L‘w with the inimitable Mercier, who like the amphibia crept out of the slimy waters of Quebec bnodleism. ascended the high- lands of religious sanctity, and with the dire witchery of pretence took from the hand uf unsullied and exalted purity in Rome honours which, says the True Witness, were never claimed by a Bohemond of Tarentum. or Richard Coeur de Lion, returning to the slimy depts of boodleism again. This is the man who rose to power by the arts of a demagogue and with unblushing front and insolent audacity in seeking to array the nation- alities of this country in hostile camps. that he, by appealing to their baser passions, may regain a power which he had abused to his own aggrandizement. This is the man who forged the gigantic instrument of SpolialiOl by which he sought to command the clergy, the Jesuits, and the Laval forces to his side, tainting even Protestant honour~the instrument by which his opponent, Sir John Thompson, was made his glad de- fender, and by which the one hundred and eighty-seven of our Federal Parlia- ment fell upon their knees before him and ratiï¬ed the stupendous dishonesty, thus breaking down the integrity of the national conscience. This is the man who influenced a corrupt majority in Parlia- ment to Vote an additional ten millions, with the bonds of which, to the dishonour of Canada, he went peddling around Europe, knocking at the door of money- lenders like an impoverished spendthrift; coming back with a few millions to squander in Pacaud style and divide amid I take that great commoner, George Brown, whose monument adorns the Queen’s park, Toronto, as I trust it will for centuries, and place it beside that of John Haggart, whose introduction into the Cabinet was a shock to the country, whose advance to the leadership of On- tario is an insult to that great provmce, and generates suspicion as to the sagacity of a Premier whose vast legal attainments and general impartiality we have accusc m- ed to admire. We take Sir A. A. Dnrion, who carried the white 1in 0‘ a stainless hfe to the sepulchyeï¬angi goqtrgtgt }_xi_m with v_vhqp_1 ? We take Chief Justice Lafontaine, the man of Napoleonic presence and untainted political life, and place him against Chapleau. As a citizen of Montreal I know the last named, and have failed to discover one pulsation of sympathy with high virtue or moral advance, and whose departmental incompetence has been made manifest to all. was the sincere when he brought in his preposterous bill for a commission to in- vestigate the evils of the liquor traflic, hnowing, as he did. that the land was moist with its tears and blood? If sincere, will he explain why the com- mission was never organized, and that, too when this week has seen the assembling of Parliament? We brand his motion as an insincere act. to kill the aspirations and hopes of two millions of this Dominion. But let him‘pass‘. _ We take Sir Alexander Gait, who was the rival of Gladstone in the brilliance of his budget speeches, and the exalted honour of Sir Leonard Tilley, and place them against the viceregally discredited Foster, who, when lifted frcmthe platform of the temperance advocate to Ministerial office. practically turns his back upon the reform he formerly advocated by engineer- ing a policy of indeï¬nite delay. I ask the Hon. Mr. Foster, Minister of Finance, REV. DR. DOUGLASS DISCUSSES THE POLITICAL SITUATRON. man’s Almonte â€address when he condon- ed dishonesties by charging on the British Administration a deeper corruption, since he must have known that one of the greatest lawyers of his age, when convict- - - - 1 r , J _7.- t _____ J In the light of the great reform which is the mission of this Dominion Alliance, nothing is more alarming in our outlook than the steady intellectual and moral decadence of our public men. As I con- trast the ethical and mental status of our leaders in the past with those of the present, that contrast is sufï¬cient to ï¬ll every citizen who wishes well for his countiy with blank dismay. Take, for instance, Robert Baldwin, whose serene elevation of character and political apti- tude made him the idol of great Ontario, and contrast him with Sir John Thomp- son, whose unfortunate traditions and re- gretted princrples forever unï¬t him for winning the conï¬dence of the people of the Dominion, principles which, says Gladstone, are at war with impartial ad- ministration. hever did a statesman utter a more unworthy speech than that gentle- foreign land. Would that we could frown out of this Dominion all men of kindred criminalities. We would not be unjust even to Sir John Thompson. That gentle- man introduced a bill for the protection of sweet Canadian girlhmd and carried it against the ghouls and vampires on the floor of the Parliament who laboured for its defeat. s We place Nova. Scotia’s greatest states- man, Senator Howe, whose speeches are the classics in our political literature. against the juvenile and dubious u‘ter- ances of a Tapper, who as the country knows, is held in place by the foster in- fluence of his father. To the Editor of The Watchman. DEAR SlR,â€"M§y I ask you DEAR. Simâ€"May I ask you kindly to copy into THE VVATCHMAN the following address of the Rev. Dr. Douglass, deliver- ed last Friday before the Quebec branch of the Dominion Alliance in the city of Montreal. I think every Christian citizen will feel it is timley_: -vâ€"v-- Ed of I'léï¬otiism and fraBd, was frowned out of society. anfl‘died self-exiled in a. Aâ€"‘- ‘ ‘ l- MOXTREAL, Feb. 28.â€"Rev. Dr. Doug- lass, principal of the:Wesleyan Methodist College, at a public meeting held on Fri- day evening under the auspices of the Quebec branch of the Dominion Alliance, made a. remarkable speech on the political situation. Dr. Douglass strongly con- demned the leaders of both parties, and called upon the country to make a sweep- ‘ ‘ 7 c L : ______ 1__ LA ing reform in 5 said:â€" §6ï¬f3 Respectflfllï¬ the coarse of his remarks Be T.' M. CAMPBELL. “ What is the origin of motion 2†asked a. celebrated lecturer. Well, there are many origins. A call to dinner will bring men to their fee: in a. second, and a. spider down a girl’s neck is the origin of some of the liveliest, motions the world ever saw. When I think of the forces arrayed against a Wilberforce, the very darkest hour of the conflict presaged the mom when the shackles were struck from every slave on British soil by the irresistible genius of British liberty. I do not forget the time when Webster, Calhoun, Clay. and Benton gave their splendid powers to the perpetuation of the dark curse of tyranny on this continent, but the great God rolled the conscience of the millions South of us into one mighty projectile. which, like a thunderbolt, struck the monster to the death and gave this con- tinent to justice and liberty. I look for the coming time when the Merciers and the Thompsons, the Haggarts and the ‘ Chapleaus, the Langevins, and the Fosters shall go down into the deep waters of ’oblivion and there shall arise a brighter day, when God shall give the leadership of this great Dominion to men of pure character, of exalted principles, who shall lead the coming nation up to the pl-me of morality and honour, who shall wipe out the curse that has devastated this land and make it a sanctuary of that righteous- ness that exalteth a nation, fulï¬lling a nobler destiny as a benefacter to the world. I call every young man and aged at this crisis of our country to lay aside party, and stand for right and true. The national conscience is debauched by paitisan chiefs. The demand is that the entire Christianity of this county should be thrown against the men who have ruin- ed the reputation of Canada and dis- honoured her flag. May God help the right. It is ours to have fallen on days deso- late as those that followed the corrupt Restoration after the Commonwealth in the times of the feeble Charles, but I do not stand here as a despairing pessimist. I‘VI a French-Canadian, one of the best in this city. This man, after meeting temperance delegations with a hypocritical smile and the blandishment of insincere promises, turned around and gave away to the Hogans. the Dawes, and saloon-keeping crowd almost everything they desired. It was asked that the corporation might have the right to limit the license. Mr. Mercier refused the request, for would he not lose money? It was asked that the right of private prosecution might be continued. Mr. Mercier refused, for would it not disturb the Sunday liquor sellers? He would uniform his police that the liquor men might not be taken unawares. This political brigand, relentless and merciless, to please his liquor-trading friends, has smitten every family in the province by so dextrously altering the law that the liquor sellers cannot be convicted at any court for selling to minors; even tender girlhood may go in and carry out liquor to their parents Nay, more he has practi- cally increased the difliculty at every turn in arresting the multiplication of liquor hells in this city; especially when Com- missioner Dugas is allowed to insult, as he did, the secretary of this Alliance in his endeavours to stem the destroying tide of ruin. Around the name of Dugas we fling the fragrance of special regard. It is not over the wretched and ruined families begging their bread because of liquor that Mr. Mercier throws the shield of his fostering protection but over the Duroch- ers and Riendeaus convicted of Sabbath desecration; it is for them that judgement is arrested, that they may ply their work lwith impunity. Deep is our sorrow thus ito speak of any man under heaven, but, i when I think of the malign career of this Iman, I think of him corrupt as a Marl- ;borough, desperate in his dodgings as a ‘Halifax the Trimmer, and replete with ‘ arts of deviltry as Titus Oates, the incom- ‘ parable of his age. Never was there a more righteous act than this dismissal, and never was there greater demand for Royal Commission than for that which let in light on the astounding villainies which have made the country infamous for a generation. But, in the name of eternal justice, if a Royal C.)mmission is right in Quebec, should not the cold steel of a like commission have been driven into the corruption of Ottawa ‘3 There is not an honest citizen but has asked the question: Why was this c0mmission not granted? \Vhy were Foster and Thompson allowed to burk investigation by their petty legal technicalities? Why did an oppressive majority in these committees restrain search when it. was clear to the country that the heads of departments escaped as by the skin of their teeth 1 I say to-night that if the misfortune should come, which God forbid, that Mercier should return to power. the sin lies at the door of Foster and Thompson, and the men who have failed to redeem our national Government ‘ from the suspicions of a corruption which is hidden, but must be unveiled before the conï¬dence of the county is again given to hundreds of worth men, like a Bourinot, a Bowles, a LeSueur, and others in the service. ‘ Dr. Douglass concluded his powerful ar- raingement as follows:â€" ï¬nancial and inevitable ruin of our prov. Ince, which already staggers to a fall beneath the weight of thirty millions. Never in the memory of living man has our city suffered in its ï¬nancial and moral interests as at the hands of this man Mercier. This man with the majority has let loose the curse of gamolling upon us, when the Supreme Court of the Unit- ed States has outlawed the lottery and the New Orleans infamy has come to an end. Mr. Mercier has given the blessing of lotteries to his dear countrymen to Corrupt the youth, to ï¬re the cupidity and entrap the unwary, and spread ï¬nancial ruin through thousands of families, misled by the greed of ill-gotten gain. This man while felicitating his peOpIe with the idea that he was a patron of learning by open- ing a few feeble night schools, has, for the sake of money to waste on his political immoralities, let loose the ï¬ery floods of liquid damnation to burn up his dear countrymen. I take this from the lips of band of plundegqrs, _hastening the THE WATCHMAN; LINDSAY, THURSDAY, MARCH IO, 1892. The following characteristic anecdote of Carlyle has never been published till now. During a Visit to Aberdeen, a walk at night- fall brought him to the poorer quarters of the city. At length he reached a dark lane with a beam of light from an under- ground dwelling thrown across it. The philosopher had just gained the conï¬nes of the radiance when he heard, 1n the house, a. voice, rancous and angry. exclaimâ€" “ Yer an eternal leear, I tell ye.†His comment was Carlylean to a degreeâ€"“I like’t to hear that,†he said, “for I thocht; it micht weel be true.†On the eve of an Irish election. English visitor :--â€"“Well, Patsy. who do you think will win to-morrow ?†Patsyâ€"“ Begorra, 301', the survivor 1†Statistics show a great decrease in the number of accidents and losses during wh a t may be called the modern period of the steamship as compared with the earlier, and especially w1th the transition period from sailing vessels to steamships. and no doubt may be accounted for by the fact that the ofï¬cers in charge were more thoroughly acquainted with theix duties. and the ships and engines more efï¬ciently constructed. The record for the year 1890 was of the most satisfactory kind, for, notwithstandino all the ri .slts involved, we ï¬nd that there were nearly 2000 t1ips made from New York alone to various European ports, and that about 200,000 cabin passengers were carried in addition to 372,000 emigrants. all without any acci- dent. It is an interesting fact to note that in the large lines of steamers the average safety of the sailor’s life 1s hirrh. Tl 113 late Mr. Thomas Gray stated, for instance, that in the Union line to the Cape he found that only one passenger had died 111 three years. In the P. 0. only one seaman had died in one year in the forty vessels of the line, and during three years not a single passenger has been lost; the Inland liners had lost no passengers (int of a million, and only eleven seamen had died in three years; and the Cunard liners had no passengers lost in three years and only nine seamen died â€"Pr0f. Henry Dyer. | From 1838, the time when trans-A tlantic steamship trafï¬c was established, till 1879 there were one hundred and forty-four steamers of all classes lost. Of these twenty-four never reached the ports for which they sailed, their fates being un- known, ten were burned at sea, eight were sunk in collisions, three were sunk by ice, and the others were stranded or lost from various causes. Many of these were small, but some were of considerable size, and their loss caused much public feeling. The ï¬rst which disappeared was the President, which was never heard of after she sailed in 1841. A Cunard steamer, the Columbia, Was wrecked by running ashore in 1843; but it is somewhat remarkable that this was the only Atlantic steamer lost in thir- teen years after the disappearance of the President, a fact which speaks volumes for the quality of the workmanship of the ship-builders and engineers, and the skill and care of the navigators. In 1854 the City of Glasgow. with four hundred and eighty Souls on board, was neVer seen or heard of after she sailed ; and in the same year the Arctic, of the Collins’ line, was sunk by a collision, and five hundred and sixty-two persons perished, and two years later another steamer of the same line dis- appeared with one hundred and eighty-six persons on board. The Austria, of the Hamburgh-American line, was burned at sea, in 1858, with a loss of four hundred and seventy-one lives. Some of the most striking losses in the following years were the City of Boston, of the Inman line, which disappeared in 1870 with upwards of two hundred persons on board; the Atlantic. of the White Star line. which ran ashore in 1873, causing the loss of ï¬ve hundred and sixty lives ; the Ville du Havre. of the French line, which was sunk by collision in the English Channel, and two hundred and thirty persons drowned; the State of Florida, sunk by collision with a sailing ship ; and the Cunard liner Oregon by the same cause with a coal schooner. DETROIT, March 2-‘Joseph T. Richard- son, a resident of Detmit, is the latest person claiming to P9 a Victim of the wily l machinations of Michae:, the PriHCe, the ‘ leader of the cuhmy “f Latter Day Israel- ites on Hamlin avenue. Accompanied by his z'ttoruey, Mr. Richardsml appeared before Judge Garthel‘ this morning with a. petition for a writ of habeas Corpus to secure- possession of his ten-year-old daughter Ella. Richardson stated he had lived happily With his wife for ï¬fteen years. Two years ago, however, she came into contact With Prince Michael and his sect. Since then everything had changed. At that time Michael the Prince was em- ployed at the Free Press as a printer, under the name of Michael Mills. Shortly afterward he left that paper because he was required to work on the Sabbath. and commenced preaching: his religion in the houses of the neighbourhood in which the Richardsons lived. “He preached at our residence,†said Richardson, “after con- vincing my wtfe that he was not a preten- der. After that he spent much ofhis time at my hc use, and on many occasions I found him in the company of my wife upon my return from work. He managed to enthuse her with his doctrines, and she Soon devoted all her time to reading the ‘Flying Roll,’ ~ and “hen Michael the Prince returned from a missionary trip to England 1n 1890 she joined his sect, and my house then became a rendezvous of the Israelites. When I went home on Feb. 19th last the house was deserted. My wife had gone, taking our ten-year-old child. I traced them to Mrs. Daily’s, a member of the colony, at 39 Hamlin avenue. My wife refused to either come home or give up the little one, declaring' that all outside of the chosen would be destroyed. The child cried to get away, but they would not liberate her." A writ of habeas corpus was issued by Judge Gartner. STEAMERS LOST IN THE ATLANTIC Modern Safety on These Vessels. Latter Day Israelites. ST. PAUL'S (Church of England) Russell Streetâ€"Rev. C. H. Marsh, Rector. Ser- vices at 11.00 A. M. and 7.00P M. Sabbath School at 2.30. Pray er Meet- inz \Vednesdav at7 3.0 P. M. ST. “Reciprocity and proctection are no more ahke than water and oil.†“But water and oil can be made to mingle by addition of a little lye.†BAPTIST, Cambridge Streetâ€"Rev. W. K Anderson Pastor. Services at 11.00 A.‘ M. and 7.00 P. M. Prayer Meeting Sab~ ath morning at; 10.30 A. M. Sabbath School at 2.30 P. M. Young People’s Society of Christian Endeavor Monday at 7.30 P. M. Prayer Meeting \Vednes- day at- 7.30 P. M.â€"A11 seats free. At an evening party in the South of France, Victor Hugo was Introduced to a lady with the words, “ This is the gentle- man to Whom we are indebted for ‘Notre Dame de Paris.’ †METHODIST, Cambridge St.â€"-Rev. T. M, Campbell. Pastor. Services at 11 A.M.. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School and Bible Class at 2.30. Classes at 10 A.M. Prayer Meeting, \Vednesday at 8 P. M. Young People's Christian Endeavor Societv. everv Friday eveninqat 7.30 METHODIST, Queen Street.â€"Rev. Newton Hill, Pastor. Services at; 11.00 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School at 2.30 P. M. Praver Meeting Thursday at; 7.30 P. M. Some months ago about 500 persons left Yorkshire for Brazil, but owing to hard- ships and the unfavourable climate more than 300 of the number perished. A spe- cial cable announces that Mr. Waller, a merchant of Bradford, has arranged to de- fray the entire expences of bringing home the remainder of the band, some 150 per- sons Greatly .cstonished, she exclaimed, ‘Whnt! is that ancient architect still liv- ing ?’â€"E'venement. As the mother and grandmother moved triumphantly away a shrill, small voice came from umder the bedclothesâ€" ‘You’ve got it on the wrong foot I’- Rehoboth Sunday Herald. If the threatened strike of English miners to prevent a reduction of wages takes place it is calculated that over a million of employees will be idle. At the mountains, Paterfamilias: ‘Come girls, we must start for home right away. J 391‘. Frogtufgrived last nigh t.’ ‘There, now.’ said his mother, ‘the old sliver will be drawn out and Eddie’s foot will be all well." But the uplifted switch awed him into silence. In a minute more the poultice was ï¬rmly in place. and the boy was tucked in bed. Girls. ‘ Why, pa, how 63in you think of such a thing? After waiting all summer, why should We run away at the ï¬rst male arrival?‘ ‘I wrin’t have 116 poultice,’ he declared, stogply. Onvcewuixore the little fellow opened his mother. Two old friends meet after a separation of many years: ‘Time flies,’ says one. ‘but after all you are_nqb_s_o b_alt_1 as_I expected t9 ï¬nd you.’ ‘Bald ! I Should sa§ not. Look lï¬ the glass yourself. I’ve more hair than you have} There is a. time to keep silence. but it evidently was not the riaht time in the case of a boy mentioned, who lives in an Ontario town. He got a sliver in his foot and, in spite of his protestations, his mother decided to poultice over his wound. The boy vigorously resisted. _ If the poultice was ready the boy was not, and he proved so refractory that a switch was brought into requisition. It was arminged that. the grandmother should apply the poultice, while the mother was to stand with the'uplifted switch at the bedside. The boy was told that if he ‘opened his mouth’ he would receive that which would keep him quiet. As the hot poultice touched the bcy’s foot he opened his mouth. ‘Youâ€"’ he began. ‘Keep still,’ said his mother, shaking her stick, while the grandmother busily applied the poltice. 'More hair than I have? That absurd, perfectly absurd ! Let’s counc ’em 1’â€" Epoch. Customerâ€" ‘You said these woollen shirts wouldn’t shrink. But just look at this will you_._’_ __ Dealerâ€"‘Well, I had good reason for my statemenc. I bought a. big stock of them three months ago, and it hasn’t shrunk a partical yet; that is to say, it hadn’t up to the time you bought that pair yesterday.’ Professor Whackem. ‘Who helped you to do those sums 'Z’ John Fizzletop. ‘Nobody, sir.’ ‘What ! nobody? Now don’t lie. Didn’t yum: buthogheflp you 2’ ‘Yes you will, Eddie,’ declared both mother and grandmother, ï¬rmly; and. the majurlty being two to one, at bedtime the poultice was ready. - ‘No, he didn’t-hélp me; he did them all by himself.’-â€"Tea:as Siftings. 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 . Youn men always welcome. Dr. 5V. H. arke, President; C. K. Calhoun Gen. Secre- MARY’S (Roman Catholic) Russel Street â€"Rev. Vicar- General Laurent, Pastor, Rev. Father Nolan, Curate. Services at 8.00 and 10.30 A. M. and 7.00P. M. Sabbath School at 3.30 P. M. ANDREW'S (Presbyterian). William Street. Rev. Robert Johnston, B. A., Pastor. Services (it-11.00 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School‘ at 3.00 P. M. Prayer Meeting Wednesday at 8.00 P. M. Young People‘s Christian Circle Sabbath Morning at 10.15 The Churches. POT-POURRI. Search» the Happy Homes of the County and The ï¬rmly established reputation of this well-known house is fï¬ sufï¬crent guarantee that outside show is only the last thincr aimed at and that stability and good value for money are to be {Ound in the old established ï¬rm of Messrs. Oweï¬ McGaWey 59’ 5074. 18:: and 1853 Notre Dame Street, corner of McGill street. t On the fourth floor bedroom sets in profusion are to be found frcm lthe cheap ash wood to the elegantly carved set valued at ï¬fteen hun- ‘dred dollars. Brass and iron furniture, of which they have just receiv- ‘ed a very large consignment from Birmingham, England. is an especial- ily noticeable feature; handsome solid brass bedsteads and pretty cots :for children from $30 up t0 $125â€"there they are of the newest designs : neat iron bedsteads as low as $5, and rising to much higher ï¬gures, can also be found here. A great advantage in this house is that the price of every piece 0! lurniture and article is marked in plain ï¬gures, but owing to the widening of Notre Dame street west, which will necessi- tate their removal next spring, they are now offering special induce- ments in the way of Discounts off the marked prices. The entire es- 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 covenienc'c, but also a luxury in its way to carry their customers to any of their six flats of show rooms. It’s a well recognized fact that daily surroundings have much t moulding of character. If the home be neatly furnished the chances are that the good mam will come home early 0’ nights and that the children will grow up reï¬ned and gentle. Odo Library Tables, Writing Desks. and Easy and Combination Chairs of all descriptions. No one need despair; the millionnairc can furnish his house from top to bottom with the ï¬nest and most costly, and his iunior clerk can ï¬ll his little tenement with useful and pretty articles at prices to suit his more limited means. meets the eye, such as 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 piece parlor suites. Odd piece suites,or gilt chairs, corner chairs, ottomans, di\ ans, tete- -aâ€" tetes ,piano and foot-stools 1n plushes, brocatelles and silk damasks of all the newest and latest shades; also a full line of fancy centre, card and “ork- tables, statuette-stands, ladies writing desks, music stands and easels. 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. Sideboards, Dining Tables, Hall Stands, Bookcases, Wardrobes, Everything 1n the furniture line 15 to be found there from ï¬ve cent chair to a ï¬fteen hundred dollar bedroom set, and suit everyone. On entering: the well-known and extensive warerooms on Notre Dame street, the visitor is struck bv the excellent display of On the third floor a ï¬ne selection of Rocking, Easy and Reclining Chairs claims particular attention. The celebrated bent wood furni- ture imported from Vienna, Austria, and of which the Messrs. McGar- vey make a specialty, also occupies a prominent position on this floor. YOUR HOMES CAN BE FURNISHED CHEAPLY nowadays compared with the outlay that would have be necessary a few years ago. Well-made Furniture was newt cheaper in price than it is to-daVâ€"with us. at least. Art in the household and beauty in the ordinary surroundi life was the gospel propounded by the late Professor Ruskin and elevators of the human mind, and to realize what progrcsh; has made in this direction it is well worth while paying a visit to the niï¬eent show rooms of the old established furniture house of Me: OWEN McGARVEY Son A Sideboard for $4. 50. a Bureau for $4, a Bedstead for $2 Or a. Mattrass and SpIings for $5. Common Chairs, Hall Furniture etc., very low. We are making a special drive 1n Mattrasses. éTHE MAIGH 0F IMPROVEMENT.§% ANDERSON, N UGENT CO 1849-1853 Notre Dame Street MONTREAL- ‘ARLOB FURNITURE On reaching the second floor a beautiful assortment of Furniture Dealers and Manufacturers, near A Bed-room Suite for $11, You will ï¬nd our Furniture. WE WILL Gâ€"I‘ V'E YOU Progress has been the Market. surroundings in uskin and other [O the mag- of Messrs. a twenty- prices to fore Wedne: ALL WATCH All kin‘ enjoy US a year