i + " 1 F PAGE S1X -------- -- SOME A the Battlefields of Old FTER ( retina: ---- Quebec. Whd Can View Unmoved This Historic City ? Duty a Dolio Commie WM uherien, Ottgwa, "We had full leiowre to contemplate a scale ol human industry and natural Rraudep, which surpasses any that 1 "ever remember to have beheld," wrote Sir Hebry Bounycastle, in 1840, as he anchgrgd off (oieboc. . "The assemblage of numerous spires, cont ol with bright tin, glittering like sil- 'wer in 'the morning sup; the strong, dark stone. dwellings, mixed with painted wooden houses, hanging as it wore on the lace of 4 precipice, which weotned to threaten hourly? destruction Ho those below it; the military works, impregnable in their aspect; the high water-tower, op which siguals were Ponstantly making; the workmen at their dmployment on the summit ol tions directly above our heads, "anil below ane of the mightiest of 'floods, the broad breast of a Notth American river. . We. were eon templating nature and art vieing with each other." Whey indeed, i ot ¥idward 1, $5 can view unmoved the storied city of Quebec? Seated her imperious throne of rock, guardian of Canada's eastern portal, she hap enchained the attention and stirred? te admiration of many gene tations. The: soldier is awed by the strength ® and inaccédsibility of her ones invintible, foftressed 'and ram. partes. the gntiquary is fascinated by her Meturesyue pite, studded with pinandled churches, colleges, monastic 'awd civie buildings; the histoXian vols in her ancient remains, her gates, streets, squares and battle grounds; the artist lingers amid her quaint edi. ros | «.-The Plains of Abraham Tell of Gloriously Done." burn, and be unmindfal of the decrees Fate grimly pronounced there ? | have stood on Towtpn Field, where Yorkists and Lancastrians, English- men and Englishmen met the bloody conflict of civil war five hun dred years ago, and towhing it was how . jealously nature herseli seemed fo keep alive the memory of the heroic combatants, for everywhere over this Yorkshire waste red (the rose of Lancaster) intertwine in to Bee roses {feat 7" They uid, if the vouchsafed under Britain's flag is of | tion of 16 {no worth: if the toleration, the enter- | enlightenment, which moment ths followed, i prise, is of no in the have | Leowrse of Canada's development, dar- | one hundred and fiity ing the last VEArs., university which bears thé honore jut it was the members of the | iname of Laval himese if, who addressed | | these words, in 1901, to the Prince of Wales : "lls sont fiers de vivre Vombre du drapeau dupe pation qui Fdetient wn ecinguieme de la terre hab- table, qui mil { ons de sujete, gui fait a elle seule up | tiers du du monde, marche a la tote des peuplés comme puissance coloninle, indust¥ielle et lcommurciale. Ils apprecient les gedvan- I tages de la liberte dont ils jowissent." If Montcalm was defeated then was { Wolle defeated. But the diang of 1775 did not think =o, and the words just quoted prove that the French-Canadians - today do mot { think a Mopntecalm's gallantry { Canada owes much, and the fruits Bf the conflict in which bh | came to all alike, to FEng vl { French, to Irish and Scotch, yee, even | to the dusky aborignes. 1t is ng won a compte quatre cent comumetce ie 80, ' der that the appeal of Georre Wash-| Sa 1 © 1 * 3 same} oes, they have won distinction, and ington, in September of ihe | year, met with no response. The sla- J oi CHATPAU ST, LOUIS, QUEBEC ; DESTROYED BY FIRE ON JAN. UARY 23rd, 1834, - M------ " roses (the rése of Yerk) common fame which to thardead. It s« with white and symbolize the historg 'aveqrds fires And jgecinets, her green heichts | hecansd the battle fields of Quebec tell r : and gloomy precipices: while the tour- iit 8 delighted with her bright = and oyous mien, the bustle of her wharves ingly give and 'wsplanades. the clear bracing air about her heights and the ealm, placig feelings racinly, i ¢ majestic St, Lawrence 'Nay, as British subjects, desire to have waters of the he -- us of Mgty glbficasly done, of valor unflinchilgly displayed,' of blood will- that, whatever be vétrodpectiyely, all %as- Canadians) sympathies" oF our THE LEADER OF THE FRENCH FOR CES at hor foot. Bat to the common mind set apart for ever this memorable | find that is in most of go 38 irresistible. She holds hee a glowing cloud in a elear of sky, and the spell she all alike, No matter t hd Gur race 'or country, or the il of our intellectual tasted, and proclivities, there is, to all But one Quebee, Happy is the that, as the varied peoples of the Land she new world enter hor do- win all alike by the romiug historic city at hor gates ! is i Sleep On Plains. 3 must he be that is not ¥ the recollection of the fate. r, 1759, when the of France under the toalm held the bristling the choice Britsh red: the brave Wolle, cremt oky ghore and sealed 'the ld ot in stead con- s above. eo result tid knows. To Wolle came story, to Montcalm came "the glory of duty bravely sllantry unquenched oven in the soldiers, who had the lily-decked banner bt side by side with the under the royal stan- ho ug ky At) ha. he Yo field of former conflict as a national our ark. | bal Liberty Won. The fleur-de-lvs gave place royal standard of Fagland, may well be asked, "Did and his hrave troops really to the but it Montealm suffer de- our " - " very, vorruptica end arbitrary Tae, which he lur.dly pleturad were ment of the wmasnation to who had fought on opposit the Plaivs of Abraham, and when greeted them as "friends apd or ren' ard "froebiorp sons)' ® gling for eccape from the wretched ess of slavery, and straining for the blessings of liberty, they knew that, under the Union free and ail its precious blessings were al ready thei Lhe perils of on slaug hts from the Iroquois were gone, nay even the danger, which they onee feared, of lLeing effaced by overpowe.- ing hosts of incoming Britisn sattlors aml traders; was found to be baseless for they found thems. lv to build up ther own Lis as a veopie distinet yet part and paicel of the reat Canadien mation, and parbakers with their English-speaking brethren in the fair fnme and common desting of Canada. a fig the sides on men 1 hit Jack, dom SUVA 8 Iree Our Great Destiny Realized. The Lattlebelds wituess to this, Lirth of which all who live mn tanada share, and the ¢ily of Juebee ig the histori¢ centre whenie our uiinion started, as Lord Dafieiin elo quently declared, to reali that she the owner of haf n contineht," and to glory in "the magmtude ber pos in the wealth resources, in the singws of her mater might, as the peer of any { en carth." It is in Quebec that the Canadian, prone to dwell upon the material success of the moment, ap- preclates the truth that our country has a history, and the™ wefrospcot should make jealous lame in the future. Bat Quebec is the historic centre of all that is sacred in the religious me- morics of our past. The ancient faith and religious practices of the French pioneers have continued from the sev enteenth century till now. The shiines and seminuries of the early missionar have heen maintained. The great work of . such men as the militant Monsignor de Laval r.ceived no check and the grand séminary which he founded in 1063, the numerous colleges ard schools, and the wid sneadins ed cational system, with the Univgisi- ty of thy Ancient City, Laval UniVer sity, a%*" Hs «rown, received counten- ance and encouragement British regime. The battlefie for educational growth ard relizions freedom, and # the illustrious Riche lisa, who was «© solictous of Cham-« plain's great enterprise in North Am- erica, could have foreseen, with jro phetie vision, the prosress and power of "the church, of which he aspirations »o was of ssion, of ber al PON us of 1s was so -- - Ln 1 d freedom | distinguished a prince, sien THE TERCENTENARY IN made, for the rule of the church bas suliered no decline during the jour en- SUIDg Centurics. * Loyalty Of French Canadians. On the Plains of Abrabam; Molia {and Montcalm met the same gloxaous | end and blended their heroic fame, and] the fight in which they fell was unique in this that thenteforth both sides applied themselves to oman) ends and both shated in loval alle | ance to the same flay, ang both rejoie-| { ed in the precious heritage aul |} | vouchsafed to them. Th | adians, though no longer subjects {the French king, were as true us ever| ! led City, on the site French-Cana- | flo i the stragul Freny and liberty which 2 h Can} of| their own glorious race traditions and to their mother<tongue. French| literature hms not declived in their] | keeping, but bas been cultivated and] | enriched, and this two-fold allegiance] | to the British crown and institutions, | and to their own Janguage, literature, | { and faith is, as Dilké has said, "'ove| of the most interesting spectacles the| world affords." In defence < of the empire; French- Canadians have done their shars' on this continent, in the imperial ser- their language, literature and rebie gion, have prospered gnd expend d un- der the shadow of the flag, "which for a thousand years "has braved the battle and the breeze." Unity And Variety. The sacred influences which flow from the battlefields of Quebec can never die. They are an indissoluble part of our national life, and the vic- tory on the Plains of Abraham was a victory not only for all Canadians but for our race, it gave the weal of liberty to all men to cherish their most sacred ideals, to keep alive the methory of their ancestors, to eling to their traditipnal farths, and to eultis| vate all that is best in the language, the literature, and the lie, and the faith, of the lingage to which they Le- long. thiehec has been poctically descrileld #8 'un plant Franc: cultiva par Albion"; but may mot the Freneh Ca- nadian race bo described as Flowers | of France flourishing under Britain's sheltering care, while the Thistle, the lose, the Shamrock, and the humi la flowers of ths E continent, some of them despised and are fres equally under Britain's ningnant to take rootand pand in such proportions of Leauty ard of well-being as the pemliss con- ditions of life is Canada so generous- ly provide : Mother of ropean sway ex- all blame- 28S, of hopes that her strenglh makes tameless Whore the voices of grief and of are dumb, And the whole earth laughs light of her mirth, things beautiful, battle with the --~Lampman. A Filthy Condition. Many a man, otherwise serupulous- ly clean, is dandruff dirty. The small persistent germs of dandrufi working all day as well as night are stantly throwing off the small dandruff 'scales which, falling shonlde of gives it appearance, which is repulsive to the friends of the vaetim, Many men alldw this condition exist because they believe there is 3 dandrufi; they have trio so-called cures with wnsa resgits and naturally con. . ) con- white the a filthy on a coat, to no cure various tisfactory demn all. The famous prescription called Par age 18 now put up in Americy, by the Girdyx Migg( 0., of N.Y., and Fort EriesOnt. It in Kingston by G. W. Mahood, \who guarantees it 1p . cure dandruff in two seeks or money back Parisian Sage is guaranteed: to de more; it will make short thin hair grow. long, lustrous and luxuriant; it will step hair from falling out; Wit isian 8 but only uffalo, is for sale W. Mahood guarantees it--egery bot: tle of it. 'Lhe price is only\ 50c. and if you want to stop the filthy dan: drufil flakes from lodging on your coat awl your /ft ends get a bottle at once. A The Thoro-Bred Stallion disgusting Chestaut Horse hy Wickham, by Wiltal, hy Imp. Australian and lwp. Possey, dam of Lelaps, Sunbeam, etc., by Imp. Kelipse, he dam of WAR WHOOP ia the fam- Lady Lightfoot 11., by Greenback 1st dam Proserpine, by Daniel Boone ; 2nd dam Anna fi by Lee Paul; 8rd dam hy Foreigner (son of Glencoe) ; 4th dam by Imported Jordon ; 4th dam Lucretia, by Imp. Hedgeford Noland. This andly bred and saperb wn horse. whose . brilliant turf career is known to every horseman in Canada, will make the season of 190R at King- ston and neighborhood. $ , War Whoop durimgs Me brilliant racing reer, oved himself a grout race hors all distances. ous on at He won wany of stakes 5 peace | BOTW had (expected at the {with uncouth, be- | | = will eyreall diseases of the scalp. G.| avery features that WAR WHOOP CELEBRATION Tremendous Crowds Expected at Quebec, From July 20th to July 31st, Great International Naval Review By The Prince of Wales. Quebec, June 19.--To accommedats of the great hogts of visitors Ter-centenary Cele bration a committee' of the best known and most public spirited ci tizens of Quebee has founded the Tent the historic battlefield. i1ne tents already = provi- ded will furnish comfortable hotel ac commodation for 3,000 people at rea- sonable prices. The tents are of three sizes. Prices for single beds range from $1.50 1c $2 per day, with reductions when whole tent is taken. Three dining tents, with a seating capacity of 1,500 at once, will serve good meals at Sec 'apiede and in an other plade meals will|be supplied to the public generally as well as to guests of the Tented City at 2%c. There are fine huge lavatory tents with excellent = drainage and equipped the mest modern sanitary ap pliances, a lavatory tent being pro- vided for ladies in grounds fuile se- parate from the main camp. = The Tented City will have ample police protection day, and night. Personal effects can be checked and a safe' for depositing valuables is! provided. plications for accommodation to reserved should be made without lay to W. D. Wiggs, Vice-Pres, Tented City company, Application forms and programme sent on request The site for ine Tented City is the best possible for the oceasion--on nearly the highest ground in Quebec. ot Luebec. 2 If you wish to be successful ate tend The , Kingston Business College » Limited, beat! of Queen street, CANADA'S RIGHEST GRADE business . school, Bookkeeping, shorthand, typewriting, tele graphy, and all commercial subjects thoroughly taught by competent experienced teachers. Day and night classes. Enter at any time. ted very moderate, {Phone, 440. : H. F. METCALFE, President. CUNNINGHAM, Secretary. The Old Cab Stand With a New Number PHONE 600. Orders promptly attend- ed to, day or night. The We know other typewriters of all kinds and we know that the L. C. Smith has every improvement and any of them has--AND MORE. We want to place an L. C. Smith Bros." Type- writer in your office AT OUR EX- PENSE, and have you compare it part for part, Teature for feature, with any other typewriter. We will let the typewriter speak for itself, All we say about it and claim for it will be demonstrated by the machine itsell more com- vincingly than we could tell it. Then we want to leave the de- cision to'you. If YOU want it we will sell you one on favor- able TERMS, or if you already have a machine we will take that in part payment. THE TEST OR TRIAL WILL NOT COST YOU A PENNY. This is the way we sell pens bri ities good, ai boner the chain of fairness) nr af $1.25. $3. DE Af HE + ett Which Ei # S ir Will You T; L. C. Smith Typewriter? PEPE AA EE LIE + Ark Standard Visible We do not belong to any trust and nobody dictates the PRICE we sell at or HOW we shall sell That's OUR business. + i): 3% : its merit All the writing Smith is always in sight, and direct in the line of vision. The WRITING LINE IS INDICATED, and the POINTED OUT so that the L. C. Smith is just WHAT WE CLAIM ~a perfect VISIBLE typewriter. on the L. C. The typebar and banger are the heart of a typewriter, that means they are the most vital part--a weak typebar means a, weak ty writer. Show us a typebar-Léar- ing that is narrow and has no wearing surface, and it teils us that under hard wear such a type- writer will not retain its aligm- ment, and sooner or later will get out of order. ww A 1 On the L. C. Smith the bearing is wide and bar heavy, and E PRINTING POINT 1S | shows "that our prices suit all classes. w---- 0 00000000 OODOOTOOOV0VOTTOOVOOVOCDOGOOVTR The New Things For Saturday Women's Up-To'Date White Shoes, $1.50, $1.75 and §2. Cheaper grades at $1 and $1.25. i Women's Brown Oxfords, $2.50. Women's Tan Blucher Oxfords, $2.50. Women's Tan Blucher Oxlords, $3.50. Women's Comfort Boots, $3.50, $2.50, $2 and $1.50. Women's Prunella Shoes, 80c., 75¢c., §1 and $1.25. Girls' and Children's White Shoes, 75¢., 85¢. to $1.35. Girls' and Children's Brown and Strap. | | Special at $1 and Barefoot Sandals, for Bo ys'.and Girls' $1, $1.85 to 81.75 Men's Tan Blucher Oxfords. , Special, at $4. Men's Solid Leather Tan Blucher Working Boots. Special, Boys' Grey Canvas Boots, size 8 to 10, 60c. Boys' Grey Canvas Boets, sizes 11, 12 and 13, 65c. Boys' Grey Canvas Boots, size 1 to 5, 75¢. Men's Grey Canvas Boots, size § to 10, 85c. PENDABLE SHOES = OOOO 000000 000000000 000000000000 0000T0D00D ee " FHL PEPPERELL TE PH HENNEY We Don't Lose Many Customers for Gas Stoves et AD om ? Refrigerators assortment and THEM. 'McKELVEY & BIRCH, 69-71 Brock St T 4444444444444 +e PEF PFI EPEEH PHP F 144 F y An Then agaiu, with the L. C. Smith one machine is equipped to do all kinds of work---better writ- lug, invoicing, billing, tabulating, figures, stencil cutting, without We sell our machine strictly on| touching the ribbon and heavy manifolding anything that any typewriter can do the L. C. Smith will do--and more. You can lift the platen, or writ. ing cylinder, right out and put in another in a second. You can write in two colors, and you do not have to touch your ribbon from the time you put it in the machine till it is worn out. Rou can do all these things, and many more, and do them better than you can with any other type writer. WILL YOU DO THIS? I And remember THIS IS the ma chine we want to place in your vo» for trial and exafhination AT OUR EXPENSE. It doesn't will stand years and years of hard work, go : » 1 \ . LOCAL AGENTS: w cost you a penny to try it. Typewriter Supplies for all makes of machjucs. Typewriters Rented and Repaired--all makes. Y, erguson EASTERN DEALERS, 205 QU Company, EN STREET, OTTAWA. 79 Princess St.,