W. {hi an. a. l‘i] AGREATLK} ~rv-‘r‘ fl; GONEOUT. The Late Charles Haddon Spurgeon’si Christian Life-Work. Charles Haddon Spurgeon, the greatest Baptist preacher of the present agmlandone of the mightiest, moss eloquent and most devoted men who has servud the Lord in any generation, has passed to hrs reward. After a. long illness of seven months, during the greater part of which he suffered acute pain, the release came on the night of January 31st, last. It Was in June 1831, that Pastor Spur- - an.“ L." WV â€-55-5 v- v -V,,, V It Was in June 1831, that Pastor Spur- geon’s iiiness began. Up to that time he had exterienceu occasional \‘isitatiuns of rheumatic gout and also suil'ei‘ed from kidney troubles, but a seVere attack of influenza. resulted in his immediate pros- tration. He lingered in London awhile, hoping for recovery and making an effort to preach in the Metropolitan Tabernacle when his condition Would permitt; but in October last, he was Compelled to give up the tight and placed himself wholly in his physxcian’s hands. On the 26th of that month he left his home at Beulah Hill South Nor-Good, England, and went with Mrs. Spnrgeou to Calais, on the way to Mentone. Uu reaching the famous health resort, an imprwement speedily took in... .Nnrl meuwuc. Vu. “a... ..... n “7, resort, an impmvement speedily took place, and his friends were cucvumged, but the influenZa. left in its wake a compli- cation of ailments baffling all medical skill. He would take no nourishment and was A J :“L.\.. â€at but: Llllluynautu u..- -._ cation of ailments battling all medical skill. He would take no nourishment and was troubled with extreme lassitude and inter- vals of delirium. Mrs. Spurgeon was! constantly by his side, and her ministraâ€" tions to the suï¬erer were aided by his brother, the Rev. James Spurgeon and wife and Mr. Spugeon’s secretary, Mnl Jos. W. Harrald. . In November and December last, there 1 were recurrent periods of exaltation and3 depresston. At times the ivalitl would be strong enough to write letters and to walk out and bathe in the soft sunshine of southern France; .but the symptoms, though less acute. remained unchanged. One day’s improvement was It st the next. New Year’s day. 1892, found him still hopeful, however, and he felt so bright that he was able to make an address to the little circle of friends in the hotel at Men- tone, who had met to greet him on that day. He also sent a New Year's message to his congregation at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, London in which he said: What a. joy it will be to be within measurable distance of the time to return LOWL zsu «n.4, av“ .. v -_ __, What a. joy it Will be to be within measurable distance of the time to return to my pulpit and to you. I have not reached that point yet. Now may the Lord can»; the cloud of blessing to burst upon you, in a great tropical shower. I am expecting this. Even as late as January 9th last, he was still hopeful of being restored to lus flock, and wrote to them : Personally, I scarcely make progress during this broken weather; but the doctor says I hold my own, and that is more than he could have expected. Whether I live or die, I would say, in the words of Israel to Joseph, “God shall be Wlth you.†But these anticipations, prompted by the insidious and deceptic nature of the disease, were destined to be disappointed. In the inidclle of January, all the symptoms reasserted themselves with increased activity, and the gout threaten- ed to reach the brain. Dr. Fitzhenry, Mr. Spurgeon 3 physician, warned the sufferer that the end might come at any moment. The sick pastor became weaker and took less and less nourishment. The steady decline of vitality continued, with rarer intervals of relief then before: On Sunday, January 31, it» Was evident to the watchers that the great change was at hand. A weak, restless morning was passed and at 3 Pm, he became uncon- scious. He remained in that condition, recognizing neither his wife, nor any of the others who surrounded his bed. At 11:20 P.M., he passed peacefully aWay. Charles Haddon Spurgeon’s life-story is a familiar one throughout the whole Christian world. It is specially so to the readers of this journal, who have been spiritually comforted and strengthened by his sermons. which have regularly appear- ed in the WATCHMAN. The career of such a man is a record of the triumphs of faith, ‘ and the entire consecration of human 1 energies and abilities to the Work of the ‘ Divine Master. Mr. Spurgeon was born in the town of Kelvedon, in Essex, Eng- lmd, on June 19th 1834. His paternal grandfather was an Independent minister at Stanibourne, a man of sterling piety and greatly respected. His father was the Rev. J ohu Spurgeon, formerly of the Congregitional Church of Islington, near London, and his mother a Miss Jervis of Colchester, a lady of singular piety. \Vhen ten years old, Charles Went to live With his grandparents and there received the same religious nature he had experienced at home, At School he was very success- ful in his studies, carrying oti'many prizes and acquiring high honors for a mere lad. On leaving Colchester, he entered an agricultural college at Maidstone, but stayed there only a short time, leaving at fifteen to beCUme an usher in a school at Newmarket, his father’s purpose being to make him a schoolmaster. But a year later a change came which turned the whole current of this young life and gave to God‘s service one of its most brilliant and faithful workers. That change was his Conversion, and it came about when he Was Sixteen. His own account of the occurrence is so simple and graphic that we reproduce it: THE WAY OF SALVATION open before me, and I was ï¬iled with joy unspeakable.†Sixteen years later, preaching in the same church, Mr. Spur- geon pointed 710 a. seat on the left hand “I went into a. Primitive Methodist Chapel one snowy day in January’,’ he said.“ A thin- looking man came into the pulpit and read the text, ‘Look unto me and be saved, all the ends of‘the earth.’ Then ï¬xmg his eyes on me he said, ‘Young man, you are in trouble, and you will never get out of it unless you look to Christ' And then lifting up his ands and cxying out, he exclaimed: Look! look. look. it is only 100k. " 1 did look and saw with my mental eye under the gallery and said: “I was sitting in that pew when I was converted.†t Following his conversion. he made ] professton of faith and was baptized by 1 the Rev. Mr. Cantlow and united With 1 the Baptist Church in the village of l ,Isleham, near Newmarket. He burned ‘ with zeal to begin at.once the work of . the Master. On accepting, an engagement shortly afterward as school assistant at Cambridge, he found the opportunity he l desired and began his religious work as a ltract distributor in connection with the congregation of the church over which Rev. Robert Hall, a most eloquent and successful preacher, was then pastor. But tract distributing was merely a step in young Spurgeon’s pathway to higher usefulness. He felt Tm; MESSAGE ON HIS LIPS and hungered for an opportunity to speak . it. Soon it came. There was to be a service in a cottage at Taversham, a village near Cambridge, at which a ' preacher was to have been engaged. “Young Spurgeon, seeing that no one volunteered, threw himself into the breach. l Still a mere boy he entered the Cottage * l where the farm-laborers and their Wives ' were gathered together. After singing, preying and reading. came the sermon. It 1 was not such :1. task as he had feared. ’ l HE DID NOT BREAK DOWN, . nor stop in the middle, nor run out of ideas. At last it. was ended; he took up the hymn-hook when: I u. n "How old are you Y" came trom a. dozen different pairs of lips. -“I am under sixty,†was the smilling reply. “Yes, and under sixteen,†said and 01d lady. “Never mind my age," was Spurgeon’s answer. “Think of Jesus and his pre- ciousness. : He soon became known far and wide as the “Boy Preacher†and less than a. year was called to be the pastor of a Baptist congregation at Waterbeach and he went there although only seventeen. Feeling the need of a. more thorough preparation for the ministry, he tried to enter Regent’s Park Cnllege, but afterward gave up the idea. His education, brief as it had been was unusually thorough in many ways. In 1854. when nineteen, he made an address at a meeting Hf the Sunday School Union at Cambridge. which so impressed some of his hearers that shortly after he was tendered the pastorate of the New Park Street Church in Southwark, and there he began his ï¬rst important charge and â€1ch Llauutun, qu u- u.“ ...\-.----.. ---- ___.,, ers crowded the chapel. Soon the fam of the young preacher spread abroad and people flocked to the little church in IVew Park Street. The press called attention to his precocious powers, and praises came from every side: but to these Mr. Spur- gzeon gme little heed. He was doing the Master’s Work in all humility. HIS REAL PULPIT \\'011K in good earnest. T he congregation was a mere handful, but in six months the bear- The little chapel soon became too small i for the throngs that assembled at every service, and it had to be enlarged. Pending the change, Mr. Spurgeon preach- ed in Enter Hall to vast crowds. In 1850, a fund was started to build a new and larger ediï¬ce. Surrey Music Hall was next engaged and a disastrous accident occurred on the ï¬rst attempt to hold services there. Seven thousand persons had gathered and the preacher was about to begin when some one in the audience raised the or; 3f “ï¬re g†In an instant there Was a terrible panic l Seven persons “were killed outright and twenty-eight- hurt. During the excitement. Mr. Spur- geon remained in the pulpit, endeavoring to check the panic and calm the feats of the frantic multitude, He succeeded at last, but valuable lives had been sacriï¬ced in the stampede. THE METROPOLITAN 'TABERNACLE. The foundation stone of the Metropoli- 1 tan Tabernacle was laid on Aug 16, 1859, l by Sir Monton Peto, and two years later the great building which is capable of seating over sxx thousand persons, was ï¬nished and opened in 1861, free of debt. The total amount expended was in the neighborhotid of $150,000. For thirty lyears Mr. Spurgeon’s ministery was con- ! tinued at the Metropolitan Tabernacle un- 'interruptedly. His fame as a preacher steadily increased and his ï¬eld for Chris- tian usefulness widened to a grand horizon. On one occasion he preached at the Crystal Palace at Sydenham. to fully 23.- 000 persons and at another time. at Agri- icultural Hall, Islington the audience was I over 20,000. He possessed a voice of vast penetrat- ing-power, whose clear, hell-like tones Could he heard distinctly in every nook of the greatest buildings at which most preachers would have recoiled. The ï¬rst impression a stranger received on listening to the Tabernacle orator was that the man himself seemed insigniï¬cant in contrast with the vast building. Stout. and short. his height not exceeding ï¬ve feet three inches, and on the elevated plat- form which constitutes the rostrum in the Metropolitan Tabernacle, he seemed al- mos1 di‘minutlve. The moment he opened his lips, however, the bearer felt the presence of a. powerful orator. His delivery was slow and enunciation perfect. . But thesecret of Mr..Spurgeon's success as a preacher, must be traced in a very large degree. less to gifts of voice than to his down-right earnestness, the transpar- ent“ simplicity of his character, his com- mon sense and his marvellous flow of homely Saxon. Q Mr. Spurgeon’s schemes for the good of his fellowmen, and particularly fer the relief of the unfortunate, were manifold. In 1866. he received a letter from a lady (Mrs. Hillyer), asking him to become trustee of a fund of $100,000, for the pur- pose of founding an Orphanage. Two and a half acres of land in StockWell were secured as a site, and a number of small homes were erected. Five hundred orphans are regularly cared for, educated and trained at the Stockwell Institution. All this fatherless flock is fed, clothed, trained and started in life. . THE ORPHANAGE. THE WATCHMAN. There were other enterprises of a philan- times increase the trouble of the man who throbic character C(mnectel with the 1ends it to you. - Metropolitan Tabernflcle. These include For fried smelts clean some fresh ones, the Colportage Assomatlon, an Almshouse leaving only the liver; salt them, dip f“ seventeen aged Werner“ a. number Of. them in milk, quickly flour them, and mission Schools, 3 ““55“"! t0 the bhud' thread them by the head on skewers. six beside Ladies Benevolent and Maternal small ï¬sh or four large to each skewer. SUCi-et'iesn and "thel‘s' One ,"f M"- Spur- Fry a golden brown, strain, salt and serve geou's favorite pllllmlthroples was the with parsley. Pastors’ College, WhiCh was founded in . 1 -. T in er ~ 11 ot stat-tin ounu wastors Try cranberries for ma. arm. ry g g . 1806' The pla g y a l ale for stomach cramps. Try a. wet towel . and encouraging them until they found . ' .â€" ’ : their true sphere occurred to Mr. Spur- on the back of the neck WhenthSkep'lisjf l oeou while he was Struggling, during the Try a llot, dry flannel over f e seat1 l Earlier years of his ministry. He under- neuralglc pain, and renew it. requen y. ' ' ' ' ' borax up the nos- . W of susz Ill†from his Try “Wilma powdered t“0k the expersc ‘ “t tn) H - \ . L-.:ln Em (-qfuwrlxul nnlr‘ in I'll“. haul]. rl‘rv a own income a number of young students. His wife ec'unnmized as much as possible, and he spent on his work from three to fULlI‘ thousand dollars a year from] the sale of his sermnns. In 1864, the college building Was ï¬nishing and opened. Over ï¬ve hundred students have been educated there, and have entered upon ministerial duties in different countries. Mrs. Spurueon was a. Miss Susannah Thompsnn, of Londun, and was married to Mr. Spurgeon in January, 1856. The issue of the marriage wss two sons, Charles and 'l‘hnmas, buth new ministers of the Gnspel. Mrs. Spurgeon has devot- ed much of her time to a fund in behalf of poor ministers. and enterprise in which she was aided by a. host of friends. She has long been an invalid. As a. writer and editpr, Mr. Spurgeon's abilities found a wide ï¬eld of unselï¬shness. Since 1865 he edited T he Sword and Trauma], a religious journal in which he gave to the world many volumes of essays and addresses other than pastoral. His “lectures to students,†'b‘peeches,’ “Books of Devotion,†“Treasury of David." and “John I’lnughman’s Talks†have been issued by the hundred thousand and com- manded an amazing popularity. dohn Craig Horticulturist to Experi-l mental Farms before Agricultural1 Committees of the House of Com- mons. In large fruits we are making a test of varieties running along two lines; ï¬rst with the standard varieties chosen from the nursery mens’ catalogues of to-day. These are the product of the ï¬rst intro- ductions by the early settlers, as modified by selection and cultivation, and called the American varieties. These varieties have mostly come to us from the western and moister parts of Europe as our settlers came from that region. The French colonists when they ï¬rst came brought with them the best fruits of their native locality; the English settlers follow- ed and brought their favorites; and the Scotch, Irish and Welsh did the same with theirs: So that to begin with, as 1 have already stated, we had the fiuits of I western and the milder portions of iELll'Ulic. I might say this class then, ,composes one side of the varietal test. iSeContlly, the other olas. is made up of Eust European sorts which you haVe Tre- quently heard referred to as the “Russian apples,†and I will draw attention to them quite often in the coarse of my remarks, as we are testing this class extensively. In order to give you an idea as to the causes which led to their introduction for trial into this country, touching upon the early history of the movement, I will relate briefly a few facts relating thereto, upon which hinged the beginning of the work- Ever since the introduction of that Duchess of Oldenburg from Russia, byl Way of England, about 40 years ago, there ‘ has been a growing interest in the fruits of that cold climate. The ï¬rst large importation was made in 1870 by the United States Department of Agriculture. This comprised 252 varieties, but owing to the very crude state of Russia pomology, evidenced by the many synonyms after- wards found in the collection, and coupled with long unpronounceable namesâ€"the work of sifting the good from the bad in this cumbersome list has been laborious and slow. Without going into details in‘ regard to their merits and demerits I may say, that already a sufï¬cient number of valuable varieties have been found to re- pay all the expenses incurred in the work of introduction and trial; and when we, ‘look at the possible advantages to be de- 1 {rived from these foreigners by uniting them with our native varieties, thus obtain- ing hardiness on the mu; side and possibly l quality on the other, the beneï¬ts likely to |accrue are inestimable. I have said the first importation was made by the United States Department of Agriculture, but the credit of bringing this work to a practical and a successful issue is due to a Canadian â€"one now departedâ€"I refer to the late Chas. Gibb, of Abbotsford. Quebec. At great personal expense, - in company with Prof. Budd of Iowa, he undertook the arduous task of visiting the various local- ities in which these frurts were grown, making notes on condition and quality of tree and fruit. The result of those in- vestigationsâ€"a fair and unvarnished state- ment of facts was published and is now the foundation of our knowledge of the 5 Russian fruits. As far as we know at present any apple tree not. up to the grade of hardiness of Duchess, Tetofsky, Wealthy or Pewaukee is of doubtful usefulness for planting in the district of Ottawa or similar latitudes. I lnve refel red to the work in apples. Experiments of a like nature have been carried on with pears, cherries and plums. Nodaughter’s education should be con- sidered Complete until she thoroughly understands every branch of housework. Don’t take alcoholic drinks on leaving a warm room to go out into the open air. Tea, coffee, or the like, is inï¬nitely more appropriate. There is only one sudden death among women to eight among men. When you borrow money you borrow trouble, but a‘. the same time you some- HORTICULTURAL LINDSAY. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, I892. DOMESTIC HINTS. on the back of the neck when sleepless. Try a hot, dry flannel over the seat of neuralgic pain, and renew it frequently. Try snufling powdered borax up the nos- trils for c-xturrhul cold in the head. Try a. cloth wrung out from Cold water, put around the neck at night, and Covered with a warm wrap. for a sore throat. A mother can guard her child from hav- ing an accident by strict supervision over him on her part, and by not permitting her child to be left to careless servants; by not allowing him to play with tire; to swing over banisters, and to here knives and lplaythings of a. dangerous character; to keep all poiSonous articles and cutting instruments out of his reach ; and, above all, insisting, loveingly, affectionately, but ï¬rmly, upon. implicit obedience. Acci- dents generally arise from one of three causesâ€"namely, from wilful disobedience, or gross carelessness, or from downright folly. In making Scotch cookies take one-half SCUlCCl] pint warm water ; mix with flour{ to an ordinary Consistency, dissolve one half ounce yeast, and add to the mixture ; then add 1; oz. salt. Mix well, and put into buttered jar. There should be plenty of room in the jar to allow the batter to rise ; leave for about. eight hours in al warm place. In the morning, it ready,‘ they will have left the side of the jars; Then to every 4 pounds of batter add 6 oz. of lard or butter, 6 oz. currents, and a. little flour to make quite dry. Leave for another hour. Then make into small round pieces, and allow them to prove. Bake in a sharp oven. The quantity of yeast mentioned may not be the same as we use here; but you will easily learn how ‘ much to use for a given quantity of water.. l When the cookies are provingr keep them I from the air. and don't shake them. Mount Vesuvius is again in a state of eruption. Premier Abbott is almost entirely re- stored to health. On Sunday afternoon Michael Disher, only twelve years of age. committed sui- cide by hanging himself in the barn at his home near Freeland, Mich. Mrs. R. J. Doyle who founded the ï¬rst Canadian braucn of t‘1e Women 8 Chris‘ tian Temyemnce Lnion. died in Owen Sound on Tuesday morning. The Canadian Paciï¬c Railway Company has decided to establish telegraphic com- munication befween Rat Portage and the Rainy River district. It is believed that a number of vessels bound to or from European ports were lost in the storm that prevailed on Monday and Tuesday. A quantity of wreckage has come ashore on the west coast of Ireland. The fourteenth annual convention of Ontario Grand Lodge of the Ancient Order of United Workmen \\ as opened at Ottawa Wednesday morninfr Grand Master Workman Milne presiding. Sir William Hsrcourt’s speech at White- chapel has attracted much attention. A special cable says he contends that the Irish Local Government bill is sure to fail in giving satisfaction, and may bring about the defeat of the Government. Mrs. Anna Margaret Montagu, of Col- eraine, daughter of Lord Robert Montagu, was committed for trial yesterday, charged with the murder of her three-year-old daughter. It appears that the governess locked the child up in a dark closet for some offence, and that the mother, to in- crease the punishment, fastened her hands behind her back with cords and secured her to a. ring in the wall, in such a position that. her feet barely touched the floor. After three hours, when Mrs. Montagu opened the door of the closet, she found that the child was dead. METHODIST Cambridge St. â€"Re\. \1, Camp bell. Pastor. Services at 111 A. M" and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School and Bible Class at. 2.30.01asses at 10 A. M BAPTIST, Cambridge Streetâ€"Rev. \V. 1{_ Anderson Pastor. Services at 11.00 A†M. and 7.00 I’. In. Prayer M eating Sab ath morning at 10.30 A. M. Sabbath School at, 2.30 1’. M. Young People‘s Society of: Christian Endeavor'Monday M730 1’. M. Prayer Meeting \Vednes- P01 day at 1.00 P. 1\1.-â€"All seats free. Prayer Meeting, \Vednes‘day at, S 1’. M. Young People's Christian Endeavor Societv. everv Friday evenim: at, 7.30 METHODIST, Queen Street.»-â€"Rev. Newton Hill, Pastor. Services at 11.00 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School at: 2.311 1’. M. Praver Meeting Thursday at; ST. 7.30 p. M. ANDREWS (Presbyterian). William Street. Rev. Robert; Johnston, B. A., Pastor. Services at 11.00 A. M. and 7.00 1*. M. Sabbath School at; 3.00 P. M. Prayer Meeting \Vednesday at 8.00 P. M. Young People's Christian Circle Sabbath Morning at; 10.15 PAUL’S (Church of England) Russell Streetâ€"Rev. C. H. Marsh, Rector. Ser- vices at 11.00 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School at 2.30. Prayer Meet- ins: Wednesday at 7.30 P. M. MARY‘s_gBomz§n Catholic) RuseeLStxjeet Iii‘e'é. “Vieeiéiexiei'éivLahrent, Pastor, Rev. Father Nolan, Curate. Services at 8.00 and 10.30 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School at 3.30 P. M. M. C. A., Rooms Cor. Kent and Cam- bridge sts. Open daily from 9.00 A. M. to 10.00 P. M'. Prayer Praise meeting Saturday at 8 P. M. Young men’s meeting Sunday at 4.15 P. M. Short addresses. Good singin ..Young men always welcome. Dr. . H. Clarke, President; 0. K. Calhoun Gen. Secre- tary. NEWS ITEMS. The Churches. Search the Happyjolng of the County and It’s a well~ recognized fact that daily surroundings have much to de moulding of character. If the home be neatly furnished the chances are that the good man will come home early 0’ nights and that the children will grow up reï¬ned and gentle. nowadays compared with the outlay that would have bEen necessary a few years ago. Well-made Furniture was never cheaper in price than it is to-davâ€"â€"â€"with us. at least. A Sideboard for $4.50, a Bureau for $4, a Bedstead for $2, or a Mattrass and Springs for $5. Common Chairs, Hall Furniture, etc, very low. We are making a special drive in Mattrasses. A Handsome Parlor Suite for $30 Art in the household and beauty in the ordinary surroundings in life was the gospel propounded by the late Professor Ruskin and other elevatOTS of the human mind, and to realize what progress has been made in this direction it is well worth while paying a visit to the _ . . mag- niï¬cent show rooms of the old established furniture house of Me 5513. egééTHE MARCH 0F IMPROVEMENT? OWEN MCGARVEY8: Son. 1849-1853 Notre Dame Street. MONTREAL- A walk through those spacious show rooms :5 a revelation; in fact they really amount in themselves to a Montreal Industrial exhibition in their line. Such must necessarily be the reflections of anyone who pay; a visit to this ï¬rm’s prominent establishment and makes a tour of nspection through their attractive warerooms. Everything in the furniture line is to be found there, from atwenty- ï¬ve cent chair to a ï¬fteen hundred dollar bedroom set, and prices to suit everyone. No one neecl despair; the millionnairc can furnish his house from top to bottom Wlth the ï¬nest and most costly, and his junior clerk can ï¬ll hlS little tenement with useful and pretty articles at prices to suit his more limited means. On entering the well-known and extensive warerooms on Notre Dame street, the visitor is struck bv the excellent display of Sideboards, Dining Tables, Hall Stands, Bookcases, Wardrobes, Library Tables, Writing Desks. and Easy and Combination Chairs of all descriptions. meets the eye, such as 3, 4, 5, 6 and .7 piece parlor suites. Odd piece suites, gilt chairs, corner chairs, ottomans, divans, tete-a-tetes. piano and foot-stools in plushes, brocatelles and silk damasks of all the newest and latest shades; also a full line of fancy centre, card and work~tables. statuette-stands, ladies writing desks. music stands and easels. On the third floor a ï¬ne selection of Rocking, Easy and Reclining Chairs claims particular attention. The celebrated bent wood furnit- ture imported from Vienna, Austria, and of which the Messrs. McGar- vey make a specialty, also occupies a prominent position on this ï¬OOr. On the fourth floor bedroom sets in profusion are to be found frcm the cheap ash wood to the elegantly carved set valued at ï¬fteen hun- dred dollars. Brass and iron furniture, of which they have iust receiv- ‘ed a very large conSignment from Birmingham, England. is an especial- ly noticeable feature: handsome solid brass bedsteads and pretty cots for children from $30 up to $125â€"there they are of the newest designs : neat iron bedsteads as low as $5, and rismg to much higher ï¬gures. (it .i also be found here. A great advantage in this house is that the price of every piece of lurniture and article 15 marked in plain ï¬gures, but owmg to the Widening of l\:otre Dame street west, which will necessi- tate their removal next spring, they are now offering special induc, ments in the way of Discounts off the marked prices. The entire est tablishment‘is a model one, neatness and order prevailing everywhere: all available space is taken up to accommodate the enormous stock which they carry, and from which purchasers can select at their liberty. Their new passenger elevator Will be found not only a great covenience. but also a luxury in its way to carry their customers to any of their six flats of show rooms. The ï¬rmly established reputation of this well-known house is a sufï¬cient guarantee that outside show is only the last thing aimed at, and that stability and good value for money are to be found in the old established ï¬rm of Messrs. I Owen McCain/6y 65’ 5074. ANDERSON, NUGENT CO. 18:1 and 1853 Notre Dame Street, Furniture Dealers and Manufacturers, near the Market. On reaching the second floor a beautiful assortment of YOUR HOMES CAN BE FURNISHED CHEAPLY A Bed-room Suite fur $11, You will ï¬nd our Furniture. E W ILL G-I‘ corner of McGill street. VIE YOU ,ment of on: E‘I‘UBE fore i All kin der lor should crease able t< ions 4 1.153