THE DAILY EXAMINER. MARCH 21, 1887. Fullerton Marsh Road. No attack upon Hon. Mr. Fergusen is more than that respecting Fuller unjust ton’s Marsh Road. Petition after petition has been sent to Governments for Orlo- succeeding years and years b ack ever since ¢ apt bar owned a farm in the neighborhood —ask- ing that this road be opened; but no Govern- ment grappled with the difficulty until Mr Ferguson was ¢ lected a representative ¢ f the district The tried todos have Marsh Creek, and The Sullivan Government bridge on Fullerton’s opened the greater part of tho road, which|ang 6 of be ready for use this spring ! that the will probably It is complained Western terminus of the road is Southport and not} What are at the head of the Ferry wharf ? the facts? Every petition asked that the road be brought out at Southport; only a few men, who were believed to be person- ally interested, wantedit to end at the Ferry wharf. In fact, the main cause of the delay, since Mr. Ferguson took hold of the matter, has been the location of the road with a view of meeting the wishes of the people. i . _-— > eo---— Significant Tacties. THE tactics of the Grits and their organ anent the election in the Third District are hig hiy significant of the weakness of their advanced one Third District should now deprive themselves of case. They have not yet good reason w hy the electors of the representation in the Government and on the Government side of the House of As But they say THe EXAMINER isa very wicked paper and Mr. Ferguson wrote ae EXAMINER'S articles about himself. [It does not matter who wrote Tue Exami- NER'S articles concernmg Mr. Ferguson. Are they true And they to the And should they influence sensible are Pp int men such snxious to use their franchise in & Way a3 to promote the interests of their community! These are the questions to be the Third District. We may however remark (1) that Mr. had directly or indirectly, to do with Tue } ‘ . eiecwors Oj considered by the Ferguson whatever, Ex- fact of the Patriot seeking to prejudice the public nothing AMINER $ articles, and (2) that the against them, and to nullify their effect by stating that Mr. Ferguson himself wrote them, is good proof that they are articles calculated fluence tl inds of caiculated to influence the minds of sensi- ble and patriotic men, -Few persons know what an immense amount of literary work Mr. Beecher ac- complished. The following is alist of the published works : Sermons, ten volumes of 475 pages each. Sermons, four volumes of 600 each. “A Summer Parish,” 240 pages. ‘**Yale Lectures on Preaching,” first, sec- ond and third series. **Lecture to Young Men,” 506 pages. ‘Star Papers” 600 pages. **Pieasant Taik- A bout Fruits, and Farming,” 498 paves. **‘Lecture Room Talks,” 384 pages. ‘‘Norwood ; or, Village Life in New Eng- land.” 549 pages. ‘*The Overture of Angels.”’ pages Flowers **Eyes and Ears; or, Thoughts as They Occur.’ ‘Freedom and War.”* **Royal Truths.”’ ‘Views and Experiences of Religious Subjects. , **Life of Jesus the Christ.”’ This is in addition to his writings on agricultural, political and general subjects, his routine work and sp2cial trips for lec- turing or speaking. He was always greatly interested in church music, more especially in the form of congregational singing, and one of the first things done by the new pas- tor from the west, when he took charge of Plymouth Church, was to compile a book of hymmns and tanes for the ase of his own and sister charches. The Anti-Scott-Act petition is on the rounds. A_ correspondent propounds an important question in relation to the peti- tion. Now is the time to consider the matter. : <inutiibiiting ~he Grits are pouring upon Hon. Mr. Ferguson a torrent of lies. Will they suc- ceed in securing his defeat bv such foul means ‘ We shall see. ; ek ee ee A String of Pearis. A short paragraph in the Patriot of Satur- day, headed ** THe Examiner's Health,” contains the following among other literary gems for the edification of Sunday readers : ‘* Hooted and yelled,” ‘** In a comatose state,” ** Delirious shriek,” ‘** Wandering condition of mind,” ‘ Muttering, grumbling mood,” ‘In the last stage, “ Lot of clrive 7 ~ res of fell disease,” ‘Ss pping the strength ‘Of the Water Street Daily,” “THe EXamMiner’s malady.” his list might have been enlarged, if only the eye of the Patriot's editor had fallen upon the following, which was evi- dently written concerning a political oppo- nent by another Grit editor :-— “‘Andy Falkner is worse than a thief, meaner than an assassin, and uglier than a erazy quilt. He would steal a twenty-five cent umbrella, A hopeless fanatic, a ‘slimy izard, a toad with devilish arts, a whelp of sin, 2 malignant hyena, a gangrened buzzard. His s'an lerous soul is imbued with the electric fires of perdition, bis black heart emits sul- phuro 18 fumes till his whole nature is absorbed in one homogencous mass of corruption.” SNE. mone Tur the Queen’s Jubilee by issuing a _—< hod ee Amman, ETE BE ET RET THE DAILY EXAMINER, - - - -, | tion, candidates may select to be examined Davies Government | French, (5) English History and Compost- , and failed most egregiously, | tion, (6) Mathematics, (7) Chemistry or built the} Electricity, (8) Physical Geography and | | i ships are to be offered in each of the prin- cipal colonies, of £50 and £25, respectively. | | The competitors must be between the ages | of 14and 16. The examination papers will | be sent out from England. The agent gen- ral of the Colonies will settle the condi tions, ete., of examination. Candidates will be examined in dictation and arith- re ic. iu the competitive part of the examina- in any four of the following subjects : (1) Latin, (2) Greek, (3), German, (4) Geology. Mathematical Subjects —Books 1, 2, 3, 4 Euclid, Algebra (to Binomial Theorem), Plane Trigonometry (to Proper- ties of Triangles. ) English History and Composition —Can- didates will be tested in essay writing and a knowledge of the outlines of English His- tory. Latin, Greek, German and French—The examination will include translations from these languages into English and vicejversa, and grammar. The scholarships will be tenable for three years. Would it not be well for our Local Government to bring to the notice of our Agent-General the fact that we are one of the ‘‘principal Colonies,” and that our young men are entitled to compete { -_-——___- + 22-2 St. Joseph's Day. Sr. Josern’s Feast occurring this year on Saturday the ceremonies connected with its celebration at St. Joseph's Convent were not carried out until yesterday, when Mass was celebrated in the Convent Chapel at 7.30a.m. At this Mass upwards of three hundred approached the Altar, and a number of young ladies were admitted as members of St. Joseph’s Sodality. in the evening, at 7 o'clock, the usual panegyric of the Saint was pronounced by the Rev. Father McIntyre, who eloquently dwelt on his great virtues, and exhorted all’ present to imitate them, and like St. Joseph, their recompense would be the greatest in the gift of Heaven. After the sermon Bene diction of the Blessed Sacrament was given by the Rev. Dr. O’Ryan. The Altars were beautifully and _ tastefully decorated, and when lighted up produced a charming eifect. The was pro- vided by a fuli choir of children’s voices from the schools attached to the Convent. We need not say that the ditlerent pieces were well executed. Among the clergymen present we noticed, besides the above named, the Revs. C. McDonald, A. E. Burke, F. X. Gallantand J. A. McDonald. singing Ward Beecher. RIBUTE M' GLYNN. Fienry A BEAUTIFUL FROM FATHER THe Rev. Dr. McGlynn, of New York, wrote, in response to an invitation to Beecher’s funeral, the following letter:— “New YORK, March L3, 1887, “Rev. AND DEAR Mr. HALLIDAY: I regret very much that I cannot, in compliance with your courteous request, be present this evening at the meeting in Plymouth Churchto honorthe mem ory of the great pastor and to condole for the ir- reparable ioss. I must therefore content myself with saying briefly in a letter what I should have been so glad to say more fully in speech. It is a sign of the dawning of the better day for which the world has so long yearned that such a meeting should be possible; and that you and yours s),ould so earnestly desire the presence of a clergynuian of that Church which seems so remote, and tco many would say, su antagonistic to yours. foremost in the work of hastcsiag the coming of the better day was the grea: man whose death we moarn and for whose work we give thanks. None other so well as he taught the men of his land and time to exalt the essentials of relivion pure and undefiled in which we all agrec, and to minimize the differences that seem to separate us. To him was given to see with clearer vision, to reveal with unequalled genius, and with tire- less energy to make common among men the meaning of Him whom we allrevere as our di- vine teacher, who taught of old on the Monat and by the seashore the core of all religion—the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. I cheerfally confess that from Mr. . Beecher I learned from the first day of my ministry a new enderness and fulness of meaning in the Our Father, and Lam gladto be able here to state that the theology ofthe old Church azrees with his in this, that the essence of religion is in com- muanion with God through the love of him for His own eake, and in loving all men for God’s sake with the best love with wiaich we love ourselves, and that while sacrifice and sacrament, creed and ritual, prayer and sermon and song, may be and are powerful helps and necessary manipulations »f this religion, which is love, without it thev are but a moekery, a sacrilege, and a blasphemy. I thankfully count him among the masters from whom Ihave learned a fuller meaning of the prayer, ‘Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” We must allazree with Mr. Beecher that the conditions and duties and strifes of our temporal life are but signs and symbols of = spiritual and eternal things, and thatin the yearning of the whole world for liberty, equality, and fraternit under the reign of justice and love, if we pinck out the religious heart of it, the burden is not worth the bearing nor the battle worth the fight- ing. He apd the other giants of his time have cleared the field and illuminated the way for a higher progress, and helned to give more perfect assurance of victory in the strife thatis now be- ginning against a wider slavery than that against which he dealt his sturdy blows—the enslavement of the masses by the classes-—and to cement a tnien, not merely of American States, but of the peoples of the world. Stimulated by his example and encouraged by his success, let us take up the burden of the peo- ple’s wrongs ‘where his tired shoulders have iaid it dawn, and fight the battle, if need be, even till the night shall come, and we, asthe burden falls from our shoulders and the weapons from our hands, shall have a nearer vision than was given to him of the reign of the Prince of Peace. Af- fectionately and fraternallv yours, “EDWARD McGLynn.” 2 Whiskey has scored a decided triumph ever prohibition. It has saved a man’s life when prohibition would have killed him. The hero of thisincident is said to be a Boston man. He was on the fatal train which burned up 80 many people in Vermont. Arriving at Concord, he stepped into a saloon to take a drink. The whiskey was good and he took another pull at it. Rushing out to board his train, he saw it disappearing at the rear end of the depot. A few hours later the White Plains horror was accomplished, and the car this man should have been in was the one from which not a human being emerged alive. —————> -@ - ae Srzctat Lot of Men’s Fine Boots this week, at J. C. Sprague & Oo’s., at thirty per cent. discount. 3i—mch21 ++ <i Oo Sam Jonxs left Troy, N. Y., $200 richer, but | {the young men who brought him there were’ $100 out of pocket. Troy has no liking for re- | vivalists. TRemMeMBER the extensive sale of stocks at rooms of A. H. B. Macgowan to-morrow at ;noon. Following will be offered: 100 shares | srotest Gas Company, 2 shares Inland Bovigation | vive Wevigewen hehe i ecv PB. 1 ene | Military Scholarships. An Islander Abroad. ube a talents die a ail ; | Late English papers announce that the | WHAT HE THINKS OF NEBRASKA A HARD ‘Governing body of the Oxford Military | PLACE TO LIVE IN. 7 - . . - ; oo | Col ege propose to offer scholarships for | — : a: f competition in the Cr slonies. Two scholar- A TALENTED and successful young sian } der, who, during the past few years, ha travelled over the greater portion of Western States, has recently written racy descriptive letters to a friend in eity. That friend has kindly handed tic letters to THe Examiner. Although ' intended for publication,they are of absor» ing interest to all, especially to intendi emigrants. The first letter deals principal with Omaha, Neb., and the following is 2 extract therefrom :-— ‘How + ividly the memory of the long winter evenings of ten years ago return to my min as I wander over these snow-spotted prairies of Nebraska. At that time how eagerly | drank in the honeyed words of the land agent as some discontented farmer drew from his pocket a fulder of some Nebraska railroad and proceeded to enlighten the assembled mob of country loungers sitting on coils of rope and soap boxes around the comfortably-heated stove of that Orwell haberdashery—on the grand possibilities for great wealth in this then to me far-off western land. How I sym- pathized with the trusting honest granger as he rehearsed his grievances and cursed the un- toward fate that consigned him to life long toil on a mere 100-acre Island farm. The simple-minded countryman would as soon doubt the words of Holy Writ as doubt the truthfulness of what he saw in print; his honest nature could never conceive that the artfully executed and glowing descriptive pamphlets were other than the philanthropic efforts of humanitarians to spread the gospel of great wealth for all to the poverty-stricken inhabitants of P. E. I. But the whirligig of time brings many changes and new conditions, and now, instead of listening in open mouth wonder to the marvellous tales of the land agent. Tam in close communion with the men who till Nebraska’s soil, and_ the stories I learn at the fountain-head of truth are no less marvellous than the land agent's, but in an opposite direction. The farmers tales of hard- ships, cyclones, frosts and drought, would make a very respectable volume in itself, so I am not going to burden your precious time with detailed statements ; but it is my candid opinion, based on a corn-dodger diet, and a skirmishing-for-facts expedition in eight coun- ties of this State that 99 of every 100 farmers who have settled here regret it. Nebraska has not furnisheda decent ‘living for nine- tenths of its agriculturists. This is an undis- puted fact. An examination of the mortgage records of the state shows that in the past ten years there has been placed over 100 million dollars of mortgages on farm property. Ten years ago a man with a little means would come here from the east, take up a quarter section and settle down in the routine duties of a western farmer. Soon he tinds be is losing ground and getting behind, He has to pay big prices for the necessities of life and at the end of the season he is in debt. Then he plasters his farm with a mortgage and next year it is foreclosed. Some othersman with more means will buy the land in at sheriff's or mortgage sale—-spend his time and what little money he has saved from the wreck of a farm down east in digging the hard-earned dollars from the soil, only to meet the fate of his pre- decessor in a few subsequent years. The railways are the snetion pumps that help to drain the farmers of their little accumulations. The Nebraska farmer toils and digs that Jey Gould and Vanderbilt may enrich their al- ready plethoric purses. He goes through the sweat-mill to foster monopoly. The railroads have everything in their own hands. They,, bribe justice on the bench, buy up whole legisiatures, elect United States Senators, and, ‘ tine» ste ti A New York company with a capital of ten millions of dollars has been formed to develop the iron mines of Ontario, and certainly there | is plenty of room for the energy not only of | such a corporation as the one proposed, but of half a dozen others like it, as far asa plentiful | upply of iron goes. There is more iron lying | bout the rocky districts of Ontario than any- | thing else, there are hills, islands and valleys | ‘it, but in many mines the proportion of sul- | -phur to iron in the ore, is so large, that it is, ficult to use the iron, and there is absolute- ly no market, owing to the American duty, for | the product of those mines in which the tron, is comparatively free from sulphur. fron mining in Ontario is, under existing cireum- stances, rather unprofitable. Reciprocity | would, however, make the nearly valueless | iron mines of Ontario, that is, those that are | reest from sulphur extremely valuable. Goncert & Entertaiment IN y. M..©. As WA ae a. TUESDAY EWG, 22nd Inst. (BENEFIT MISS BARTLETT.) PROGRAMME. Instrumental i.:i 3:22 Fig. ... Band Address. .....Chairman—Rev. J. McLeod Vocal, ‘Open ye the Gates,” Baptist Choir Reaeitask «> +s Langues <sos Miss Lawson Solo—‘‘The Sailor's Grave”. ..Mr. Walsh er rEer 6. Cornet Duet—“‘Twilight Dews”...... ea ......+ Worth Bros ‘*Sailors’ Chorus”... ...Zion Choir | Voeal Lente amneiitel © oss ons cx res Bo he Jand Vocal Duet—-“‘Spring Birds”......... hawk Miss Scott and Miss Hughes ~J @ ~ ' 10. Reading}... ....0e-Mr. T. A. LePage | 11, Solo Vocal. .‘* Marguerite”. ..Miss Knight | 12. Vocal ‘* Teach me, O Lord!........ coe oa@dbbau é sokpe ees ner ers Baptist Choir 13. Cornet Solo ‘Sweet Spirit, Hear my PEROT: sag ces _Mr. Fletcher 14. Solo Vocal—‘‘He Giveth His Beloved Blea... v.ccseadesecisstev et Miss Fowle .. Mr, Knight Thou Great Zion Choir 15. Solo Vocal—‘*Absalom”’ 16. Vocal—‘‘Guide me, O JOnOWE os Frc T5e. ss Doors open, 7.30; Concert commences at 8, sharp. Admission, 15 cents. March 21, 1887, Tenders--Tenders. TENDERS will be received up to the first day of APRIL for the building of a Stone Foun- dation fora large brick building. AU informa- tion given at our office. MARK WRIGHT & CO. March 21—Iwk LIMESTONE, 100 TONS for Sale at MeMillan’s coal depot. R. McMtLLANn. in fact, run the entire State. of cost in the administration of State aiffe’) falls back on the farmer. For years the roads have been preying upon the farmer now the lords and dukes of “American fir are clamoring for a navy to protect them i foreign foes, and for police to keep their owx working men from cutting their throats destroying their property. The bluster Congress in relation to the Canadian fish dispute is nothing wore than an attempt the money kings to still further tighten the grasp on the Jabor and agriculture of America. Every rifle and cannon which the government intends to build in order to protect our belli- cose editors and fresh senators from the wrath of foreign foes will come out of the pockets of the debt-burdened farmer and the poorly fed Jaborer. Every dollar the rich man pays for such he takes ont of the pittance he pays to the producer and the laborer for the result of their toil. But I haven’t said my say about Nebraska. Lincoln is the capi- tal—{famous to Irishmen as being the home of Patrick Egan, formerly Treasurer and Presi- dent of the Land League—and a city of en- chanting ugliness, stretched over severa) miles of bottomless mud. Just now the number of mushroom cities springing up in Nebraska almost equals that of Colorado in her palmiest days. The sills of frame houses, planted at nightfall, blossom with rafters at sunrise. What was yesterday a bleak prairie, is to-day teeming with life and excitement. Real estate climbs to the top notch, and then all of a sad- den the bubble bursts, There isa scattering ot the lambs that were fleeced, and the bottom is knocked out of another boom. This is especially true when laying out new lines of railroads. Real estate men swoop down on the farmer and offer him fabulous prices for a few acres of land, which he, of course, refuses, only to wake up next morning to learn that the railroad won't touch within ten miles of his old ranch. Omaha is having one of those periodical booms. A stranger would suppose he had fallen into a lunatic asylum when he comes here. Everybody seems crazy on real estate. The Missouri River has been sold over and over again, and lots invisible at high tide are worth some thousands.” oe a —- A visitor to Ireland was bidding farewell and said to his attendant: ‘‘Good-bye Pat.” ‘“Good-bye, yer honor. May God bless you, and may every hair in your head be a candle to light your soul to glory.” ‘‘Well, Pat,” he said, showing him a bald pate, ‘‘when that times comes there won't be mueh of a torchlight procession.” me THE auction sale at the Farm of Owen Con- nolly, Esq., on St. Peter’s Road, about a mile from the city, on Wednesday next, March 28rd, at 11 o'clock, a. m., of 16 Milech Cows with their Calves, also Farm Horses, will give @ chance to those who want to buy good stock. en Aw Ottawa despatch of the 17th says :— Wallace Veitch, an employe of the C. P. Rail way, leaped from a baggage car as it jumped the rail near the Union station. The car up- set and crushed him to death by falling on him. ~<a eo Use the great specitic for cold in head and catarrh— Dr. Sage’s catarrh remedy. saw ——~— -— -s50e0ee - In the Alps: Guide —‘If the ladies will only stop talking your honor may hear the Radical Clubs of London will celebyate | Merchants Bank, 20 shares Charlottetown | T°?" of the waterfall across the valley.” oe But every geal as : - STOCKS, STOCKS. iA Augtion, at Rooms, TUKSDAV next, 22nd March 21—1i inst., at 12 o’clock, noon, immediately after arcs in Merchants’ Bank are sold :— . { Share P. &. I Steaua WNaviga- tion Co. 2 Shares iniand “team Navigation Cw. iv Shares tharlottetown Gas ©o. (first preierence ) 19 Shares do (second preference) A. H. B. MACGOWAN, Auctioneer. March 18—3i LOBSTER FACTORY FOR SALE Wwe will Sell by Public Auction, Qn TUESDAY, the 22nd Instant, COMMENCING AT 2 O'CLOCK, P, M., the Valuable Lobster Factory, situated at Park Corner, New London, latety occupied by Andrew © McLeod, together with Cook House, Bait House, Stable, &ce. ALSO— Boats, Traps. Rope, Fishing and Pack- ing Gear, Cooking Utensiis, Stoves, &e. Also, about 250 Empty Boxes and about 100 Boxes, Cans, and sundry other articies too pum- erous to mention. rerms made known at sale. ANDREW ROWNESS, Assignee. BOWNESS & ANDERSON, Auctioneers. Kensington, March 8, 1887—tl sale The above Sale fis postponed until THURES- DAY, the 29th fnst., same hour. A. BOWNESS, Assignee, TRADE SALE. THE Subscriber will offer at Auction, on TUES- DAY next. the 22ad inst., at 11-15 o'clock, a. m., in front of Warehouse, Lower Queen Street :— 20 puns choice Antigua Molasses. 15 tierees Bright Barbadoes do. 50 half-chests Tea, 10 boxes pure India Tea (for mixing, 100 brls Flo ur, patent and superiors, 25 bris Cornmeal. 2) buchets Assorted Confectionery, 6 boxes tinest Canadian Cheese, 5 Tubs Butter. 6 boxes Coleman’s Starch. 24 boxes Sgap. f) dozen Brooinas. 10 casks Kerosene Oil. 5 carboys Numatic Acid. 150 reams Wrapping Paper. 180 dozen Assorted Twine. 10 bags Cot on Seed Meal. 25 bris Herring. 2;400 Ibs choice Table Cod fish. 20 cases Saimon, “Cairns” brand, 10 cases Lobsters. 25 boxes Prepared Farina. 50 Hardw Pork Barrels (new). 20 Empty Molasses Puns. 20 do Kerosene Casks, Terms at Sale, HORACE HASZARD. Ch'town, March 17, 1887—tl sale Ganned Salmon TWENTY cases Canned Salmon, “Cairns” brand, packed at Antigonish. N.S. flue larce meat. and far superiorin quality and flavour to the British Columbia salmon, sold by grocers, | For sale by . ‘Go to J, Cy Spragus ts Cot’y Ulvernney Stile rei urn rn Se NOTICE. Intending back to my first of April, for the next ten days the remaining stock on hand at a sacrifice. J. B. McDONALD. Ch’town, March 21, 187—dy & wky to move ownh store i will sell LONDON HOUSE, House-keeping Goods, New White and Gray Cotton, New Printed Cottons, Bieached Sheetings, Unbleached Sheetiags, Pillow Cottons, Tabie Linens, Towels, Toweling, 0 ’¥°HESE goods have just been opened for Spring Sale, and having been bought before the i recent adyance in Cottons, will be found extra value. CARPETS! CARPEHTS! Brussels, Tapestries, Hemps, Floor Cloths, Matting, Hearth Rugs, Door Mats, Lace Curtaina, Tailoring , A lot of Spring Tweeds just opened. Department. — HARRIS & STEWART, SUCCESSO RS TO CHO, DAVIES & Co. Ch town, March 7, 1887.—wky TN - — ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAQRDIGARY OOO OO Or i N order to have more room, and increase our Printing, Bookbinding «od Blank : posed _ Book Manufacturing Business, we are enlarging our premises, an’ sve dis of our Stock of General Siationery, Blank Books, Law and Customs Bianks — TO Sees ae DIAMOND MR. BooKsToRE, CHAPPELLE, QUEEN SQUARE, where parties may in future procure everything in the above line, at prices lower than else JONRN CoomMmss. where in the Province. March 19, 1887. Referring to above, we have to announce th attend to every description of Custom Work, in PRINTING, BOOKBINDING AND having lately added New _a—-- at we are now better than ever prepared to BLANK--BOOX MANUFACTURING, Machinery and Plant. i ‘ We shall endeavor to still further increase the reputation of our Establishment as the — LEADING HOUSE for first-class work and } ow prices. Estimates cheerfully given for all classes of Book and Pamphlet and Mercantile Work, Promet DELIvery. March 19, 1887. JOHN COOMBS. ——= Sarpets, Bilcloths, —— AND—— HOUSE -FURNISHINGS. 47 E offer the Largest Assortment in the City in these goods, and at prices very low daring March. 28 BALES ROOM PAPER NOW READY. See our Sample Books before buying elsewhere. Sheetings, Pillow Cottons, Tickings, Table Linens, Towels, Gray Cottons, White Cottons, Prints, Ginghams, SHEERSUCKERS. 70° A very large assortment of LADIES’ CORSETS, at extremely low prices. 10. JAMES PATON & CO.,, MAN KOT Ub'tbwny Marth 13, I887.—@y wky SQUARE. » 7