Daily British Whig (1850), 4 May 1912, p. 10

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FT THE DAILY BRITISH witie, _ SATURDAY, "ONTARID'S FRENCHMEN, Six Members of Gallic Clood Sit In the Legislature, TOMB 'OF AMERRY GIROD ate Are gis rel fie Oniario els HEART OF MONTHEAL. teresting litle gr pn Jjenough of them fo iy." Thies ure J three are Liberals. comes to French-Canadian "rights they are one and livided. There is ti {among them no Heratius, either Grit New tor Tory, who locks as if might jump up some day and s compatriots for volunteers on either hand of him tragic end of bridge against any g man ; sHial host which would see b French-Canadians The valiant three mL AGE TEN MAY 4, 1912 THE HERPICIE GIRL N A Gentlemen, ---- a THE BOUKHOBORS, Their Religion and Community Sys- tem of Livins, the A REBELS GRAVE! "NORSEMEN NEEDED, New Ontario Requires the Scandinav- Ra i ian Peoples. | "Ontario is now obtaining a larger i proportion of rig rt of men and women from the United Kingdom much was heard I vears later whom we this result is large account of the ) ot i he iv due 1 t the good aécounts Dominion vernment, y the that are 'home' by those who! me of an article { have settled in the most British pro- ork vince of the Dominion sinte we estab- (Munich). lished headquarters in London and races in this articl organized & ocampaign throughout history Greater Britain." Mr. C. C. James, tiates up strange CM G., former Deputy Minister of SAYS, amg ther things Agriculture in the Ontario Govern. he nucleus the Doukhobor Hent, these remarks to a repre- 1 I ory Jed in the re ts i the not long ago the 15th that the superior opportunities S1 MPLY DEliciovs » Doukhobors, us sect Advises h-Canadians in peculiar peasants ow such larga IS iN At Mi gerthmen who man in sl hut d 4 goad head Where Sherbrooke Street Crosses St. t manners, Wi 3 . Lawrence In the Busiest Part of e sonality, snd bore his is / : st ngusad aw of a gent an. the Commercial Metropolis Is the & { Linen was immacy i Burial Place of the Swashbuckler, Ithess ax to e Whose Rebellion Was Crushed 75 1 the pleasant firs kmpression 'med when 1 discovered the Years Ago--A This sto d shoulders of his dress coat red with loose hair and fakes ! a rematkable nuraf. 5 have mouldered « To me this was an tutheathon ! strangest rrave ever pn on the ersomal carelessness, not to say uni of Montreal. Two of the grea the Canada ir institute a * numbers in 1899, and whom rvatives sent \ Suddeut che Mozat. Hin Le fle 3 Kv rk Mr. Svrk D mkholb rs he e the and ex- beliefs, . my > - ¥ - > - trange Career. re z Y Qui ( OCCT. ry tells of the pd vo of the press UNSWEETENED HOCOLATE ow ar island ot in by the community in : at ther- can offér various classes of fesrdimess, 1 wanted to tell him to ot a bottle of Newbro's Ilerpicide. is remarkable remedy would, fu a crt tare, remove every trace niruff from kis bead, stop his hair from falling and prevent Jum tecoming bald. 1 don't hike odd men; they look old eo. are or not. Juinjeuli is caused In whre's Herpicide kills that Ihe iteling, which is vith dandrufl stops almost Her cide is the origins! remedy that destroys dander. 'Vhere is no thing in the world just like it, ne- thing that is "just as good." One dollar size bottles are guaran- teed by all druggists to give satisiae from bald whether and germ. frightful instantly by a germ 50 ol | i Montreal of street, r heart of of the Sherbrooke the oughfares ate through dential quarter, street, which, country to the two and to-day inning the finest resi. and St. Lawrence running in from the northwest, culs crosses Sherbrooke Be neath - the these streets cross is remarkable pavement where the grave of who played the game of rebellion and lost, and then dying a suicide, buried, according to the custom tine, at this cross-road. BSeveniy.! years have passed since that straf burial took place, and The trafic a great city passes over thé grave The man buried there has long since been forgotien, but the story of man, i the faiths are read of the brid any heroic at the six Frene h-4 Cada dians i islature are al nation ality, but that hey Bd to do much elaborate representat fa minorit The Canadi (Nipiss (Edst down-trodden three Conservative French- nembers are Henri Morel Napoleon Champagne Ottawa), and Hon, Dr. J. O. Reaume (North Essex) The three Liberals are Gustave Evantyrel (Pres. ott}, Damase Racine and Z. Mageau (Sturge hese men, with the Dr. Reaume, exception | underwe or in jt vermmant, idea their forth in their that the human ily a temporary no other of God; neither cus- stitutions but Holy Ghost, power of evil Under Cath Doukhobora cutions, under Nicholas I. in 1842 they were exiled F'iflis in the Caucasus in the hope t they would die out. The Douk- made friends prosperad agrical- of the century to the Ru Gio after Pobir ' faith should be life alone. We body 18 for the where than the the uetause prison am that have tal first win had n torus iaws § and Paul severe pi with ants are becoming bel ter appreciated, we hope to use the machinery of our agencies on this sidé more effectually in sending the right people to the right loc Fot instance, my visit to Norway, eden, and Den an imuression I short visit to ago that there is a large Scandinavian populatic n wha w find in lific virgin soil of the areas of Northern Ontario, and other condition? similar to those | in whieh their present persevering, lligent hard work leaves them only a subsistence. While I should be careful as to culturists I adyised to settle in North- intending en formed on my first lities. | mark has confirmed | these areas two years | he pro-i newly-opened | climatie | in i what British agri-| A f Logon ov oS For Cooking and er Phis Chtcolite is excellent tof Cake Teing and Fudd: were born in Quebec, Townships of Ontario. Dr. Reaume's ancestors left Quebee | tion. Aplications obtained at the closing scene of his chequered career bho Eastern ern Ontario, I think it would be diffi can be gleaned from history, and in and Vere » 10 : 1 in 1888. 1 uit to make 4 t 1s ay good ita ndure ar r persecution barber shops. S'd le, in postage bottle and hooklet to The Co., Dept. R., Detroit, Mich. das, B. Meléod and LL. T. cial agents, for a sample Best, spe- Dr. de Vans Female Pills A yellabk French Joguiator; ave faile, These in regulating the Pav portion ot yah system. Refuse iI cheap linitations. n ¥ 'an's are sold at Abox or 1h three or ied to agy address. Boobell Drus Co. St. os, ODL, For sale at Mahood's drug store. Orrine For Drink Hahit TRY IT AT OUR EXPENSE. We are in earnest when we ask you to give ORRINE a trial. You have nothing to risk and everything to gain, for your money will be re-| turned, if after a trial, you fail to get Pes phi from ORRINE. A1H4 r This offer wive s of the ho drinl ( try the ORRINE trea I it is a very slaiple treatme ant, can be given in the home without publicity or loss a Jive from business, and at a small Pr RRINE is prepared in two forms: No. 1, secret treatment, a powder; ORRINE No. 2, in pill form, for those who desire to take voluntary treatment, Costs only $1.00 a box. (ome in and talk over the matfler with us. -Ask for booklet. G. W. vigshood, corner Princess and Bagot streets. four orders will be filled tactorily if you deal satly there at TV. WALSH'S, B57 Barrack Street. COME A MOTHER SOON? I have glad tidings for you~child~ Piri need be dreaded no more, Follow my advice--be happy now, and all will fv well with Lhe child and yourself. My remedy, Mothers' Cordial or Herbal Tonic, builas up the reproductive organs and ! nerve centres makes confinement easy, safe and quick, and rapidly recalis the glow and cheering health of vigorous womanhood. Mothers' Cordial is also a rebuilder of run-down girls--girls strained or overfaxed with too much work. It purifies .the blood--makes menstrua- tion prompt and easy, and Is account abl¢ for many of the clear, beautiful complexions you admire so much, This valuable remedy contains no stimulants or hurtful drugs. It is Hf y a sclentMic blend of Indlan herbs, whose virtues are well known to medical men. Write for free circu- Wr. At your druggist's, or by mail, $1.00 per package, or 6 packages $5.00, Or, Coonley Medical Co, Windsor, Ont. Recommended and Sold in King- ston by 0. 8 PROUCE Druggist Herpicide { etnployed his { in their { small cannon, { such determination to resist any ! succeeded in making the bridge Jot come to St. in wp gp ---------- gin = REAL ESTATE SNAPS 'DOUBLE FRAME HOUSE, with good barn and large lot, rents for $17, all at $1,800. BHIOR VENEER HOUSE, To- 8 rooms, with two TO ae full lots, good barn and poultry house, o to ut |. $1,700 FRAME HOUSE. 6 rooms, on York Steeet $US FRAME COTERAGE, six rooms. all improvements, and barns, Him Street .. $1,250 FRAME HOUSE, six rooms, © large lot and stable on Al fred Street $1,000 potELE FRAME HOUSE, 6 ee all im- TE ey ont: Street rented for $252 per year, $2,100. HOUSES for Sale and to Rent in all parts of the Qty. Crevan briefly retold here. His name was Amerry he came to Canada about the year 1827, or ten years before the breaking out of what is comma called the Papineau rebellion. Whence he came no one precisely knew. By some his birth-place was in Bwitzerland. by others in the Province of Al then part of France, now part of Germany He claimed to have passed his youth at a model school of agriculture, subsequently to have served as an of ficer of cavalry in Mexico. He was an excellent linguist, speaking not only English and French, but Ger man, Italian and Spanish as well. He seems to have been a soldier of for- tine. Coming to Quebec friendship of Mr. Perreault, otary of the district, who placed him on one of his properties to estabiish a model farm. The end of the enter. prise was heavy debts, which Mr. Per. reault had to pay, and the ingrati- tude of the man whom he had be- friended. Girod then came on to Varennes on the south side of the St. Lawrence and only a few miles below Montreal. There he found favor with one of the | great men of the village, Dr. Duches- nois, a great supporter of Papineau, At Varennes Girod married Dr. Du- chesnoig' sister-in-law, the daughter of M¥. Ainge, Seignior of St. Therese, and from that time the adventurer lived on the property of his father. in-law, and devoted himself princi pally to the trade of a political agi tator. It is not proposed to trace the course of that agitation, or of the rebellion in whieh it culminated, but simply to follow the fortunes of Giroed through the bloodiest chapter of the dfigma- Gired, and ace, and won the prothen { the chapter which tells of the upriz- which on De ing to the west of Montreal, was crushed at §t. Lustache, cember 14, 1837, One of the earliest overt acts of the Bt. Eustache insurgents was to plun- der the Indian mission of Two Moun. tains where guns and, ammunition were carried away from the Govern. ment stores and a small cannon, be. | 'longing to the superior of the mission. was one of the party, and he best cunning to per suade the Indians to give Gp the arms possession and their two The Indians showed at- tempt to remove their property «that { Girod and his companions departed Loe | without the armé they had demanded MADAM, ARE 'YOU LIKELY TO BE- | 16 | of turmoil Girod was At During the two weeks that preceded the battle, one of the principal agitators. { times he seems to have dominated the situation and to have influenced for tha worse Dr. Chenier, whom some historians have made the hero of the uprising. Girod was practically the general in command. He forbade the priests to leave the village, and he practically detained them several days as prisoners. He sent men to destroy the bridge at Bt. Rose,and his men im- passable. He harangued the crowd, but no attempt -was made to drill them or to prepare them to resist the troops that would be seni against them. In fact, the misguided insur. gents were told that the troops dare Eustache, and that he insurgents would take Montreal without drawing a trigger. But the troops came, and soon all was. over. On Dee. 13, Sir John Colborne set. out from Montreal with what was a small army in comparison 'with the force it was going to attack. On the following day the force reached Bt. Eustache and at once be: gan the attack, the artillery opening fire upon the church. The battle last. ed only a short time and Girod, the swashbuckler, was found when the insurgents surrendered to have gone for reinforcements. The loyalists started ont on his trail. Girod's wan- derings lasted four days, with his pursuers always on his tracks and! He turned circled to the ever drawing nearer. northward and then east, making for the St. Lawrence River. He succeeded in reaching the outskirts of the village of Pointe-aux- Trembles, about eight miles below Mopireal. Finding himself surrounded, Girod dréw his pistol and with it he blew out his brains. Girod's body was at once brought up to Montreal, and the anthorities ordered that it should be buried "'at what was then called Cote a Barron, in the middle of the crossroads of the St. Lawrence Main street and Sherbrooke street." "And so do things pass away like a tale that is wid."--Th: Moutreal Standard. Better ga night worker than a day dreamer. One interested listener an orator lias is himseli, t all-round, substantial, popular citizen. | He {is the number of nomad farmers who {from the States have had wide ex- | perience; they know that from these | rich Many Vears ago settle in Essex. Altogether, this little gréup will pare favorably, in intelligence and | education, with the rank and file of | the English-speaking members Mr, | Morel and Mr. Racine are practically i unknown quanti . 3 ey have been | heard and felt but little in the House vet. Mr. Evanture! is alsh as yet a quiet member, but he is considered very bright. He is a son of the late Speaker Evanturel, and has a liberal education. Dr. Reaume we all know | as a good, average routine adminis- | trator in his department, and a good { [ fellow and sermewhat of a jollier in | dr and out of the House. Messrs. Ma- geau and Champagne, both new mem bers, are the most interesting of the French-Canadian group Mr. Magean is said to be 47 years | of age, but from the gallery he pass for 27. He the tl graceful type of French-Canadian, his life in New Ontario has given-him a restraint and solidity that the age Ontario citizen does not as with French-Canadian characte less in exceptional cases. Mr. geau is a real estate and insurance man. He has been elected mayor of Sturgeon Falls several vears by accla- mation, He is also president of the Board of Trade in his town, and an is is a very effective speaker. Mr. Napoleon Champagne belongs to another type of French-Canadian. He is big and burly, with a thick neck and a big, bellowing voice. His gpe- cialty in debate is ables of the rous< ing, ironically humorous kind. When he gets on his feet things are certain. ly livély., Every time he delivers what he thinks is a punch that will put his opponent to the ropes he loos. ens his collar and takes a drink. Two ar three pages are kept busy bringing him water. Then he jams his hands in his pockets and glares savagely at his foes. But Champagne can make the House and the galleries laugh. The Nomad Farmer. One of the most remarkable things about the western provinces of Canada come in from the United States to raise flax and wheat. These farmers Canadian lands they can make mie money growing wheat and flax on a large scale than in growing feed to fatten cattle, hogs, or turkeys, or in raising eggs, poultry, butter, cream, or vegetables. They come over to Can- ada with gasoline plants to plow and sow and reap and thresh. They have even motor vehicles to take the wheat' and flax seed to the elevators. They | are 50,000 of them that have not got a hog nor a cow nor a hen on their farms. They import the eggs, poultry, butter, and bacon that they use from Quebec and Ontario, and the pota- toes, vegetables and fruit from British Columbia, and if they use milk it is canmed. Neither the farmer nor the help he requires for his wheat or flax want to milk cows, feed chickens, gather the eggs, or weed vegetable gardens, But these wheat and flax farmers are nomads. They winter in Spokane, or Seattle, or Los Angeles, or Van- couver, and they come to the prai- ries in the spring and sow the grain crop. They watch it grow from the nearest tower, and marshal their har. vesters, and when ripe they reap it, thresh the grain, and market it. Then they plow up the land for next year's erop. The farm laborers have only four months' steady employment at this kind of farming, and during the four months they earn good money, and, like their employers, they mi- grate to the near-by towns or cities and spsd their winters, There must be 108,000 farm laborers of the nomad tribe in the Canadian prairies.--The People (London). Metaphysical History. It has fallen to the lot of Mr. J. H. Burnham te inject what a member of the Press Gallery termed "histori- | «al metaphysics™ into the considera. tions of Parliament. Following Mr. A. Verville, Labor member for Mais. | onneuve, who was the other day eriti- teiming the increased expenditure on the Militia Deparimnet, the Peter bore member gravely announced: "Ten minutes' study of history will show that if the aucient Empire of Rome had been able to defend her- | self we would have been two thousand | years ahead of where we are now, in-1 stead of being two thousand years behind." And accurate Hansard chronicled the utterance. : ------ a Womer, ice too busy doing five] things all the time to Ra nd tioed for it in the newspapers onve in a while. Money makes a good deal mare | tT hen com- |] | Dot patriarchal life Péter eaderst ip and smoking, Werigin undertook of the community's prac mystical life, prohibiting wine and meat. As a con. seq we of the schism of the party" Werigin and his di banished to Siberia. In ID u cal PS Were 1895 and refused to Government tary treating of women nassacre of u vernment ikhobors ve them lages where privation take part in the SUPPressic and mili- the m i children and old men, the thousand ages and nian vil and died of available for r 18 years service nt ic battalion ugh the co pS f Friends raised and C 24r' s * petmlasior obtained for emigration of tl to Cyprus, i sing found unsuitable, in 1869 t thousand Doukhobors were granted lands by the Canadian Gove ernment in the Province of Assinibola near Yorktown and of Saskatchewan near Thunder Hill and Prince Albert. Mr. Syrkin notes that on the arriv- al of Peter Werigin in Canada the return to the traditional Doukhobor- ism and the introqaction of modern agricultural methods began. Werigin disowned the pilgrimages and discard- ers of clothing and organized the communities into a central union. The is strictly adhered to and work is more the contented. oe- cupation of energy than the curse of bread earned in the sweat of the brow. Everything is: left"o the good will and judgment of the individual, the. administration is at a nominal cost; as the elders work. Annually 1,000 adults are sent as day laborers for the railways, and after the de- duction of their living expenses they return the greater part of their wage to the common treasury. One of the largest and best brick-making plants in Canada has been founded by the Doukhobors at Yorktown, and the communities have paid their debts, and even eighteen months after their arrival in Canada, wrote to the Eng- lish Quakers to cease pecuniary gifts and apply them to others more needy. But even under Werigin the Douk- hobors have not found peace. True to their belief in common property they have finally refused to became Canadian subjects and consequently have lost the greater part of their homesteac ds of about the value of two million do retaining only about fifteen acres each member of a communi fun the the sect llars for Friends Didn't Know Him. The House of Commons enjoyed a genuine sensation récently. Mr. Em- manuel Devlin, the eloquent member for Wright, has for years worn a lux- uriant moustache and a bunch of wav- ing black hair which would have done credit to any embryo artist or musician. But the barber bided his time and finally got Emmanuel, The latter a faithful attendant in' the Chamber, and theslong fight debates, followed by the recently inaugurated morning proceedings, proved too mach for tired nature. According to the story going the rounds of the corri- dors, Mr. Devlin fell asleep under the operations of the tonsorial expert and when he awoke found himself minus his moustache and sporting a real short military haircut. This was, in itself, bad enough. But other tribulations awaited him when he reached t after prayers en Francais. He had doffed overcoat and chapeau and was heading into the Chamber when Joe Demers, of St. John and Iberville, spotted him and gave the alarm. "A stranger coming into the House," was the appalling whisper with which De- mers startled Mr. H. W. Bowie, the stalwart deputy Sergeant-at-Arms. Mr. Bowie nothing if not alert and eflicient. He gripped his sword and started menacingly towards the sup- posed infruder, waving at him to halt. Mr. Devlin was late, and wasn't bait ing. Member and officer met within the doors of the Chamber. The latler conducted a searching inspection, but Mr. Devlin finally . established his identity. And he maintains that the officer most gallantly atoned for his error by observing: "Well, sir, 2% cut ten years off your age." -- in Canadian Courier. This 1s a Busy Farmer, A remarkable sight was witnessed recently at High River, Albguit, where a farmer was reaping and threshing grain, and plewing for spring seediog, 'all on' the same plot of land. is A man ants to arrange his fort first and com:- then his salvation ny (time i's convenient. When a girl has sore feet she wants the | . | areas, { foreign settlers we | ern Untar } "Small | the | wobors burnt their weapons pub. | "within a year Col he House out of breath just | { fifty miles from the colonel's 1 quarters. ng Scandinavian emigrants to these and the more of this class of can get into North. he better it will be for the prov and, indeed? for Dominion as a whole. "Ontario has become facturing province, nee a great by far the largest sr growth in this regard The « hich Ontario has , and for which she end upon the adjoin but the great water distribution of elec- make the been i had to deg ng states, is coal, powers, and the soon That to} has its part by the rece the Cobalt ict: rthern Ontario has been sho nt unex ( For re present we advise the Jritish newcomer to spend a year or 5 1 Ontario before taking area more remote from to scl neighborly and general routine, than 10s¢ he has been accustomed to "in Britain, Toronta, our capital, it should always be remembered, (5 within seven days' reach of London, and in centre of the most thickly po area of all Canada. Our manufactur ing industries are growing so rapidly in the area that the agriculturist i sure of his market. But speaking a Deputy Minister of Agriculture, sponsible for advice to the emigrant, t is to the agriculturist, the dumestic servant, and the prudent investor, that we hold out the most induce- ments." As illustrating the extent of organization of Ontario's Department of Agriculture, for the benefit alike of the new-comer and the native born. it may mentioned that it has fif- teen district representatives in var. ious parts of the province, qand there are eleven separate branches, manag- wij 100ls, FOUrSe, be ed by experts in dairying, live stock, " fruit growing, or farmers' institutes, ties, and women's institutes. "The latest addi ition to the Agricul. tural De parime concluded Mr. James, "is a veteri nary college, which will shortly have a new building in ronto, and add to the opportunities 1 at Guelph, at Kingston, and for the most practical edu- given upon reasonable , to the sons and daughters of e who decide to cast in their lot with the prospering Province of On tario." Mr. James was re a Companion of the chael and St commendation the eral, Earl Grey, as a recognition of his general services in promoting the ic promotion of agriculture in ominion, co:opbrating with to be ently appointed Order of St. Mi- George, upon the re- ok the Keeping Out Whiskey. It was to protect the Indians from whiskey dealers from Americar side of » border that the Northwes ¢ Mounted Police came into being in 1874. So well did they succeed that Macleod, who was stationed in a district which now forms the southwest corner of Alberta, reported that the whiskey trade had been completely stopped in that part of the country, and that riots were at an end. His first blow at the 1! was the capture of a colored man named Bond, and some other Ameri. cans, who had a trading post about head- An Indians named "Three Bulls" informed the police that he had bartered two of his horses for a couple of gallons of whiskey. An offi. cer, with ten men, accordingly set out, and rode dowu Bond and his as- socistes after a forty mile chase, ar- resting the party, five in number, and seizing two wagons cases of whiskey and buffalo skins, which had been received from the Indians. Heavy fines were inflicted, and the first step in protecting the ludians from their worst Shemies Was & greal success, Influx of Americans. "The present outlook is that there the will be forty thousand more Ameri | cans enter western Canada this year than last," said Mr. W. J. White, zup- erintendent of American immigration agencies, who was in Ottawa recently. Unimportant Man. Many a man goes away from home for a #eek and imagines that he is missed by the whole community, and when he comes home he finds that there isn't a person in town that koew he had been away. . Even a card sharper is suspicious of | the morals of a politician. 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