured against all the Hotel for overchargin g in our bill, we turesquely situate_ atart at 8:05 a. m. for Callender, en route nucleus has been formed by the r ock on bceu fabric:u .-d Llelure t tie usu c;f iron was hotel ke··pers of the town. The-case of to the famous Trossochs and Lochs Kat- which the Castle is built, and the known; and t he c .ief ones of the R omans D1·. W . S. Boyle excites considerable rine and Somund . This trip by rail is situation of a precipitous cliff r endered it are coins, medal~, tmces of a Ro1min road, interest. 11 is cha-rged by the prosecution one of the finest and most romantic that suitable for a royal r esiclence and n post and two fine proffle sculp tures supposed . to represe1. t the Emperor Septirni us Sevthat Dr. · Boyle has soltl in toxicating we hav& ever enjoyed. We were fre- of defenca . It is hi ghly probable th:it i r liquors l\S such. The defence claims that Quently in t he shadow of rugged cliff~, be- 1vas so occupied by the Scots prior to the erus and his wife Julia., said to ha ve been tween banks, skirting the r i vera sides, fi rst Romau invasion. It fonnecl th o exhumed at a digginis for fo undations, ind though the m«dicine sold contained liquor, tichly hung with oaks and birche~, cross - eas tPrn termiuation of that chain of for - now placed in the front uf an old t eneit was only ' > Ile of the ingre<lilmts of a ing t he mountain side with t oweri ng, tr··ases which Julius Agpicola erected be· ment i n N etherbow, nearly opposite J ohn medicinsl mixture. lt is to be hoped that rocky bloJfa hundreds of feet a hove and tween the C lyde and the Forth in the Kn ox's house. Tim Homans certainly Dr. Boyle "'ill be abl e to clear himself of 8parkling streams hundreds of fe et below, ye;ir of our er a 84. Many of t he most had two stations within (i miles of Edin: with ams.II and pretty towns nestled in important e\' er.ts in the long " ' a r of burgh ; they possibly, sume ant iq nar1 e3 the cl1al'ge. F lagrant violation of the law the rwoks along th eir banks. As one lndcpendenco contered on Stirling. l t think they probably , h:id a station u.lso cm by hot l keepers is certainly bad enough, member nf <1ur party remarked, "It would would be inter esting to recount the mauy the city 's own site; and they aro inferred, but gin selling by a member of one of the be impc.ssible to find worcls to exa!!gerate incidents that cluster around the history on tolerably fair e vidence, to have rnt1rchnoblest of callings, is too disgraceful to be a descriptior, of the lnvelv scenery b e· of Stirling, but· pace forbids. A clay or ed from some .ground on or nea r the cit y's tween Ohan a_nd Callander." two may be profitably spent here _ In site, to the famous battlefield of Muns· even th ought of. The case was adjourned Au hour's run on the Caledonia railway the vicinity are th e Abbey' Craig 5GO foet Gram pius, whether that may luwo been at till Saturday. bcou!!ht us to Callander, where we le_ ave high, wi th t he Wallace Memorial 'l'owd' Arducl1 or wherever else ; yet as t hoy did our luggai::e and travel on foot a distance 220 feet erected by public subscription ; not remain more than a bout 68 y ear~ in Many Rm using instanC'es of zeal outrun- of ten miles, "just for exercise," t c· t.l1ese B ridge of Allan eelebra ted for its salub- the south of Scotland, aud were in ii whirl ning discretion occurred during the revis- places made so famous in Scott's " Lady rity, its pretty scenery, und its minor ·.l of warforo throughout mo·t of t hose years, of the L1kes .,. Calland er is s ituated on waters. Bannockbum is a bout a mi~1:1 they cannot be thought to have raised on ion of the voters ' lists just con:l.pleted. the hanks. of th e riv er 'l'eith. A number and a half away, C1llnbuskenne_th :.tb<;ut the si re of Edinburg the nncl uus of a city One Door West of Post Office, Bowman:ville. One young m an could not make up the ·nf moiern villas have recently beeu _ built half a mile, where may be ~e n th e . rnms or to have materially alterecl the nat ural required $300 -nc0111e, when his father for - r esidents and to uris ts, and near t he of the Abbey once a royal sepulcllre. a·pects of the ground . 'l'he Castle H ock came tA) th e r · B ue and informed the town is a very largti hyclropathic estab · W estward the Car se of Stit-ling sketches for alone, in its own b are mass, is tho best e vias th~ eye canrcoach ,prese ntin.~anunbrok- deuce of aucient posses8ion ; .fo r it is so court tlrn.t his son had sold a colt for lishment. The surrounding scenery has en surface of fert ile and variegated country, strong as a natural military fastness, it so TO~ attractions for almost. every taste- the $70 dur-ing t ho y,.-ar past. When the day urave, the ~ay, the liv ely and severe. dotted. with ~owns and. hamle~s in _rich grandly ~omina~es a irr eat smTo'!-ndiug of battle comes, that young man will stay The landscapes are of a truly romantic profus10n, while the maJest tc n ver wmds country, 1t so lughlv exce ls t he sites of at home a nd hnsk corn or thresh peas, character; the masses of wood are very wiLh ·serpent like and sinuous writhings most of tho ancient i1ill-forts in any parts through the green plain, betwixt i ts vcr - of Scotland, that it could scarcely miss while h i~ f11t·hc r urnrk11 his ballot in fav 0r rich and beautiful. On the hills lie the ruins of some ancient fortalices; and the dant and fruitful banks on its way to th e to be selected as a fa,·orite post by the of th " $! e!lt · hieftain." At another streams afford excellent amusement fur sea. The statue of R obert the Bruce is ancient Caledonians. Some rude fort is sittin ~· f t.h e c<11irt an · enthuaiastic yom1g the skillful angler for salmon and trout . on the Castle E gphnade. The Patriot pr esumed t o have b een early constructed man t .. stifi«d t·.hat he was a cou servative, F or the botanical every rod of ground hiis King ii; represented as sheathing his on it ; the pristin e fort ther e is suppos ed for everything in ,.i··iced in an i ncome of over its store of riches. For the lover of the sw01d after having achieved the inrlepend- t o h ave been repeatedlyre·construct ed by i1nd that he r < picturesque the Crag>1 serve as a watch- enco of Scotland. Quite a number of succeseive Caledoniau r eguli ; and the $300, rn:id ·· up partly by_ proceeds of his tower, whence he may overlook ma ny a interesting historical building are cluster- latest fort of the s eries was event ually caplabor ,:H,l 1·n1r I b y money made by bet - mile of pleasant scenery; or if he be in ed arouud this locality, including Queen t ured, re-built , aud nam . cl E dwinsburg, ting on ,; h m .e--race. This youth will not quest of th e sublime he can find pleasure ~fary's Palace, once the residence of the in 626, by Edwin, the Saxon ki ng of The old Greyfriers Northumbri:\. vote t i,, 1 _ ,1w«. Another l1opeful scion in the gorgeous panorama uf sun -lit or ill-fated queen . Our let ter on Edinburgh would be most cloud-crowned mountain peaks which ri~e church st11 nds near the h ead of Broad S t ., of the " , ·· t, emen's party " wished to ~Fl. · against the distant horizon ; and for th e er ected. 1494. . The cemetery contains i11complete if r efer en ce wer e n ot made to obtain D. 1 ote on 11roperty which he studeut of song and legend sutlice it to many mterestmg monuments, the m ost tho present and firs t Int.ernatiunal E xhibthought- hi11 fattier would some day be- s8y he is here on the very borders of the striking among them being in memory of ition e ver h eld in Scotlo.nd, but we are Their China Hall contains the Largest Assortment pf queath t.1 him. He too h:ts no use for a Land uf Scott, of the haunted region con - Mar~aret Mc.Lachlan and Margaret . Wil- unable in the limited space at our dis·· s0n who suffered martyrdom at W igt on posttl to do more than t ouch upon the secrated t o all time by the deeds of Rode1 ballot I""· r. ick Dhu; the adven t ures of the royal in 1685. Ther e ar e a!so statues of s.e veral princi]Jal objects of inter est . . ...................,.,,,,, The opening cere mony was performed James, a nd th e l0ver of the h eroic Ellen. of th e h eroes of S cottish church lmtory, Blam~ g the Wrong Party. Proceeding from Calland er to the Tros - including .John Knox, Guthrie, M elville, by H . R. H. Prince Albert V ictor of \Vales, on Thursday, Gth May, in the sache, we passed through a romantic, love- H euderson and Ebenezer Erskine. to be found in the district. Ther e t<r·., ms to be a disposition among ly and sublime mountain district. At Stirling Castle has been intimately presence of an enormous concour se of the Tori11 of the riding t o blame the first we traversed a series of riuiet pastoral associat ed with the history of th e Stuart people. It is estmiated t hat close upon local lea<h·rs of the party for t heir dis- landscapes along the margin <Jf Loch V en - race. .Tn~ies I I. was bom :Within its 50,000 persons passed into the Exhi bi· walls, and it became the favorit e ret rei~t tio11 in the course of the day. astrous failure in the Courts of Revfaion . nachar, whose sho;es are cloth ed with o~ J ames III., James IV. frequen tly r eThe buildings are composed of two wood. and diversified by channels, femy T his is wr·ong ; th e gentlemen in question, n.nd flowery, t hro ugh which the moun · SJded there. James V. was burn and large h alls, standing on over 7 acres of though 1 Jerhaps nut so br illiant or so t ain streams pour their wate rs into the crowned at rhe spot . Queen Mary was " round- one hoin" a tempomry er ection, conscienth·usly horrnst as some others, no ls.ke. ·we passed Coilantogle Ford, the crowned there as an infant, and married ~nd the oth er bei~Jg intended for 11 p er · ther e secretly to H enry Darnley years manent hall fo r concert s, &c . In the <loubt d id thin b est uuder the circum- scen e of th e fig ht between R oderick Dhu after wards. J ames VI. was brough t to latter Oro-an R eci < als are given daily, s.nd the Knight of Snowrlon. A mile furstances. But it was a case of " make t her on is Dun~r11,ggan, represented in the Stirling an infan t and crowned in 1567, and Conc~rts and other entertainme nts KING STR EET, BOWMANV ILLE. brick s with· ut. straw, " and like tlDse "Lady of t he Lake" as the fir~ t tarrying when J ohn K nox pre!lched the coror;a tion are hel<l dUl'ing t h e season . R ound thi~ »tncl P avilion are the Art Galleries, compelled tu this in th e long ago, they place of the messenger of th e Fiery Cross. sermon. (We stood m the old pulpit and G1 sat in the coronation chair) P rince H enry where a fine collection of oil and water· failed. T .... ,.,. are very few actually en- Other not ed pla1ies passed wer e the Brig was baptised h e_r e with great pomp, and colour pa.in tings, photo~raphs, and statuary Tm:k, L och Achray, Glentinlos. and view titled to v" r ·, left off the list . ln what· two high mountains. Be n A'al! and Ben the removal of the Court to E ngla nd is placed . Pictures h ave been sent by ever light (1 e looks at it, this is plainly Venue, 1800 an d 2800 fee.t res pectively shortly afterwards ca used t he glory to the Governmen ts of France H olla nd a nd seen , tho n';,-.v 1·oters are H eform. That above the sea leve l . About two miles be- depa rt from it . Iu the rebellions of 1715 Belaium a nd t hese witl; the Br itish and 1745 th e Castle was an im1,ortant i colJ~ctio~, form a gallery of art well th ey are so is 11ot entirel y the fault. of the vonrl the B rig of Turk we entered the post. worth a visit, as no pictures have been Trossachs, a pass a bout a mile long , the local party en gineers, but of th e head The villages of Bannock burn a nd St. admitted th at do not r ise above t he ecene c,f a fierce contest between the D ercentre leaders. L and jobbing, timber mids and the Clan ,Alpine. P assing Ninians ar tl i n close pr oximity t o Stirling, average merit of th e arfo t. battleground where Druce L cad 1n . g ofl' l p a vi ·1· · t he grabbing, excessive tax ation, foolish this narrow defile we s uddenly emerged and. t hedfamous b · S · - t l10 G ran< 1011 is h 1cvo t I10 l" i erat10n of cot1a nd h es C t 1 c· t 0 f t l t b ·1d · sriuandering of public money, and general on the broad expanse of L och Katrine ac l e emp_or.a ry lll m g, immediately between them. 'vVe stood en ra our · h' h B t d wher e are to be found exl11b1 ts repr esent reckless incompeten t b ungling in t he with ite rini:{ of heig hts closely fencing it on th e b or e-s t one m w ic ruce p1an e · 1 11 d f 1 f around, and which "receives the tribute his standard durin r the battle in 1314 m g n ea~ Ya tra es, m m it ree o cott?n G-ov-ernme11t of tho country are n ot d a hundred rills and burns which g · (traced mall stages from th e raw ma teria l 1 1ualities whi"h atteact the votes of care- flash down the sides of the surrounding Ow \VAVRRLY H O TEL, ·} both of cotton and r eel) to th e locomotive E DINBURGH, July 17, 1886. engine. In t h e sectional Courts on the fol t hinking m~m. L et the Tories blame m ountains, white as the " snowy charger 's \-Ve reiwh ed E ninburgh from Stirling left of this building, the exhibits a re - w hom they will, they cannot get over th e tail." Huw cm we fi ttingly describe t he fact that thern ltre, in W est D urham, of lovely scen e that met our gaze? The first yesterday morning and as soon as we had prmcipally of a domes tic nature, b ut t hree sight was as Scott puts it, " a narrow .inlet , found our luggage which had been sent Courts at t he far end are devuted to th e new voters alone, 14!l mor e R eformer s still and deep," but when we were clear of on dir ect from Glasgow a nd secured rooms art izan's, foreign aml women's work . the rugged shadows of the great Ps.ss, it at this hotel, we star ted out to do t he In the Courts on t h e right of the central U1an Tories 1 broadened before us as the s un shone city. We fi rst visit Si1· Walter Scott's one, th e exhibits are principally of hardbrightly upon it in all its beauty- a sh eet Monument er ected in 1840-4 at a cost of ware, nearly h alf th e space being accupied of silver, of molten glass and of rippling £15,G50. It consists of a crucial Gothic by m achinery in motion . fire and flame. Then new beauties met spire ri~ing from fo ur grand basement The principal attraction,hv wcver, is th e TnossAcIIs, Loon.KATRINE, } _ us at every step. B en Venue towering 01 1 nrches, soaring in successive stages 200 ft. Old Edinburgh Street, being a reproducw.,dn esday, July 14, '86 . the left: to the west the broken summits high, modelled on the details of M elrose t ion of ancien t hou8es which, with t heir Abbey, contains a marble sitting st.a t.1 e quaint gnbles and roofs, ha\'e a most picl) b&n, from wh ence our las~ letter was of Arroch.ar rising against the sky like the _ sent, is th e chief seaport and the virtual ruin ed battlements of some gigantic fort- of Scott and is adorned wi th 32 statuet tes t uresque nppearancti ; this is heigh tene41. ..,_ cap ital of the West Highlands. Its name ress ; now a bluff, bold proniontory, a t of th e most prominent characters in Sir by t h e tenants being d ressed in costumes i1uplies white bay. It is a natural har- whose b ase the white waters break in Walter Scott's novels and poems, a nd of i he period of Q ueen M ary. In the b or at the head of a broad inland sweep foam and spray: an on, on a still deep the likenesse3 of 16 of th e most famous centre is a m odel of the Market Cross. The grounds make a very pleasant of the Atlant ic, and is favorite head. cove, wher e t~ ey seem ~carcely t o ripple Scottish poets. A gorgeous bird's -eye ·1u:ut ers for tourists to the W estern Isles. on the glittering sand ; and th en on a view of the city is obtained from its high- lounge d m·ing the cool 0f _the evening, being illuminated by t housands of electric It is a stirring little town and contains reach of whitened pebbles, which roll and eat gallery. \ Ve next visited Edinb urgh Castlo lights sot in colorecl globes. B ands per11ome very pretentious private residences. rattle at each rising and ebbing wave. Its situation is on the side and along the H ere a sombre jagged cliff shoo ts up pre- whi ch crowns a precipitous rock 450 feet form every afternoon and evening. So foot of a cliff, from which one can look cipitously a bove the path, marked by the high , and which is now used ns a garrison fat· the EJ1:hibition has been a great suc· \ out upon the radient expanse of the heav· hand of Time with many a furrow, a nd for soldiers. The b uildings have under- cess, thousands of people visiting it M. A. J. in.g Atlantic. In the vi;;inity nature ap· garlanded with waving ferns and festoons ~o n o man y alterations from time to time, daily. MASON BROS wish to transform ·a ll their summer goods into Casilto DONT FAIL TO SEE MY PATIERNS Gold Embossed Papers help pay for their extensive fall purchases, which are . now rapidly coming lll. P. TREBILCOCK. CREAT BARGAINS WILL BE GIVEN. ~bt (!!;niuulinn Jtntt~mnn. Room - To make room for our ·we shall sell-- FALL IMPORTATIONS DURING JULY&AUCUST A.LL SUMMER GOODS at Greatly Reduced -Prices. PARA~C!kl Will be sold at cost, and several lines of Dr·ess Goods at and unde:r cost price. COUCH, JOHNSTON & CRYDERMAN, GO .. - I MURDOCH 8ROIHERS C> C El :R. I El S . Staple and Fancy ~HINA, ~ROOKER[LAMPS &GLASSWARE) HIGHEST MARKET PRICES for all kinds of Farm Produce, Butter, Eggs, &c. ~~~~~ VICTORIA BUILDINGS, WEST END HOUSE. NEWEST AND N iDBB~EST IN EDITORIAL CORRESPONDENCE. ---------- Dress Goods, Prints, Ginghams, Printed Muslins, Printed Canvas Cloth, Parasols, &c. &c. I Cloths and Tvveeds, Gent's -Furnishings. notice by the A 1 Tailor. Suits made to order on shortest J . McMURTRY. "