_ ' I-Va .:.;-.1 - _ _ ~ _ ' ‘ “ i- ff"'>~ f_\ " ._ -"E, _',i_ile ____,. ,'.'r`-,.-I- ~-rg:-~ __ ~ 1’ '-\ i; fi- ;¢'_;.. » 1 3,.; “ ze... _~; _ _ __.--,-,~~., i - I" _. ~.__-_-,A .- il THE MOR o »4<. _A~_ _;1__:;~ . .fw -is-» _ _ __ __ _ __ mm|;||5n mi, THE GUARDIAN, oEAnLo'1'rEToWN. PRINCE EDWARD 1sLAND, MONDAY, AUGUsr 6, woo. ' mg 1' ROBERTS mer 6,000 Prisoners in ~ late Haul. i___- » siimsii TAKE 9% ciiiis BATTLE English, Americans, and Japslcading. ' _ -M. RUSSIANS ANI) FRENCH _.ff - i _ ____,=_,,__.____ _ _.__ . _._ _ 1 , _ - ~ - ‘_wArem=Ai.L. L_ Pnzroiiinj ~ i C ~~"' - ,I - euupsi=9mg;_n MAP SHOWING LORD ROBERTS'S LINE OF MARCH TO KOMATI POORT- A _f_4sNooP$- JRENE- T kzuuaronrsiu ."“_"F°'ff5i"'~- 5 - W ...ai \,_~ EYIJENBURB O _\\o\l\l\ '\ 52-5, 'ft \ 1' y\°'»‘_" \ sf” 9* “N ai\°°_ -/.if4°""°`;' -» e2_\}'=' in ~ Ne somone' -‘ft iiEi>oiiis Exi>EciEo \\» (_ _ E In _amen ~_ _ M T . _regime room _lRBear°f1 ` » xnuasnsooae T’ 0HANli_ESBlIR&“ _ _ ' _ __ ___ - '° »~~ f ._ _.___ PLAEUE is ¢l__'_ _ i _ ."_ signs not iii; "Draws Near. ` 1 Middlebu is the chief town on the railway, 101 miles east of Pretoria. In s ite of broken brid es and a badl destro e “""'“ ` _ P8- D 8 Y Y d Guard the Rear of the C01 railway Lord Roberts is making rapid progress. Machadorp. President Kruger’s headquarters, is 60 miles eastof Midddelburg Hundreds of Canadians to B_e , Lydenbiirg, to which place President Kruger is reported to be about to fly, is 48 miles north of, Machadorp. Komati Poort is Sent Home From England \ln1\1_Pl'00f 0f CITIHCSC miles from Pretoria. '_ _ Dupiioirv G I . I ‘ f I 0 .P=1'Am¢fi¢w1?`rannedi‘i Ve" S°°“° ` PRIVATE JAMES MATHESON EORTUNE A=f°fi=#i1»f . - ,ggxnixo HUNDREDS Home A BIG HAUL OF PB-ISONERS. Losnos, Aug. 4.-(Si'¢<=ial>--Lvrfl 1 ENGLISH, AMERICANS AND JAPS LEAD _ 2 A nie BATTLE EXPECTED Tsun. B°h°r°s "°p°'tfs that Gan' Hunter “OW . The Russians and F1‘°n°h f°"3°S are SPRINGS, 1 of the regiment isbetween here and Cap has 3,348, prisoners and Gen. Hamilton rd- h - ti 5 th Town. We are cam d in the raund I -» VLH' gua ing t e communica on o e Juue18 th,1900, _ _ Pe . :U __ __ _ _ ; _ 3_045_ English Americans and Ja_panese_ who DEAR FM_HER___I am wemand hopethis house. It pretty cold he_re now es- I m __ __HAI1l'.L!, ` 4 pecially at night as it isthe winter season, wk RHODES AND MAJOR WILLIAMS EUR-1-_ _form the advance guard. will :find you, mother and the children but we havve new clothes and the weather _ _ the sa . We are resting here. This - . _ _ . . -.-- Gem Hammm, colmmms gpm-among to. ‘THE LEGA'rioNs iN HARD cAsE. place szbout Amiles from Johannesburg agises with us. . We all looking _ _ mans* 1ardsRustenburg. C°uri°rs fmm Pekin reporo that the to the East- it is a coal mining place. \Ve we col. Rhodes and Maier Wiiiiome eieLegati0nS on J\1lv23rd had but live dass had the grind moron through Pretoria, Y°:} “HY b§“°"° 2;” °f_;'°f1;_?i”K' th ded provisions and25rounds of ammunition 3115 lieu YOU that We made the best on a ra “ms an man' nga” ng ng - ” _ » Roll, L_-('Speghi'1.)__K1gg 81110118 6 WOUH - i h t f th d _ Th b d 1 d 675 miles altogether, I weigh 190 stripped _ _ _ _ _ 15m MORE PRISONEBS AND 9 GUNs_ _per man. , 135;; J; thee 0;; Brigzdein anlziaggu off, and just feel _we1l. Jack Proudsends ""'”" b¢l't3_ takes place on _ _ ` A Pretoria despatch reports General Christian Dewet dead from a shell wound, but the report is not confirmed. Gen. Hamilton has captured 1,56) prison- eers and nine guns. The Boers under Prinzloo, who refused to surrender at first, are now coming in. -STARS AND STRIPE FIXED ON. A train carryinglfnited States Consul Stowe and dying the Sta.rs`?au`d Stripes snsattacked by the Boer flying patrol ’1tHoningspruit and burned. No prison- FOREIGNERS LEAVING SZE CHUEN. Foreigners are leaving Sze Chuen pro- ; vince, 'fearingtrouble as a result of the march on Pekin. 1 CHINESE DUPLICITY PROVEN. At Tien Tsin plentyof evidence has been discovered of Chinese duplicity and of oflicial support of the Boxers in their war on foreigners. _ _ ~ . _ , . » RUSSIANS REPORT SUCCESS. The Russians report their operation ought to see the boys with sore feet get- ting a move on. Out of the first 30 men from the Island there were only nine, Dillon, Small, Rodd, Mellish, Stewart, Gaudet. Foley, Mr. Fullerton and myself, The rest had to go back with sore feet and the fever except Brown and McLean, who got a jcb in Bloemfontein in the Red Cross. But we must get all the honors. ~We were in 27 fights _and ten general engagements. In thirty .days we fought 21.da.ys and ma.rched3ll_)_-rniles. The 19th his respects to his old comrades in arms. _He is in A Company. There is a good crowd of fellows. None of ourCompany have been killed or wounded since the battle of Paardeberg, though some may have died from fever, but Id0n’t think there _was any. Arbuckle went to Joh- annesburg with fever three days ago, but he is getting all right again. Kennedy, Coombs and Proud are the only ones o_f_ [the last draft 'that are here now. There areelot of Boers comingin- every day Brigadeiziaa the beet recordf._of, ` 8 ` ' ff ment that ever fought-iuauy of Q19 T* ""” ' ' 5' " “n Qu’ eonord Roberts _toieioe The men toes WW "_.*'_'°- "°“""'_t “t °B°°"': 9 was coming to us was burnt on the side of were ‘camped around here have gone to as were mkem about Stakhal are meeting with success. the Vaal River thmé _weeks ago and our :_'J0hagm¢5bm»g tg give up their arms, They C . _ = . " said that we were too small in number to aptain captured and an oflicer in A Com- 'T d to t th wo fri hte d n kmed_ so in S d n. surren er , ye ey were g ne Q-- pa y you W ` ee we' ° t exfitoattack us and we had chased them' out pect any mail for-a while and may not get of the town. They only tired a few shots _ .» any till we get back to the Cape. Kitchen- _ R0 Y AT. AS SASSINATIO N S “ E" “E” E M -~ 2f.:.?.‘;°°=..“.1’.:.‘:.‘§:‘..'2:i.::.. . a._ . _ _ _ _ ~ . k Th 1 ft Hit h dred killzafde aarido woiiideii ou 8;; kzpyes. ‘hea.r from home soon’ I remain your There areonly a.bout3(l) Of us here;the rest ' loving son? _ Jm_ ~o»¢.¢¢.¢n"»o oooo -anno ...... .Joe--"1- ~~~~ -oo ........ -oe ............. “-41 _llic Recorder Goes Back to 1840 Wlicii Queen. » W , _' D " A - VicIoria’s life was Threatened. A number of assassinations of royal and ‘st-ick, and in 1872 Arthur' O’Connor pre- WHUK P90910 INWB Wkell P17196 Within the sented an unloaded pistol at her. Banish- 5” half Cent'-11')'» but the 1‘€C0l`d \1S\1&UY`T ment, imprisonment, whipping, were the ,sloes back to 1840, when Edward Oxford tried to 'shoot Queen Victoria. In 1842 another attempt, real or pretended, was made upon Her Majesty’s life by John Irancis. In the same year a hunchback ' named Bean attempted to tire a pistol at the Queen, but was stopped. In 1849 mother attempt to shoot Her Majesty was made by a bricklayer named Hamilton; ill1350Robert Pate, an ex-lieutenant of Hllssars, struck her in the face with a ,i ______ ___ __ -_ _._=__i=|= Kumfort Headache Powders Cure. Tourists and others wishing quiet, com- fortable, homelike rooms, an board, good bathroom in connection should call on im. Wellner, Upper Hillsbroough Street. A special bargain in a pair of second hind l t E. W. AT 10 ’s, c.me?e°§’§io§i?.”e“ “E “ati lr' I i _ Hammocks l R Hammncks'! A big mek of GooD. STRONG and “REAL comfortable Hammocks just °P'l|ed Tennis Racquets, Croquet Sets B0YS'.G1ni.s~ 'eos vows, GAR. ES- A large variety al. al only punishments inflicted for these at- tacks upon the Sovereign. .In 1848 an at- tempt was made to kill the Duke of Mo- dena ,and in the same year an attack wasmade at Minden uponthe then Crown Prince of Russia, husband of the Royal Princess Victoria. In 1852 the death of . Emperor Napoleon was projected by means of an infernal machine at Marseilles, but' the plot was discovered. In the next year 1. an attempt was made to kill Napoleon as A he entered the theatre Comique in Paris; -earlier in the same ear Francis Joseph’ Y of Austria was dangerously wounded in the head at Vienna. by the Hungarian tailor Libzens, and two months later an " effort was made to kill Victor Emmanuel. ` In 1854 Ferdinand- Charles III, Duke of _ _e Parma, was killed by a stab from an un- known person. In 1855 an attempt was `made tn shoot Napoleon III. on the Champs Elysees. Paris. In 1856 a man R was arrested while in the act of firing on Isabella, Queen of Spain; and in the same year a soldier stabbed Ferdinand III. of Naples with his bayonet. In 1857, 1845 `(the Orsini affair) and again in 1863 at- lgemps were made upon the life of Napol- 0 ,Baking_B0wdeI’ -Hadeirolnpure. aeamoftartar. if ,_ li tml I _ , -_ ~ e ~ - . ~- _~'. - '=.:.~~fe'.-I. - ’ _ ~ - ' ‘ _ _ .- .~»'=‘=-."-i~‘=‘f..~.i~>1r,-;‘f. 1 .». ». .E _ . ._ - . 2s_»;m»r ..“== :E-»’_=r__.°s.-:»=:»/_”;.-:_ ;.a.~._..f<.“@~=..As..--.;A»..~- ~._.= .-, ~- » -. .._~.=». si.-_..~.s. : 5 _ fact,the fmodem > con III. So mauyplots againstNapoleon’s failed that some people believed that the police _of _Paris got them up in order that they “might have the glory of discovering them. In 1&il the thestudent Berker tried tokill the King ofi Prussia, an attempt which failed, as did that of Dr. Nobling in 1878, when the King had become Emperor of Germany, but Nobling lodged thirty pieces of shot in the Empe`ror’s head and neck. That same year Likmann, the socialist, fired three shots at the 'Emperor while driving with the Duchess of Baden, but they all ‘_ missed. In 1862 Queen Amalia of Greece was fired upon. In 1866 the life of then Emperor Alexander of Russia was at- H temped, and the peasant who saved the King wasmade a noble. In 1867 another attack -was made in Paris upon the life of the Czar; in 1379 two attempts were made, one at Moscow and one at St. Petersburgtokill the Czar; in 1880 the attempt was made to destroy the whole Russian royal family by blowing up the Winter Palace, and a great many persons were killed and wounded, but the Czar escaped, only to be killed the following yearbya bomb thrown by and assassin. In 1868 Prince Michael of Servia was killed by two brothers In 1871 there was an attempt to kill Ama- deus, King of Spain, and in 1879 a second ‘ attack was made upon his life. In 1897 an an attempt was made to kill President Faureof France; in 1898 the Empress of Austria was killed by an assassin, and an attempt was made to shoot the King of Greece. During the -present year an attempt was made to assassinate the Prince of Wales at Brussels. One of the most prominent assaesinations of recent days was the killing of Canovas del Cas- tillo, Prime Minister of Spain, by an, NEW YORK STOCK LIST. American Sugar ~ 1222 American Steel and Wire 34 American Tobacco __ ~ nil Brooklyn Transit Burlington e Continental Tob. Federal Steel A f 34 Federal Steel Prid 66§ Louisville and Nashville 7O§ New York Central nil Rock Island nil St. Paul 110 Tennessee Goal and Iron nil Union Pac Pr’fd nil United States Rubber nil 575 26% nil -for 198 Years. Sullendluoh-laelImbleto_l¢l'l_¢ll' _Shep-Dr.ohese'eKl|h\e|-Llnrfllo ll@&l|l. _ Too many endure the misery of D301!- llche without knowing tlmt. it is the unmistakable symptom of. kidney dis- eases .As you .value yourlife G0 1101i neglect a. hackache. It tells of the be- ginnlngofthemostfatalofdisealel narchist.. ' ' 1--Bright!! Disease of the kidI_\G?!. Among the most notable assassiiiations on this continent were the, killing of President Lincoln in 1865, and of Presi- dent Garlleld in 1881. In 1872 President Bolta, of Peru, was assassinated; in 1873 President Morales, of Bolivia; in 1875 Presidentfiaroia Manco, of Eeuador; in 1S77President Gill, of Paraguay, and in 1818 Pl vi as of pu-atively little induenee in the lil ‘__ A il* _ . 1 _ M _ 2 , ' Mr. D C. Simmons, Rubee, Ont., writes :-"lily kidneys and back were eobadthatlwaeunabletoeleepor work. ‘Hy urine had _sediment like brickdwqrtf’-and_1 liao- to ses up Uv” or- tour times every llitllt- "I saw Dr. Chase’ Pills advertised. nnd them e. trial. I have box, and em a well one can and felt F* g’_~_-_-____-Q, Closing prices August 4. _ 'I 5 Am-ii Gentoo oei ioo lbs -_i I 1 i TOTTAWA. AUS- 4-.(5P¢°i&1)~-L°1`d Losmoy August 4_s.pe-eioi>_A name AAAAAAAAAA _ ____ A IIII I .Tn PuGT".mL°EE‘E_’”f A Sh‘ll'»h¢0U9» is “Hanging t° Send home is expected on Sunday between the Allied . ' ` ° 5 7A“g H0111 Enidand hundreds °f C“”“di’mS° troops and General Mais forces at Yang _ ` 'W I - °t the TEH* 0( inlalki ‘the Bureaus! - .L And Leaves Before the Mar- shall Could have interview With him. v Them is nothing more infectious than -'havingonefs fortune told. .The 'girls wait .-you with hal! disguised the fortunefteliers Y”-On. -Friday a gentleman with a carmlne appearance' tacked a shingle on the frontjof the Savoy- House. The inscription was asfollows, FORTUNE TELLER SAvor House Onlya short time elapsed when those de- sirous of learning of their future appeared before the ‘.‘Great Wonder,” It appears that from the commencement the fortune teller displayed a lack of the cunning, but it was not until ten c'clock in the evening did his lluish dawn upon him. ' _ At that hour a gentleman with two lady friends called at -the Savoy House and 1 inet the “Wonder” at the door. With a Parisian politeness the fortune tellers ushered his supposed patrons into the parlor. When told that the party wished house. He would be married and have to have :their fortunes told he displayed great delight at the way trade was boom- ing. He then motioned the gentleman to al chair for “treatment”j and proceeded' to tell his fortune by placing his chubby fingers on the party’s head with the pretense of bring a phre-- nologist, whereupon the gentleman re- marked that “you goat it ina proper way.” The fortune teller replied, “Oh yes, I go right to the bottom.” After making a most rigid (1) examination he commenced to tell the gentleman that “it took a long time to get his temper riz,"butwhen it was once “riz” he was “`quick temper.” He would meet with disa poiutment within a year and some obstades were in his way and he was trying to make a certain pointwhich he would not reach, but he was not to“stiddy”(worry) over it. He was to be well oii’ after that year and was tolive ina nice house-a two story seven children. After some deliberation! he said that the gentleman was a clerkin _ astore ahd handled glass. ' ` The ladies were next told their fortunes andthe iiist examined was to _» have four children. ‘ The other was to be blessed with three but she was to “row” with her hushand. Both, however, were going to eroso water within A year to “foiiie e rei- low.”This ended the fortune teller’s labors _ and he turned to the gentleman' of the party whereupon the gentleman asked thefortunetellerhisneme and if be bid alieense! Hesaid his nameifl-S LMI renee Warren of Cape _Trl?¢;T_l¢ ind he had e licenses ‘ ’ " _ The (gentlemen th_en_in!mmed_l_lilll ill liowesa5‘|7¢l'l°*'l"'“W°d 59 '°_°_“’° license. Amr muon W°."°°i he waemistnkeh end' that ifiwix Y E I kill! Tas* niichfsas to`1"say ‘-‘will you canbeohtained, M Lumen. Irie new believes im enoennhr _Nioolina of Manza,was olive.. _ » _ ’ ' _Hehds disappeared. i I _ `, _Annmcng nsom'uas~-nnvsnlb- ___ - ' Wasmroroar, Ang. Alstoltter and - i ._ ~ »- -Q, his Polllall Gazette - ». -i Many believe Astor must Ehghd for good though he is _ a Englishman now. , ‘ ` SIGNS OF AN EL%'l'ION IN MONTEEAL, Aug. 4.-(Special)-All indi- cations point to the elections coming in, October. l " . ' Sir Wilfrid Laurier le erranglq Q stumping tour through 'the Provineesand SirCharlee fupper isllh-'~ toning home for 5 _ Largecrewsare etwork Q; public enterprises throughoutthe Dom{n ion. ' _ "U the criminal law and stated the of the ofense patrons the fortune teller must have-Il-E iiected, and on Saturday his shingle was lowered`end;he took Hanes Geeely’s advice and “went west.” -_i€----_ Y 'd be neti?:uDyo§ 33"” 5-E gh it cost of ten cents. _ New Eooxs -I For Summer Reading. “To Have and to _H0111 "The Tranevael from within,” - “London to Ladysmith,” I “From Capetown to Lady- “B ' t o vor " smith,” __ f S d_ "Hmgsof Gill.” - “The Redemption of ~‘De1|l! Carson,” o “ITIS Biffyfsn _ “The Natal Campaigns, “Ordered 801105." "The‘Deat h or Glory “Briteine’ qferedhimedollarns gg;-viees,butWu'ren tbatitwoulddoon pressed iniiift "