FAMDUS THE TRAIN EXP CANADA’$ ~ MARITIME RESS INTERCOLONIAL t RAILWAY letwees Halifax, Truro, Painsec i 4 Junction Ioncton, Quebec, and lloiitresl, ensures a SAFE SWIFT SMOOTH YOUR OWN LIN Write for rates and time tables to G.'A. SHARP. Snpt. P. R. L Rail lotnetown, P. B. I. |80. I. LYONS. General Tkket Agent. lloncton. E. TIFPIN, Trait Iannger. Monet _VL Journey, and yon will travel via wa Passen E. y, Char nor; and Z I WILL BUY sooo nro a on :goo Cass Grande 5ooo_G:ild Tunnel 5ooo Horseshoe 1. old 51) Para Rubber Plantation Will buy all or any part. State you hav: and lowest cash prices you iooo Aurora Consolidated _ A r Evensi wi tooo Alaska Oil and Mine-1 ......... _. tooo Aurora Consolidated _ . . . . . _ . _ _ _ . ._ iooo Aurora Extension ........... tooo Qs: Grande . . _ . . _ . . . _ _ . . . . . . . . . _ ._ 50 Colonial Investment & Loan. ._ ioo De Forest Wiiees soo: lnipirestate Gold._.... sooo Gold Tunnel Mininiz__._._....._._ 5Gres Northern 5p.c_ Bon&..._.. looo Hurricane Mining , , , , , _ . _ _ , _ _ __ 5oN. B. Petroeum ...... ._ tooo Manhattan Oil _ ....... ._ 'c ll Gold Ml ...3 »’&i‘..°... is it p‘;‘.‘T?¢,.....'i;; 1 :_ __ oooQhio&Californis . . . . . . . . Fort Hood Coslllds . . . . . . . . . . . __ sooo Plninas Gold Mining_...._..._..i°. poo Potosi Orleans Gold. _ _ _ _ _ _ tooo Standard Smelter ._ sooollnion Consogdated xooo UnionConso‘i stedRf...._.._..._ i5oo Vizasga Gold Mining .............. _ _ of`ms.ke * At the cheapes` prices ever heard me an offer. All orders can be telegra hed at in quantities ll take. I WILL SELL 0.07 .zz -09 -°9 745° 4-25 C7 .M 5io.oo _:i7 S 25 .o7 .07 .no I 830.00 .o7 .09 .16 ‘ .16 .iz it expense. REKEKIBR, I am waitrng to send you copy of my latest MARKET Lsrrtx and Pnici-: List. I i NORRIS P, BRYANT Dealer in Investment Securities, ‘ 84 St. Francois Xavier Street. Montreal. I NOVA SCOTIA ' Garment llannlactory' miuCm $'l7.,llA|.|FAX._ llsniifscturers of v Mes’s Sllrtaiwhite and colored W it u i u .neriwoki-grain. _, _ - '~?Aea’a Overalls. lilsemlrlland design, ~" ` u as .i ‘- so V ul Q | Boys’ Blouses, O Cow Boys' Pants. ` ChiIdres’s Sailor Saks. Coats, white drill, for cooks, Ewsiters, hat- , krl. harbors. 5 il Going” Camping n Summer? Getting wet, change of water, eating food that does not agree, or eating unripe an attack of Diarrhcea, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, etc. The most reliable medicine to carry with you is DR. FOWLER’S EXTRACT OF WILD STRAWBERRY. Relieves pain and checks diarrhoea quicker and more efectually than any other remedy. 1 1 fruit may can se Sl , ` l A Cure For L Rose Cold Hay _Fever and AS'l`Hl‘i_A ~ ¥ - i A prominent New York lawyer in an unsolicited testimonial says; “uil. ' itoirs Asritn cuts cured me when all f‘ other remedies failed. Physicians ire- _~ scriptions did not even relieve. or years I have been a suferer of Rose ' Cold with all of its annoying symp- ' toms, such as constant sneezing and - itchingwateryeyes. Himrod'sAsth- ~ ` ma Cure is oiisrrlln totally eradi- ' cated a Rose Cold of years standing. ; No words can express my appreci- _'_ ation of its effectiveness” '_ The late (Dsl Oliver Wendell 1. Holmesin his boo °' One Hundred _ Daysin Europe" says: “I haveused all remedies--Himrod’s Cure is the best. It neva’ hiled.” Send for a generouskee sample to- f ` day and try it. Itwillnotdisappomt - you. ' HIMROD WPG 00., _ 14»io vssev sr.. new vous, ` lotsalnby nlllknggists. _ - Boys’ Sailor Collars, trimmed, lsvs' Windsor Ties. l.sdlea’¢’Apro_ss|r naad trlnqed, l.al=f'Ili¢\flI|mseg;f 1; _ ~ I , Lldlos Skins and Uniersklrts, Clllrefs 9.--rt t Dresses. Clildiefs Uslerciothisg. cniaem if lsfsnt’s Slips, CHldres's Sailor Fronts, Pillow Sihs. I I I m _ _ Q i ters Nantha Soap, This is a soap which is very highly recommended, Will wash everything washable, clean everything' V cleanable, and hurt nothing. "73 per cake. 4 for 250.. Jenkins & Son Q | 1 \ l HOTEL BRUNSWICK HONUIPOH, N, I. 11s Lupatnrlutuauryiseiuns ¢l!.AcesnnolsIs¢Ilsusts alinisilotaeeesmorsosetau cmaasisa surrounded lliado Trees, makin k¢p&Uy Tm& @°intli% r8ss|os..Q E.x¢swnnnnvi»».., ‘munuuti»turs' ofcom-in, seein, Bntertailnisnts &., of a. monq making (ofo get insertion, ma 2;; :rits a the _for @ , _Churches and charl- tsble institutions price xs»oest¢_Bla¢1¢ ¥»i=“f'3".;°°"‘°" 1......" _ Dum' rain;°§.§ '"l°Wlthdesths ss-nersteos above. .,.- » > it _ _¢~_=_ I ‘!ossso!v_ ...TIL !=:!,v_v;'_!*__:.gE_ _ o ~ _ _ .,_.~_-_ rw GUABJJIAN, cnaamtgrarqwlgzrslgicy l\A’ifSfl‘lt5\’EIANi l?.E@\1!D HOW` THE BOOMERANG TOOK THE PLACE OE BOW AND ARROW. ___.__.____ I I ‘_ loomornngs Nos tho Peculiar .Proporty a . V of tho Australian Blsok Follows- ” Trnoo of Poetry In tho Rude Tale ` Which Gives tho Whlto lan tho Know- lodgo of tho Aboriginal-'l‘\\o Story. _ The origin of most primitive tools or weapons is not, as n rule, diilicult. to tract-, for the service they render is so direct and tho need for their existence is so manifest, even to men of to-day, that their evolution is a simple matter of observation gud brief' mental calculation. The ham- mer, the nwl, the axe, and the saw were potentially invented when first a. prehistoric man cracked ~a. nut with a stone, bored a. shell with A broken bone, chipped a log, with a sharp-edged flint, or cut a groove in a spear haft, with a serrated flake of slate. As with the tools, so also with 'the weapons. A pointed stick proved its utility the first, time it was hurled at au object, and so led the human mind to recognize the value of the spear and the arrow; ~the hammer, which cracked a nut., naturally suggested the club where- with heads could be treated in n. similar way, whilo the desire for shelter from attack would. in duo course, lead to the invention of the shield, and the sword would grow out of ‘the crude armory immediately mm' came to hand-to-hand conflicts. z But what was the origin of the . Boomerang? _ i From the fact that it was found .in the hands of the Australian ab- ; original when first _the white ‘ man .landed on the shores of the great lsouthern continent, there has grown n belief that it is purely and par- ticularly a Weapon of the black fel- _ low; and that it had its origin § with him, an origin so much obscur- ed by the mists of an unrecorded past. 1 as is his own, for whence the black § fellow came is a conundrum which § none dare to answer. But boomerangs are not the peculiar property of the Australian aboriginal, as they were ~ known to and used by the Egypt- fans in days before the pyramids i.lN_lM£n_l 5 were built, and are still to be found f among some of the isolated' aborigi- ; nal tribes of India. The peculiar pro- gperty of. the Australian black fellow, 'curiously enough, is not- a. posses- Qsion, but the absence of a posses- ; sion. It is not that he possesses the ,boomcrangg but that he does not fpossess the bow and arrow. In this ihe- is alone of all races and tribes ‘of mon upon the face of the earth, not e\'ou excluding thosc of thc low- , est human types, and in spite of the ifact, that the inhabitants of islands within a comparatively' _speaking -short distance of his coast linc _are ' nmong,.t.he finest and most powerful farcheps humanity has ever produced. 2 Throughout. the Pacif_ic_ islands* Q tho 1,_bow and arrow will everywhere be 7 found; in New Guinea it is the ai5`a.pl¢_ 2 weapon, and at the Prince o’f`~Wales' ‘Inlands, just off the northern cpast ,of Australia, thoinatives Lsltoat e. i ' six-foot arrow with fnontia-:bow * _ .. ya. _..-¢_-_._.. P I i S » that ii muscular white, man can,_bare- ly draw to his elbow. But. on., the mainland of the continent bows and arrows are unknown, while the ~wa.i'- riors wield the boomerang ns it was wielded by the men who lived on the Nile centuries before Thebes or lem- phiswere built. Wherefore is it dif- `neyn<`>1ds, oliver »o<>1¢ismi1:ii~ment'§ ficult to trace tho- origin of' this ln curiosity, difficult, that-is, for it nj White man. The black fellow knows ‘whence it came and treasures' the *fknowledge in a legend which _ is not altogether without trace-of poetry. whatever may be its character as to ,_ veracity. “Plenty long ago," was the begin- ,_ ning of the story as the writer heard `i it. “Plenty long ago" the moon was a. beautiful young gin (or girl) and the sun a fierce, ‘restless warrior of n, another tribe. The warrior, desiring T the young girl as a_wife, followed ; the orthodox aboriginal method of courtship and sought to pounce, _upon her unawares with the kindly inten- , tion of knocking her on the head I1 and carrying her od to his 'gunyali V (of hut.) But the young girl was op- . posed to his attentions, and in order lyto protect herself she wrapped her- lg sell in a rug of black ’possum skins and only peeped round the end of __ it a. _little at a time lest her admir- !; er should see her and carry her _ off. Sometimes he did see her, and purine.. H _od upon her, but ever was she able ., to dodge behind the shelter of the black ’possum skin rug and so elude 1 , r _ l lhim, for when she vanished mimi.: lhc Elftown Steam Navi gation Co., Limited. -STEAMERS- api; ni; everyds ,Sands niggas! sexeeptgd, 8,on arrivalofniorniii ifnsct ‘i,i}}S*l§rg ,,;‘§" Hr larsl; _?. n 5 NTDU CHRNB., ici n Ili i Northumberland’ and 'Princess' on atrial of rx qi nfor SUIIHBRSIDB, een. aprt train for Charlotte- ltetown and all stating #_ ‘a I s= [the rug he was confounded and could _ only wander about wondering how she escaped. At last the constant ‘disappointment made. him grow an- n; gry and sulky; yet when next he had ‘a glimpse of her face peering round the shelter he sprang forward, Ag 1 was usual, the face vanished; but, he, _ bel-D8 Sl-llky. Sworo ho would try for xlterno more, and lay down to sleep then and there. T118 Y°\1ng girl, crouching under the ji cover of her rug, listened fon his _ resins fvofstein to pass on. For it long time sho listened, but heard for sr. roam, noarosi' nothing. me um, being nk. ,.11 '“_"*~“ more curious than crafty, she needs _poep round the end of £¢h°1"1x=samwse'°_whstthe si- ,lelioe meant. The warrior, lying ’l§iU. law the gleam of the face, and gathered himself, silently, for g U “ou sp_m_ an cnA'_;o1__n_n spring. With hor ouriosity unsatisfied squiens.sso'r'rnrowui°¢ ai,” tho girl pooped further, and the wg-_ rior. impatient in- hia'ango¢,,1¢gpe¢ , at her. His ima esugiic on ‘.:_“.».»"~=f*°__§.+_ #arts “aa_. "‘*'°»....l:....t_tt".£»tz\: Rst'-n»d»_¢l_»¢G~€» _ `?X,_‘l:’.RI: _ " iv.w.n'ai.na, “I_:”a;t”l:‘s ~ srniritv.ir.s..-.< " i.. .1 nm °"*“°lAN ‘Har:i1m"" \ ' I ° f"f' ' s _ ~ ~ - . ,rsssvlirv-List' l - R . ds' of her with n mighty grip, bug isyjorriiied ,st the; 8ig,l\.t»of him, wit/h,_s9. much vig- i'.:~°' ‘care ds. at did 950843.' and A with ing: l_w"m~1a There, "later, y picked ir. up, t it could be, Ab once it '_ ,= ,_ .f§’_'f__ §i~ _- iiigigini ggifiéiérgiigi E3-§,‘f§5ff§§§E5_l _ F' ' E _ -_ katoos fly ho- r 'than 'even fwenc lie- it plunged doww _every day in the slave pens of the n bruno short of provisioiis ‘ho buys n faii-,up _toward *sling i°ound». and long iovrney. bun H 1 ' f - r'.,;f. wardmnd Shrek in-'ins oat-in at feet Of the .black fellow who thrown it. Again he picked it and again he threw it.,.and than comrades tried it, always with tho same result, and at last. the men, fearing “plenty debbil dcbbil" was in it, called a great gathering of tho tribes to discuss it.. To solve the problem each man who attended the corrobo'ri‘c-e set to work to fashion out 'an imitation of the strangelyé all succeeded they laughed at the! fears of the discovorers. They did not V if If Wm b¢ d¢“Cl°“5if YW, 50'” my °f Rh* know that what they had found was a part of the moon’s face, and that its long flights were the result of its etlorts to get back to its proper place; nor did they know that the' warrior, in revenge on the beautiful young girl, made all the imitations travel the S_&1ne way, no that' when the moon looked down and saw them , all whirling round and round in the 5 air she would _not know which 'wan the missing part. of her face and which was not, and so would befor- over disfigured, in punishment for having rejected tho love of her great | admirer. And in proof of the truth ' of his tale the black fellow would point to tho moon-when not at the ' full-and ask how else had it lost a. , part.. On nights when the :noon was full the black fellow was silent.-`, London Globe. WHEN WIGS WERE BIG. ` Tho Fashions That Used to Bala in Ing- lnnd and Franco. ‘ In King Charles lI_'s reign in Dig- 1a.nd a physician or a. judge's ability was gauged by the size of his wig. Ladies had the hair frizzed and adorned with artificial “heartbreak- ‘ors" and “lové locks." Later' on, in William and Mary’s time, youths and children wore wigs. In those times combing the wig in public was conr sidered the proper thing. Steele'l' large black wig cost. him 40 guineasipt but it was the fashion to have nf large wig, and money was no ob; ject. The Duviller full bottomed wigfn 3 were invented by and named after; French barber who made them conceal the elevation in the shoulder of the dauphin. Wig makers whm short of material would often resort to foul means to obtain hair, somo- times holding up children and shear- win Atkins, Charles II.'s gout dos- tor, wore a. three tailed wig cnrefulf- ly frizzed and arranged to fall on . each cheek, and for fear of `obscurin`g part of the beauty of his wig he gen- erally went hntloss_ Another man of _fame was Colonel Dalmahoy, whose~n splendid wig was a theme in popular song of the time. ' In the eighteenth century po wigs were used at times for nn our purposes. A Duke of ’Ho being warned, made the wig » who offered the wig to' him to it on his own head, with the that the wig maker suddenly died Dr. Samuel' Johnson, being sighted. was in the habit. of li a candle close to his head reading, and in that manner _burned the front of his wig.~ _W expense for wigs must havesbesnnb small item. ` if In ‘one of his letters to Sir J os having bought a new ribbon for wig at Canterbury, and a Calais b - ber broke it so that hetmight an extra expense by supplying _tho poet witlia. ne‘w~0ne. ` _g ,.,__§, ' " >‘ ‘“-'-- ~ -~- »-. A ...__ ._ - An African Metropolis- __ f “ The recent extension of British ad- miiiistrative autliorityover the Ka- no, Katsena and Sokoto districts; in Northern Nigeria.. has attracted .at- tention to this prosperous and fertile country. K-ano, which has a hundred thousand inhabitants, is the_métrop- olis of that part of Africa.; It has been called the Manchester of the Soudan. For centuries the Hausas, as the _people are called, have been the clothmakers of North- ern Africa.. They raise cotton, spin the yarn. dye it with indigo or scar- let. and then weave it. But there is not a factory in all the country. The work' of weaving is done on hand- loorns in the homes of the people. Much of the morocco leather comes _ from Kano, and this, too, is prepar- " ed and tanned by workmen at hom_o.___, Their caravans .carry their goods across the continent to Alexandria. and thence down the eastern shore of the Bad Sea. even to Mecca.. 1' The city has been the centre of s great slave-trade, for much of the n work in the fields and practically all the work of transportation is done with the assistance of slaves. It is said that not less than five hundred men and women ate otlered for sale city. This trathz. and slavery itself, will be abolished at once. The money of tho country is slaves _ and cowrio shells: the slaves 'sro the large bills and the shells the small u coin. When the owner of a caravan » mono and pays for them with a __ Slave, itklng h_l3 Ch;:.r_§: in U10 Shelli. ` Thick wnlll of mud, thirty feet ‘_ high, surround tho city, which in df- ‘” toon miles in circumloronoo. _ large area, thus enclosed will locom- modato not only the population, _but many big far!!! as well. on Wllidh girls is raised sadosttle pasturod. us the city lsonpobloofwith- standing a_. long siege. _ _ The British have extended their su- thority over thsciti Q04. the nur- ._ rounding territory tho nn!/lun rulers refused to surrender thsmur- dsers of s British odlcisl. ' . _ - ‘ ‘.?I'.‘fo I ` lashionod about drlv. Tho gentle crawl o(_ "ly ar- - I whining .through '__ motors. Wo lms ' 155555 nnii .S-igtigoi in = distracting _ When' n ‘ Qiphgll look 0 *Ars* un’ lin# ua ii ti: 5 5.32 gf' ing od their locks. _ K* _f _.fire f 7' ~,;'i.- -;‘»._,~" -r _asf E. I. Rllllll i§ 2 lei? I itil ‘.£ Inspect it * _ _._ _ .._.~..-_ Jr.. n,_.r3i‘ 4.. L_ _ mmr_ 36a _ ...anno _ " hr a whirling thing, and when they had ” dessert be? .__ _~= daintit-s that can be made with Crystal Corn Starch. There are many--here ls I simpieom. _ Sold by lll th Crystal Maize ` ' nine xanga n Grocers. Wlnaimi Mix four sbietpmruii of ciymi Mm. Com Starch with onfngnart of' milk; add sl n t ' w boil for ten minutes, allo it_o coo _ ,, mould. Serve with milk and Jelly, or milk andsugar. _ , A "risticii, , , rysa s s Corn Starch »-¢».-.-.l-".i»...““_;._3...."°.. ~ > '_ (Made in Canada) The jim! af `e¢§|arn;f_- fhrdainlr qf qflueilcr. 'ruiimqimiaiviii wot-in Lunpa, smtnmcuhu. Y” __ _ 0* ’lskes$_b,i¢\'=s¥ thnt|`ndesm'o|rong- . ~ ,.3 Vifhereyeritheré are child- ren miist be plenty of good breed- BEAVER I makes the lightest, most whole- I some and most nutritious bread. _ ltissblendof '-vt-.:r.."".':.'*~ -f-- f-» _ asafuyuie-at .cities _i is Canada. ’ '°‘- ide' be f~ W IU'loldXf¢lBo¢axm. astolnssro P GIFK.IN8Oineial Wlics ltls Yoiisnetoo ‘@8111 ' _ Y STABLES--~ iéiiinfcsf s`i’i_tcisr. "tnir1¢itteimi,"P.s'i2: n First-class »~ ' double teams. HJ. WORTH _ ~_. _,_ . ,_i»npeitii:roit.; t. 5,; ir I. _ 1-11. 1 n nn ""’P&t\"°tPl will BOVLB, Raatieo 5-1 dt! _ ' ~~ i-;_ -1_ Hossemd F‘°¢°¢%4U. _ - ~ napa* m lneirmaa Good A onthe f&orh IAlHl~l_H‘l klivoll trains , ' lnsdbown. ' Stations. Ro. No. Ro. 3' 2! 5_ _.1 / a mr. ur. am. _ _ 9.1. 5.oo 3.so loo vLCh'lownar 4-I1 54 7.51 1_-°;~s_.°4A naiersio yur. 1.1: ` 1’ i ' A 9* E257 lvmlsne. ' ,_ oo .33 aol li; are io.xoar!sinIorsids No.5 Noir nl. ant. 6.* so. tv ’°` iintitirfgg irgrsrii*-iz. i. ' I sr. rlgsina tv. it iii; iii; li fit, rc " it I P I _ ‘:&’iI. _ {%‘u..."“' --t £5 ii' ‘ii Sl llo.i1._l¥oxs., lem loss. r.sr. a.l. - sm. na. $3 53?’ 15%. ”" 3 ‘:1s5'§.'“_'f°°-5' _ v. ax. In-_ rm. 1.; lv Vt! .li __ il int r 8 _ _ _ .‘_’3~ _ ~. .__ ~~ IAS to 8.L lU&w76-J *§f_'s_f 4`“?§5"- mrs. »"¥':'="""'-="'°"""""" rfviuvmeinttnvf L.;-