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Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Apr 1910, p. 8

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PAGE EIGHT. Now'the birds are singing ; and Sunshine's J bright ; Nature 's to us bringing Something to delight. Grab at all the gladness Neath the heavenly don Get a Wormwith-Weber Piano in your home. warm 23 PRINGESS ST. [1:2 0 Is where the WORMWITH Av WEBER PIANOS are sold, Some bargains second-hand organs. Wormwith-Weber Piano Co., Limited 282 PRINCESS STREET, KINGSTON. Buy a Davis Motor and Keep Going 1610 highest ty built They Davis thie The a pe violor 1g figure with you on the for your boat. sve you not forges of Ga mont we earry 1ir He and Sap And abie prices DAIS DRY BOCK C0. "Phone 420, HALLEY'S COMET i May be hard to find without a tele- L geope, but you de not need one to feo he auctioneers commission Its a big thigg--1oo big to lose can pave all expenses ang feos vente es Of y tion by selling you « blog "en publie au pacts to me Antique Furnitore asd Odd Artivies a Specinity. © ¢ . 1 hay dh Cha la ail kinds kof Househo Bi L. LESSES Cor. Princess sad Chatham Sta, Ki on. Laadd pianos and Engine Re- Of 36 com- » all the qualities that go to y a-motor that caf be de- son under all condi- a We Engine Fit- can jah vou with same dt reason- LEO0000000000800000000 90904 A New Idea In Medicine Which Accounts for- the Enormous sSuceess of DR. AW. CHASE'S Nerve Food, i -------- 1e; fo fear down the d ae ium cipie of a ir sw, henlth lisaues Foad new InCrens tng the nerve force is of woe met the "blood, , and by and dissase with igor, new abergy and pew vital snd quality of ' erenting new GYEreoming wenkne ew ty Fhe tim "KK (thase's il eon i¥ 1 bids falta, new #lorative . wil is en IN § riched, the G pots tosh and feel the hrm formed, and new Vou Vigor as it is ito vour system, DEEVOus prostration bit keep the system mark. Ih A.W Be. a box, all dealers, Bates & or paralysis; high water Nerve Food ok Fdmanzon, #t Chase's Ca., Toronto NEW MAPLE SYRUP, NEW MAPLE SUGAR. NEW LAID EGGS Pure Milk and Cream de- Hivered every morning to all parts of the city by milk wag- gons, also with grocery orders. A full Stock of Fresh Groceries to choose from Prompt de- Hvery. i - SS. T. KIRK, 277-281 Princess Street. "Phone 417 1 Agent for Asselstine's Yarn, a Weak Kidneys For Two Years. Doctor Failed to Help. Doan's Kidney Pills Cured Him. . Mr. Edmund Assela, New Carlisle, Que, writes: --"7 feel it my duty to let you know of the great cure I have obtained by using Doan's Kidney Pills. 1 was troubled with my kidneys for two years. 1 tried a doctor, but he failed to help me. 1 read in the B B.B. Almanac about Doan's Kidney Pills, and began using * Chiver's Marmalade All sizes. Ready Cut Fine June Cheese, Fresh Qysters. D. COUPER'S, 8418 Princess Bt: Phone 76, Prompt Delive Macaroni them, and after the first box began to feel better, 1 only used four hoxes and they completely cured me. | am very thankful to have found so speedy a cure, and would advise everyone suffering from kidney disease to try them." Perhaps mo other organs work harder than the kidneys to preserve the general health of the body and most people are troubled with some kind of Kidney Complaint, but do not suspect it. It may have been in the system for some time. There may have been backache, swelling of the feet and ankles, disturbances of the urinary organs, such as brick dust deposit in the unne, highly colored, scanty or eloudy urine, bladder pains, frequent or suppressed-arination, burning sensation when urinating, ete. ry Do not neglect anv of these symptoms, OOOO O00OVOO00000L © KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE (LIMITED) HEAD OF QUEEN STREET. : > » 'Highest Education at Lowest Cost Twenty-Sixth year. Fall Term begins August 80th. Courses' Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Tele , Civil Bervice and English. graduates get the best pos - tions, Within a short time over sixty secured positions with one of the largess railway corpora tions in Canada. Enter any time. Oall or write for information. Hi F; MET CALFE, Principal. FOO0000000000000000000 for, if neglected thev will eventually lead to Bright's Disease, Dropsy and Diabetes Price 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25, at all dealers or The T. Milbum Co., Limited, Toronto. In ordering specify " Doan'a™ Xr 4 THE FRONTENAC LOAN AND Farm } rl allowed 3 0 MS Games rat. TMENT SOCIETY ESTABLISHED, 1863 President--Sir Richard Cartwright. A COLD PREVENTIVE Is a dellar filled with Coal. 1 can sup- ply you with an excellent quality. P. WALSH, 55-57 Rarraek St, A iin sn bi CAIUST A WORD" of fe ol awit be perfectly tri a bottle Flowers and Plants 0 and Funeral 1 th ail parts. hen ¥hu want a good Scateh you can pothing bat & on d fe fF hickey it's the * 4, and carries with Jt . #cent of the Highland 4 8 Ha, 4% A o 1. hi Golden Lion Block. "GOON GROWING WEATHER." When the New: Scalp Antiseptic is Used. ter A good head of hair ix ws much. "orown of glory. for man as it is for woman, nowithstinding «ll the poetry on the swyeet apples] to the female Ax oXelusivelvl, Tn the sen: son when (hes Gite the bald-hemjed man ean sympathive with the Fgyvp tiuns who were so sorely plagmed on ateount of the chikbve of larael. Why not try Newhbro's Herpicide * Others have ven bencfited mad ave Joud in Hs praise 1 cleanses the scalp, kills the guim at tie root of the hair amd by Mesping the sealp sweet, pure snd wholesome, the par is bout to graf. as pale mtenal- al, regardioss of the tetmperarore, Try it amd be convi AT " es ON THE ROAD IN 1751 #HOW THE SEIGNIEURS TRAVEL- ED IN NEW FRANCE. When Marquis Duguesne Went From ! Quebec to Montreal a Century and a Half Ago the Old City Turned Out En, Masse to Say ' Good-bye-- Huge Cavalcade Needed to Take Him and Nine Attaches. In some respects this age is sim- Pler than were the times of the past, in other respects life is much more complex than it was a generation or two ago. The latter is true of what may be called the industrial side of life in wireh there is such a mingling of varied interests and such a diver sity of services It is sonplér, in one respect at Jeast, in what may be called the ex-. ternals, in 'the stage setlings amidst which i is played, in the manner in which men go up and down the vary ous paths of 'occupation, discharge their duties and perform their work. There aré still formal and some- times elaborate ceremonies, but tos duy they are not the picture but only ihe frame The picture consists in the doing the thing for which the office or it really exists. A Prime Minister goes about his work like an ordinary private man of affairs, and even a governor-general moves here and there throughout the country over which he rules with the least possible display in keeping with his high office, and often with as much simplicity as would be shown by any citizen of independent means in his travels either for pleasure or business Perhaps this in part is due to the degnooratre spirit of the age, perhaps in part 10 the pace at which we live and the little time there is available 1 mare nt is contrasted with monditions of the past, and thanks to the journals of a French military man, who lived in Canada a little more than a century and a half ago, & comparison can be made of the way in which things are done to-day with the way of ithe old regime when Can- ada was but a soar on the wildernese of the St. Lawrence valley and her entire spopulation was scarcely equal to that of a present day city of the second class, In 1751, when quesne came oul as clouds were lowering over Canada and New England, and only four years later they broke m that storm of war destined to make such great changes on the. map of North America. The comming storm was at that time foreseen and preparation was made to meet it. Aanong the military men whom at about thisitime France sent out 10 her American-colonies was Col Franquet, ; Chief Engineer of Fortifi- cations. He was: first employed the Marquis Du- governor, the at Louis- bourg, Bredon, where he plan- ned and directed' the construction of these fortifications which eight years later the British army under Am- heorat and Wolle baitered down after a long and trying siege. His work at Lounisbonvg finished, he crossed over to Isle 8t. Jean, now Prince Edward Island. Then he came on to Quebec and what he sawrthere and in other parts of Canada he set down with considerable litemary merit and which throw sidelights upon an interesting chapter in Canadian history. Thanks to the Annuaire de !'Institute Cana- dian for the year 1889, the memoirs of Col. Franquet have been made ac- cessible to the student of history, and | in his charming sketches Sir James | Lemoine of Spencer Grange has given to his English readers a number of Franquet's most inkeresting chapters, One tolls. of a mid-winter journey formed - by Marquis Duquesne and party from #Quebec to Montreal, and {from it ones.can learn how the gover- nor of Carmda traveled one hundred and. fifty-three years ago. "Each year," wrides Franguet, "it is eustomary, ngy necessary, that the general in the "colony should go to Montreal in Jenuary, retoming Quebec in the {following August." He then gives a summary of the business to be transacted at Mont: real, selecting officers th command at the King's posts in the upper coun- try, providing the posts with soldiers, arms and stores, to issue permits to traders, to receive the delegates fromn the Indian tribes and so forth. In 1753 Duguesne fixed January 14th as the day for his departure from Quebse, and with him were (0. go nine officers as a military staff. The setting out of the vice-regal expedition for Montreal was a great event in the Ancient Capital, parti- cipated in by" the elite of Quebec so- ciaty aml withessed by the greater part of the city's population. In the official company assembled to see the governor off was the notori- ous but them powerful Intendant Bigot who, to use the popular term of today, was the great grafter 'of that administration. Bigot was to aecompany the governor as far as Pointa-anx-Trem twenty ndfles shove Quebec, and with him he was taking a y oi ladies and gentle men. All were to. be Bigot's guests at dianer that day and at brembfast the fellowing morning. . At ten o'clock in the forenoon of the day appointed for the departure of the governor a gay cawaicade of single sheighs and tandems assembled before the Chateau St. Lomis.. where the great marquis held his little court, Franguet relates that it was a bitterly cold morning, with howling 4 wind and driving snow. So strong and boisterous was the gule that its pear: abmost. drowned the salvo of guns fised. from the fort as the gov- ernof. and: party drove through St Louis Gate. The procession of sleighs filled with the high dignitaries of the colony aod the leaders of Quebee's gay society, followeft the Ste. Foy road until it reached the heights of Cap Rouge, where the road skirted the hill. © Hore thers was danges of being upset and thrown into the val ley below; and. «i the road was lined with trees to keep the sleigh: from ro! conspicuous | to | | FYENGu . . Here fn ms narrative d what rges in arier to tell habitants should do in order t the winter roads passable. Their front roads th should shov out and ith evergreen boughs to guide the traveler after storms it was the duty of the Grand Voyer to look after the country romds, / this office comtinued down 1840, when municipal government was cstablighed and the roads passed to the jurisdiction of the parish suthori. ties In due time he first stage of the journey, a drive of twenty-five miles, was completed by the arrival of the party at Pointe-aux-Trembles, where the night was spent. The viee-regal party drew up at the door of the Con- vent of the Nuns of the Congregation, founded there in 1713, and then in charge of two sisters. The governor made the convent his headquarters } make ars . v and to and his followers were lodged in the | ° neighboring buildings, Col was the guest of the Megsire Chartier de whose sister-in-law was party Franquet | care, Rev. Lotbiniere, | one of, the vent kitchen where they prepared | supper which was served at ten o'clock; after which all retired, - The traimed eye of the soldier | Franguet did not fail to notice. the | | during i The governor also was given | a bed at the presbytery, but his chet | and staff were installed in the con- | | drawing portfolic THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, APRIL i, 1910, A ROYAL SCHOOLROOM, How the Children of the Prince "of Wales Are Educated. The presen schoolroom at coupants of the roval Marlborough House, are the Princess Mary and her bro thers, Prince Henry Lreorge : the "baby" Wales household, enter it very The roval ehi were taught read and write at jour years old, and from the age of five had to speak in French and German. Once a week they must speak in French and Ger. man during lesson time, when studies ure conduetes wine or other of these languages meals they must in French or Ge } schoolroom ay House is in charge of ho came to supeivis the education 4 young pru § Some Years ago, large, we htod room on the fawor. In the centre there is round mahogany writing table; the bined with book shelves tiled with and on the other there sive old oak bureau of the. ginn period where exercise paints and rubbers, and © schoolroom Prines ¢ Prince of and of w to their and also talk man Marlborough Mr. Hansell, either The side of roam is vx, pencils, guard of honor that through the long | and bitterly cold January night stood | guard 1) presbytery i which the governor was lodged. guard consisted of thirty of the local | |" militia commanded by the parish cap- | | tain, When the party entered the village the militia lined the street so | far as their numbers would permit, then they did sentry duty during the { night, and when the" governor set out the following morning they were dis. missed, glad to return fo their fire sides and breakfast. At every village in which the governor lodged on his journey to Montreal this would be re- | peated so that a winter visit from the | great murquis was not an unalioyed pleasure to the local militia in the rural parishes. At nine o'clock in the morning his excellency set out from Pointeaux- Trembles for Montreal, his staff con- sisting of Duchesnay, captain of his guards ; Mgpelles, his * secretary, his body servants' and two soldjers, Bix | carrioles loaded with baggage pre- a.m hour es th IE at nine st eight ir thr lroom. al 1 , ala 1 Work afternoon, betwee ur there ther period of is not, however, swyal pupils under seven Louis anda 15 a fu 4 joined years of ' the hours ol study usual ¥ obsr when princes are al Marlborough House; but they are, ; irequentiy at other ol ences; they may be wh idle » week, at . perhaps Windsor Castle » hour sSancringham week alter ag } devoted y varied, but, except the royal prinees put hours' work in the r he holidays, four every, cla at least SCHOOLITrOoOImn Very sp ceeded the governor's sleigh to beat the road I'he governor gone, Bigot became the head of gay | party from Quebec, that proceeded | no tarther than Pointe-aux-Trembles Bigot's official duties were evidently | { not pressing, for at his suggestion the company decided to remain an- | { other day and night at the village | before setting: out for Quebec had made ample provision for the stay. his servants having brought { with them large supplies of good things for the table, Much of the time was spent in gambling "I'on y | jous beaucoup." writes Franquet, the and the whole entertainment was on | the same elegant style as those for | which Bigot's palace in Quebec was | {so famous. | On the following day the cavalcade | returned to Quebee, the only stop that was made. being at the ferry- | man's house at St. Augustine to en- { able the ladies to go in and warm | themselves, as the weather was still | very cold. Quebec was reached at four o'eloek in the aftornoon, the party driving {to Mademe Peau's mansion in St Louis street, where a sumptuous | meal awaited them, the gathering { breaking at ten o'clock in the l-ovening. Such was a winter "partie | de plaisir" at Quebec in 1753, parti- | cipated in by the governor of New France, several of his highest officials { and the gayest set of the society of the capital. Two vears later the storm clouds burst and the colony was plunged into war, and as events proved, the ! last that France fought in this part { of the world. It may be that seeing | the coming storm and knowing how | il prepared the colony was to meet | ity the Marquis Duquesne asked for | his recall in 1764, the year following this journey to Montreal, so as 10 pe relieved of the responsi bility of Secing the erisis. up A Steep Grade, iNew York Le anything be df the spirit of the time? observer, writting from Paris, than | thas A group of three at a fash-| 1onahle restaurant table--old lady, | middle aged man and voung woman of tht "sociéty age The man, ing an order to the waiter, "Bring my mother a glass of milk, a for me and an abrinthe for my daugh- ter. Tribune. more indicative asks ani Ey heer The week. Lord Service. HANDICAPPED This is the Case With Many Kingston People. expects and demands all the Intendant | He |, n in mstrocting al English histo them ma 1 the pnne y the Britis! ongnai of great r { In order to y of their are taken fre- Museum by Mr letters and historical import, ve found mention- see n their iis method of instruction Xas one greatly RRncatel to Prine i- for docums ad ene bovis whom these ndous nee would frequently ken to the Muscum instead ol » a football or cricket ametimes 1 was i he would sper 1 dd fascina match granted reading si i wien deal th sfialrs t had great the history oul #0 wa influenes ol mitry King nt on ih and Queen take the live Hest in the sducation of their itt rande The soversign is, ' respongible for the the education and : 1} : sha of fact; not Prince Edward, nor in the matter of hi the direct con- « rule does not winrss, ta Prince Edward's brothers: but the Priv of Whales ya { Thoir M ws to the lines whieh efion aml gen- we conduoted iomatter fengaged for p taken their sun upbringing should rv month, test examinations are schoolroom, the re. with Mr. Han. soll's rep tie gextral conduet of his puy t King as Lies upon studies in the Her Majesty's Favorite Books. The Queen prefers rion books that deal and especially # history. Stories imple annals of oor attract Her Majesty," and in old book like "Uneie Tom's CobA" is much appreciated | by Queen Alexandra, and it 1s a fact that ye go 1 then Prinoess of Wales 4 1 to procure for ¢ "Jinx"s Baby. that ter. i so-calied charity sad to be rile th the one and : hal a great liking for Young's old-world pre- noveds, Kingston © citiang with a bad back. Tou many factheappesl ery, making woth # burtlen and stop-| ping or Lifting an impossibility. bark ache at night, praveniing re) freching Pest, ami in the plorming 1p stiff ant lame. Placters aad Hiniments} wmy ve reliel, bat cannot reach the! cavse, To ehininate the pains and athes vou must pure the Kidunews. : Booths Kidney Yills cure sick kid- | wavs and twee them permanently. vor dodbs Kingston evidence, Thos, James, of 165 Colborne Kingston, Ont, say=: "For over fiv sears | bad suffered with my back Fach spring it would become so weak ard painful phat I would be laid up| for weeks and not able to turn niveelf | ine bed. The pains that would me across the kidneys would fesive me | in a miserable eomidition. | Kad tried! giany ductors but sould find po relief. | My condition bedame mone painful | with each attack. 1 was weak and Ianguid for thy wy of each | summer. Pootl's Killiney advert i Mabood's Pharmaey and | 1 concl I would try them. I wend} ons box and it gured me when all ele | had failed. 1 am stronger amihave en: ned bettgr © ; v than in years. 4 'i Cm el img Posth's Kidney By Std unceasing pain CHUM constant ms! + The | | Cani cateh! sentiments of Cif inhabitants Indeed, "The Heir of Red- ef tio books that she % davs in Denmark. iia Andersen's fair ws were 2lso nh favor, espici Matea-Girl' wineherd." is Poor Father! A woman apprery real influence in ker own he German Empress is smd vipped by her husband pete The love of her sons 8 wolli si by a story told of the bovhood. One prince. religious is » giving thi court chaplain tried ! all people am | that ejaculated His Ime "father may be a sine | pa you say, but I'm quite sare | meshier 3 not' Would Spell Ruin. ~~ The undermining of Britain's im. | perial position would spell ruin not only to Cansda and Aostralia, but zlso to many other nations. Our self-int rest as well as our dufy. de) mands that Cansida wake an adequate contribution to the Empire's strength at sen Times-Journal! Fort William. + 3 * } A conmmunity asually reflects the 'Many times the "earnest i A FINE COSTUME OF OLD ROSE -- -- 1 -- ~The wide hemmed skirt of this costume of old rose snfe is overlapped by a short skirt consisting of a cond Foraerea with un deep band of satin elaborately braided in a matching tone and a similarly treated back, which is plaited into the waistband as well as nto the left edge of the straight front. The seamless shonldered bodice is shirred into a broad givdie of the cmbroidered silk and worn over a guimpé of white Chantilly lace, The large sailor of old vose straw is trimmed with white roses aud pink satin bows, the gloves are of embroidered silk and the sanshade is of pink brocade. cashmere de adged front "ROSS-BALLARD MINES LTD. Buving and Selling Orders promptly executed for this Stock, 'Hennessy & Gilmour Members M f Exchange DAME STREET WwW. MONTREAL. 7204 NOTRE "hor M Se Fresh on Saturday 8 viss Mountain and fine cakes. Try one for Sunday night's tea. R.H. TOYE, 30 KnS, Phone 141 Ribbon Cake, two very No one w only L0c or $1 % to throw awa $ You can wasie money on haps quicker, for what guite another color Apxt fro Shoes. 2 Have you Are you ¢ tle joss should be? k to your hoes "This Bhoe Store buys liberally knowledge of what every manuliact Shoes as like 1 gulekly as on anyling, per- looks ather is ofien "4 horse of Wi wasting mont are you tired?-Look to your a cold ?~--Look 10 your Shoes well dressed than 8 person of your means and has such United intimate and an in the Stat Canada van do and is doing in the way of making Footwear, that we always have the best, al pat price, consistent with he quality. 3 as ii VW , But (with a capital B) the be d rock foundation en which our bugsitiess is built is queality. So -- Make this your Shoe stores You can't do betler. Don't think you camdo as well SUTHERLAND & . BRO, E HOME OF GOOD SHOES LR TH

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