if ii ééssr ~_»-__ .W-..»--,_ _. u , _ i , s-~. ew, , - ~ . ' _-.__- ~~ ...Q `.i»:>\_.~~,.’~zi:s;»;;__. f.-‘.>n.'.;.~n:.‘;.s;».f. ’i;.i....._.-.;.._~..."_,"..it”i` " ‘ "‘*= 1',/5:-,,.,,.,.ff‘1‘f~"=# ~;‘~` ' _ '~ _ =_j.,-_-:f_-..__-.;€°!~i-‘==@>;.2;. ' '=» _ -_ _. - -»~ _ - .. 'tttii _ jg ‘~ “ f - f-_=~’*\g_;_-_=,_ Y \8Q| _ THE GUARDIAN CHARLOTTETOWN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND TUESDAY, AUGUST 361, 1898,-8 PAGES. M m 9 O "‘t:i iilsi om.ln.Av‘ Ulnanvesiuv of clothes. .,._k,,__my Waits Hot wi; ILCIIXSDIP I PG C0 St Stephen, I B O l K _ ir- ire' W0oDiLL s co “eo Bsmngion si iiriim__N ;s t & IIIITII THE TIME IS Slllllll Before the Final Crapple at the Polls-Ontario Holds the Center of the Line- The Pacific Goast ¢om|ng to tne Front-The Liquor Men’s Political Perfidy Unmaskt Tonosro, C.iN.ii>.i. Aug 27.-The fact that the last few weeks of the first | national battle for Prohibition in the Do- minion of Canad have been entered upon and that it is sc~aice‘y a month before SPeC‘3'uY made f0I` IU' the electorate will be called upon to renounce u onthe most momentous P P fants Fpet These Pro' political issue which could be submitted to the voters, is impressing itself upon tech the feet from Cold the temperaiice people profoundly. Leading members from all parts of the and hurt “Well 1eCnm` country are constantly visiting the na- ..._,_ , tional headquarters of the fight here to mended Price D0 to consult Secretary Spence, of the D0- minion Alliance, upon the requirements C of the campaign. and instead of the de~ niand for Prohibition literature slack- ening it has poured in with such Aol- ume that an output of a quarter of a million tracts'a day from the printer has not suiiiced. Already the gdemand is half a million pamphlets ahead of the .m..,..a_.___._._______ supply. \Vithin a Short time the num- ber of pamphlets sent out will pass the School opens you can set ten_mim0n ma,.k_ _ Wu reqmre The Voice correspondent has positively Press Agency to secure the inseition of limetxp ppfd 811 h I ready-set anti-Prohibition editorials in hues at cg; 2° °° weekly papers|has snceeedeito adegrce, wa them and despite the exposure of their scheme the anti-Prohibition plates will be sent bil! fl‘0m BUY out for the early publication of these We have evafythln’ bogus editorials- The Prohibition com- limes J Hoi-nsby’s Bwkginfe learned that the effort of the Central °' °°h°°1 mittees have been warned to be on the alert, and the publishers who have all the beg; maker. made such contractswill be certain to from new and old authors have a vigorous :fusilaie of replies to pass our storoto pay more elsewhere* thesophistries to be_thus palmed off on the pub iifsthe principles of the pa- a handsome Card Cass Q Boom st P"’~° . ._ . md 0m,,me,?,faf(i,.esenbs The Piohibition election has been or smooth gmsi, nm, 3, tem" paper .placed in charge of Senator Scott, ~ t. h _ _ 5 . _ _ Reed rather of the Canada Temperance Act, Enoch Arden, popularly known as the Scott Ae Books H busil enva ed in the a oint Greek Prose Composition, - 8 ls Y - Vg ni rs tor tg? rid_ I Caesar Book V ment of returning o_ ce _ _ 9,3 and How Plum Grow ings, who will appoint their deputies- to enhghten the mind I A safe forecast of the aggregate vote and Fi-gngh 3,; ' is that should the best hopes ot the liquor men be gratified the majority of J H the province of Ontario for Prohibition ' ' an adverse vote in the will ov erlao y province of Quebec, that British Col- - ' ` umbia will be about even, and that the province of Manitoba and the maritime provinces will give an aggregate Pro- 5 hibition majority of 40,000 votes. In this, the great English speaking W. °- province of Ontario,the Prohibition wave ue 8959011 COIDIDISSIOD IDBI' is sweeping all beforeit. Every district direct importers of Oranges, _is.so~ well organixed that polling ,divi- Bananas, etc , Jobbers and =sion sub-committees are rapidly being cf butger, Eggs Cheese and formed. About 20 well-k'nowu Canadian pmducts Goods of an kinds speakers ol eloquence- and tract are on a m emte com cities and towns. Correspondence solicite- .. -~- - - Cf the Hardshipa of Wounded __ --__ tunate than they drinking the heel taps of glass as of in lk and the dregi of cups of coffee It is pitiful, the/ hunger of these poor soldiers who lave sei red their countiv so well and who are beinv repaid in such unkindly fashion Phiianthtonic persons here who are trying to help the soldier boys are on the verve of rebellion They have bought stood food in large quantities here for the ill and stffering soldiers, and they openly declare that the supplies are diver ed from the object for which they were intended The con‘ract doctors. thev say, are iiving like lords, but it is at the expense ot the patients After the doctors had lunclicd io clay twenty tive empty apolinaris to iles were counted on the table, This is it sanip‘e of the way the doctors are enjoying lite at the expense of the ill for whom the min eral water was ibcught. ` The hospital ship Olivette =ai1e`d for Boston at 5_ P. M. to-day, with all her ill on board. In a mea. sure this relieved the pressure on the over crowded hospitals here which are discharging patients as fast as they can, but which cannot keep up with the demand upon the accommoda- tions. A The list of typhoid patients here con- tinues to grow faster than the Red Cross yacht can take them away. There were 250 in hospital to day, and the authorities do not know what to do -with them. Two men died inhospital to-day and four more were buried with military- honors. They were John hro_wii_. _troop l\1.'SiXth"Caval'r"y'Fran“E`N6H8'ii _' - pany L. Second Massachussetts; T. A. Dunning Company M, Seventy-iii-st 'Regime-int; Frank Rouse, Company M, Seventy first Regiment- Private Farnuui’s father came to camp yesterday to see his son, who was reported dangerously ill. He was driven up the hill to the general hospi- tal just as a burial squadron was marching out carrying a coilin "Who is that poor fellow?" asked Mr. Farnum A ` ‘°It’s Private Farnum, of the Second Massachusetts,” said one of the hospital attendants. The old man fainied dead away. The transport Rio Grande wasbrought to the wharf to~day and thoroughly cleansed and disinfected. Tomorrow 300 of the ill will be put on board of her and sent to New York, where hospital accimmcdatiiiis have been arranged for. iiiss WHEELER in came. ' Miss Wheeler the daughter of Major Gen. Wheeler who has been nursing the ill soldiers in Santiago, came ashore to day from the Olivette. She said that half of her patients were on board the transport, ani that all of them were doing well. Gen Yifheeler visitei the hospitals this .morning and listened paiently to the complaints of the ill IDGD the Seventy-iirst 1654Br N wYork t.e».i.E$3;2§i; QASZARD Q E playing and colors flying gaylfy. They are the best conditioned tro0pl"that. .A ~ ,_ _ It - ._ ._ n~v--»m-i~m-s-=m-r-- ; _ i 'i '°'_'°_"’ i sun|isnr.ausntas~_\ "“ _ .' T "Sur _ . _nl , i 1. _ =.. np , 0 A S 8°” "E63 iT°!“*=S msissiinon civilian Len i smug; 1 Soldiers- B A . CAMP Winori, N Y Au2.:22 -I t nmtreal, erhzsuts to Quabec 1° .. vm". b ‘ ` ` § ’ ‘ . ., . n ‘ Y KP ~ t spite of all the pretiy stories which _ p _ M ° _ F u 4°.” come trom Washington of luxuries for ONTBEAL All! »29-'(sP°°’a'1) “M lmtncmxv Aw ‘ ‘ u V; , but le :or Uncle Sain in Cuba, the to the United S‘ates. ishetc Onhi-S Way loft Ql85,000 0gg|&Q‘g¢,g fha soldlers who fcught a d Won the Jules Cambon tha French Ambassador _-nh. l r . h _ - ~ the for Q _y W Zfiititgers are getting anyt ing but lux p _ _ y _ tg Qusbem Bydm” Jug. 0.. “K a an , I Q The regulars are positively suffering `_' ‘ ; y s° _ ,_ 1 ha st 3** uses- f ` s ` f lf. T ' ` ' .` °*ld lflfbl- I.hE¢np:racu1iat h' 't B ' rzddiieedleddspzytzrothrelee monies.; liiaiivde I A I mall. f th mare Penniless. T' h of i O qualities fm asv e B abonl ghe bil; luncheon counterueait sth; ' Drowned Yntudly at LN* |'°' and quick Wasliung railrcad station. picking up fragments ' _ mmm’ 't' “hh” of sandwiches left by those more for- _ ` 1. I ”' . . . ' ' ' ' ° - . I u _ I q . B V . ’ d y- ' . . ' | . D . . . . - , I V 1 - _ _ fr _ P . . . S , ' ' V t u o ' - _ . ' ` ' N . _ i O' _ '_ u Q Ao . 1 . 1 "`C6Hl""‘Pai1S and Family iran-»___ Dawson District is over 10,000 0ver'~,_ populated. These must prospect new territory or leave the country. he, says. 4 __ -l-£----- 'Something New in Kmrvoators- _ ____ .._¢ OTTAWA, Ang. 27.--The' latest most wonderful thing in the line of har- vesting machinery is the invention of Mr. J _-mW. Conroy. who operates ex tensive grain fields near this city. This is an interesting. peice of mechanism The reaper and binder which outs the grain and ties it into bundles ‘at the same time, was regarded as a wonderful invention, but Mr. Conroy‘s _machine cuts the grain and threshes it simnlta eously. It is started in a iield in the morning and at night the grain can be taken to the 'elevator and the field is ready to plough once more. ' t ' l Tue grain is cut by a 'bar similar to that on a mowing machine, from which it is thrown upon a sheet ot canvass ar- ranged on rollers and then taken up in- to and winnowed and then carried to the opposite side of the 'machine where it ialls into bags, which as they fill up, are in turn tied up and thrown oi. The work is done perfectly. '1‘he grain cant be cut: at any height required,comes out absolutely clean and there is no waste. Under ordinary circumstances fifteen ec; chine is somewhat complicated, but it is very simple to work, two men , only being required to handle it, while four horses will draw one large enough to hav e a six foot cutting bar. - 1 _ Ex_L=_eui-Gov. iiaiie. or Mnssohu-/_ Use in plagg setis, came over from Block Island e again on the tug \Vester1y~ He had lots of good things on-board and acting in ~ U accordance with Gen. Yonng’s sugges- and Soda. p as garefnl gs tinmdistributed them among the regm _ _ but a cam” lars of the Eight and twenty-second In- - » _ fantry ard Ninth Cavalry. The boys; V is _ m&y Put lu Your pounced on the food like faniishezl men ` e n ‘ S tg ngu L_ an it was plain they had not tasted _- 653%” V Thro luxuries for a long time. The _ _men of : 1 - it - _ We announce the opening of a. large stock of all - new SCHOOL and COL- LEGE TEXT BOOKS for the coming SCHOOL _ TERM. . We give special discount' to P. of VY.-Gollege Students. » ' Tl|.l¢|EIlIl\itlatlt“E||j+_ _ gellu" lirmmh -f . . ta ,- _ ‘ ` ' ...,.‘¢..- .. ~.';" 1. -N -~ ..`».§ ~.-» 1' ll Hnrtissnyotsisensiniins ST JOHN. Aug 28-[Special] -Frank cm°*°° A ' ' 0| J Alien s wealth New York mn Th’ °°n°"“‘9"' » J' swimming here with his wife. was ac-I p°£:§ :rat ‘M'°'“° cidently drowned at Lock Lomond to- Sept. wlies,t,|4| ee|\,38| a pork 8 85 Dee wheat, 61( , co!'\\,80) pork 8 75 Kitten time ALPS. Pofgtspgat ts °°=°~ 'H Sad Fate of An American Engineer -°--¢---- _ BERNE. 'Ave 29 --(special)-Pi-oi.i Hopkinson, son and two daughters Th’ P|°b“°i‘ wr were killed while mountain climbing g:?;et§:',he n Switzerland He was a distinguished ed H", 30,, , lectiician engineer _ the license voter saloon alligator the revenue question MAJOR WALSH an forty miiiion iiaiim s divided and what the Returns From Dawson _Giving all ;t,mm|;1;l;i°,{¢;”°°»;“F¥'” Good Account ,I sminpg them ` Sairrnn, Aug 29-[Special] -Maja-f live cents per Walsh has arrived here from;-Dawson. ’ P°“°" “'° He estimates the Yukon season’s out- §n?£n;I;°lh,l°°"t“y. Bun", put at $11,000,000, predicts twenty* millions next year and other develop- R ments beyond everybody‘s expects- swritlgzzgaie tions. F i°`§i§§§°§ii .piigiggi l l the tliresher. There it 'is threshedi st D“.“n Longfehv l l_i::i-theriizw ali Matty orders UIUIIUILE res a day can easily he cnt. The uta- hbor n ma 1‘2i§..ii. ‘Ea ’ MvCos nmlwm tects you :gamut carelessness of neighbor IN Cosaud aclaim.