Daily British Whig (1850), 16 May 1908, p. 12

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. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, MAY 16. 1908. -- wem------ mms - . : i ' and all creeds can cordially join, The j record an interesting, thniling story, y memorial is meant to be 2 tribute alike | they present us with a picture of Bim! ° to French and British heroism. andfin a lonely post on the ed f Sav- | atin ] ---- enterprise. It would be €asy to arrest|age w t tensely d BROADMINDED TRIBUTE your attention and stir your -enthusi- | cold, 1 mg t bis | g , A asm by a recital of some of the deeds! wooden shed and the y drifting y : p frequently cautes stomach troubles, but careful eating will never FROM A PRESBYTERIAN, [of daring and the feats of endurance] through the Srevices, himself and: his | A, © This is the Maid of beautiful face ; right them. When your stomach is out of condition, 'it needs help & the neal the To BY Sos Shiveying aver their scanty] ; With wealth of hair and hle nf - anads e difficulty r | fires omp ns discontent Da ? : : ah wealth of hair mate that no food can supply. ust | ighly cleansed, sett] yo (Lanada. Ome difbculty 1s to ow: hire 's companions discontented and gies : pply. It must be thoroughly cleansed, settled Rev. James Barclay, of St. Paul's, | where to begin and where to end dejected, a ready prey to a disease which ¥ PN 5] grace ; and strengthened. Food never does this, : ! A ~ ny » Montreal, on the Achieve- We might speak of Jacques Cartier was constantly thr ning * them, - one 3 to whom we owe the name of our city | after another succumbing to it E ' 3 Complexion clear and without 2 fault 3 y ( ments of the Pioneers of Nae --the hardy adventurer from St. Malo,| But in the little company one heart} ay ' 3 ; France, and the real discoverer of Canada. We |remamed strong and true. Champlain | § She's aregnlar userof ABBEY'SSALT. Preaching in St. Paul's Presbyterian might speak of La Salle, sacrificing |never for a moment lost courage, but) : ' : church, Montreal, Rev. James Barclay, | himself in devotion to his King--travel- | kept on cheering his companions, i i saa - : 4 said; : ling with indomitable unweariedness, 'he story further pictures him, after | Do ah aiast some medicije lize aki} ver, Somponded, It was with a feeling of justifiable |amid hardships and dangers and pri- | experiences that a have broken | starve and get little bencht. Give Beech ds Pills a chance and you pride that Paul in writing to the Philip- | vations over thousands of leagues of down most men, undauntedly trying to} will again know the pleasures of a sound digestion Appetite will pians claimed to be of the stock of Is- country hitherto unknown, among v-jhold a continent with only twenty-eight | return and the stomach again work without any discomfort. The skin rael, of the tribe of Benjamin, an He-lage and cannibal] tribes, fighting his men, fearlessly fighting against savage will clear, the face plump out, while people will remark "How well brew of the Hebrews. None of us live | way with conspicuous bravery, with but Indians, and when beaten, equally fear- . a : : lv only in the present--the memories of ja handful of men--travelling mostly on |lessly living amongst them, sharing in you're looking." These are facts, not f .. Prove it yourself. Pp! ? : : NE the past god the hopes of the future are [foot, reduced ever and anon to ex-|their councils, their haunts, their feasts, | Prepared only by Thomas Beecham, St. H Laacashire, England. as much a part of our existence as the |tremity of fatigue, without repose, with | from day to day carrying Mis life in his | Sold by sll Druggists in Canadas sad U, S. America. 1a boxes 25 cents. experiences of the present, and are alow recreation, frequently without pro®|hand id yet never despairing powerful factor in conditioning our life | visions, yet pursuing with hope, the en- And we must not forget his devoted and moulding our character. It is this [terprise to which he and his companions | wife who came from France to share which gives each, nation a distinet in- {were solemnly consecrated at High! his arduous lot, and gave herself with dividuahty and life of its own, claim-| Mass in the venerable cathedral of hisla wholehearted enthusiasm to the "in-| ing and taking its place among the ad- | native place. struction of the Indian children, and mnistrations of the world and the We might speak of Frontenac, & no-|{by her beauty, her kindness and her agents of history. A nation has all the [ble specimen of hewic chivalry, ready piety won their hearts, attributes of a person, performing} for any perilous enterprise and fight- A MAN TO HONOR v | hate ov bali TT responsible actions, possessing indefen- [ing hard till he was nearly eighty to] We may well honor the memory of 7 Ey Res . sible rights, making binding engage- | keep for France the colony she had won. | Samuel Champlain--few men have ex- a ¢ v J Ei '» ments, animated by a common conscious- WOLFE AND MONTCALM. hibited such a combination of courage, 2 oa conom ness, maintaining its identity from age| We might speak of Wolfe, a name f daring, and business capacity > 0 to age, and this it is which gives it not | imperishably associated with the an religious zeal. In a time when tl . only political but moral eontisaiy, In | nals both of the uid land 2a of the standard of morality was: far from } OMBUSTION taking place in the dome or more than we are apt to think we are | new. Rat can we say of that noble] he lived a singularly pure, honest and vhs " PF ae 3 debtors to the past, n our knowledge, | spirit, utterly undaunted by disaster, 2s fie Jife nga) ly pu i es! en fop chambe r of furnace fire-pot is the in our freedom, in our civilization, in|rising superior to all physical weakness | tice. his acts were yet tempered with result of air and heat mingling with uy religion, ou inheitanes to-day is and Suffering? Can we not recall him { mercy ; faithful to the masters in France, fumes. This combustion produces heat-energy, the resuit of the weary totls, the tremen- jas he awaited his supreme efiort.--re- | who commissioned hi . he won the un wh 3 1c): i ling v dous struggles, the defeats, and the vic- | peating Gray's Elegy, conscious that he Pe Bissioned | on De a > whic h the radiating surfac es above and around tories of those who have gone before { was entering one of those paths of | whom he traded; and that chapter fire-pot absorb or draw in and then deflect or us. These have made us what we are |glory that lead but to the grave, with | his career might with advantage Ix throw off. Incoming cold air receives this heat- to-day, they have fashioned the condi- | the shadow of anticipated death hanging | printed on the doors of our parliaments 4 4 : : = : tions of our life, whether we will or'no, over him--we can hear him calmly say jand city councils. our business ex- | energy, the result being heated air. Now, if the = Sarat separate Purseives from hese ing: "1 would rather have written these | changes and emporiums combustion takes place at a faster rate than the icy have enfered into our very life {lines than take Quebec to-morrow." 1 » midst of his military and poli naib ives of ar raat nn saw} hook. - We are the children of the| We can see him struck by a bullet that a the midst. bis militar ang ok radiating surfaces can absorb and deflect, the fathers, and no richer heirloom can any | shattered his wrist, but still gallantly | his zeal for Christianity was intense. surplus heat-power will pass up the chimney or nation possess than the memory of their | leading the way to victory--pierced by leading him to declare that the salva- into collar--a waste of coal. great dead : second bullet, in his side; yet still { tion of one soul was of more impo ce . . HEBREW NAMES. cheering on his men, with a third bullet an the founding of : mpire. Twenty i " "" What a power in the lot of the He- | lodged deep in his breast, we can see han the igvnding of ey oe mission he | There is no waste of coal in "Sunshine Furnace. brew bas theis past beet, what a Potent him staggering into the arms of ah off crossed the Atlantic in ships devoid of Circuit of radiator is so complete, and air- +actor. all through their history have [cer, yet entreating them to hold him | co ort and f: from seaworthy. and | A : names, namés of men and names of [up so that his brave followers might not Sontfors and far. 40 oe a Sod | circulating space so large, that every bit of places, proved, How often in the dark know and be disheartened, and then in He died as he had lived, ending | heat-energy is quickly absorbed and quickly est and weakest moments of their faint accents, hut with the smile of duty sakness and suffering with calm re : ational life were they arrested in their | accomplished on his face, we can hear weakness 2 rag) buried be- | deflected on the circulating cold air, which downward career = Feawakened to | his last words: "Now God be praised, 1] neath the cliff which overlooks | is thus quickly heated and ascends through nobler purpose and life. /hat inspira- | die content." scene of his indefatigable enterprise. | 7 2 : a tion came to them again and again from We might speak of his brave and We . Es in in rl the hot alr pipes to rooms above. memories and names, Abraham, Isaac, |generous foe Montcalm. We scarcely memory of such men as of ! me a . . . . facob, Joseph, Moses, Mount Bethel, |think of them to-day as foes, but a% | 1 nace ake The check-draft of a furnace is situated on Peniel, Hebron! Are not all the great | gallant and noble comrades in one great THE FIRST MISSIONARIES the smoke-pipe. When this draft is closed-- steps of progress in every department campaign of loyalty and duty. If onel If in some of the early Beet : especially on an "ordinary" furnace--heat f life associated with memories and | was a hot hearted Briton, the other was have a rich inheritance of soldier tiel ng f x ity y names and inspired by - these, all the a high souled Frenchman, a man of ow ea od nhertane i Sold partic les. can escape up chimney. w hen check- great achievements of history, of social | impertarbable courage, and of incor-| ,n4 4 Re faba og Mg al draft is, opened the incoming cold air from the and political and religious "progress | ruptible patriotism, a man who set an | \hroueh whom we have a rich cellar drives ill heat particles back inte furnace have" been the result of the life, the | example of disinterested honor which tance of Christian devotedness proper. Ifthe grates and fire-pot of furnace are thought, and the actions of individuals {may well be recalled as a lesson to men such a day and in such a place | : F x p : who seemed to step out of their environ- lin public positions to-day; whilst others | oo pt, 53 this. and tn such 2 place not constructed properly, there's n clogging and ments and cannot be explained by their | were draining for selfish aggrandizement Should en pli fh last. fd : surroundings, who overtop the men [the lifeblood of the colony, he was giv- There are no nobler pages in Canadian $3 readily. If no provision is made for gns escape, : abont them, It is these men, the Moses, | ing lavishly of his own resources and | 1 han those w 1s of the y check-draf wt be lef sod i ini | 50 CITIES and towns now he Mohammeds, the Zoroasters, the |dedicating his life on its behalf, his Mustory than, th Eo Li hres ie hie . ey must bo left closed indefinitely-- £ a a4 s 1 i » bet a cassie © coal, 3 ! ' TTY * * : % D080 TROT RT 000 UR XE 0 A : r= gathering of ashes, and fire does not burn up . Pauls, the Luthers, and the like, who [warrior spirit keenly felt the prospect i ho. cam , : : : Toe t 3 ct SSION: $ 0 came to our Domin demand Fit-Reform garments have in their regions and in their times, of inevitable defeat and he was glad 10 | I Jromcy WhO came to our Domin 8 . =hicved the great movements affecting die before he had to witness the sur- lon. It way ba e be eu the enterprise of There Is no waste of coal in "Sunshine" Furnace. . . and influencing millions of men through | render of the city which he had so gal- {,, Cans 4. but the enterprise of rel Me fan . We ask you mn all fairness--would generation and = generation, and it js lantly defended, and he closed a noble I ry oy the Sn Srpeise else No clogging Gan take place in the 4 plece : : good for, us to read hou thats men, | career in a singularly noble way, pay- fin" Jacques Cartier's early exp a grate, no ashes can gather on the straight '0 remember them, to honor their mem: | ing as he passed away a generous tri-| relizion plaved 2 tant pz ut : fire-pot i i 4 SO many men wear Fit-Reform spring ory, that we may catch something of | bute. to the valor of the foe who had religion plays } an ipptiant jart---bai d Tire-pot walls, and the Automatic Gas 5 : . . if h h their spirit, and entering into their la- | defeated him and which Cal. Hever be forgotten in Damper makes every. provision fer the and summer suits these were not the bors carry on the noble work. In death these two herole men, re- ihe history of our land are those of escape of gas; consequently, check - draft SENERATION TOR THE PAST hot divided. and. sorely me paces, were |Le Jeune, Daniel Brebeouf and Jogu can be opened shortly after coaling and all most perfect types of hand-tailored There is no more remarkable people [Mot divided, and surely nothing would | These men came.to our land inspired | - on the earth to-day than the Jews, and have given greater cheer to both than with a glorious ambition--they aimed heat-energy saved for radiation. what has given to them and preserved {0 know that ere many years had pas- at the conversion of a continent. From 4 A ------------ s Rend. . garments ? to them their characteristics.--I mean ed, the representatives, the descen- | heir dingy hovel on the St. Charles ; their distinctly high characteristics ? | dants of both races, would be banded they surveyed a field of labor whose tondon C 4 Vancouver Give . Undoubtedly, . their memory of their | to8¢ther in paying joint honor to their | iciness might "tire the wings o Teoronts d St Johan NO. win past, their history, their Book, has done |Pames. It surely is an honor to our- thought itself," and their lives attes Montreal Hamilton This enormous correctness, this. As has been asked: "What did] selves to honor such men the earnestness of their faith and the Wianipes Calgory business has comfort, service their book do for them?" It enshrined . HEROIC WOMEN. > intensity of their zeal . 1 the Code of their great Lawgiver,-- it| - I might speak of women 2s well asl Their motto was, and they were ur AGENTS TESTIMONY been buiit up and value. It preserved the living words of their hi fh of Diadame de a Pelirie, tiie flinchingly true to it "Ad majorem Dei ---------------- OX ¥ nk: » ia mighty prophets, it presented them with | YS Widow of wealthy and noble }gloriam.™ They would act or wait, dare because 'this is small mn size a aN Peolific 2 heroic examples, birth, who left home with all its com- an and die in unquestioning sub 3 forts and refinements and. toiled and jection to the authority of the superi x i hat but this has preserved their trademark has b r and what Hs has | : abore roti AMONE Savage : ut great ix immemorial continuity as the most im- labored with devotion among savage m whom they recognized the age re aha ¢ Ons 3 {tribes, toilipg with ardent enthusiasm 1 We alwa s stood for $i ificance. perishable of the nations of the world , % M | Divine authority itself ¢ y gn Why have revolutions thundered in vain [1 build a seminary for Indian girls in| rained to admire the dauntle er- | LEMMON& SONS. ver their heads? Judea saw many a mighty empire rise and fall. She hd > " We can vouch, far the * Sunshine" virtue mentioned above. We have installed this furnace and ke pt records of its performances, and know 16 tu be exactly as 1 presented, » ! x ar } anada--and Madame Le Tour. thel immtion of these men to- master Acadian Joan of Arc, the intrepid ang | jifculties of their enterprise, We may heroic defender of the fort at St. John, pity their superstition and lament their standing out unflinchingly on the ram-| cr rors but ec t but pay a tribute of parts at the head of her handful off ec" 4 self-sacrific ad herself but a petty kingdom, 'hardly more extensive and not pearly so pop ulous as many an English county, yet » ) hers were the covenants, and the law |soldiers, and compelling the besieging sparing devotion Q and the promises and the fathers. The |general to offer terms of capitulation, A PICTURE OF LE JEUNE hosts of Assyria trampled her into the Which she iy ep d fa et a ht C faif to be t : : > aA a a a ye win an we fail to be as we rea 2 mire: Babylonia swept her into dreary [Save the lives of Der lathiul and heroic} aft ¢ . ' : --- exile ; Persia ed her in the iron | followers (but specially may we speak of | the story ol Le Jeune i . Is LIFE WORTH LIVING 4 : c a Wi / Wh R Bard oi i hut in the long 1 we trees net work wi her cruel Satraps: the one with whose name this movement for fant at hg x os a i 2 MEN, you becoms dishearter - un E kings of Syfia and Egypt made her the |2 national park is closely associated, | Outside Sra ng ' ! Pek 4 when you feel the ay ; er frozen and his fin I yet to ; Kervous Debility and de ¢ football - of their fierce contentions. [the founder of the city of Quebec, in connection with the 3ooth anniversary |g away at upont you, You haven't the ney Republican Rolie, put her under a pro P y ' ) . W W g of ' h ent is to be cele. | cOnjugations of verbs, and translatiy m ambition you used to have, You CRA FORD & ALSH Shiator wha Was the soi of an Luaperial o asich Sis. ovement Js 10 be vel the Pate r Noster mt gonqu tl S Mel you are pot the man you ought oo 2 Rome, burnt her temples to ashes and | brate ih ice of their washing water ; to be. You feel lke giving vp in } Sole Agents for Kingston. reared a temple to Venus on the plat .:¢ JHE STORY. OF CHAMPLAIN, Be'broken. every moti: with y : despair. You get hervous and weak, form of the shrine of God. The nations It is more than likely that you have |be broken ey MATRINE Tr halehe 4 have little ambition, pain a - E---------- of Europe with their Torquemades and | all read the story of Champlam, but it and thess blankets frir ged every night a " back over kidneys, drains at nig Borgias and iniquitous inquisitions, in| Will do ussgood to redd it aga. He | with ig icles Shey wore bu ht | hollow eyes, tired mornings, Prefer TO YOU AND EVERY SISTER Rua . a d od 2 lived in an age which we are accus-|in the hand of God. to be used to be alone, distrustful, wvarioid FREE T0 YOU----MY SISTER FREE iy iD Maly, Russia and Spain, tortured and 4 2 3 4 {eo ye th | thrown aside {f such should p is appetite, looseness of hair, por « an SurreRinG FROM WOMEN'S insulted her. The Moslems have held |tomed to regard as a rude age, with|t rn. , ' & li er hme <tr. , TL J : 1 Bow wens sufferings, her lands and cities for twelve centuries | ride ideas of civilization and of colture, wii : thhold windedtion. fin Deblitty, Dur Naw Mims { have found the cure. and a half under their effete and som hen manners were Loew hat r ragh 0 3 i h RS a "the pe \ 5 Ri Treatment is your refups It I will mail, free of any charge, my home treats i fe bate and morals not very high jut in the € courage entureq bn the will strengthen 1 we ' \ \ nolent despotism. But where are her? g t : . 0 stresgthen all weak ment with full instructions to any sufferer from pent . Cespot . h . vages of h tory we will find little | terprise to re the Herons and the fi the Rervocs aEAtH. tr wotaen's ailments. | t to tell bout | cnemics? Assyria, Greece, Rome, Car-} Pag ot his story we ! Wh Dittie | ) Hoh iA y purify \ "my reader iE Shows thage. where are they? Even brilliant [cause for shame, but many opportuni- | fierce Iroquois for Chris Well did the bided and restore Fou 1 & Iman + yourself, thage. 4 & : ties for pride these hrave missionaries know that the iy condition. 3. OF your . § want to | Greece, with, her poetry and art and } : . to eure ives at home without 3 3 : 3 . The life of the pioneer from F pathway to the goal of their ambitior doctor. o cannot understand science, perished with her own lusts ie ite Of the prone rance 3 . amine = What we ang] WQerstas Rved mn. Rome, with her legions | who founded our old and beautiful [lay through toil, hardship, famine, all Pay When Cured. 4, x oh . shar : > + em a $s MNS tin r er than doctor, and her luxuries, sickened of import. |city, so full of interest and attraction, that was mast revolting 10 men stniured READE Are you a viclim} Have you lost hope? Are you intending to . et corruption. Bat because Israel had [is a story which may be put into the|in an atmosphere of ir marty: Has youl blood been diseased? Hava you any nets her story: her Bible and ching to it, {bands of our school children without and all that was most trying and terrible Our New Method Treatment willibure you. What it has dens © wrocds of y. i : because, amid all her miserable failings, | any fear for their morals. As a youth | to mowastic faith. others, it will do for Jou, CONSELTATION FREE. Xo 10 hs treated she was the lifter up to the nations of {he was familiar with the sea, and IN SATAN 3 STRONGHOLN FREEThe Golden Hovitor ad) narpt borg mae; on the banner of righteousness, she re- [gained distinction in the French NAVY! They believed they were face to face , ! > Bai' on Visstacs of Ym, maineth. And what is true of Israel is | later he served with honor in the army; {with the innermost stronghsld of Satan ESTABLISHED 20 YEARSCURES GUARANTEED. No Treatment sest true of any nation, it is true of Canada [still later he volunteered. aud we have land they resolved to storm it. Jt is a C. 0. D. No names on boxes or anvelopes. Everything confidential Question The man who has no veneration for the [every reason to be grateful tf it He did. { picturg of winch no. matter how many Hist and cost of Home Treatment PREE. to help in the founding of the mew | hadows of superstition and terror dar- i past will have little reverence for the to p present, --and that is true of a people | France in the western hemisphere. Ofljeq it of which any Frenchman, and as of an individual. 1 his experiences and exploits odr annals | Canadian, any Christian, may be prond As you all know, a great movement Of only two prizes could these men be RS. has been inaugurated, whereby Canada A SNEEZING EPIDEMIC. sure, danger and death, and in the name 3 v 2 is to remember and to know her past, of God they faced the issue. There was Cor. Michigan Ave,, and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. and the Presbytery of Montreal decided | It's Not Influenza, But Sprine-- {a noble heroism in these nien which we 5 upon this day as a fitting time to brin: Catarrh That Comes With {do well to borrow, and the fruits of this matter before the congregation Change of Season. their heroism was a blessing © the within its bounds, Every person you meet seems io jland, They introduced 2 genuine civili- . A L AL Pe' Little can be said, which has not al- 1, 0 Goome and stuffed feeling in| zation if not an altogether genmine | of Canada, surely We will rot withhold: hers spirits : rendy been said, written and rewrt- fo Co head and nostrils. To eure] Christianity As has been ssaidi whilst {our tribute of recognition from the! bhave glorified the tenn mn the columns of onr daily news- prompely, sayin halt an hour, there | the Spaniard crushed the Indian and patience, the kindness, the integrity. the | If y we could papers. We are all appealed to bear a 4 nothing worth using except Cae the Englishman scorned and fieglected | whole sotfled .disinterestedness of those | { : th : tarthozove, Y kim, the French embraced and cherished | splendid mien who risky: their lives live on in ce y, only purified from share in the creation of a great nation- x ite. balsalit La] park at Quebec as an. appropriate . You inhale its him. No doubt there were errors and among wayward savages, and wor their | the t : so ofted marred : : were among | | : memorial of the founding of our Dom- rN. od fenkas if 30s in evils in their systems, errors and evils [hearts, those. splendid soldiers of the the beauty and darkened hight of inion and as a fitting monument to the Catatrhozoh itis. a healing medi: incompatible with true enlightenment feross, who walked in fle shadow' of | the r Why should frth be Jess memory of the daring and ie] santa. air, whith iq | 0d #3, errors and evils from [perpetual peril, the oh gleaming | us and esthusiastic than error? pioneers to whom we owe the first be- * which da still suffers, but there above their heads, th adly ambush {In this patriotic monument we honor ginnings of our great and growing ma- was the sincerity of the martyr and the [lorking for their lives, undizmayed by] Hot only those who have gone before tionality. : 3 E : seli-devotion of the saint. danger, sndaunted by' hardship; undeter- land who laid the foundations of no It should not be difficult to enlist our and catarrhal We cannot forget the tribute Chm-ired by threatening look and muttered | mmtionality, but we honor ourselves: for ; plain paid to these men when he in | curse, they 'Calmily went 8 theif wiy of the genius of a nation is sot in her troduced themt to the Horons: "These mercy. | buildings, courts and Sells, not in he dre our fathers--we love them more! The hearts of these men never quail-| harvests, herds and stores. not : ed. they were ready; if it were God'sisivews of her peasants and 2 will, to water even with martyr blood land the lives of her children they the seed of God. and this they were d { but in the character she stumps timed to do. It becomes us fo Honor | on history. in the type of ber arts and their passionate charity, their ens] literature, in the spirit of her laws, and Susie ore for & They} ot least in the pride 'and glory of her stand from those | memories and traditions, : § "et Es £

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