Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle The festival of St. Jean the Baptiste was celebrated with more than usual éclat by our fellow-citizens of French Canadian origins. The procession which mustered on …
Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle We have received numerous complaints of the conduct of a gang of rowdies who infest the northern extremity of Dorchester Bridge and the junction of the …
Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle The most dangerous inconvenience suffered by persons whose business leads them at late hours through suburban streets arises from the immense number of useless curs …
Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle Discovery of Trunks Belonging to Wilkes Booth: Some time late in the autumn, a small schooner, Canadian built and registered, cleared from the port of Montreal …
Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle Four boys were tried yesterday before the Recorder for obstructing the thoroughfare by playing football in Nouvelle street. No obstruction, however, was proved and the complaint …
Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle There are two reasons why a loyal and law-abiding people should keep holiday to-day. First, because we love to remember that the “only Ruler of Princes” …
Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle The Emigration Department has caused some very useful information for immigrants to be published in the brief and comprehensive form of a hand-bill, …
Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle Many of our French Canadian contemporaries are in the habit of drawing wholesale upon our general and special telegraphic dispatches without giving us credit. We think …
Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle It will be seen by the advertisement in other columns that our friend and neighbor, Mr. Pierre Bourassa, the present attentive host of the Mountain Hill …
Memorials and Things of Fame
1865 The Morning Chronicle What with recent storms, frost and floods, the wire travelling messenger, upon which we now depend for early news, has been sadly obstructed. At Cap Rouge …