.i;];.n.;i ,11i'.'.1‘f<%.3sf§.~.;- .f _ ..»£e~&'.cxAL»\~.~. 1". -1 #_ ri* *‘ ft S, a ii.; Li;»i \ 1 -. __ ~» ;--=~ » ';~<“:.=."=i~ vf~.1“.r\.r:.‘v':» »= ' " » 5' Q35. ks 7 f oo.A_nnArN.cHAaLoi:TE -__;._ E, .~ _._ _ , in TOWN' OWOBEB "6, 1395 oa¢a¢¢¢¢a¢°\° ¢nsatsi¢**** Baby . . . KNOWS A c-oon THIN HUC# filth! 0 v»»4»»» Dhiti WHEN HE SEES IT. 4¥l~l lillilifi \\ 1| seen# Cf ' “ .521-~_°°'-,T'a.',\"'”"'”° '#1, ‘$3 f / ` ‘ ~_;`. #K uh* * \`v1 nt” Q-$4# . , ` »c- 2' T-' - ~' _ ~: _I _-' fi* i _ ___:_ f= ` B/\BV’S OWN SOAP 1__i...1-_-- itil!! G 8°- t{° Q’ ¥44¥4 *#4 43 f *fa *assesses I O »»»¢444 444; 4»44»4¢44»»4» l~¥ i wie: sv THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO. MONTREAL, IAAKKIIB O7 THE CKLEIHATZD ALBERT 'ro|i.sT SOAPS. Q* V ¥ Q'{l.¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥‘ _ '1 .~_ _- s R. r $- A I d ndenl. Journal, untrammelled and eari'les'si;gl)iging to be I b' N 'y Just. Impartlal, Rel a en ew ` eeking at all times to further the best in srests ofthe noonlaana recoiniized therefvre “S The Poop1e’I P&I>°1°- Published at its olllces Cameron Bloexfouth _ide Post Oiiice, at the fbllowing ra.tee.P&Y¥"bl° in advance:-_-_ _ Morning lgdition. daily (except Sunday) 400 th 1.00' r . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . Seldilfxwehkly I1ldiiion(Mond. 81. Thur.) D01' yr; 31,50; in advance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .L25 Weekly Edition (Thursday) D61* YGB-l‘ $l.25;in advance . . _ . . . . _ . . _ . _ . . . . . . . . . . . . . _.L00 Branch Offlcee wi I a e been established at the follo ng P 809°- willere subscriptions may be paid, news turn; A ished, adverttgiiiig, iob work and other busi Cu;rie's Bookstore-D. K. Currie xlbiyrstiariziiigiill-berton Bookstore, G. S. Muttart East, Telephone oiilce. R Seaman.Agent J_i-:_ B. Mccrinsnv. IJ. P. HOOD. Editor. Business Manager. .llll MURNING llllllllllllll. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 6. l89°. 1PHAs1:s or THE Pnonnnrloiv movnus Nr- | The maritime provinces have, from ithe beginning of the temperance movement held zi position much in ,advance of the inland provinces. It was down by the sea that the first “--"ff f' s "i _"”°_’ mtg] abstinence societies were formed. ' _ it was in New Brunswick and Nova. l :Scotia that the first bold measures . i 2. .l ~ were taken in the direction of pro- Bllllll ll lb./is l r~ _ '“‘-Y, nf~__>- 'Z~,-~‘2s_._-sei.. fa- ~=-~.’ .fif- The '~‘. S,(`ob.in sailing from Montreal Tuesday morning October llfh, will be due at Fharlottelown Friday morning, Oct. 7th. and will nil for St. John's Newfoundlanc, via North Sydney, carrying Horses, Cattle and Sheen on deck, and produce under deck at lowest pc sible rates. liibit'on_ So long ago as 1855 a law entirely suppresive of the importation manufacture and sale of intoxicants was enacted in New Brunswick, to take effect on the first of January fol- lowing. It was premature and had to be repealed, because the great mass r of the electorate of that day had been brought up in the habit of moderate drinking and had but recently been 5 system of dual representation and #ite trvf election petitions 'in the courts of the land instead of _ by partisan election committees. We must teach them the great lesson of liquor prohibiti n. The P0ll00lII18‘BUO!‘ has been abroad in P. E. Island as he has not been in Quebec. Just as the great army of pioneers marched west ward from the sea, redeeming the wilderness to the sickle and the plough, so the great temperance and prohibitory reform will yet spread in- land until along the St. Lawrence and the great lakes they see this question ,in its true light, and as the eastern provinces have long seen it. An intelligent Spaniard has writ- tion and prospects of Spain. which article appears in the Nineteenth Century magazine I-Ie takes a gloomy view of the situation. The public debt of the nation is $2,000- 0O0,000 and the annual interest charge is $lO4,000.000 Twenty thou- sand oiiicers and one hundred thousand I men of the army and navy must now ~ be withdrawn from the colonies and disbanded, on terms that will not give even the oliicers the money to buy food. Besides, _the factories of Catalonia, which have hitherto been supported by the markets of the colonies, of which they enjoyed almost a. monopoly ,under the Spanish tariff will be unable to compete with United States competition anti must go to the wall. Such aie the salient features of the story. Rev. Mr Mi.-Caughan, pastor of St. Andrews church, Toronto, gave some plain talk to his people the other eve- ning in connexion withyhis acceptance ofa call to Chicago. Among other things he said : "His experience was that in his first year a pastor was ten an ar_t-icle on the present condi-, _ _ . - > __. I _ V ’ 3 THE TEACH or PRINCE EDWARD is To Bu Their , Fashionable _|=RoM-- As. _ To iltilfsillsrlltelltalti Teachers A E \ .t E' I O We expressly wish to impress the TEACHERS throughout this prov ' 54- .i K-. lil. -F"""1 ur--il 4"*-2:1' For further particulars as to freight and pas- sllike apply to PEAKE BROS & CO. I Azents Lh't.0wn Oc‘. 4th '99, Evening Classes. Will be opened at the P, E, |3|;||d tellerclal tollcge on _ ~ MON DAY, OGT 3rd. and will be continued throughout the season on Monday, Tuesday and Fri- day evenings. Same coursesas in day classes. Apply at once. ISAAC OXENHAM, Sept 29,’9c5t~f Principal. _ I7 2 CASES _ ‘ _- @QQ @ Q @ Q Celebzlatqeiiii Brand Bllllllll Bllll ill Has arrived in Halifax, And will be here Tuesday or Wednesday. DAYISON 8100. GROCERS. UUBELL LINE S. S. Poino is due rcre from Montreal, 'l`hiir.~i1l=iy, Bfli iiist and -‘ails forfSt. J.»hn`.-, Ntiil, via *id ey and North Sydney. Live oz; dec.; ii .il pro-liicc under deck at lowest ri-‘es For farther inr`oriii.itioii :i< to frcigh* or ras- ~`.il.;e apply to N. liATTl~I.\`BURY. Agent. Oct 4-3i E no As we sivgmi W HEN A WHl:EL’S WELL Repaired and kept that way,...... it z_i\ es i_t`s owner the best of; satbfarlinii. Our repairing 3, pleases each one of our large= iiviiiber of patro- s. :_ir;.w~ ir is “in = wor - ease == owners send otliiars. W ee W' L»~t's _doctor your wheel th next time it needs it. ERNEST RICE The Bicycle Doctor. CK YCLE REPAIR 8|-I0 Kent St. ' lllllllllll Illl II Elllllllnilllllllilill P nf! brought within the fold of abstinence. It was to have been expected that a great revulsion of feeling should take place, though the temperance people were unprepared for it, and were sur~ prised at it. ' But the temperance sentiment did not die out with the repeal of prohibi- tion. From 1856 down to the pre~ sent day one or more of the counties of that province have stedfastly re- fused to grant licenses, and so either in that way, or by the adoption of the Scott Act, various sections of the maritime provinces have had for many years, prohibition of one sort or another. In our own province the Scott Act has been in force through out its entire exten*, and to-day it is only in this city that the liquor trade is legalised. In Ontario, while there is' much tempeiance sentiment, there are many evidences that it is much less advan- ced than in the lower provinces. For instance, we hear and read from time to time of Protestant ministers there who are either open opponents of ,pro- hibition, like Principal Grant,or more quietly distrustful of it and unwilling" to accept it. In the maritime provinces almost every Methodist, Baptist and Presbyterian minister, and a goodly number of Anglican clergyman are _ the open and avowed advocates of the , 'i suppression of the traffic by-law. The 5 exceptions to the rule are few in- 7 deed. _ - A more marked_diH`ex-ence still is found in the attitude of the Roman Catholic clergy east and west. In Quebec, and in a less degree in- Ontario, the Catholic clergy are almost a unit against prohibit( ry laws and their people have spoken with sweeping majorities against it. In Prince Edward Island, on the Gon- trary, many of the most earnest advo- cates of the legal suppression of the liquor trade are found in the Roman Catholic churches. Hence it occurs that in the Catholic sections of t-his province we have majorities equally large as in the Piotestant sections in infavor ofa suppressive law. Ten and even twenty votes for prohibition to one against it in almost exclusively Catholic districts were common on plebiscite day in P. E Island. And it is to be observed that this ~ conviction has come to pastors and people, Protestant and Catholic alike, not suddenly, but by giiadual process, and after the fullest opportunity of inves tigatiou and experiment. We have tried legal suppression as it has never been tried in rhe west, by per- sistent aiid renewed trial, and it is after such experiences of years in duration that the settled convictions I ofthe maritime people aie in favor of prohibition. This a. most hopeful aspect of the question. Tne people who know mosqabout:prohibiti0n are l 1 | > and dolized; during the second year he was criticised and during the third year he was crucified.” lt appears that his salary got in arrears. illmuit Dislraclel it Dreadful Suffering by a New- ' market Woman. The Bones In the Nose Afteeted-_ Face would Swell Untll Her Eyes were Closed- How Relleved. good opportunity of noting the great medicinal. powers of Ho0d’s Ssrsaparilla. My wife has been s. sutlerer from eatnrrb for the past four years, and the 'disease had gone so tai- that the bones of the-nose had become anected and particles had come Away through an opening in the left side. Her eyesight was also uiected to the extent that tor nearly a year she was unable to read for more than ive minutes lt s time. She sullered _ Severe Paine ln the Head » snds.t¢times1wasalmnstfdietrscted.' She wsvtrelted. Wiiblr.dilf¢ent.¢i9s¢91!B| 911! of whom was A specialist. They all said they coiild not do anything for her, as the disease had gone too far. Her nose would about every three days until her ` eyes would almost ~be. closed. Then is would break through, and the swelfhig i vmia sensing-sun du; or -ms. fatter' ‘ she commenced ’» § Strslperille, that fini ` imi>r`¢v€G=i tioubleqwith any swelling sin`c`€,` iiid the ‘ sore on the side of thenose has all healed. She ison the road toscom late cure. I cannot ipenk tooiigiily of“`Ho0d’s'8¢‘1'sl- parilla,snd l cheerfully recommend to _ any person who issullering with eatlrrh.” w.H.inmsmn. -_ ~~ ~»'- » N. B. It you decide to take Hood_’s Ser- saparilli, do not be'~indueed` to buy any su bstitiite. Be sure to get Hood’s. Hoodfs Pills i’.`.`»§Z..lf.`l`§'r.:.'lfi`»<‘»§.‘€.7_’¢s‘2 Gaiters g Leggins our Fail Stock of La.dieS'i and Children’s Gaiters is just in. We have them all sizes iii Black and Tan. A Prices low. -/ wi _ most in its favor. Those who kno# least about it are the most opposed, The logical result must be that the maritime province view will in the end prevail. It is not too much to hope that the Catholic clergy of Quebec may yet be found as strongly in favor of prohibition as are their fellow priests of P. E. Island. It_has been the lot ofthe eastern provinces to teach their western brethren many useful lessons. We Has re-opened her studies in Morris Block and will give lessons in Oil, China and Water Colors, also Tapestry painting from October lst, 1898, ic PAINTING _-*L_ I taught them the use of the ballot in elections, to abolish the absurdi ..@ June lst, 1899. ' ‘ NEWMARKET, ONT.-“I have had I ‘ 5/ / ,f yr. A/ _=, f/'H ~< `k_ Sept.28, d&W 6w. ~ intel “‘°f‘"_i’ '- 'I ,bil 7 ~.' _ O at Qi-1 il \ Palun’s rss _ 5 ” *_;*: = if `f&`b f`\».\\'(~`U7 ~g`\”mP ' i 1 I _ ~ 7 " I _ A \ ... _ la 5 _ \ ` \b?f:, I. ,_ _ + _ .~_'~ -it \\\.~v€§S‘_ff4i~ _sri . _ _ ';`:';L _ ` .1 w __»~ ~'. ' g 4; 33/'-5. , F _ .ff .-iv’,\?>?»i>‘*¥‘ I `~ /7///» ._ V, gg _ _,_ -E? -..._ 1 1 /in ,,/Kgfiiy il g '__ ‘ 4 , /;L_»'//,~ /_~ 5;. ~ , /If ' I, 1" ' if/ f f l .,/. f _- 1 ~: %%% A gp 7 1 iltillfillt them ‘call and see us while in the city this week. , . Many of the teachers with whom ' we do a. large mail' order business are personally strangers to us and we would like to availourselvcs of this _ opportunity to shake hands and thunk them for past favors. f We won’t talk shop unless re- quested to do so. P We purpose offering to teachers on Thursday and Friday over 300 Fancy Fealhef Bias Watch our Eastern window For our Special- offer to the ~ Teachers of P.E.I. illtaltrlltilllslf I _ELL=D l __.. X I _ - s. ‘ ir Teachers it . Store ¢ , vi' » 2' G #'45 '*:'°.f, .~= P.E.i. |-ionsv s n c|.o1'|-| Ne Is worn by almost all the teachers on P E Island Whv 7 because it WCS _ _ _ H _ g H' & and is guaranteed. We are the only lirm in Charlottetown that sells Shoreys E _I I g Clothing. Millinery, Fur Goods and F urs at popular prices to the teachers of E- mlss M. fculsluin I ince that we are most anxEous to have \&\\\ \\\ \\\\. e\ ,Q