At Return Fares. oir ($30 $B sa Spa 140 Te The Camadian North West Moosejaw... ----- ~~ returning wofil AUGUST 24th, until returning JULY 18h, returns 16th. ty ars not ww LINE FO Dedsrontd and sll local ey Hall Depot ut 4 , CPR. Telegraph Of : guuTe RAILWAY To Manitoba and Canadian NorthsWest and Returs Via North Bay as Follows: Yorkioni,.... Return on or Before A elgg 4 TH Whthel' G0 wet ery posses PABS, AG E-Samen, $08 and to steamer and ser " ¥ROM BOSTON. the Susmonsesteh «June 16th NEW SERVICE Piano... June 25th duly 20d. August 13h. aloo! Bay of Quinte and ? VE "yl Junk Ish, tri-weakly sors gr kel av Beri © XORONYO-MONTRRAL LINE. 8 June 4th to 15th apd Sundav Gong, EAST. " Sud, ge I. J i : Bi eS, Lake Ontario & Bay of Quinte Kingston Picton -- Belleville Str. "Aletha" pe Fe oT . 1 th wil ave on Suge : NY Mandays ot Tors am, } aod Gu DISPOTES AND OUARRELS' THAT ACCOMPANY ola TION PROCEEDINGS. The Splendor of Some of These | Nation Festivities Marred --! Struggles for the Crown. Special the Whig #1. ve. unfortunately, has been & by no means infrequent accompaniment of the proceedings of a coronation day. frddeed, there have been occumions apr on which the splendor oi this great national festivity has. been entirely mavied by the evil passion displayed by us imperfect men ! ft is curious to note that the great name of archbishop Dunstan figures at more than one Anglo-Saxon corona tion in a militans and, we may almost say, pughatious aspect. The first oo casion at which this mighty prelate came to play a leading part was the coronation of king Edwy the Fair in 055. This young monarch, who ap pears to have been weak and obstin ate to a degree, was sufficiently foolish to withdritw himself from his coronas tion banquet in order that he might enjoy the society of his beautiful poung queen, Fthelgiva. A at | amount of public feeling bad been al ready evoked by the fact that the king was previously related to this | Jlady in the prohibitive degree, Ac | cordingly, archbishop Odo despatched bishop Dunstan (as he then was), to gether with Cynesius, bishop of Lich | field, to summon Edwy back to the place he had so anjustifiably vacated, The manner in which these two bishops performed their task hardly commends itself to us. They entered the room without apy previous warn: ing, and, finding that the king had placed his erown on the ground, pros ! bably because he was not allowed | to shard it with his bride. Dunstan drag- i wed him with considerable violence from his seat and insisted on placing the crown. upon his head once more. | A scene of mutual recrimiontions fol i bowed, in which Ethelgiva joined with the freedom of specch which! her are occasionally in the habit of dis playing !| Dunstan never forgave what he conceived to be an outrage, and the wretched end of poor Ethelgiva always appears to be a dark blot upon his otherwise really great career. Some twenty-five vears later it was | the lot of Dunstan to play the part | (we might almost say) of a fiery pro: { phet: The boy king Edward the mar- ' tyr, Dunstan's special favorite, had just been cruelly done to death, Fired ' by this iniquity, the archbish pro- seded to denounce his half-brother, who now ascended the throme as Ethelred the Second, and in words " prophetic. warning actually foretold the terrible evils which were destined to befall the land and people of Eng- land during the unfortunate reign which was then about to commence. The righta of the srchiepiscopal see of Canterbury had not yet become fully defined, except perhaps in theory at the beginning of the twelfth cen- tury. When Henry 1. became king of England in the year 1100 the arch bishopric was in the hands of one Ralph of Escares, This prelate was a man of a bold and determined tem- perament, but he was now in the ev ening of life, and was ne longer able to command the fund of physical pow. er which once had been his. His pal- ied hand could obviously not be | trusted to perform the delicate and important duty of placing the crowns i of 8t. Edward and queen Edith upon the head of the king and queen. One of the suffragan-bishops of the pro- | vines of Canterbury, Roger of Salis urs wan, Shiirefore deputed for this rpose, altogether without the know- ledge of the primate. The latter, to Wis horror and indignation, saw his junior deliberately take wp the crown with the obiect of investing the new soverelgn' with it, while all the time he himsell, stricken as he was with old age and disease, was completely powerleas (as it seemed) to save the situation. Rage, however, imparted a This Blacksmith Had Backache. And Kidney Disease -- His Life Was Made Miserable by Il- Health, But He Found a Cure Dr. Chase's Kid- ney-Liver Pills. hes The work of the hlaokeumj uires a body of brawn and shus ie, an well as strong comstitutiony for, besides thn a muscular exertion, the Aackom subject. to chang- & of temperature ing one moment witid the sparks at his forge and the of the shop ney troubk , being aggra by the an on avnted lacks sex op'¥ ting to the fact i podes' of Williams, temporary strength to the archbish; palsied hand. A struggle there: upon ensued, Roger being fully deter ined to assert what he conceived to w his own rights. Somehow or other archbishop Ralph succeeded in gaining wa fire bold of the diatdem, but that was all. He just managed to "fix" it upon Henry's brow, but without do ing so weeurely. The 'crown slipped. and was within an ac of falling to the ground, Bad it not been saved in the very nick of time by certain of the officials who surrounded the king ant archbishop fo dll probability the people began to realize what a mighty sovereym they had just lost when his worthless son aspendéd the throne of England, ax king Edward TF. At the very out- "Wt of thi¥ unworthy mondreh ¥ reign, feelings of hostility and annoyance wore evoked by hix tactless, not say undutifil, behaviour. To begiu with, archbishop Winchelsey was un able to offitiate as chief prelate, ow- ing to the fact that he was in bad health and absent at Rome. A commis don of three bishops was therefore ap pointed (6 perform this duty, and the actual deed of coronation was carried out by Woodcock, bishop of Winches teres most evil cholee, and one cal culated to cause no little offence, ow that not so any years before he had actually conspired against the King's mighty father. There was, however, far worse to fol Jow. Edward 11. seenis to have Deen completely dominated by his wretched favorite, Plers Gaveston. Consequeat: ly thik upstart, as the ancient nobili ty of the land regarded him, was ap pointed to the highest post of honor on the coronation day. A more unfor tunate occurrence could hardly have taken place, for not only was Gases ton extremely uhpopulur with many sections of the English people, Tut it was well known that Edward 1. had altogether disapproved of the young friendship which existed Letween the two young men. When at Jemcth the great day dewned, and the peers be held Gaveston, who surpassed them one and all in "bravery of apparel' and *'delicacie of fashion," while ther had also been adsigned to him the high 'duty of "carrying St. Edward's crowne in that pompe," their fur knew no bounds. From the first tc last the general arrangements of the coronation were bungled by Gavestom in an altogether hopeless fashion. The gateen was subjected to numerow slights, though whether these were ac tually due to him or not is doubtiul and there were many other lesser in cidents , all of which combined to arouse evil passions, which survived until long after the actual coronation day was past and gone, The coronation of Charles I, as wi have already indicated elsewhere, sur passes those of all other sovereigns in the general unpleasantness of the at tendant circumstances. Of these the element of strife was by no méans the least appeavent. In the first place, there was a quarrel proceeding in the royal household. The queen was a Roman Catholic, and she absolutely declined to reecive the crown as queen i consort of England, while she also in bg 4 timated her refusal to be present, even a* a mere witness of the ceremony Nothing could induce her to waive he resolution, and so Charles 1 set fort} on hix way to be "hallowed" all. In himself, the queen watching the pro ceedings from one of the windows o the royal palace, while her ladies--sc it is recorded---amused themselves by {risking about behind her A quarrel scarcely less unfortunate was also raging over the way, within the walle of Westminster Abbey. The .aean at that time was the celebrated lord keeper Williams, a staunch Puri tan. Fis chapter was serie of the word a dividea house, foi the leading wember of the staff of twelve prebendaries was bishop Lau (ae he then was), a man who migh! be deseribed as being the exact anti The latter was i deep disgrace. The king woula have | nothing to say to him, g resolution ir which he was warmly supported bh the donfinant conrt favorite of th time, the notorious. duke of Bueking ham: Williams implored that he mighs be: allowed te officiate in the time honored position assigned to the dea of Westminster; but the authoritie would have none of km. It there fore became necessary to nominate a mbstitute: The office would naturally have devolved upon Laud as sub aean of the abhey, especially as he al wo held: conjointly with his stall th bishopric of St. David's. = Williams however, could not bring himseli to place his bated rival in so prominent w position by his own act. He there fore forwarded a complete hist of the ndaries of the ghbey to the king leaving to the latter the responsibility of making the selection, The choi fell, of course, upon Laud, who was » prime favorite; but Williams had at least shcconded in avoiding one piece of mortification to himself. In this manner, then, did the reigning pow ers set about the coronation of ow ol. Stuart Ite conch sion, however, was even more dismal and unfortunate than its commence: ment, and served as a fitting. barbin ger of the most miserable reign Eng land has ever known. in the fullest WAS A WAN OF ANY SIDES; A STUDY OF THE MANNER OF MAN LATE PRINCIPAL GRANT WAS. Raster Much to Tell What He Has Dose ~duhness the Secves of His Disting- wishing Eagerness -- The Something More That fe Wis That Lified Bim Above the Common Flane, It is easier to state what Principal Grant has done than to tell what manuer of man he was. Yet an exact catalogue of his achievements is dif Geult of eompilition. for his activi ties were extraordinarily' numerous, says a writer in The Toronto Globe. "Phe head of a university, he was keenly interested im polttics; a theo~ logian, he was sensitive to the mat~ erial development of his country and his province; a clergyman, he held singiilarly accurate views upon mili= tary policy; a scholar, he had extra- ordinary administrative ability. Fe uumerable were the channels in which his energy flowed. He has bequeathed to his country a university; he aided in its crucial days the union of Can~ ada; he fostered the sentiment of Tie perial orgamization; he had a share in the welding together of the branches of the Presbyterian Church: be exerted a rare influence upon pub~ lic opinion as the work of the devel- opment of Canada wes prosecuted, Behind these activities was a man; Bow are we to estimate that nature, with its profound human sympathy, its eager activity, its edergy singul- arly tempered with saguacity and tact? Eagerness is the word which per haps comes most readily to whet one recalls the Principal's as pect. Eagerness was the secret of his great physical activity; his long stride, with the body bent forward, was that of a man with something to do the moment he reached his goal. Eagernoss was the keynote of his conversation; his voice had nothing of the level intonation aflectod to-day so largely in the English-speaking world, but rose and fell with Celtic vivacity, and who'that has once beard the rising inflection which so often closed his sentences can forget it, or, with it, the absorbed interest with which the Principal flung him- self into the subject of every conver- sation? And eagerness seems the word to apply to the restless energy which found interest in every human activity, Keenness was the secret of the eag- erness; the Principal's mental vision was piercing. A look back over his life recalls how often his perception of the ultimate meaning of events wis accurate. The union of the Pres- bhyterimn Church has borne abundant fruit, and the young clergyman, al though identified with the body least inclined to merge itself in the great church that was to be, committed hinisel! instantly to the cause of un- fon. What has not confederation done tor British North America? And the Grant of 1867, a son of the province which had least to gain by it, and purtured in the party which viewed the change with deepest' suspicion, broke the political ties in which he had grown up, to fight for it. We tre all thrilled with the conscious aess of our Imperial destiny now; Imperial organization was the key- note of his political creed years ago. The same foresight appears in his conduct of the university. A. quarter of a century ago, when equipment was meagre and the prospect nar- row, he insisted on acquiring grounds which within the last two years have proved useful im . the latter-day growth of Queen's. A decade ago the Principal appears to have - foresocn the present activity of the Province ! of Ontario, and the School of Mines rose in Kingston, keeping pace with instead of following after. the new development. Rapidity and accuracy of judgment inspired his' boundless en- ergy. Energetic men, men passionately in- torested in thelr work, are not always liked by others; more often their ime titaus activity is resented by those whom they are seeking to hurry into great schemes. But with Principal Grant, next to his passionate pre vision, ranked the balance given by his great sagacity. No man in Can- ada enjoyed higher repute for prac- tical grasp of things as they are; there was none lke him in counsel Allied with the eagerness and the sa- gacity was one quality more, the sui- vity, the sensitive adaptation eof ad- dress' to the man before him. The re sult was a most remarkable inflience over the men Who knew him. His fiery purpose inspiréd the ardor, his strong wisdom compelled the respect, his personal charm engaged the lik- ing of the man he talked with. This most unusual union of qual fties was seen in its lightest side in the Principal's consummate clever- ness. The deftpess with which he managed men was equalled hy only one other Canadian publicist, Sir John Macdonald, and the Principal was an infinitely more strenuous nan than the Premier. and aroused far fewer antagonisms. His circumstances weve most difficult, for he bad to ex- mind | DAILY Barnsy YHI0, TUESDAY JUNE 10. showed in every aspect of his publi: lite, for he lo¥ed wien in the mass It showed (exquisitely im Gis rela tions with his former st.lmts, for he loved ruen individually passed through Queen's were mel bors of his family. Te 100k no pains to cotrt undergraduate Iiking but it is impossible to number the men whe in thew battle with thw world found the Principal a friend whose affection grew with years One of his miner qualities was a memory for faces, names, and domestic detail of the sort which is said to be the spec fal gift of royalty. Fe spent himself prospered or had not. He. was wel come in their homes: he was the friend of their children, He swayed wen because He inderstood That sympathy was the sotret his optimism. Most men on recalling his qualities will enumerate that ams ong the chiefest of them It was a pecnliar charm of this ¢ager, strenu- ous, busy Man, that he wads intense ly and spontaneously hopeful, Life had bern for him in the finest sense w success. He was born a Nova Sco tis and a colonlst, he dicd a Cana dian and a citizén of the empire He was hora to a lund suffering from the isevitable provinciality of pior neer days, he ieft to his country # cintre of vigorous intellectual Ife. Sorrow came to him ax {t comes to all, but it dimmed not the delightiad cheerfulness of his optimism. High hope was with him the fusing force whith brought into unity his pro- found sympathy and acute intellect tieorge Munro Grant was indeed a force in our mational life, but was more than a force, was an inspira~ tion STYLISH COSTUMES. a Gown of Fancy Suiting and White Moire. The material for this handsome street costume is fancy suiting, but it will also be gpuite chic if developed of smooth finished cloth, Some of the newest features in tailor-mades, the basque or skirt as well as the broad shoulder effect are combined in this smart gown. The long rolling collag and the straps over the shoulder and around the bottom of the skirt are of I moire. revers and the extension vest are of white moire stitehed with | several rows of Corticelli silk; small | buttons are set down the centre of the vest as well as on the fronts and clusters of buttons ave placed on the shoulders straps and sleeves. The latter are quite novel, the fitted und ersieeves of moire being completed with cloth over-sleeves flaring at the botton, The skirt is laid in wide tucks and spreads out into a very full flare at the hem. As the season advances the prefer ence for mixed anid fancy suitings he comes more and more distinct and it seems almost as if the latter would in a very short time be used instead of the smooth-finished cloths; although the cloth is by far the most dressy in appearance; it is of more compa t and closer weave than the mixed suiting: and homespuns, which, together with Scotch tweed and covert cloth are in the lead at present ---------- Women And Jewels. Jewels; candy, flowers, man--that is the order of a woman's preferences. Even that greatest of all jewels, health, is often ruined in tha strenuous efforts to save the money to purchase thew, If a woman will risk her health to get a coveted gem, then let her fox- tify hersell against the ingiduous com- sequences of coughs, colds and bron- chia!' afiections by the regular use of Dr. Dowehiee's German Syrup. It will promptly arrest consumption in its early stages ano heal the affected lings and bronchial tubes and drive the dread disease from the system. It i# not a cure-all, but it iv a obriain curd for coughs, golds and' all bron- chial troubles. You can get this. veli- able remedy at Wade's drug store. ------------ Wheat Outlook Good. Puluth, Mign., June 10.~The favor able weather conditions of the last few weeks have given a most encour aping torn Yo the prospects for the spring wheat crop in the great wheat raising states of Minnesots and the Dakotas. The possibilities, according to reliable reports, are for a large crop. Last year's wheat hy in the three states was about 14,700,000 sores? this vear's will be a few hwn- dred thousand acres loss. But, while wheat will be shariched a trifle, dhe buncant moisture of t ing, wi nid the crop iin growth. here will be a far larger ctop this year of other 3 wheat, if the prgsent pro- i is fulfilled. The fax trop is es Umated for the three states at a Ut tle over 3,500,000 acres of land. Big Bridge At Waco. Waco, Texas, June 10.-The magni fieent now stwel bridge over the Bra: son, one of the largest in the United States, was formally opened to tof fic to-day. The hridge is 458 feet long of solid steel, sixty-six feet high in All whe! for his graduates, whether they had ' Medical Profession. Effervescent Salt A teaspoonful of Abbeys Salt in a glass of water shortly after rising will keep you in perfect health. It purifies the blood, keeps the head clear and stomach sweet. A positive cure for chronic constipation. Recommended by the Write us a Letter. 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