Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Oct 1911, p. 9

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Large can 10, at Grocers Valtable Premiums Free for Comfory Lye Labels pote are emsily, therooghly churnad if just o Hitls Comfort E Lye t2 added to the water. wm Second Hand Furniture Large Stock of New and BSecond- hand Furniture; also all kinds of Pre- serving Jars, Call at H. Bugerman's 242 Ontario Street sma BIT, 5 74 5 0A Balik wap D000000000000000CCOOOOS THE FRENCH WAY OF CLEANING CLOTHES, It is & mort modern method employed in these great dyeing and cleanirg works. The fin- est costumes are cleaned in this way. R. PARKER & Co, Dyers and Cleaners, 80 Princess St, Kingston, Ont, S00 otRORGIGIOIATY 2000000000000 00 { Bald Heads Not Wanted Baldness is Too Guuerally Considered a Sign of Advanced Age. A bald-headed person does not have an equal chance with one blessed with a healthy head of hair, because bald- ness is too generally accepted as an indication of Many porationa have established hmit, and refuse to take thirty-five years of ployess, Probably sixty-five per cent headed people may regain a head of healthy hair if they advice and our offer. We have a remedy that we positively guaran- tee to grow hair on any head, unless the roots of the hair are entirely dead, theif follicles closed, and the scalp has become glazed and shiny, We want people to try this remedy at our psk, with the distinct unger- standing that unless it does exactly what we claim it will, and gives sa- tisfaction in every respect, we shall make no charge for the remedy used during the trial We know exactly what we are talk- ing about, and with this offer back of our statements no one should sooff, doubt our word, or hesitate to put our remedy to an actual test. We want every one in Kingston who is suffering from any scalp or hair trouble, dandruff, falling hair, or bald: ness, to try our Rexall "93" Hair Tonic. We want them to use it re gularly--say until three bottles have heen used---and if it does not diosa the large an we, con- age aver om men age as new of bald- good follow our accept dandruff, cleanse and refresh scalp, tighten the hair in its roots, and grow new hair, we will retum every cent paid us for the remedy for the mwre asking, © There is no for mality expested, and exact no obligation from the user whatever. Ne are established right here in Kingston and make this offer with a full understanding that our business success entirely depends upon the port of treatment we accord our cus- tomers, and we would not dare make the above offer we were posi- tively certain that swe could substan tiate it particular. Remem- ber, you ean obtain Rexall Remedies in this community only at our store ~The Rexall Store. GG. W, Mahood, we unless in every John Labatt LIMITED LONDON ONT. » "| absolutely THE GOING OF TE Ges (Continued from page 7.) French and English testify continually how well he succeeded. Upon his theme let us hear Senator Dandurand speak. In speaking to =» motion jn the house he said : "His excellency has been most provounced in his desire and in his efforts to bring the two races together, to de- velop a greater knowledge on the part of one race for the other, and to bring them more in contact. He has felt that the French Canadians were setting an example which perhaps should be followed by the majority, in speaking, to the best of their ability, the language of the majority, and he has done his best to develop a taste and a desire in the more cultured part of the English-s ing ppulation for a knowledge of the I language. He bas with her excellency, helped to iound clubs wherein the two races should meet together socially for the benefit of both and for the best advantage o Canada. He has throughout the land tried to disseminate a better know- ledge among the English-speaking race of the French history of Canada. He has done his best to bring into relief the heroes and hercines of the history of Canada from the founda- tion of this colony up fo the cession of 1763, and we all remember how en- thusiastic he was in disseminating knowledge of those who have done something for the development of Canada under the French regime. All this effort has not been in vain, and the French population of Canada will long remember the good work their excalloncies have done towards bring. ing the two races in closer contact." No man living knows so much of Canada as lord Grey, or has seen so many of its cities and men. To illustrate the extent of his travels his itinerary during the summer of 1909 ; In June he went to Eng- land and returned in July. Then he visited the Pacific coast and pro- ceeded as far north as Dawson City. Upon the return journey, he called at Prince Rapert, encamped in the Kootenay district, and visited in turn, Nelson, Calgary, Edmonton, Regina, and Winnipeg. In 1910 he visited England, and on his return made a voyage through the Hudson Bay and Straits, visiting Newfoundland on his return, and for the third time landed in Prince Edward Island, Tor a mind of extreme alertness, Lord Grey has brought the experience which only a large knowledge of the world ean procure. When the chair man of the Canadian Club at Vancou- ver welcomed him in 1906 to the "paradise of Cynada," the guest was able to refer to a visit which he had made to those parts twenty-five years before, when Vancouver had not $0 much as a baptismal name and was known as Gastown. During the seven years that Lord Grey was governor-general his activi- ties were so numerous that to deal with them in detail would be to write the history of Canada; yet it may not be amiss to eall attention to certain events with which he was most closely idéntitied. Chief amongst these was the rescue of the Plains of Abraham from the base purposes to which they had been put. That splendid pageant at Quebec in 1909 which really did at last awaken Canadians to some reali zation of the riches of their heritage shaped itself first in his mind. And when the battlefields at Quebec are finally rescued from the squalor of a jail-site and the vandalism of a gun- maker, we will remember it was Lord Grey who put the thought in our hearts and the means in our hands. In an address presented by the senate and House of Commons on May 4th, 1910, to his excellency at the time when his retirement was due these words are contained: 'Lhe National park established at Quebec on the Plains of Abraham will remain as an enduring monument to vour excellency's wise and enlighted ef forts." In moving the adoption of the address Sir Wilirid Laurier said: "The conception was his and his alone which resulted in the establishment of the battlefields commission, the efiect of which will be to consecrate and to hallow the ground around the city of Quebec which has been marked by the most dramatic events in ow history." For years Lord (irey worked upon this plan, and utilized every occasion to forward it. At a mass meeling held in Ottawa, January 16th, 1905, the proposal was formally set forth. "We are met here," said Lord Grey, "to consider what can be done to celebrate the approaching tercenten- ary 'of Quebec, in a manner worthy of Canada, and of the empire. it has heen agreed, with an unanimity which appears to be not less intense than widespread, that there can be no better way of doing honor to what may be roughly regarded as the 300th birthday of Canada, than by nation- alizing the battlefields of Quebec. The ingnortal associations with cling round those battlefields are a precious inheritance. they contain enough and more though to feed ard sti mulate the national pride of all, whether they be of Hritish or of Freoch descent, This is a privilege which does not often come within the reach of any generation, and my hope is that every publicapirited Briton, wherever he may reside, may not be slow to avail himself of his oppor tunity." At that meeting Sir Wilinid Laurier was present and marked the import ance of the occasion by saying: "No one can go to Quebec and visit the Plains and not feel some shame that the monument which has been erected to the memory of Wolle is one that is unworthy of the hero it is intended to recall, and absolutely unworthy of Canada. But there is in will serve. ithe city of Quebec a monument which for my part I never can see but I feel my soul thrill with pride as a Chnad- ian. Monuments te the victor are not rare in this world, monuments to her. oes who have been crowned by victory can be found almost in any country; but a monument to the vanquished is not se Be Soung sew where. In the city is & mopyment erected to the memory of Wolfe, which [was natural: bat there is also one lvrectidd to the memory of the man who fost, the memory of Montcalm, and THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1911. |erected, I am proud to say, by the | beitish government . Whenever [ or | anyone eise of Canadian organ, aad 'a pritish subject, and a Canadian ati lzem, visit tne city of Quebec, and there sees that monument, that noble pillar erected to the memory of Wolle and $0 the memory Montcalm by he British government, he can not but feel proud that he lives under inst- tutions which can promote such a breadth of thought and action by the authorities of the land. And may I be permitted on this occasion to remem- ber, British citizen that 1 am, British subject as 1 am, that in my veios flows the blood of the race which sav- ed the British flag at thetime it was disgraced by those of Britain's own kith and kin." Upon music in Canada Lord Grey has also left his mark by the inaugur- ation of competitions for thé muscal and dramatic trophies which bear his name. These competitions in which repre- gentatives of different towns are en- abled annually to make each other's acquaintance in one of the cities, has had a wholesome influence in the ten- dency it promotes towards the estab- lishment of a common sentiment on matters of common interest. At the first competition in 1906 the represen- tatives of towns as far apart as Win- nipeg and Halifax came to Ottawa to compete for the trophy. The more closely these cities can be associated in the minds of the prople with national life in its various forms and phases, the more likely will the in- habitants of the provinces be to give to them a preference over the cities on the southern side of the frontier as a place of holiday resort, It cannot be fairly said that the people of Canada have been inapprec- iative of the good fortune which has befallen them in the possession of this viceeregal family. The press has joined in a chorus of thankfulness and praise, expressed both in French and English, Parliament, too, said for- mally after the sad event which hap- pened on February 3rd, 1907. "That they have entered more completely thap have others into the life of the Canadian people." When the -retirement of Lord Grey seemed imminent in 1910, parliament presented him with an address on May th, and the testimony which was offered must have been gratifying even to one who is not unfamiliar with praise even from a higher quarter. In that address there is a warmth which is more than official in the words: "The special interest which your excellency has taken in everything calculated to foster a high sense of public duty and responsibil ity, to stimulate intellectual develop- ment, and to advance science and art, will long be gratefully remembered; while the success of your endeavors in cultivating the growth of a Canadian spirit has strengthened us In the be- lief that the full 'development of our national life compatible with the closest and most loyal connection with the empire." Upon the same occasion Sir Wilirid Laurier said : "In his case it was pre eminently a #ase of 'noblesse oblige,' ard from the very day he landed; on our shores it is a matter of history that he gave his whole heart, his whole soul, and his whole life to Can- ada. Canada became the all-absorb- ing object of his thoughts. He was not satisfied, as every one knows, to give to the discharge of his official duties the most careful and close at- tention, but he associated himself with everything that went to make the na- tional life of Canada. His constant object was to advance and to elevate the national character in everything which goes to make up the highest expression of civilization. It js noth- ing but just to say that under hist wise and generous guidance the arts, letters, and the sciences have received a notable impetus." In seconding the address, Mr. Bor- den said : "The work and the acts of his excellency in this have been characterized by a broad and generous sympathy which has won the affection and the esteem of the people of Canada, and when he leaves these shores he will leave behind him an af fection and an esteem in the hearts of the people of Canada which will be a monument to his memory more en during than any other he could he- sire." Lord Grey has been as successful in the United States as in Canada. That was a master stroke of diplomacy, when in 1906 he wrote a letter to the president, making formal presentation of a portrait of Benjamin Franklin, which had hung upon his walle for 130 years, ever since it had been car- ried off by his great-grandiather, Major-General Sir Charles Grey, dur- ing the occupation of Philadelphie, be. cause as he said, "my sense of equity tells me that there are higher laws than the law of possession." It is worth remarking that this soldier-an- cester first saw service as a subaltern under Wolfe, He told the Americans, too, how he had been privileged to enter into the coveted cirele of Mr. Choate's friends, how he had witnessed the results of the "lofty American character" of of | is country OXO Cubes are in the same class with the cable, telephone, adding machine and electric light. They are time savers and money savers. Just as the masculine world is beginning to realize the value of electricity, so the feminine world is fast awakening to the countless uses of OXO. 10 for 25. # for 10." ¥ , Mr. Phelps amd Mr. Bayard; how Mr, lowell had left an impression on his mind and heart, "but the music of his visice, the gentle and humorous dig- mty of his manner, the rare wstine tion of his mind and the'beauty bt his countenance." When he reminded them that, "of the one-thousand years ' of Britain's pride, nine-teuths are yours as much as mine," there was really nothing more to be said, and it was no wonder "the toast was drunk standing with cheers." In every movement towards the social good of Canada during the past seven veaps, Lord Grey has taken a part. The campaign against tubercu- losis has had no crusader more ar- dent. The housing of the poor had his support. The elimination of slums from the eities and their replacement by play grounds was an end for which he wrought. ° : All those who are concerned with the things of the spirit have bad Lord Grey for a friend. No writer was too obscure to merit his notice. * The theatre has been his care, and munis ters of religion have been his com- panions. For the material welfare of the country he has done much; for the minds of the people he has done more. During his term of oilice more dis tingmished persons have visited Can ada than during all these other years since confederation. At his table one was liable to meet men from all quar- ters of the empire, and with increasing knowledge has come an increased re- spect and affection for men who are engaged elsewhere in the common ser vice. Lord Grey is a grandson of Earl Grey who carried, the bill to a conclusion in 1832, and of Gen. Hon, Uharles Grey, who was private secretary to the Prince Con sort from 1349 to 1878. He was born November 25th, 1551. He was educa- ted at Harrow and at Ttimity Col lege, Cambridge, and in 1877 married Alice, daughter of Robert Slaynor "olford, M.P.,, which leads one to remark that her excellency and her daughters, Lady Evelyn and Lady Sibyl, are as well-known in Canada as the governor himself, and as gene rally beloved. To an intellectual life, which is learned, to a public life which is brave and patriotic, Lord Grey has added a private life which is brave and a domestic life which is lovely and happy. that reform son | should say that the career of Lord Grey in Canada might well be 'shim | med up in words which he himseli em ployed to characterize another great | English public servant: "He was] impetuous and untiring in the pursuit | of hig colntry's good; he always acted as he felt to be right without regard | to custom and without fear<Sf consé quemece; his constant prayee was the blessing of tod might rest upon his endeavors to serve his country faith- | fully.' Official Majority for Dr. J. W. Ed. wards Was 833. i The official count of the returns given in the recent election in the county of Frontenac, was made at the house, Wednesday af-| before the returning officer, | Pillar, and the returns gave Dr. J. W. Fdwards a majority of 853 | votes. All the boxes. from the differ- ent polling booths were of 1, and the figures as given totalled. There were upwards of thirty spoiled ballots and about fifteen rejected, eight of this number being rejected at one booth, that of Verona. Dr. Edwards received 2,629 votes and R. H.. Fair received 1,776, giving Dr. Edwards a majority of 853. Fol lowing is the vote : court on ternoon, William Edwards. Fair. Pittsburg-- : No. 1--Barriefield 2--Pufferin : 3---Woodburn ..... ..... 4--Joyeeville .... 5--Brewer's Mills Kingston-- No. 1--Collins Bay ...... ... " 2-Cataraqui 3--Elginburg t~Westhrook ** B--Glenburnie 6--Sharpton ...... , 7--Florida Portland- No. 1--Murvale . 2----Harrowsmith . 3--Hartington 4-Petworth 5---Verona ...... ...... 6--Bellrock ..... .cce Oso No. 1--Oso Wolfe Island No. 1---Head of Island * 2-Marysville . 3---Uold Springs ... .. 4--Central ..... .... . " 5--Foot of Island ....., Bediord= No. 1--Fermoy 2--Bradshaw An 3---Bedford Mills {--Clendower Storrington-- No. l---Inverary ** 2--Sunbury ... 3--Battersea ..... 4--Opinicon ... . Barrie-- No. Cloyne ....: vcr one " 2-Harlowe Palmerston and Cananto-- No. Mississippi " 2-Town Hall 3-Ompah 4+-Cananto Howe Island-- No. 1- Kennebec-- No. 1--Arden oR " 2-Dead Creek .... .. 3--Mount Hope .. Hinchinbrooke-- No. 1---Pieadilla ... ... ...... " 2-Parham ..... ...... " 3-Chippewa .... " 4-Revnoldson Olden-- No. 1-Olden ...... .... Clarendon -and Miller-- No. |=Plevna ... * 3--~Ardoch .. " 3-Wensley .. Garden Island No. 1--Garden Island .... Loughboro-- No. 1--Sydenham ...... 2-Bangall ... i 3-Spafiordion . " 4~Perth Road . " 5~Desert Lake Totals w 4 - wn . 28] 1776 ne vot lose faith in humap- 38 16 29 14 " 61 39 53 64 37 65 26 14 32 2 wt " " REE "@ a a Ph iy | grocer will see to it ity because an enemy wn the guise of @ friend deceives and betrays him, This is the octagon shape of the soap that sur- PAGE NINE, -- most of the world's washing and never makes a passes for every sort of cleansing soap can help to do. It gets the dishwashing over quicker, gets the china and glass- ware brilliantly clean, and never will get the hands rough or red. No other soap cleanses so easily. For every sort of laundering, white clothes 'or colored, the snow-white Sunlight clothes from the tub clean and without the least need for rub- bing or scrubbing. And it does that in hard or soft water, hot, lukewarm or cold. Try the easy Sunlight Way, too, for scrubbing floors, cleaning windows, brightening up soiled woodwork--any- thing that soap and water can do. Sunlight Soap is pure soap, that cannot hurt Many fabrics nor harm the skin. cakes. of Sunlight will be sold week, the world over. cakes ought to go into your house. Surely one of those tell him you want the aser sorry she chose the soap that | saves work and spares lather sends the sweet-smelling, for laundry work million this try Your soap you know is better than common soaps. $5,000 in gold guarantees Sunlight purity Made by Lever Brothers Limited of Toronto that i. Compare the report of the Provincial Govemment Analyst, with the Analysis of any other sugar. Is there anything else you eat IS SO pure as Sugar You will find that "ST. LAWRENCE GRANULATED" is the equal of any other sugar, not only in Canada, but throughout the civilized world. Read Prof. - Hersey's Report : of the St GRANULATED SUGAR, cane sugar, with no impur 1 Heresy Cerriry that | have dawn by my own hand ten samples Lawrence Sugar 150 barrels each and six lots of a same and find them uniformly ities whatever (Signed) Montreal, 22nd February, 1909. Refining Co's EXTRA STANDARD ately taken from fcur lots of about bout 450 bags each. | have analyzed < ain 99-99/100 to 100 per cent of pure indiseri lytoc HERSEY, M.Sc. LL.D Provincial Government Analyst, MILTON 1 Not only compare the analysis, but compare the sugar--and y ou will see for yourself that ST. LAWRENCE GRANULATED is purer and better than any other sugar.-- 20 Ib. bags--also by the pound and barrel. = _ THE ST. LAWRENCE SUGAR REFINING C0. Limited, MONTREAL. THAT TOBACCO With the "Rosster" on Is crowing louder as he goes aiong | | Only 45c per pownd Por chewing ent | Auto repainted to stand all kinds of by | wmoking, Al AT A. MACLEANS, Oatarte Street, < Carriage Painting This is the place fo have your ther. E. J. DUNPHY Cot. Mention! snd Ordnsnce Stroven

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