Ontario Community Newspapers

Ottawa Times (1865), 9 Feb 1876, p. 2

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spite of the doctors," and there is no denying that the members of the profes sion, with what justice the following facts 'iupnlud'-mm-ho_w, h&ve been ntbmpondbbbrnpodm, of the m“m"hwhm“un find & tmst ro ook at cloths, tweeds and doeskins fron ‘he best markets in Britain ; ev< y garvei. is made on the premises by first cla«<< workmen, and as we keep no realy made clothes we pay particuiar attention to the get up of our order trade _ We charge a (air price and ip give areliable article ; we attend to our ewn business, are determined to leave nothing uncdone to give satisfaction to our customers, and have no aoubt will sucâ€" ceed as (~s/clo«s lailors and Gentlemen‘s Outftters.â€" 1. W. Kanny & Sons, 149 (late 86) Sparks sgreet, O tawa. *,* Pure Irish The only difficulty we forsee in conâ€" nection with this remarkable prophecy is that the Govermor General and his advisers, piqued at the idea of the little production on which they have spent so much time and trouble being so faithâ€" fully foreshadowed, and their thaurder stolen so completely, may, just to spite the prophet, chauge their policy, make up their minds to introduce an entirely rew set of measures from those originally agreed upon, and thus make the Speech from| the Throne an entirely new document. There are two things they cannot alter, howeverâ€"His Excelâ€" lency‘s visit to the Mother Country, and the bard times. Upon these points, Mr. Zadkiel may safely defy the Gonmpont and all the powers of the earth to contra dict him. LOW DOCTORS PRESCRIPTIONS 1kE XaAaADE UP. this country. Let us have that tariff good friend, at the ecarliest opportunity‘ #o that we may have a stock laid in of the gokds upon which the increased rate is to be levied. Why that word "unreasonâ€" able" should oceur so often in this reâ€" markable production, it is hard to conâ€" ceive. And then Mr. Zadkiel, with all his wonderful fund of information, is so tantalizingly general in his remarks about 2e future policy of the Gorernment in eference to the Paâ€"iiic Railway. Why soguld their be so* The arrangement arrived at between the Provinces in reâ€" gard to immigration, Mr. Zadkiel says, is to be annulled ; an increase is to be made in the "subsidy, and the organization of the Northwest Provinces." whitever that may mean, and it is " not improbable"â€" as if anything appearing in the Cifizen, especially from Mr. Zadkiel‘s pen, were anything but probableâ€"that the early meeling of the Washngton Treaty Comâ€" mission will ue torâ€"shadowed. The Civil Bervice is to be semerally reorganized and rearranged, by which we suppose it is intended to convey the impression that Mr. Zadkiel will be turned out to graes ; the Intercolonial Railway will be referred to ; and ghe Act for inStituting . suits against the Crown will " probably‘" be amended. refuse _ to _ commit tremseives in adrence to any statement of their intentions ; but we protest there is no‘ such seal upon the lips of Mr. Zad keil, writing especially in the interest of the oppressed but loyal opposition of ing the past year been thoroughly depressed. What a wonderful prognostiâ€" cator Mr. Zadkiel is !| Who but a pro pluet, or the son of a prophet, could have so correctly divined the great secrets of the Caklinet as to be able to predict that the speech would touch upon that moot topic Anmd weare to have a re organization of the terifâ€"such a reorganzation as, in the opinion of Ministers, will promote the prosperity of the nation at large, without oppressing or unduly favouring any one particular interest. It is too bad, however, that we should be toid so much of the secret, and not the whoie. We can easily fancy why Minisâ€" ters,, acting from prudential reasons, and under official resiraint, should The /mikiel of the Citizer has again bsen progmosticating. _ That compli~ meni which our contemporary ence paul _ the Civil _ Service of the Mother Country, siapping on the mouth, as it did. the babblers and eave+droppers who have brought cmtumely upon the pabuc service of Canaia in order to satâ€" isfy the immoral gree i of a hardâ€"up jourâ€" malist, has bad its effect, and surâ€" reptimous _ informants _ have _ taken tie hin: and given way to the "almanac mao.‘ The fory newspaper his employed Mr. Zadkiel, or some " special" who has & turn for that sort of thing, to " write up ‘ the sovernor‘s Speech in advance. Ihe speech from tha Throme is proverâ€" bial for its stereotyped style and bad conâ€" struction. Mr /.dkiel has at least comâ€" plied with these req=irements :: writing out iis ~.grecusi.‘" _ He has look ed _ into the _ Ministerial _ horoâ€" scope, 1ad _ hs _ discerns _ clearly that the " happy efects‘‘ of His Excel lency‘s recent visit to Britain will, " it is Rot unreasonable to suppose, ‘ be referred to, How very absurd you can be when you like, Mr. Zad. : Who would suppose that you would svppose anything unrea somable? it would, in truth, be rather unreasonable if some reference were not made to that subject,.as any school boy will be prepared to tell you. Then we are told that the trade of the country has dur. La THE SPEECH FROX THE THRON & No OQuthtters.â€" i 86) Sparks <er Fmeze always T‘ke Tumes. sents a (a aADVERTISEMENTS INSERTED IN THIS EDNESDAY, FEB. %, 1876.| @UEBEC,AND EARL DUFFERIN‘S Pa«o. ommz ____|_â€" POSED RERASILIETATIONX 06 IT wau‘s Hall Queâ€"n Rest iura 8T about "living in of { the Session pre ortunity to gentle ablishment a visit with a call wil ronts M thank him for his well judged and well timed intervention. The construction of & continuous pro~ menadé sround the entire_circuit of the walls and outward base of the citadel}, in tho_uyhpmpa.d,mnlddoubo-voq great additional attraction to visitors, and source of enjoyment to the citizens. â€" But the grand old historicalidea of Queber contemplated wrong to the people of this country generally ; who had reason to look upon it as a sad and . unnecessary destruction, and an? irreparable one, ‘of very costly monuments of national his: tory, unequalled on the continent ; in which they alsoâ€" and their posterity had a right of property and common moral inâ€" terest. Public feeling therefore warms to the proposed design of His Excellensy for their preservation and picturesque deâ€" velopment ; and certainly posterity will The idea, previously entertained, of destroying the walls of Quebec, and utilizing the ground occupied by them and their outworks for building purposes, was not only a mistake as regards the welfare of the city itself, but was also a most of what we have already got| of it. SJ:mthn nearer, and northward, w6 have still greater, but less hospitable re, of which history is dumb, except as to some sea fights andfort capturing, on Hq’dm’n Bay, ynthought of now, owing to their in â€" signi ce in action and result. lhoultlhzlm preserve most of what we have alr may Have no history save that of p p.mui industry.â€"Heroic histoty, i most |costly product of any countrf ; of common historic renovn,â€"a powerful point of attraction, round which should gather sentiments of future common naâ€" tionality. Were they too sordid ta see it themselves, the literature and the general ;ntelligence of the civilized world would tell them so. Our country is but sparsely sown, as yet, with sites of important historical inâ€" cidents. Our old settlqments present a few points, here and thereâ€"sites 0f isoâ€" lated memorable events ; some of them of gréat importance in the history of our country. We have vast, newly acquired in regions, twenty times as large as Switzerland an i Tyrol, but less habitaâ€" ble less likely ever to have a history,â€" umnéuo prairie lands, which, we hope, the elevation of other cities, Quebec is, and ever will be, to Canada what Rome is historically to Italy and Athens to Greece. All jpatriotic â€" and intelligent Canadians, alike of French and of British origin, must feel tha: it is to them au hsirloom Notwithstanding all that confederation of the Provinces and commercial develop: ment may have done, or in future do. for * MaRMIO®." In view of His Excellency‘s spiritâ€" stirring proposal to restore, and further appropriately develope, the renowned historical aspect of the ancient metropolis o(Can«daâ€"to those now gathered here, who may have once made it their home, and mauy more, long linked to it by outr special Uttawa trade, or the tie of national origin, a little garrulous gossip may not be out of place about Quebec and " Auld Lang Syne." For is it not the season for stories of oiden time. We have classi¢ authority for it :â€"does not Macaulay tell us that it was * *‘ in the jong nights of wioter, When the coli north winds blo@," that the Roman‘s told their stories of " the brave days of old." Firz Eustace‘heart fols clovely pent. \~at to gove h s raplure vent, h ...3 Pus »par het> b‘s oncir;er leny Aod raised Lie bridigâ€"liaud, A ud m aking demiâ€"volte in air, Cried,*" Where‘s the coward that would not dare lo dight for sucria and !" Sach dusky granjeur clobt xi the h igh W here the huve e «tle hoids it» state, cuse. â€" "he borough analyst of Sheffielil, Engiand, in a report of a series of expeotiâ€" monts which he has just M, nas rathér «hifted the responsibility upon othér shoulders. His experiments were made with a view to test the accuracy and honesty of druggists, and an Euglish ex. change gives a summary of the results. Various prescriptions, each including /a full dose of some costly remedy capable of ready and accurate estimation in x mixture, were presented to certain ‘drugâ€" gists. A series of three samples in which 120 grains of iodide pf potassium were j reseribed were found on analysis éo conâ€" tain 122, 120, and 76 grains respectively. Uf three samples, which should have contained 16 grains of sulphate of quinine, one contained ouly 94 grains. Another sample, which should have containcd 40 grains of sulphaterof quinine, had but 30 grains. Of twelve samples of glycerine only five were pure and of the standard strength. Three samples of citric acid were found to contain a minute trace of lead. In short, the result of the experiâ€" ment was such as to give just ground for apprebension that druggists are not more troubled with consciences than groce‘s, and that the effect of the poisons retaile J by the latter is often enhanced, instaad o( removed, by the aduiterated antidotes dispensed by the form»r. The Health Committee at Sheffield have, it is stated, decided nof to take any procee lings against the druggists whose medicines . were found wanting. This is satisfactory | to the offenders, but less so to the public. . [n the meantime, it is only fair to medical men, who are ofterm accused of killing their patients, to admit that this @ccusa . tion is hardly just if their prescriptions are liable to revision by chemists and druggists. Mine owa romantic towa ! But o mbward {@r, with purer blaze 0i O ‘hi> moust«das e l tie ra~s, Au d as each heathy top hoy gissed 1t gieamedi a pirple ametbyst. Siz,â€"I beg to send you the following article on " Quebec," for insertion in your paper, should you think it likely to be iJteresting to your readers. _Â¥ And all the steep sio; e dowao, / Whose ridgy back neaves to the sE y, Pied deep and wassy, close and high, To the Editor of the THE TIM BS,. Edrrco@ 0n dA Ccliaa. for his well rJu&‘ul and well Yours respectfully, © SuBSCRIBER.‘ t of Sheffieli1, could never be fully realized, and the imâ€" wries of experiâ€" | pression produced by it would be that of ide, nas rathér a magnificent,, but beadless, statueâ€"if upon other | it be not ¢rested, as proposed, by a real ts were made and appropriate "Castle of St. Lewis," as a accuracy and | memorial of {past/and an insignia of presâ€" n Euglish ex. ent Viceâ€"Regal dignity, and of ‘the Im of the results. | perial power it reprbsénts} and nothin h including ia | could tend more to realize such ideas, l? medy capable sides being beneficial in other ways, than timation in ‘a â€" the occasonal présence of Her Majesty‘s ) certain ‘drugâ€" | representative at suitable seasons. sdue 4. | 1080Dg over the low bu 'qu gfl'!a‘ mouth, a little a rity will | St. Lawrence bends nc and well | view behind the bold hes ous pro~ Tarlgd with Aigi of ‘the Mahol wood, which ado!, in in the distanc 6 elevated plain of the St. | 0 & very mm%h.m ors, and . summits of the great is â€" But r:mthohm Quebec ) some of us these re: D0 AC°0 Wewrqoy TV | * * i CEmt °0 PEERCwene C MBl 40 his f 7‘*c-;" _â€"h" ja Arl s in en mamewt h dend beiewe as e aermnes , Moklian, & _ Arless, iffs continue gou troops. wé + 3 N TA Â¥ i 1 uce ons in ambrmn uroms ,hmmw&"fi‘wflfl" soulg‘s / soxkraing NEw : foaming over the low but.wide fall that effect of their costume and action, tboir: t cluls“s mwuw ha.r.’l‘x:mnutb,n little &;);O 'hl::‘fl: mfl.,hudhmmhyinw:}n;}t RiD fll"fl Adl U Or enc ward M ow * hS Tiew fmlind the bold headiand of, Pointe Tebnlp viompariagy battioe in which wis AUENTS W a mt uo. BP 10Dvomnatize a Pispau, Diamediately, abore:~Wolfe‘sdisplayed in efeqiiremoiiowtheir onciont !â€" f : Cl i Acand the: clifle we 0e the hidle (Buiiopal " weepon =â€" the idoppient groat | MEeMALL AN: j yaried with .fields and clump8}i broadsword described by Tacitus, as used | ~ ‘ ¢ and ts of wood, which extend till all is: the same dari mmcrbytheircuh] & elevated Ph‘l,dts:‘.':;'::mq ces m m.zrltm& _’hil,fii:l;hdt_ho'ut',; #% ARLESS, seen stretc where ‘indeperidance against he utnade ‘e Agents for Ontari». f : m%muwm«mum@mh,;*. takee .mmm‘ e lln::.thnm blue sumâ€" d'm'“-. army actually engaged in . ottawa,Jan, %, 1876, OTTAW a, .. 1at t has G it i . .BGASm Followi the line of 'fl-;- proposed Pmm"nl:‘ln: or rather here ‘"cornich," Alon} the top of the e under the front nlr of the olww i southâ€"westward up the river, the scene beâ€" fore us, though i:f;riorin grandeur to that from which we have;justiturned, becomes more intensely interesting as we advance. The river, firbflfiwmd- to : more than a mile and a in width. forming lnes and groups of thickly clustered,| bright dwellings ; till pale and nebulous in the remotest Jhunoo,tboh.utoyo ! sight may trace the line of settlement sweeping lbrupgi up into the dim moun: | tain region of "Chemin duCaps." _ ~| _ _On the left, far beyond this.noble exâ€" panse of water, the view is bounded on rthtnorthlzfibo long array of the lofty, massive and generally dome shaped sumâ€" mits of the Laurentian Mountains, the most majestic of which visible is Mount Ste. Anne, nb«*at three thousand feet high. The jeye f}:lrlom t.h:m’ ?:'n the rivd:: stretching far away, the hazy di tance of thirty miles, Cap Tourments dir its vast dix of two thousand feet abruptly down to the horizon. ,_The infinite continuity of dark forests, in which they are throndo%.ddn & sombre grandeur to these very y hills, Their lower sloping uplands, and the lowlands bencath, that skirt the St. Lawâ€" rence, down through the parishes of Moutâ€" :&ronci. A;:so sg:;dion, Chateau Richer, Anne, cachim, are exquisitely beautifulâ€"lovely to distant viow,‘Lu still more so to travel through. ~Adormed with: occasional spires, and continuous Joseph. F beyond, with high fsirenerichens it recedes, the west end of the of rOfl:fl- projects upw:_rd'; inmn .;m.a into w rver bavihurylaniyrcun maliege | _ But some will say that it is all romantic, ‘ sentimental nonsenseito set so much by naâ€" | tional monuments and historical reminâ€" | escences, now that weâ€"have logical comâ€" | mon sense and political economy (> | guide us. But he must have studied the history of the world amiss, or not ‘at all, _ who â€" has _ not | learned tuat after instinctive selfishness, sentiâ€" | ment has ever exercised an incompara. | bly greater power therein than the dooâ€" trines of political economy ; and that the great difficulty is now, and ever has been, to get the world to be governed by sound logical common sense at.all. Now, there‘s | one half of societyâ€"the fair sexâ€"God | bless themâ€"they are constitutionally iliogical, and are all the better for it. Phey have sentiments always ready for their guidance, that are on the whole preitier, nicer, more benevolent and better, in a Christian point of view, than ours. _ And as to the power of such senâ€" | timent, there is Joan of Arc, that heroic | saint aud martyr, that should have been ! canonized long ago â€"was there an atom of political economy, logic, or what is called common sense in i)or project ?â€"Quite the reverse ; it was sheer sentiment, alone, that gave the averwhelming f; by which she liberated France, :ienmden down, almost to political extinction, by foreizn invyasion. We see, on a great _ scale, the same worldâ€"turning force in the |crusviec. In th; fall l?: the GmkhE‘m pire, we judge what it might have I done tho:.’lini the Greeks of &t time of the cliff from which the front wall of the citadel -rrinp. From this point, insccessible ~now, the view is much grander than from Durham Ter: ace ; and the effect, from the nature of the position, vox peculiar. . Those who have climbed the long steps (since burned) that rose from the water edge to the citadel, will recollect the semsation it gave of clinging to the face of the cliff, like a fly to the wall : grim ramparts above you and grimmer rocks beneath, that gungo steeply down to the spot, far low, where the American Gensral Montgomery was defeated and slain, in h:s daring attempt to sarprise the urpu town by way of Mountain street, a hun dred years ago. Down below, the long, crowded line of* shipping skirts the shore ; and the dizzying effect of the elevation isincmnd’ by the impressive swiftness of the mighty river, which sweeps the crafts crossing it from their sad beyond the high oiilh opponiter aon eyon: opposite, an the picturesquely planted town o(“iovil Without dwelling on the magnificent view from Durham Terrace, with which ;um::n.d f .lhr'o.:;hmtau‘gn“. Garâ€" e ernor‘s den, pas the monument to Wolfe and Mountcalm, and up to the highest crest sweep down to the water edge, near_the pretty old fashioned Church . of St. Through the press the proposed works have been fulg and ably,described and illustrated. â€" The turrets and bridges will enh.nce the antique effect of the gates and walls, and the forming of a continuous promenade round the entire cirouit ot the ramparts and the outworks of the citadel will open the way wwm. of vio:a:.t ]iruond ooml:bto ible or :‘nfn- quented, an: a panorama torial beauty and grandeur and h-um';: torial beauty and grandeur and historical interest _oombi.nor:noqndhd on this continent. With that view, we should appreciate the importanceâ€"as more advanced na‘ tions are now doingâ€"of preserving aud deâ€"eloping. the characters of every monuâ€" ment and famous site, the reminiscenses of which are calculated to inspireé and maintain â€" such sentiments of historical mwz:unn%humml honmx;; and should recogn ou"ufinx of such works, so .dminhly::'{d for doing so as those now pro as appertaining to a more elevated and noing::nm‘ of statesmanship, than falls within the ordiâ€" nary compass of political economy and and the Swiss at Morxrun, have dong much, since, â€" for both these nations (trough small in numbers) and the pe+ ple of them, as individuals, in maintaining their self respect. And what shall w say of the greater nationsâ€"England mg Fraunceâ€"what pecuniary sacrifices woul they not make rather than fail to maintain thas national honour which is based on their history ? And, " La noblesse oblige ;"â€"we‘who are the descendants of rapresentatives of both these nationsâ€" is it not incumbent upon us to cherish such sentiments and transmit them to our posterity, who, with the aid of their influâ€" ence, may be de ivered from sinking into old have so often fallon. the ages of degradation, into which we see the .s:oondants of . ominent nations of had the same sentiments of devoted patriotism and determined valour as their ancestors of Marathon and Thcrmopylfi' we may safely assume that they have given the Turkish armies " to the ravem and the kite." The sentiments that inspired the Scots at Bannockburd, THE TIMES, OTTAWA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1876 PORdE * C * f But from their i t <she. in this. baile, and the minpolgent es effect of their costume and aotion, ‘ their m“. here is noteworthy in‘an arohs 3 logical point of view, thisbeing one of the in swift and deadly pursuit that allows no rally, till‘ the‘ routed remains of Montâ€" calm‘s army afe driven to the gates : of th%h tow.r':lsnd f’oo‘fh“‘ d?"' 85’. Charles, e "slogan" of "claymore" was a ve critical war ory in those days to all c The ranks of the best British regiments x‘:lfitrior ::::ib“‘i“ gone down'. before or given way, a few years Teigre 1 tnd 19 well might‘ others who found that unusual style of fightiny bor. barous and embsrrassing:"" Its efl%otivo nature â€" and | their > readv. daring lad 6n are nowâ€" ing line â€"of leveliod bayonets=of im m charge:; :and: on théir: left the Highlenders, who have thrown away theit muskets and taken to their broadswords, t'h‘:&-il‘:l'g?m' and nll‘i:‘uo_bonuq; us, is e battle. impression ] duced b thuhrnupootohhooihdflt theldfidd nmpuui sunk in . decay â€" the desolite expanse fiwtm with its martello towers,and the i recollections inspired by the battle field, give a charadter of solemunity to the scene which is enhanced by its magnificent extent. 6 Beyond the battle field is seen the lateau, on which it is situated, extendâ€" E:qm and richly diversified with villas, fiodc,iamnnd'wooda. It sinks, on the left, to the great trenchâ€"like m in which flows the St, Lawrence, with its cliffs and mm.flout distance ; and on mruhtbn to the picturesque valley of the St. Chlc:,.dm hi'ufl:;o.:: reaching nwdl;n‘ remote, h:fl::bmmm the north. There is no ground on this continent that has been so often in past times trodden by feet of armed men in w\ of war, as that in the scene before us. We mnoh.w‘hou:tf u‘.Stnrhoom,“” hi:: power gont, w hi wh:%nownmhu taken;piace about the timée that Hochelaga fell. But we have record of the blockade of Quebes by the Iroquois, and the atrocities they commitâ€" ted in the couhtry before us,twenty years ‘ after the death of Champlain, and the battle of St:@‘y Wool, mucre‘ the British forces, rsqduuqd innu::.r after the capâ€" ture of. Quobec, on following spring ;oro defeated :;t.: n::x loss tl)?dul:. Frénch regulars ili y M.~ de Levi; the siege th:tblLuwod, but failed owing to the arrival of British ships ; and later, the ‘occupation of St. m‘-,‘on the plateau b“onlu,byAmo'g‘ “‘sfl“' , their brief si ‘Quebec, an t.h:;‘;luuou.hlnno;‘:h:ld.r attempt‘to dr-:gmuon But isgnshm thoinou tle of 13th SBept., 1759, to which the Plains of Abraâ€" ham owe their renown, he riaitattatWilren: s toutstuts ore «< d u; C t bl.“- 4110 valorous past carger, it might be said, as of the Douglas of old, ‘“f?-;hfiuy.iu there ne‘er was born." How gallant and noble he looks, on his dark horse, in the fiw‘inl French uniform of the tim;.. is fine wristband cambric shows copiâ€" ously under his> m "Inced sloeye, as he raises his x ordering the ;:imma;}oomt of b“g’ Ein.,dhwpl. ag ‘by platoots as vance withsgmt dash ‘and m&& towards their antagonists Mub;zmdtho towers now there ; but Wolfe‘s picked battalion« waver not, their fire has been steadily: reserved tifl, at forty paces distance, it is poured in on their advancing uuihnia and maintained with deadly rapidity an effect, causing manifest disorder, . Brief and very severe is the fighting. Wolfe has fallen! His successor is wounded, almost mortally ; ‘the oonmmd has passed to a third general, Montcalm is h':“nlglol‘::n. and his second in &:mqnd smoke of their last volley, is scen the Turning from the clifis that overhang the river, and following the route of the promenade round the base of the works that front the Plains of Abraham, a view of wider sodop is obtained and of equally ‘impressive character. "The busy street, lHned with shipping, is no. seen. ‘The massive works of the citadel, of great extentâ€"silént, and grim with hidden strength, rise up bo£d usâ€"and wesie mndhg and the surroundings magnifâ€" cent. pra flll:ft. fln.l::id stone work on the verge of a y very prominent angle of the clif which onrx:g- the ltnlnd three hun;lfndnd fifty feet below, a plunging view of most striking effect is obx:dnod of Wolfe‘s Cove, crowded with shipping, and the track of Wolfe‘s daring grouna ;‘o:khm;u ‘h&‘t i ..hoflm‘ {d s up the river eâ€" scribed. But it is the condition and exâ€" pressive aspect of the grass grown remains ~[ the extensive ramparts and other works that speak so poetically of the past, that give & scene its intensely impressive and dreamy power. More than a century has passed since the smoke of the battle and the roar of the culverines haxe rolled away. ‘For the long Sabbath of a hundred and~twenty summers the grass and the wild weeds have thriven upon them, un â€" disturbed save by the bee and the butterâ€" fg-mmmflu birds that build u..i.:i petts ereâ€" wand an e long Bur(:od m.:gbling ’::' that, grin grimly ‘down on the mast heads and chimnéy tops far below ; but these v~â€" able by in Elchemin ; nd the pretty looking utusywh s which are disâ€" tinctly seen on rising uplands thirty &nilu’d.r. It was Ihauélpthu remote epression, fo ver Chaudiere, of which it a."'&':'v'ffl.,,'ua,m through I.ho country before‘ us, that Montgomery ed his toilâ€"worn troops, in the fall of 1775 ; and crossing the St. Lawrence beâ€" neath us in canoes, landed at Wolfe‘s Cove up there on the right, with five hunâ€" dred men ; and the heights lookgonu-ionof St. Foy‘s and the Genâ€" eral Hospital, and beld them till joined by General Arnold, whom he succeeded in command in that unouooo-fnlmnigo. Proceeding onwards, we reach the most intemfi.l:fi-“md impressive. historical / veitiges that Quebec has to show â€"the old | French works. Their site is most com:â€"| sweliing in, . the townahi] far away boupe and Btandoy, the smy Inelige Scanning the horizon, to the left of th Nit broad depresâ€" no:,‘m the a:.y m.i unbroken by high summite, till they are again seen, by living sound, save thfiq Tby might, and the whip :l:bgw .'b;ndq main it and other Indians ; a vast odmudlo. 'v'v&u silence was rihly’b:okon in the thickets of lgmoo and . fir that crown these lofty hills; when the country behind them, back to the White Mountains of Maine, was utterly unknown and uninhabited, except by a fow wan: deting Abenaquis (whose ‘h:’udihry doâ€" * A ohaa‘ne the wild dteor, And a follewing the roe, ‘ roused before dawa of day from their lair, in the thickets of ‘spruce and fir mits recall pleasant days passed fifty years What a striking"scene the field before " With tir ans wa far and w‘qn, "Aud cluymores .&".‘m olsar, * of the past become only more ve easing age and decay . f ow LiR (oth; T ommkipe af thas of Cran: us coung ips . w q ready, daring led ‘to far away southeastâ€" ‘waters of the River cliffs that overhang lonely n m on e P. LUMMER‘s MDPM Gereral and Sohool and Writing Materials. ARTHUR L. HOLMES Leisure Hour, Suâ€"dry at Home, 8 azine, Good Words, 1815 vois, at Whesdon‘s Comment ry, last wol. Ten Thousaua Mies by Lard and Valentines in Great Variety, Made up in Jackets, Caps, &0., s AliG a l s oouni h69 207 C° Juace t %mfiol"mnmmm 8 E, MoGILLIVRAY. _Ottawa, Sept. 2 1975., . * MOOILLIVRAY, TIMBER: LEMITS, Astrachan,. _ _ _ â€" Sou:l?'%u Seal °_ __ . "o% 777C °NO 108L AGvand ize4 liuropean nations first contact here with " prehisto 493 SQUARE MILE§ ® TRADE ASs4IGNEE, Clty o OTTA W A, County of Carleton, rgpmesee crurrs ror sare. A m“!"hndh;mbwn_x Quinze" in Caneda, m:d::.hhwo.ddh'u‘u’.;ffiq.m rical associations md-::i:m y w remi we must to the days of the men to whom & last «War of the Roses" and the battle of * Bosworth" were as: recent events as “Allhrlitl"tnd“wuaho"mto-i and the " Sac of Rome by : the Bourbon‘ as recent as the Siege of Sebastopolâ€" back to the days of the qcndf.thmof the men that fought at Moncontour" and " Ivry‘" ; to the days of romantic disâ€" covery, when the most advanced of civilâ€" this conlinent. . 4 Navo seen, when a boy, men whom % at Culloden ; but t{o lived in th walks of li}o, in dvslnd‘ Bsociety Traan ant on n en ie capr com would die and their ashes mld'_nol "blz Mhflnn"orinthhndof,thdr,birfl. edluny h tm he mermaneg) uns e time & been the lonely forests and sayage men. ts dom: by im : Sn m mauite en seen im ve | the banh'ot‘ t.ho‘ Seine, and the associaâ€" tions eofhis youth would be to him a misty dream ; and far away back in‘ the past. would: be his recollections of : the weariens.. Surme might be the ieos mt mander. Suo ue ‘ogmpn_m:l!eodpm of the last M 83 Sparks Street. Ottawae, Sept, 15, 1875 40 that after the conclusion of the wn'râ€"f;; remained with them. Pointing to a very old and bent little woman sitting at the left side of the fire, he said she was his w‘fe, and wnm that he h .1 rescued when the Indisns he was with aad muu?’ndl. md{.rmflomm of + Bostonais," including parents, w hadi come from England the: year b‘hx‘ when she was tweive years old. .Ons words being addressed to her in i .houmodvmtly.mdho said she had l'os}. that long ago and spoke only Indian ‘now. horizon. _ On being asked where tliey cawe from they said : " From the west," point: ing to the remote high hills behind which the ruddy en;{:i '.:l :uing. ‘l}ny said. they were and hungry. My er brought thex:hx;:’ :o warm and Mh?lu triarch, or , was a very su 5»- looking man. As he I‘OS?'IA frm of the blazing Ing{fire around which the othouwer:n?usmd, I saw he was not an Indian, asked in what parish ‘he was botn. "I shall never forget his look and aititudeâ€"as he replied : "Buis pas Canadien ; sais Francais,‘"‘ and proceeded,_ in not very perfect E to say that he â€" was born at Rouen, on the 6 ; that he was a soldier of the regiment ol) Roussil« lon ; that in the wat against the ish, before the taking of Quebec, he had b much with the Indians -u:-d in it; that ‘after the conclusion of the war Nov * Over fifty years on a bright frosty evening Plnto in.& hlkmtlll;m came a _ amal party â€" or ily _ grou; of â€" Abenaquis <â€" Indians to my thdl: er‘s house, that stood alone on the skirt of that blue mountain, that dips backward with a faint fog to the sou ‘ horizon. On being asked whare Hliey aama & common prosperous nationality of future promise. It was in m.mf.m of community of feeling that the monuâ€" ment, we just before passed, was erected in commemoration of bodl the hercic leaders, and surely more appropriate Latin was never writtenthan when@Dr.=Figher penned th e inscription :«« constitutional government and the union of f{'?_"t@!'g“ of the eonh.u:fi ip MORTEM. VIRTVS. COMYNXE. » FAMAM. HISTORIA, MONVMENTVM. PORTERITAS. DEDIT. Before leaving the batttleâ€"field, a last of Montcalm‘s soldiers hitherto unreâ€" u;rdod, may, jperhaps, not be out of place. ‘ Over fifty years on a bright frosty evening . ll,flz in .& fall, there came renown:â€"the stake, continental em the result, the ultimate uhblilhmu] LUMEBER AXND COMMISSION AGENT, Rajotte‘s Block, Wellington street. Ottawa, Jan, 15, 1876, _ * pm:msxrlm._; SNOWFLAKt <BAKING POWDER, i:?r;t:::m& fim .r}i. t U 'iM:“h: :fhml:fim& lar troops. Indeed, such was the actual disparity in that respeot against to lead the French V'lttm'fi oomo:'hil giving g“:h an “: of chivalrous indisoreâ€" tion. But we must remember that he pulsed Wolfe at Montmoranai -lmd: this battle was unquéstionably much inâ€" femor to Wolfe‘s in effective force of regu« side, Ottawa, 5th Feb., 1876. JUST RECEIV 56 SPARKSST, . é‘!" H(T’LME S, T have seen, when a boy BEST IN USEâ€"GIVE IT A TRIAL Fot sale atall Firstâ€"class Grocers. | T. LAMBERT, â€"â€" HODGE s . C. W. MacCUOAt ECEIV ALL THE NEW :'_"lafi.;on 1876, numbers jin the earlier part of BOOKSELLER, the last soldier of CELEBR ATED ___ A. s HOLMES, at Home, Sunday Magâ€" , 1875 vols., A L'faoma;i. " prehistoric man‘ of OR Seal and %éaver. ard and Sea, at . in doth B 4088y1 1o Es ~Dav., 2 Agong hn s m Apate moments, or all their time, than us Lnit ONE HUNDREDAND . EhS underelgned is prepared to sell his, TIM. Meacimes pike want to 1 Comprising the Ten Jâ€"wels of Imaginative 4 ‘ wakhnreqs s<~~ Pilgrim‘s Progreas, YVicar of WakeGeld, Undiné, . Tales from Arabfan Nights, garm®»"" * $s UB GIBBS &.COURSOLLE, ~, dgan ay hel in and from both East and Wast, aod with the E!BL‘!’!‘!E‘!."M to and from OHtawa, Novs 17 1875. Patents . of.â€"Invention, [TRADE MARK REGISIERED.} < «I wELLINCGTON crenia caanmene, warmnraton ALUTERATION OFP ~RUSXSING TIMs Un and afer: FRIDAY, 10ih December, 1576 iA s‘ tig #V 28 ADSOR 4 Wellington Street, | Near Poolay‘s Bridge QOTTAWA:RAILWAY, t dsgores elee on os on use The old reliahis; quiok s mdxt, and mont dines CORNER OF DALHOUSITE‘ s rRBR&ET It is the WORLD‘S STORY "HO0E, T.l BT. LAWRENCOE olinn w; with Grand ‘Tronk Ex Siok iver Railwey from New Ye 45 UOwnooflu'.“ m ide at Rerfrow ' ".to aAnd Irogh Poinbroke. wiub #:mzes / No. No. PMH0G| Connenting with. Ottawa > Reafrew eu.o.&?a&?& 3!31‘%'"‘““! l('. sor Oe Train ‘or the West and with tha _ ~~ / .llel‘\:ot Railway tor New York \w«onv. n ho. m on ns RIVER . DESMOINE, 6-'1”.“"0 G. T. Junction â€" 9.35 a.m. “gk: +W _ _ â€" ® masint c . Renirew * s1 5 ie t,zs a.ma. 8.40 pam . Brockville &Ottawa Raflzays. For Ottawa viaâ€" Brockville For Ottawa . via Brockvilie. TWO EXPRE®S TRAINS DAILY. LEAVEq § â€" Brockvilie G. T. Junction â€" 9.35 2.m, 4.05 p.m, and :fid. by and â€"Bteriin ':h"‘" Furchnse: Savings‘ Department. _ f Bure connection Ww James Mc En‘ President. g. T. M‘::hn.hlrt;t m.m Pullan or LIBRARY OF FAMOUS FICTION, Victoria Buildt James M1c Flour & Farm Produce. A al on to sult all m‘mfi ':‘t‘ugag:h for the Kiroys aAso reeo srore. RIDEAU AND Drug Store:. T. T. SHEPHERD: Chemist & Druggist,, ALEX. TAYLOR, Charlesiv. Leonard, 6 â€" ©10,00 p.M. Trains run on Montreal Brockville, Den.3, 1875 A SGeneral Ban«ing Basiness Transacted. Taterest liowed un Depontte, ="*** RE 20 OF terms and condition, m 10 H. V. Noek Quabee Re vk, or is. fon. uo * WeX it mye, .. 1Q8EPH SMITH, 9e . . ols ANADA CENTRAL ° 11+275. | â€"and â€" ANK OF OTTAWA. torim l:‘llfimâ€"â€"‘fipro-lu Wesrer: Trains wiliâ€" run. &« aBlow exa~ / Bank Aloticc:. ‘ ~â€"nâ€"â€"-â€"v-\.,r Lour & Feed soLIOITORS or arapd Trw‘ k Expres fund ‘ Trunk . West '-.:lnh_n T i. 40 King streot West, ARRIVE. A‘B. FOSTFR, ey, M Ama Je Di . t Te i l’A‘l'll_’_!A RoBERTSON, _R. Chureh, M.P.t 4 0 l.l}., Alexandes tnira e# io: 12> : .m. 730 o.m, 2. $.40 p.m. 120 p. x. FRS A. M Allar The Royal Exchange Hote § wflmég s'rngrr-, l' AFirst Class Family and Commercial .Hotal. . @186 4. 188 RIDEAU STREET: @8 .g%&g&mmmw cA % â€" (PiakEvice e e ie Aeadinaie at Huabsro [NROTIOUS S10Ne by Messrs, Angus & 0a., wo. 8 gguoraw !‘mm-d‘;m mâ€"td‘_w m have decided to & BSrauch lhvlnwm) Ii! % wâ€"%‘; BPEOCIAL NOTICE. © faug have desidea to doneem o uh ces in oi bacee d Oare districh _ thst Ottawa Branch â€" â€" â€" â€"â€" â€" â€" 38 Sparks 3 ___ ‘CLUFF & MILL, GENERAL AGENTS. FIRST FIFTEEN) DAYS OF JM" - * ALL apons tm a ‘; Show . Room,| at Cost for" Cash, Carp»ts, Maotles,. Millinory and Fancy t °wi en Grood{ h .' Asall 200ds in the 4h0@ R>>+mâ€" M ISP BILD previous to the Removal of Atairs _ Liberal ‘!‘n-â€"loull{or Quarterl Ottawa, fiov L’;‘. eot & Hooks Mus CaANADA Agricultural Insurance ilr'npoqtant' to Housekeep JbEENWE :: 4): .30 5.. 24 20sn Jackets atâ€" Manufacturers‘ All Fancy Dress Goods at e oo y en e o O c an . Boards, « buas lak stintâ€" 0 d 0 KFens, ~oiders »ni Poois, Parses ani 1 Texts Remeabe ihis s a reu Cl â€"ur. © Olte "a, San. 14, 1 75. â€" ROBERT® STEWART Begntooaumfion&otbe&ductminthl’rio.dthflb'-. Blaukets Jleared at Lost. Black Lustres, the ‘best value. ever afar L2 P 9 ooo ie “‘ announce make a b clearing their stook mnu nmov:hr‘:m'vglu-n M..Co’:. “ sile of all Tor Cash on! . The itoâ€"k ‘con 15, of ~tat E *nl:h."&:m -nlun: Lit‘‘ 0 mpag m-mh‘ an abte .R uks W ds en Bleached and Unbleached Lmens-,â€" Damasks, and Table Covers, Table Napkins and Carpets and (General House l"urn] _ Carpets and Oil Cloth VERY â€"CHEAP. Linen and Cotton SMITH & STEWAF 4 Having nearly.complated the NEW ADDITION to pres>nt premises, Mtawa Dec. 80, 1875. ~_â€" D.°S. McKINNON & CO., 18, Sperke Bteaoty > â€" «> wz [ [3 ols o ues 3 1875â€"PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION Ottaw», Feb, 2, 1876. p-muâ€"urmvuu:n Alex. Russell & Co., STATIONERS, â€" _ Sparks Street, opposite theâ€"Russell House, #irst Prize for m'g*%‘k%mmm 9. W. M. SOMERVILLE, MARBLE &.GRANITE WORKS, EXTENSIVE â€" ALTERATIONS 1 COL. A. 0. WL HARW WILLIAM ANGUS, _ CLEARING SALE~OF FANCY GoODS 1 5 â€" AND ORGANETTES, Hallett, Davis & Co.‘s, H. Hardman‘s *‘ * To Sheok& HooiMoris . â€" Viotin Birings, dn aiware in Shote: oPENING OF_PARLIAMENT, 3 (19 3 § o fig] _4 @s % KLitk Aesnrance. ISâ€" NOW OPEN. io [ffe E’fi‘ih; is 0 in s l e T ta id 2 iE3 z. }gig § if ( f | BR ; w%g-l E&:gn:r‘ P 3 gfi E‘E.g!fi‘ A 5: Eizg pi E o PS CHAS. BRYSON . D. PEASE & COS PIANO FORTES. &..Co.‘s ~PRIZE MEDAL ORG 66 & 68 SPARKS STREET FOR _ ONE â€"MONTH, HEAD â€"OFFICE, MONTREAL Pillow Linens, Linen and Cotton t JS9n 15. of ~Aiton ‘abine‘s. Work Bex w thw‘ O foan ns _P arifolio _ Music F Aios, Oa) y‘ T â€" in lâ€" C »d 0 ses, Iva‘y mm ap B3o Parses ani thurch Boo‘s, .g,a reu Clâ€"am~g <ai~, al! g odâ€" being reâ€"mark ed as t§ o _ (Gif ad: sf o $fif § d ts t ig best . value: ever. offeredâ€" BLD previous to the Rer Of Staire, s ild (81 * 6 4o9 + po EDWARO a. GOFF, JAMES A. maf@® at Cost. ROBERT | Special attention pald to Orders oy M street, (opp. Bate & 49 * [ & -“b‘ of the mise dence ld be pless ' &J-bh:“ i ‘:â€"--uw she believed, therefor all his love for Fanny, so much more. that he : about the relative con: ter and the housekeep ing dress of the latter, itâ€"she could not find found three bags of bi the d’m_ohnr-d I ‘%hem ftorth on the dis of the bureauâ€"she be and at thst momenrt, % mpe‘y /m & u«m m 6. new Pfli!d!'i-‘;:':x with !npfll“'.‘: aceak was there in that clou shed on dul\ things th bly cringing and cm never guessed the h to hanus w uelpless long, bus ies Fooking ure. This bad in uncenscious, sat by h. bolding her breath not frew mone ons her regard, agd certai youth had not been confirmed the suspicic why we feel sure th false is this,â€"Simon C hard on the early foll inters hn rerine pos But Bimo made itm he w perfectly tainly, at all events, pain that might base ::-dma. M SAy s . to his breast. Heé pu â€"â€"goâ€"go, child," he 1 â€" " Tostarve |!" said and she stole away, s naturally in his dotage. The Tnighrt tos tire" phaly So, as she tripped e ge s 00 Tire Poker sotbed; P OOpL IOS men children -‘,...‘E'.......""" mz"‘m They called her Frovs axo Fru the best fiour and Night and themselves as stars incapable of thro excretions, assizni ho vofuntey s Li phosphites is sin not only induces news Was in deep though

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