WUIICII UIUD. Appklou Journal (John Houdonon.) The Thu Brotbu-t,'l`bo Supggost, Count do Wal- dtchlamou of tho llellpu, otc., no the prin- cipal contacts. The subject of the cutoon, `flu Inn kin. 1.00 to o,oo.\ Rye Flour, one to 0,00. I Flour receima light: market very rm at an advance of m\to 15c. on snpers; small gale! I western our at 5,25, and of Welland Canal 5,20; sales of stronk bakers our at 5,25 lo 5,40; fora choice brand on exceptional price was paid ; No. 2 nope: I: sold at.-quotations ; middlings nominal 31 3,8 \to 3,85; as high as 4,00 was pmd for a choice `tot. Wheat, rmer saleo of Canada spring in car lots in store at 1,18; red winter and midgk proof quiet; not inquired for. A sole of No. 2 Toledo when lo arrivle on prints terms supposed 118; other grains nominal. P;oviaione\_genera1l_v unchanged; quotations nouginal. Anne: quiet and steady at! quolaliona. . I NEE_ YORK MARKETS. Special telegram to the Daily News. New York, Sept. 2.--Gold 1333. Cotton 34} 0 35:: for Iiddling Uplands. Floor 10 ft?) 20c boner ; receipt: 19,000 bbllg ulu 18,000 bblu :1 5,90 6 6,35 for nupernc lute _IDd western; 6,65 0 7,30 for common to choice extra auto; 6,45 ra 7,35 for commqnto choics extra state and western; 6,70 0`7,35 for round hoop Ohio. Rye our quiet at 4,50 @ 6,50. Wins: 3 /12 5 cents better; receipt: 32,000 bush; sales 176,000 bush 311,51 @ l,5& for No. 2 smimz: 1.65 0 1 an fnr Ha I an aA,U` J .-u,uuu nun; sales 176,000 bush @ spring; 1,65 0 1,68 for No.1 do. Rye quiet. Corn without decided change; receipts 30,000 bush; ales 57,000 bush :1 1,16 fzib 1.18 for sound new mixed western." Barley nominal. Ont: rmer; teeeipu 20,000 bush; nlee 21,000 bush st 81 @ 64: for southern and weuern. Pork heavy; 3l,87 B 32,00 for new meu. Lard steady; 17$ 0 193a for steam ; l9i_@ 200 for kettle rendered. Arrlvllls. G`;-1 IIIIAMII Liverpool, Sap. 2, 11 n.m.-flour 25:; Red wheat 95 9d ; while do. 10: lld ; European earn 303 ed; on: 33 6d; pens 44:; pork 107: 6d; lard 77: ed; U.S. Bonds 841. Y..an:-_`I.0ln __ |n-_I_.., - - _ .... ._ , u.u. uvuua Uiju Later.--l;28 p.m. - Marketa unchanged. Bonds 84!. London, Sept. 2.-Consols 93} for money and account; Ameiicnn sucuritieo quiet; Fin Twenties 84, for 1862; old, 83}, forr66; old, 83 for'67 ; Ten-forties, 762; Stock! cloudy ; Eric 24} ; Illinois Control 94]. `put-in ...o 0`) D-_._-- 1: ,. g o 7 _-, , .-uuvuv uvuunl 11]. Paris, Sept. 2.-BourIo at and quiet. Routes 71f 5c. Carpets, Carpets, Cal-pu, per cent oil at.- -4-._.:-- - _ ._ - /- It IOIIIIIJIF Just arrived direct LEA PERKINS SAUCE in pints And quutl. Wunnted genuine. w. R. loB.AE k 00. Aug. 17. During the proceedings at tho mc-cling 1 of the ahar-sholxlers of the Gore Bunk xela- tive to the question nfhmalgmimtiun, Mr: King, of the Bank of Mnmrcal, mule I n:- | ference to the reports respecting his gold trancactin-ns in New York, to which we feel disposed to gin: quite as much pronlim-uco: 3 of publicity as wc have done to the(`har_{1's' Igunsl which Mr King deli-ndecl liinm-H". He is thus reported in [he Hmmlmn .*'}c- j tutor : - i o _ -..(.-- ovvu I on HUNDRED HALF cmcsrs 1.49`;-N ' TEA. - \ u-p-._-_ . English Breakfast Teas! OHESTS cnoxon souoaona nu.` ' Chest: choice Oongoh Ton. - W. R. HcBA.E t 00. Aug. 17. uuunulll DIIIIIIQ GUINNESS & BON S EXTRA STOUT POL TEE in pint: and quarts in prime order. - ~ W. R. NORA! 8 CO. Aug. 17. j Becelvlng this day ltonslgnmem of 031130 Her:-lugs. ' And will be sold at $3 50 per bu-rel. War- runted this season : cstch and sound. W `D u..I..n - --- Ex-Ships . 150 CASES 0111 Tom liln. IN QUABTS AND PINTS. nun--- Real Dlgby Hex-1-lugs :1: N0 boxes real Digbys, this season : onth. W. R. McRAE ah 00. Aug. 31. ` July 30. 7raURsr'>.?n" EVENING. SEPT.` Er mm rmsr 7} .-1(}P.'. ' i7. Aug. l,"l. Aug`. Aug. '38. Aug. 26. Aug. 17. Aug. Aug. 31. Aug. 26. ARRIVIN G, FRESH TEAS. Season ,lI.:.... A __e. 33:): iimus. FINANCIAL AND OOIEBOIAL. mg, ex-sup -`lone Jnnhof meet from opouo. ` Hbdo Port Wino--8nndaIn:n I. Quu-tor out: do do Octave: do - do . Worcestershire Sauce _ _......- uvuovll IUUUQ 5 Annie Brightonten and Courier from Shanghai: Half Chests Young Hyuon, Cuties Young Hymn, Half Chests Gunpowder, Cuties Gunpowder, Hllf Chest: lmnn-i-1 Unttieo Gunpowder, Chest! Imperial. TDII Fresh Japan mix xv-\___ __ :__ Claret! Claret! 3 CLARET, warranted sound, `n, An Dublin stout, I. unum vnvu-- . ... MONTREAL HOUSE. ` _ ,_.-__.... .........., . 125 6d pegdosen. W.' K. MoRAE & O0. cu vvuu an mat ue saw, and with the pro- green which is being made in road making, &c. The French Canadians who were tak- en up from Three Rivers, the Indian labour- ers from (faughnawaga, and la&t,_Q;_ough not least, the Highlanders from Glengarry, have all been working with a will. and vieing with each other as to which should do the most towards opening the wayto our new territory. Our correspondent, who has travelled through the Western States of the American Union, says that he never before saw anything approaching to the richness and fertility of the soil bordering on the chain of lakes lying between Fort William and Fort Garry. He thinks that fty millions ol persons can nd a home in `_ the Northwest Territory "without crowd- mg. Tho business of organizing the ma- chinery of government has proceeded much further than the public generally imagine; but, ofcourae, nothing can be done oicially until the necessary authority arrives from the Imperial government. It is stated that Mr McMicken,a atipendiary magistrate ol0nt.ario,will be a member of the newCoun- cil, and charged_with the duty ofmaintain order in the colony. From what we know of him, we believe tha.t`he will be found ah- ..:..l.a .___ :_ .L, ,- a gust.) w. B: HORAE as _co. \w. 1;. Menu as oo. . gnuyonlnl. W. R. IORLE 4: CO. .... - no-vvu uuu BUUDII. W. R. HCRAE k 00. -.Ic`BAE k 00. .l, ten The SHEFFIELD vnuwl nu mu uunuuy. rrom win! know that he be the, right man in the right place. samsn aLAsao\I_? IPI-Inceu andfid uu uootu IOIII for out oolj,` 8008!. V . ;' T3- 599,, - E W`! 300 LIMX ,Iu-'1I'._l'_l.;`~_=~: worth $2. =~ ' t 1!: zoo uxnsllnn :2 50. _ |enm?Lii MGNAUG ' AFULL sultan 310. E A GOOD 81715. I o _ wool, tor lo, vonhlllaf 4 A 09011 V0 _ J worth 32 50. _` oflhe Western trade for Montreal, it is pro- ` FROM MON1 REAL. Montreal, Sept. 2.-In order to incrensc (bu Grand Trunk rolling stock, anal gain man: 3 pused to raise a joint stock company with 1| capital of $400,000. ,' 'F|n.\ n ....__;| -r .1... n,...-.I -5` 'l".....l.. 1..-.1-ni Cheaper than cit, ad: . watlpub.` Aug. 31.` July 26. K IN ALL! Aug. 17. A hi I oPENi nsngv-` i u x.-urn. The Cnuncil of the Board of Trade have I appointed the following nicial assignees :- E James Pyre, Willam Lindsny, D. J. Craig. k and Ed. Genera-ux. The Citypassenger railway track is to be oxu-n-led to Mlle eml. an an `~;vv,vvv. . l n ,:,.l ,CEAP FALIL prev PBINOIS I `IE! .:'l """ """ ""' ""`""" his devotion to the ' Imperinlt, and gave` in renca to the proposed hoped were bug thg ' ' . Ho denounced an ' A ` '",'Juo`3'ppo..a"""J.}':o,.1" _ these? reforms. '_ \ " npress arrived at Toulol, I D--m cg-01:1-o lm-" 3.4 ` """"' I I Gurdn IsIsnd-Vess-315 `arrived since yealer- | i dny noon :l Sch: Louisa, 'l`oledo,- timber. No 1 departures u u--u -pv Vlw uynvlang Ill emment the iron-elude dud` ordered in Europe, to `within the prescribed limit Sue: 0n;'s lV ` :'.l'he opening with eight me E:-axpeot.edto oecnr-_d:out_ > , -vvvuuanvpli IJUIILIIIIKI III! . The authorities wete _IIenues oft.hcpcoploto- u ,__ subsequently a op `M tween the guards and; / 3: Iovenl persona wares ki! 1' Tnrkich troopnjt` Illa (:ity to restore ordef. Sept. 1.-Miniucr any OI-- -:;_ __,I me, A,- i cumr: nzws. inept. l.--'l`he Noun, to-d l . Dickens left th/is con M` 1,. mighg do service in _t L `.33 good will. Mr Dick mi; peaceful mission. ggbetter lute and feeling ' , hebthe` benqnet our ( We hope there will be 1 - ` America, and feel oon .'i[l meet. as brotherly a. nu-nide hive here. We `g kinunen are satised vi * , . \ . which were mndefort _ glut for Ill time there an -- ` {gs generous rivalry betw ` 3` - the ower of Old end Ne -`:11-gnutlnntic Cambridge hie ' at of her ancestral name in ~. . unehip end. intellect, an M jg defeat. To the-error: o my . g__.._n:..un. -nu-`n--9-..` ;aamza.rd prom. Agam an -- _:.L.. :..A..._-s:___I-_.- ..;:s`;.;:: 1::';a;.'%};:".;;. gin American, wugip at ilfo j _ I-to-day on a` ch:ro of pug on timbr'fkom Quebec. [(1, Sept. l.-The Paris ' up, Msnhdlerno in more and more prominent 1.. :1... ol......; .4` a'.-:- _;,..n.aa. of would stock, the tag people : youth. Whnt b oftwo such rivals do` uio of the world. - foptember 1.`--The In 3:`: Council _of Kin` J clltbbn has grind in 1" BIIIIVJ to-dny Prism Iqoech an the `Seoul: / ..4.A his dun-ntinn on Ms. Iv-----'.- r-""'-' -9"- -' "- `pace of the intemntionnlln` *1 it hardly right to exact supih pecuuiu:y_ucrioes . T training. The Hnrvgrgis _ to entitle them to comets` `A second trial would involyc pique arid an interruption cf [is not fnir to,en'c for the . {the riynlria of hp .1...) bu-nab` sh- ... .*....`I-""3 nuv-v an-nu nuvyv IJKUIBILII the thron of Spain. "ma g...`.. 1 n.......:: ` vu-_. -u A 1vuQI' Ill F Several `arrests hnve bee 1-."'GovernmenVI `buildings are H. Thu -ntIu\-o.. --A-- -I Rsqcnm Mass no lsrnnuxrrr -The funeral solemnitiesmonuected with the interment of the body of the late Rev, Michael O'Connor, parish prier of Gananoque,w2re conducted this (Thurs- day) morning at St_ Mary's Cathedral. Yes- terday afternoon the body was carried from the Hotel Dieu to the church, where it was let ; to be visited until this tnoruing. The services for the dead were conducted by the Right Rev. Bishop Bonn, assisted by a number of clergy- men. After mass was simg the body was in- censed,a procession formed, and the remains were carried to the vaults beneath the Cathedral and placed in their nal resting place. Father O'Connor was a graduate of Regiopolis, and has relations living in Kingston. He died much regretted by his friends and parishioners: who have seen death step in M a very early age to destroy the promise of a lorig and useful career, which his talents and acquire- ments held out for him. ? pun u L; -u Ivw vn ,nu_w` CPU! _hndard masts the tuiwalw pl be rmly resisiedfnr 3 LI..- a,..... 1 II. In `rr-|..`|_ V_-----, -nrvr' A.`--IIIIIIUI EIIV V _ the city, cud IIil.dll`ti`e:l_ ` ad interim by Senor Bo , o Sept. 1.--A grind I _`of the memgry of Josep held here fn-day. U 8ept._2.--The `Boston, and Aleppo, from N itrived. . > pstsntinople, Sept. I. -A in in with the st;l:jp's;,; ep1g/"to 1114: Vitinrnv nf aunt `I : E. . ":1 `-Vfiv N that the In l`IlB ` ' pen-oi bu will / E who were apprehended for ll (Government. orders. . . ' -uuvu an-.u-vu-young as-I-II-,I Ill `H ' .. Q...` 1 RBI... u_.__ 11...` 2 V--2 -vvy-. _ -.-; auuuyuuusr need agsinsfth 1 -I\n q-no.4 nun-nknnthul 8... ml` *9: Sept 1.---A= serious [Out 3: Tyronns, in `Europe BEIEIHI -nu-I-nab: In--4: LA. -.: -tr-sea. rial. eolnnionting on the 'II 8 misfortune. It show bus: is extending beyo _ `*0 which it has hitherto "MIG county ofhhyo in no ll ! Illnnitina -14-. u.-.... of a convention for PUI cable betwenn Europa HP`: Sept. 1T.-1`ho Anotriu led the Viceroy of Egypt. FM! to oomuncinoples Sept. 1.--The tiptim NvliIIge val .nunod 3 HA up`. _ =I--4_L_--r Cur CoI:.wcu..-Mr ._Ud. Tocnkins corrects that part of the report of the proceedings of the City Council in which the Mayor is represented as having directed him to sit. down for being out of order. Mr Ald. Tomkins assure: us that nothing of the kind took place nt that part of the dtb6\6. vrn Ill Inaly oompomorl. Gan: Lawn of Canada (Dawson Broa., Mon- tnal.) We have to acknowledge the receipt of a"8_ynopaiaof the lawn relalingto sh and game and to inaoelivoroua birda in the Provinces of Qaabac and Ontario ;" a handy manual on the Iubjoot of the lava f the prcnorvalion of game all each! birds, piled by Ir W. H. Hinton, Bocnlary of the omraal Fiah an! Game Pro- lcotion Club. A._I.r..-.I r....__: II_L_ n,_: H, ~ -- E` f` "- I n|vuuouII'IIII,~ : "3 farmer in the county. ii-ruknnea. The IF :-L43` nur.v..- ---.__ -. -v-.._' PII il! yesterday. .---} TEL`F: ~-----; vs u.nD u u no Ilrooities `which have ' Int` '1.._:_..., .1 ' . ux .. ~\,....,..v\v u.-.u,.. lI\|.'I\.` . . ` ion and Rnynl 60:!) clubs, resulted i `slrplglxt games for the former. J A 1 ._....n,,_'. ,_._____.:A,. .....- wnvvnrn swm 5 C-Vs wharf-The props Indian passvd 1` down I891 night and xl-e Huron up this morning. The steam-barge R. Anglun arrived last. eveni. g` with 100 cords wood. The schr Gazelle is 10ad_ iug rnilwa ties for Port Hope. A large con- | sxgnmqnt of lumber arrived yesterday from the } Rideau Canal. 1 A jcwollv.-r's apprentice was so` ` bud yesu.-rdn_v by a comrmlc ml ` was playing practical jvrkes. 4 - `""' i i Gluaford, Jones & Co's wharf-The scbrs E. ` ` Bemis from Toledo with 14,000 bush wheat, the 3 `| Union Jack with H.600 from Cleveland, and i i the David Sharp with 6,500 from Toledo, an I A rived yrsterdny. The burg:-sJun'o and America I ` let: for Montreal yesterday wivh 33,000 bush; iwbesl. Tue birges Cat: and Teviot. will Plenve this evening with combined cmgocs of an n.\.\ |....|. ._|...... ALEIADY Amtsn.-The police stopped a man in the public streets yesterday evening with a razor conspicuously placed in his vest pocket. He said in answer to the policeman that not be- ing able to purchase a reviolver, he had armed himself, for any encounter with the police which might transpire, to the best of his abllity _:_%j_;_ -.,. ...\.. uuvvv luull uu: ruresr. Ulty. We (Montreal New) bavejust received a letter from A gentleman now residing at Fort Willmm, who was present (luring the Hon. W. Mncrlougal|`s latewiait to that place. He aay_s that the Lie'utenant-Gov-~ ernnr, that is to be, was very much grati- ed with all that he and with the pro- being mnkinu ...,......J u. 4. -unusual We-are happy to hcar it reported that Princ9Arthur will accompany the Gover- nor-Geheral on his visit. to the Provizcial Exhibition at London. Ontario is seen at its best at the great annual gathering ofits agriculmrists, and there is no better place for the show than the Forest. City. We (Mnntranl IV;-mn\ luum in. -----=- J Most Rev. Martin J. Spalding, Archbishop of Baltimore, Rt. Rev. Bishop Wood, of Philadel- phia, Rt. Rev. J. Gibhons, of North Carolina, Rt. Rev. Bishop P. Lynch, of Charleston, Rt_ Rev. R. loGill, Bishop of Richmond. Rt. Rev_ Bishop Shannnh-n, of Harrisburg, Very Rev. Fnther Hecker,of New York, and Rev. Bernard )IchInnus,`psstor ofSt. John`: Pariah, Baltimore, have engaged stuero: 1115 on v.haJteamr Balti- more, which is to soil from Baltimore on the 20th of September. They go to ntend the Ecumenical Council in Rome, which some of them think will sit for one year , and probably longer. n.. l'I_...__._v- I .....5~.. D3. Ci5numo's Lrrns. to run Pors.-The followingis a translation of Dr, Cumrning s let.- ter: Holy Father: You have been pleased to invitqgo the Ecumenical Council the Protes- tants and others who are divided nud separated from the Church of Rome. We are heartily grateful for the invitation, and are earnestly de- sirous to be present in the Council. During the course ot the year l have sent many letters to the Most. Rev, Dr. Manning, in order to get information as to the extent to which liberty of speaking will be granted to us. The most rev. and learned doctor with much courtesy replied to me on this point in these words: I am un- able to give you any answer as to the mode of proceeding. The Supreme authority alone can furnish you with that. For this reason, Holy Father, I earnestly beseech you to be pleased to inform me whether, in the approaching Council, we shall be allowed the liberty of sneaking, and bringing forward the reasons for whit-h the Pro- testan's are separated and divided from the Church of Route. .1 am your Holiness ohedient aervant,-Joim Ociunuo, D.D, Presbyter of Scotch Church. ,, nu v -- ...v~.vu vuuluu Mr John Di'x, of Garden Island. ban been appointed an associate Coroner for the county of Frontenac. \v..,..... I . . - - -- - ` _ 1 1.3.0. (Elsi-I(V,7mH ! INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE 0l?l|'lCE,! Uiumo Stun. 1 OLD, Silver, lid American Money bought and told on the beat terms. American` dam bought and sold. J one 22. The St. John Telegraph calls loudly for a stun: whistle at Cape Race, to guard against the frequent loss of lite and property II. that, point. SPECIAL T ELK GRAHS. b`II1I`I l.V(} NIL` IVS. severely 1 . L ._.o. .. 7 stab` ,, __...... y. .u- unlul nlwl. 1 Sir-Although this case bl! occupied a good ` deal of apnea in your columns lately, I hope yo'u i will permit a little further ventilation. Ahnnt Fun: -...-- -_- --- V -`-' Charles .|l.VRnuel, aliaa Maynard, was ur- rested at Rochester on Saturdny last, charged with being implicated in a number of robberies in Am-on, Ont. He was held to await the cr- rivnl of the Toronto oioers. ... r-...... - ullu: nunuur Venllmllon. About five years ago some fty girls were . sent to Canada from an Irish worlthouse. :~0n their arrivnl at Quebec they were distributed . tery were the worst two of the lot. gcy and vice in the city, through the country, and six of them I believe were allotted to Kingston. Situations were found for them soon after their arrival, but I think with one exception they Ill turned out badly. This Mary Redfern and one Ellen Slat- After run. ning for nearly three years n course of proigm Sluttery was sent to Qlevelnnd, where she `said she had an uncle. ` She has visited Kingston on one occasion since. ` When arrested for drunkenness and prostitution she stated that she was cook on n propeller ! plying between Ugdcnshurgh and the upper lukes, nnl that she came ashore here to see the girls," are for ll spree. She was detained in .L, ,. Mary Redfern con!d nu be got rid of so 99.- `, siiy. She IS nujucorrigibly vicious woman, ud- dicted :u drunkenness and the most vile habits of her at x. In fact she is so bad that the keeper 0!` the lowest brothel in Spencer`: Grove will `..... ..:.... I. , I I ` ,, ,_ . ._..... ....-. xumui nauvtu uere [0 398 [D8 i `the station hduse till the propeller returned ` from Ogdcusburgb, and was then put on board E again. II... n \r -- uoty. London Journal, September (John Bender` Ion.) This in said to hevethelnrgeet circum- tlon ofeny English periodical of the kind, 5 dis. tinclion which it owes to its thrilling sentimen- tel Itoriu end the general intern! of no lltenry eontenu, coupled with lownm in price. Of late yearn the Journal hu tnken to fash- leev, peuenu, end music, no as to keep even vi-n Ill any cotnpetiton. GIZI lntl of I71:-nzbl lnnunnn D-A. \l.._ ` __. 5.... =.....c., Iu cuu:ltq'lL'nCe Chl('U_V of her u._-nicious dis usition. Sue will el drunk P 8 if rhtf can procure the liquor, and lhcn she must tight with s -me one. Thus she has spent more than half her time in gaol, parlicvilurly in w terfwlien she cannot lie out doors. a thief. She was turned out of her rsz sinus- llioa for lnceny. in- Un one occasion she stole $115 in gulzl from a Frenchman. A part oflhis money she spent in buying dry goods, and a part she gave to her fancy man, the notorious John Doyle. The money was all lnced to her and Doyle by lhe police, but A aympalhizing jury acquitted her and Doyle, partly I suppose to punish the,F'renchmsn for being in such bad comnai-iv. gm! oh.-w -nu-o I-uni. .-i-_-_.a -_ -- - - She is also , cienuy strict with these parties. For tbeinfot-meti_on ofAldern1nu Allen it may be steted that the Police are armed with revol- vers e.t night. and under certain circumstances are instructed to use them-thet although they have been thus armed nearly four years, no one has yet been wounded, much less killed by them. A burly rowdy named Dougherzy once compleined that he was knocked down by the report of one of these revolvers red over the heads of himeelfand A number of his companions by a policeman whom they were vigorously pelt- iog with stones to'preIent him from taking one of their compenione to the station house. I have penned the for-ennimr, up man..- ..:_. on men` compnmonl the union penned she foregoing, Mr Editor, sim- ply in the interest of _ _,,.-.-_ -....,. owuuul-I-l|1 M.-I ucmg In sucn Dad company, and they were both released on society again, Doyle to best and abuse his father and mulber, and Redfern to continue to be a public nuisance. LIUIBHUCC. Redfern was once sent to jPrescott at her own request,but she only reumined away one week. In the early part of Way last. she was sent to gaol for sixty days, and Doyle was sent Boon afterward for ninety days for the olfence of beating his mother. l{edfern a period of impris- onment expired about the 8th July, since which period she says she has been working in the day time for tlce turnkey of the gaol, for her board, sallying out in the evening to make money by prostitution. In this`way she says she had saved about $15, which she had given to oyle, then in gaol, to keep for her. When brought before the magistrate at the police court on Saturday last, after the alleged cruel treatment she had received at the bonds of the police, she had not a scratch or mark upon I:er-nor did she com- plain ot anything of the kind. Her only com- plaint was that during the pulling and hauling she received at the hands of the mob and the police, her hat. and jacket were injured. She then prayed the magistrate not to commit her to gaol-again. That. if permitted she would leave Kingston forever. That the money she had at the gaol would carry her awav. Au Thu -- uy suuureu spirits in me crowd, whogave utter unce to their sympathy by loud shouts. When the two polic men found that the crowd and the woman were likely to overcome them, a cab was sent for,and if they had not been inter- fered' with there would not have been any diffi- culfy about the arrest. The police did no more than their duty in holding on to their prisoner ; they used no unnecessary violence. It is not alleged by anyone that they used their batons. They were perfectly right in refusing the order of Alderman Allen to releasethe woman under the circumstances. His Worship the Mayor, Chairman of the Police Commissioners, did not order her release in the lcelof an in- liruidxstlng mob who had used and were threatening further violence, knowing, as he did, that if the mob were pandered to on that oc- casion, and the police force humiliated, the rowdy class in Kingston would soon get the up- per band again The remark made to the decent woman" by policeman Lune was, that whilst the prisoner Redferq was utterinz her bawdy language, and kicking up her heels, ex- posing her person, rnodest women should retire. No decent, orderly citizen, however poor or humble, has ever had any reason to com- plain of the police force ; and even the rowdy class do not complain of unmereiful treatment. The latter and the Police force are determined foes, however, and it was a perfect godsend on Friday night last for the rowdies to secure for their side even the supposed sympathy and support of the leading Alderman of their Ward. Whilst he and they claim that women of the Redferu class and their companions, drunk or sober, should be allowed to range our streets at _will; hanging around our street corners in the shade! of evening, insulting passers by with their obscene language, other people complain, and with reason, that the Police are not sui- ciently strict with these lbeinformatinn of Alden-m... an..- 2. ._--- nlngslon xorevar. 'l`h|t the had carry her away, the The ma. gistrnte complied with her requelt. On sending her to the gun] in charge of an oicer, Doyle would only acknowledge to having $3 of her monoy, which amount he gave her. She insisted that he bud other $12 of her s, but under the circumstances the turnkey did not feel justied in searching Doyle. Sho said the monev mu cu_cuu.I:I.Iuc!S me turnkey did money was sewed up In the leg of Doyle : trousers. She left. the city, however, with the money she re- ceived from him, and it is to be hoped Doyle will follow her with the balance 35 soon as his term of imprisonment expires. Marv Redfern in wall Imn-n hrs on... __v= - wins on imprisonment expires. Mary is well known to the police as the want woman ofher class who has ever been in Kingston. Her lthy, hlssphemous language, and shameful exposure of herself are indescrib- able, and on several previous occasions when ur- rested her conduct had been so violent that she had torn the policemsn s uniform, requiring two or three of them to handle her. On Friday night whilst policemen Lane and Stacey had hold of her, she tore out large pieces from the sleeve of Stacey s cost with her teeth, snd'bit his hand in several places, and the sympsthizing mob tore the back of his coat into shreds. But of course policemen are expected to submit to all this and make no resistance. Redfern admin! In H... .......:_.__., , n . tuls nun muse resistance. Redfernyndmitted to the magistrate on Satur- dny that she had ullied out for n spree on Fri- day evening, tbnt she got two or three glasses of whiskey in 5 house on Queen street, and that she was noisy on the street previous to her or- rest. The policemen swear that they heard her ye-lls two blocks away; that after her arrest she accompanied them quietly, till some rowdies in the mob which had been gathered by her noise suggested to her not to accompany the police any further. She then lqualled down on the street, refused to go any further ; and when taken hold of on each side by the policemen she kicked and etruggledto her utmost, encouraged by kindred spirits in the crowd, whogeve utterv by shouts Whar- Nut PUn.xoAnou.-Sundny at Ham: (John Henderson, Kmguon.) Coloured illuauationl have become I favourite Inrnction with nmny Inglinh p-riodicnln. Those of Sunday at Ham: no bnmifully executed in chromuic priming. the one for September being a uhlcb of St. Dnvidh Cathedral. A biographical sketch of Ibo Ru. Dr. Cooke, of Ulnar, and religxoua ar- ticles, are given in addition to the continued uory. Lonrlnn .rnurnnl Snninrnhmn ILJ... u.._.I.- Kingmn, Sept. 2, ises. -.:._._-{-_._ 1!. Rune], : B8(d It Rnnhnnhar An R-0-m THE REDFERN CA SE . L DAILY NEWS--THURSDAY Tnurn. ____, ..., ......u.-u wnu mlpusionate} impartiality and faithfulness. We from Rome in tho led: century. .., .... --.i-ur, unuulicu nu nu: as out: in some dAgree in-qimintt-i with the sub- jt-cl, and pl-.a.c-1 ra her than oih-rwise with the Pope : invitation, to take som.- pr:-liruinary stops for my instruction and guidance before writii-g io Rome to inform Cardinal P'atr zzi lhtl. I ac- cepted the inviltrion, and would in-p nr at the but of the CDEHIDZ Council. Accordinigiy I wrote ,lo Archbishop Manning brgging of him, as the chi-fministur of his church in Engiund, such in- formation as be mighi:feel it proper or expedient to furnish on ihc-se points oniv num:-lv_S`.hnil " wcclesiaa Scoticae Pn-sbyterns.' "This letter in this form Ienclosed under cov- er to Cardinal Patrizzi, and respectfully begged that his Eminence would be pleased to present it to the Sovereign Pontiff, but I hove received as yet no reply. No doubt an answer will reach me in snicient time to enable me, should it be favourable, to make my arrangements to appear at Rome; December 8, 1869, as one of the `Pro- testants in general whom the supreme Ponti hes been good enough to invite. it: is a noble opportunity alike for Roman Catholics end Pro- testents Political questions aecting the Bo- men Catholic body ere settled this year for good or for evil. The great and solemn religions question remnlns. On the Oonneil s arena. it may be handled with dispnsions cram Rama in 421.. Ind. ---- - The Rev. Dr. Cumming has ;g,dreued the fol- lowing letter Io the London T:'mu:- 4-I'n-_A ..... 2-1-___, , .. .. _ . .- .-..... ....... nu tut: uuuuuu ll17|l :-- "I need not inform you that thaegeneral Coun- cil summoned by Pius IX to In _ at Rome on December 8, 2869, has created ntflittlo interest among the nations of Europe. Were the Pope : invitation Addressed to the members of his own communion or denomination ii would barely be noticed by those who do not Belong to the R0- man Catholic Church. But gs asummona to a.ll--to achismatic Greeks and heretic Pro- teatanta-ir. ranllv .t-.......... L.-- .......:.a..... ,_- ..-._ .. ..u... -u azcnu. \nppIuuaI'.) It will be observed that Mr King does not deny the actuality of gold transactions in New York on behalf of! the bank; but he vigorously denies the incidents of colour- ing which the New Yok papers have to their report In this/he is entitled to he heard, and y he has taken oppor` tunity to refer to the matter. He ought to have done so, we think, long before, and have aeved himself and the bank with which he is connected from unnecessary as- peraiona. lQ'H|vBl tlon. ll"I`l-\. u----Iv ncuwlllllc UFECKS EEG U97 teatan1s-it really deserves -Some UTLI? G rec pi-:.. . uu ucuru r mmll 1 have freedom of speech wixhin the limits prescribed by the nature ol [ho Council? Shall I be allowed to show why We Protestants stand aloof from lhe Roznsn Church, sud what we should require of her in order 10 enable us 10 resume communion with her as A branch of we Cburcl1*Universu1? The Arnhhinhnn Inn! m-.. L.-- -_-I --~--~ nuuuzslluu us me mngulyeel it r points oniy, unmely-Sball I be heard 7 Shall I have freedom prescribed luv lhn nn.lnrp nl uh- utuucu or we Uuurcu~Universul ? The Archbishop sent men long and courte- ous reply, assuring me we should meet with all charity and respect in making any grtve and earnest communicnion lo the Council. At the same time he expressed his inability to give any information as to the modus agtndi at the sail Council, this, he added, depending on the high- est authority of all. The Archbishop was good enough to send me his woik entitled `The Tem- poral Mission of the Holy Ghost, and to offer to send others which [ happened to possess, as well crtlcu.nied to give me ampler information on this very subject than he couid conveniently send me in writing. Nothing can exceed the courtesy and uzndour of the Archbishop in his replies to my inquiries. I read. first of all mnac n...-:..n.. n__ __,I. 1 vuucnlo noquenal hbo quibna inducli Protestm sun: separali et diviai. `Sancutatis Tua: ae It I | ,.- . -.--- xuyuru lU my inquiries. read, first of all, most carefully the work I already possessed, entitled `England and Chris. tendom, and also the other work. he kindly sent me, `The Temporal Mission of the Holy Ghost. In bo h works the author asserts repeatedly, and in the strongest terms, what [expect is to be authoritatively declared in the approaching Council-rst, the absolute perscntl infallibnlity of the Pope, `speaking to many or to few, by brief, or encyclicai, or bull ; and, secondly, the absolute infallibility ofa General or (Ecu|eni- cal Council-eacb, he affirms, equally and com- pletely infallible in the first tentury, in the r`- teenth century, and in the nineteenth century. To these decrees, thus infallible and inspired by the Holy Spirit, we are to listen as to those of divinely inspired Apostles. Their decrees and dogmas we are to accept as the very word of God. I replied to his letter at great length, show- ing that in the history of his church Ihavefound that Council decrees attains: Pom and Pm... .. vu cuumanuatluul mum and torn: :- `Sanme Pater-Proteslantes et alias ab Ec- clesia Romans. diviaos at segregatoand Concil- ium (Ecumenicum invihre libi placuit. Gra- tias perfervidas ngimns, at toto corde in Concilio to indie-Io udesse desidenunna. U! ceror am quae et quanta Iibertns Eoquendi nobiu concedp lur, in pluribus epistolis ad Reverendissimum Doctorum Manning hoc nnno liters: misi. llle reverendissimua et docasimuu urbaditata plati- ms do Inc to bisce verbxa mihl reacripait-`Re- aponsum da moufo agendi xibi dare nequeo, Hoc reddere potent solo. sup:-emu. auctorims. Te igi- tur, Sancte Pater, enixo er-precario rogo ul ai tibi plncet certior am nu-um nobis detnr in Ooncilio loquendi libonas et causaa reddendi Protestnntes ab Er.-clesia. Ronnnn geparati IICS. In attending the Council I must, according to these instrnciious, incur grave personal risk, plainly threatened in this infallible decree. Es- peciaily must I bear in mind in the circumstan- ces the teaching of Dena, Liguori, Alphonso De Castro. the episcopal oath, the Lateian canons, the corpus jun`: canoniai, and as the Church of Rome is snnper eadem, her tieatment of such a hereiic as she considers me to he must be such as she has solemnly enscted and carried out in all similar area. The Archbishop does not give or promise me any hope of exemption from the penalties deczeed, or promise of suspending, pro tempore, this Papal resczript for my special bent- t. He must see that I should not like `to be dealt with -th~n is to say, consigned to II con- i-e-as John Huss was in similar circumstances. The Archbishop, as I have already stated, refers me to the Supreme Hen-'1 of his church for a so- lution of my diiculties. I have, therefore, writ- ten to Pope Pius IX, with all respect and defer- ence, the following short letter in the accustom- ed ecclesiastical Latin and form :- Palnr-Prnnnun..-.9... -. -I:_- - - IE qullli LlUlIN"`llt"J. HE WEI lUt`l'U |U tuunr A proposal. :5 he intended. for the K0041 Of lb?` Bank, and in return for what he did. P "'5 M tucked in n most virulent manner by a gentleman of whom he had not the slightest knowledge I There wu 5 subject to which to public be had I never yet nlluJcd, but he felt, after lhr attack | nude upon h:m by Mr lclllen, that that was n tting time end piece to any a word in de- fence of bin character and integrity. He allud- ed to the totnlly untrue and scnndnlous state- ments made by the American press in reference to him, and the lete gold trnnenctions in which he was uid !0 bn- engaged on behnlfof the Rank of lontrenl. Al to the fnbulous ntnounte be we! elated to hue Cl"Q1'C!l by those transac- lionn, he regretted to any that the whole a"nir In pure fiction. (Leughten) The story of the dny load of gold was I delibente falsehood, end the first he knew of the etl'..ir was by rend- ing the fabrication in one of the New York papers. He thought the story originated in the name fertile brain which gave birth to the shower of rnin in the gold etchnngtg at Chicago, II the two inven ion: were about on n par, He conltfulure them that the whole of those li- nelloun notice which the American papers sew ` t to beep upon him, were but A series of pure and nnndnlternted-ctions, end there wnejot one word of truth in them. (Applnuu-.) It will In: n|.m......,a it... u. u:,, u mg was In me nlsiory or his church Ihnvefound against Pope and Pope re. taliales against Oouncil, and Pope contradicts Pope, and Council nualbematizes Council, and that in the Roman Church there is a historic concordia diacors which renders it in all respects the most. dieucited church in Chriaiendnm cum-urum uucors wmcn renders it in all Christendom. Whatever, therefore, the approaching Council may decre,I shall he prepared to edduce a contrary decree from the canons of previous councils, or bulls and encyclicels of Popes, or from both, should I be allowed to speak, and to prove that, with all their confessed divergencies, there is in the Protestant Church, in all its branches, 1: more thorough and pervading unity then Rome is at present disposed to admit or Protestants always ready to assert. But on turning to the Appendix of `England and Chris- tendom --vvhich the Archbishop commends to my study for information-s Pope s infallible judgment on the reception to be accorded to a schismatic or heretic appearing and claiming to be heard at a general Council is given at length. This is, of course, conclusive. It is as fol- lows:- r:n..r..-.. ...... .-...--s- ' - - - -" [U W. 3* `Before any queetionis treated or discussed with heretics, one thing, which is matter both of divine and human law, must be strictly ob. sex-ved-thut they should first give in their ad- hesion to the tribunal and the judge, and no- knowledge that the Church of Christ is one spread throughout the world_ and that her one Head is the Vicar of Christ, 3:11 that a. 11 wful general Council is one summoned and approved by that same head, and that they will submit to 'he decrees, determinations, and declM'a..ions of the said Council. But if they decline this, they ought. in no case to be heard, and are to be dealt with us condemned scnismntics and here- tics. (in. -n......l :_.. IL- rs, , -- v THE EUUMENTOAL COUNCIL. .tis aervum proteor, ` `JOIANNII Guuxme, DD., ` `Ecclesiae Scolicae Presbyterns. 1- it : ll nencg would Dresem it -. W... vvnuv In uuuclllo rnunna. ioquendi Lia ; asimuu urbadimu. nln-= I,whocIaim5 Tbireeuth :',ined to re- 1 him, 1h-re- HI 4.. .... .. _._ -uvun ll. yet earnest a separated Rome my ' fairly invite us once more to return, or give our I reasons for ltnnding aloof I have no doubt that Dr` M'Neile, the dean of Ripon, or that equally P` tutant prelnte, the Bishop of Ripon, or Dr. - Bl: easy, or All three, will he too happy to ac- compbny me, if renpectfully requested, and give, us they eloquently can, A `reason for the hope lhnt is in rheln, UT :3!!! nu--anunnri uI.._A ll _-.. I ~I 1 ,1 H __ --_ _-l ml! 15 In them. ` I am persuaded Ihnt if you send, as you no I doubt will, a. reporter to the successive meetings } of the Council,`he will not be able to report any language used bywhe or the others inconsistent ` with the courlely in awe or the respect we feel to the Sovereign Pontt end the assembled pre- listen. We shall, I am lyre, exhibit all the cen- dour of reueonet-I, the kherity ct` Ohristians, and the homage of men invited to Appear in another realm fend before venernble Synod to enunciate the grounds on hich they retuin their separation from Rome and their adherence to the Church of the Reformation. I-Tim ini....-mo n.1,... ;.. ....... ...'u ...:.a.. .... Pouol Courr, Thursdny.--Henry Snuudex-' Du ned 82 for being drunk, with 8 choico or fourteen days` imprisonment in the county gnol. Philip Blcnson wu charged with as- rnuliing n privnte of the R. 0. Ries,` but us there appeared to be 1 minute as to the iden- tity oflhe nccused, the matter was put over un- til the right mun could be procured. Susan Brickwood, n proatixnth whose character nppnra to no put redemption. was charged with wnntonly Insulting n very respectable woman, the wife of a soldier, on Ontnrnqui Bridge, last night, and wan lent to gnpl for ninety dnys AI rho wu reinoved rho informed the magis- lrnln that if Ihe lived to get out ngnin she would give the woman (complninnnt) 3 rather runner done. LU we uuurcn 01 mo nerormauon. _ "The iuleresl. taken in your world-wide co- luma in Ihe Council about to meet wil1:`I am per- suaded. excuse my troubling you with lhis con- densed nccount of A correspondence which, if published at length, your readers would judge l [D be in all respects credituble to the courtely and cuudnur of Archbishop Manning. \` I have the honour to be, "Your faithful servant, "Joan CUIIIIIG." No man has made himself more conspicuous for his propheticul tendencies than Dr. Cumming of London. The Gttesses at Truth, by two Brothers," have been nothing to those of the evangelical doctor, and now he proposes to hea gut st of the Pope of Rome, whom he has been so long belabouring from behind the Revelations of St. John the Divine, and the book ofthe pro- phet Daniel. No one can doubt after reading his voluminous, if not luminous, writings, and believtngin them, that the number of the been clearly fixes the title upon the occupant of the See of Rome, and tLe expiry of the twelve hun- dred and sixty prophetic-al days is so clearly made out as to enable the expounder of prophe- cy to fix the termiusuion of this dispensation to within a few months. The great drawback, however, to perfect faith in these interpretations is the fact that, evidently, Doctor Cumming does not believe in them himself. If there is one thing on which he has prided himself more than another, it is his true blue Protestantism and Presbyterianism; yet, it would almost ap- pear by a letter of his to the Times, that even this feeling has been shpped, and that to some extent be has yielded to the blandishments of the Man of Sin. It is well known that when summoning the (Ecutrenical Council the Pope included in his invitation not only the members of the Roman Catholic Church. but all schtsma- tics and heretics as well. The head of the Greek Church courteouslj; declined to acknow- ledge the right of the Western Ponti to call such It Council, as he claims the right of uni- versal patriarch himself, and Protestants, with the exception of those of Germany, have not had the politeness to return any reply.` Dr. Cumming thinks this a pity. Ho regards the invitation as a very liberal one, and attered by the coodescension, be is anxious to show his sense of the honour put upon himselfand others. Seeing no chance of an answer being given by any of the invited in a corporate capacity, he resolves individually to accept the invitation and appear at the bar of the ensuing council. The commotion, as the great Scotch Doctor propounds his views in the very stronghold and citadel of the Romish power, will be to the ex- citement caused _by the posting up of Luther's theses at Wittenberg, as a cyclone in the Indian sens to a breeze in a horsepond. These were conned to but one branch of the claims of the Church, but our new Luther intends to make a. much moi-e sweeping attack. But herein he has drawn back from the old position be occupied when he held that Popery was but a cunning device of Satan to catch souls, and that it had lost all the characteristics of a christian church, being now but a more agglutination of myths which have overlaid the original truth, as a col- lection of barnacles, periwjnkles and muscles, (Inna: I1l\ .....s --_-.,-t .- wulll ll UEIOHIJ {it iunpieeeqf a .. V nu VIKD. Wm. J.Snvi1le, the Boston who caused the denth of It Th: makings mistake in putting :2; giving huduamn inntesd 01' I'll` An` naked for munlsnghur. quire III we Unurch of Rome, in order to en- able Protestants to reeutne communion with her as a branch of the Ghuxch_Universal. As the presence of so hold a champion of the Protestant Ieuce of its highest dignitaries will be favour- able. He holds in wholesome dread the rule which must be followed by heretics who wish to be present at a Council. They must acknow- ledge the one Vicar of Christ, and declare that they will submit to the decrees, determinations and declarations of the council called by him. But, continues the decree, if they decline this, heard, and are to be chismstics and here- uotos this, and at the ver the approaching he is prepared to show a m the canons of previous nd encyclicals of Popes, or -dealt with as condemned s tics. As Dr. Cumming q same time says that whats council may decree, contrary decree fro councils, or bulls a from `both, the Manning and the letter to the Pope would seem; to be a grim 1oke, an elaborate specimen: of what is described as dry humour. If it is not, it is apiece of stupiditv._.lIImm-M1 17--1-1 uuun waned I to Ohicugo. Wu. 7 5-- a geuueman proposes to accept an invitation to It dinner party from one who hss-say-made his money by fraudulent transactions, he does not a.t'one and the same time write him he has for years been sbnsing as A sconndrel, a note beginning, "My very dear Sir, and at the same time write his host's secretary, hoping the Otd tentlemsn is not going to be at any of his old tricks of swintiling, and does not intend to pick the pockets of his guests. Yet, in his cor- respondence with Dr. Manning, Dr. Cumming says he must he promised safe conduct, sc- curding to certain writings which Dr. Manning that there is no such thing as infsllibilit , that her doctrines are all a mistake, and that if the Pope wishes to have unity he must renounce all his errors, place himself under the teachings of the Rev. Dr. John Cumming, study with him the books of the Prophets, taking with him the parallel passages from Punch, the Echoes of the Clubs, the articles on the, Girls of the Period, the Vo`oes of the Night and the Coming Strng-' gls. This wouzd seem to be the true wsy of getting properly before the Pope the changes re- quired in the Church her nn - L-`----L -5 " " - _- ._,,,...........uu us tuytns which trutl:t,a.s cover up and conceal the original oyster to which they have sstened, and of which they have left only tho dead form. V Now, he recog- nizes the Pope as the head of the Christian Church, or, at least, of 9. Christian Church which may be readmitted to the communion of the genernl body of the faithful, and he holds out hopes, not expressed so much as implied, that when all the Presbyterian bodies have made up their quarrels, when patronage has ceased, .when veto acts are forgotten, when S6- ceders, and Auld Lichts and New Lichts and Cnmeronisns and Burghers and Anti-Burghers, and Relief sud Original Seceders shall have made it up and joined again into one, he may yet sit in Edinburgh ss Modnrntnr nf ....- ---_- . u diam... -.--... 4-.-- uusuls u up and Joined again into Edinburgh Moderator of one great General Assembly. If he does not mean this, what does he mean by now addressing the Pope, his former Man of Si :1, as Holy Father. We would respectfully submit to Dr. Cumming, if this style of address is strictly orthodox, and if it agrees Wilh his teachings on this subject. Sancte Pater, Oh Holy Father," is s. strange ex- pression from his pen, while in the correspon- dence the Doctor has had with Dr. Manning, he` keeps casting imputslions of bad faith against His Holiness, and rubbing old sores_ which in his new role he ought to have forgotten. When a gentleman The un ur having 9,, ,i,md 5, 30,000 pgoplo, has been ahippod o All the Governments of Europe, with the exception of Russia, have now adopted liberal constitutional political principles. A few years ago, Italy, which is now uni. ted under a constitutional parliamentary Government, was in the hands of a number of petty tyrants, the mostidespotic of whom was Francis II, oi Naples. Austria, which had existed for ages as s rigorous despotism, has within the last three years been trans- formed in a parliamentary Government. with comparatively free institutions. In Spain the old Bourbon order of things has just been overthrown, to be replaced by a liberal constitutional Government. In France, where the Vapoleonic aurocracy has been supreme for twenty years, we are now witnessing the establishment of freer politi- cal forms. In other countries, such as Prussia, and Sweden, there has within the last few days been a rapid-development of political liberalism. Russia now stands solitary and alone as the one great autocra- cy of Europe. .j._ }, SEPTEMBER 2. ,_f._}.._ Dn. CUMMINGAND THE -POPE. ----- _r..yu--on VA huinom-. -Monma: Herald. ton druggisfs clerk r Tholnu Norton, by :15; up I prucrintizm n I ab}mi1wIAL. `M Kingston, Sept), 3 p.|n. ! lo I! |hnn'r.-F`omn BIos.,bsnkar|,rcporx ' non y nmket u follovu:-American pnmnoy, ' 1 buyilhg at 74} bills, 70 Iilver; selling at 00 ',billI. Silver buying at 2}, selling at 2. Noam in N.Y. 133;. snerlsngqcxchgugo 9:. I Freight: nnchnnged,onr lut quoutionn rule ` the market. 3 3 It (1..-..-- L r1I:A.1--v_ _I.__: am. ._.. n.,___, . ; IIIB IIIITKCL t Gurney & Gliddetfa wbAr!-The tug Elowood with tht-so bargu srtived from Iontrul Int night, with combined cargoes of 250,000 feet of lumber, Ind 125 tom ofiron on. Solar. Fnncil Smith nailed hat on ning with lumber for On- wego. ` MONTREAL MARKETS. (Special Telegram to the Daily Noun.) Ilontrecl, Sept. z.-FIour--Supe1-ior Extra 0,00 to 0,00; Extra, 0,00 to 0,00; Fancy, 5,40 to 5,50 ; Welland Canal Super, 5,20 to 0,00. Super No. 1 Canada wheat, 5,25 to 5,40; super No. 1 Western Whell, 0,00 to 0,00; Super No. 2 1 Western wheat, 4,80 to 4,85 ; hag our 0,00 In 0,00. Wheab-Gauada Fall, 0,00 to 0,00. Spring, l,l6 to0,00`; Western, 0,00 to 0,00. 0ats-per 32 lbs, 43 to 45. Bat-ley-per 48 D31, 00 to 00. Butter.--Da.iry 17] to 1810; store- packed I ! to Inc. Ashes-potu, 5,70 to 5,72}; Pe-I'll. 5.65 lo 0.00. Gold in New York at I2 packed I7 l7]c. to Pear} 5.65 o,oo. Gold York a :2 o clock, 33%. Pork, Mesa, 28,50 to 00,00: Primo Mesa, 00,110 to 00,00. Prime, 00,00 to 00,00. Dressed hogs 0,00 10 0,00. Peas,per66 lbs. 0,003, Flour l`t'.ii'Nn Iiah1- Inn:-Inn Inn-v Rpm .t -j---:-----_:__ Alltvn or A G1nu'l':.- l.ne steamer Water- town b.-ought from New York, vie Cope Vin` cent, lest night 1 young gixetfe or cemelopurd, intended on on addition to Van Atnburglfe Golden Menagerie. The animal canto Iecurely holed up, but is described as three years old, ve feet in height to the middle of the beck, end weighs eight hundred weight. It was transfer- and to the Grend Trunk Railway, and left this ntternoon tb join the mt-nagerie ; and it will be exhibited in Kingston along with the collection next week;