,.._. ""Y" <` 7’s1i¢..__ - ., ~ _ . ’ ~.~ - ‘~~ .' \"' 5*- i ‘-.f . ____ su, , -._,._._ __ _ f -wa .», _ __`,_,_ _ .` -` ‘~,..-l.--...-a..-..-‘3 -‘~»5"*."'*‘~ ‘ _ ' - -. » »- - - . ""‘ ‘ “" 2- - .-i.-M.. .- 'W ` ‘ “ gf 'rv-iv. cnmnmw f~nAnm'r'ri=:'ro=~'N. P1tINc'~: nowann ist AND ~ I had the good fortune to be at Victoria ~ Park on Saturday afternoon where I IN A "AI""`A`A"""A""'>"""`"""""""""""""""""""""" "" ` "`- witnessed some thin gs on the cricket field TRAmi>_ :_ "_ri>A1‘iPi Th¢}-Igavy Tread of Feet! ___'[`1-icy are Marching for China-It's not thc ‘-Absent-Nlinded Beggars" B” people Who Have their Wits Amt them. and Know that the ONLY Place to get Real VALUE in we (ming Line is at GC>I.»'\K7II.»I.»’S `,¢»`¢_,.-_-,¢`f\¢lI\4l&l'\f\¢\-_nv W, ,re waging a terrible ,war with high Fi# just now. You should ¢~pEKIN" M; our Store some day this woek.and it 'm give you some idea of how we are 8-ducting the China Campaign. The Fic. gt which we oder China Tea Setts, ‘¢\¢yond the comprehension of every ay buyers. Our Dinner Setts and Toilet Samui-e also exceptionally low in price. ,Jshere is a general boom in all staple of Crockeryware. Enamelled \\` are “mg-throat prices. €A\\|’T “There was at Nome ahead of us sixty- two vessels of all descriptions, from a large ocean stearnship to a small tug-boat of three tons burden, all of which had made the journey from San Francisco and Seattle. After coming to anchor we were besieged by a fleet Ofsniall rowboats, whose owners clamored for passengers to ferry ashore at two dollars per head. The first news we heard was that two men had been killed the night before for claim- jumping. All the passengers were thor- oughly drencbedin being rowed to the shore. TVe found every inch of availabli land occupied by shacks :and tents. Abso lutely no accommodations were to ke obtained by the new-comers. Selfish- ness was the predominant trait of all we met. \\'omen and children were left to shift for themselves. Owners of small express-wagons charged ten dollars per hour for moving goods miles up the beach to the nearest unoccupied ground where they could be dumped. “Five hundred feet back of the beach is that beastly bog known as the "Tun- dra." It is a shaking quagmire, with solid ice two feet below the surface. Ani- mal and human refuse was lying in heaps along the beach. The stench was awful. Gambling. excessive drinking, and other forms of depravity weie seen evel'.VWh€I‘€ in the narrow streets of the town. Pneu- monia, typhoid fever, smallpox and mea- sles raged throughout the vast camp., The pest-house, located at the south-eastern part of the beach. near the Nome river, was overcrowded. and the authorities re- authorities were notified by Dr. Grisby, formerly surgeon of one of the steaniships land the reply received was,“Put the man iii atent back on the hill." Exposed as the poor fellow was in a little tent, he be- came blind from the disease. There was absolutely no quarantine over him. Buri- als avcrged four'a day during my stay. '|The funerals were unique. Four men with long handled spades carrying a wooden coffin, proceded to the_ dreary graveyard in the “Tundra," where a. hole was scraped in the mud to the underlying I ce. The dead was deposited therein, and /rough board raised to mark the grave. I 1 a short time every mark of interment .vas obliterated by the thawing of the ice and the sinking of the body. This is the end af each unfortunate gold-seeker dy- ing in Nome. i ‘Positively, there is no gold in Nome for new-comers. The beaches have been I worked over four times, and are exhausted Every creek claim of any value is bein. lworked by the original owners. The -country for a radius of sixty- five miles is staked out. Most of the mining companies have pro- cured extensive machinery to work Creek and beach claims are bankrupt. Thousands of dollars' worth of machinery is lying abandoned on the beach. All freight is lightered ashore and dumped discriminately. The transportation com- panies’ liability ceases at end of shiD's tackle"-that is, when the freight is de- posited on the lighter-barge. In the ma- jority of cases consignees do not get half ou want V-\LL`E° if you want fused to receive any more patiemsh Aslwhat is coming to them. Thieves have H y A ` a result ‘ ‘ ` ' d' ` _ _ , , persons with contagious iseases 3AR(;AL\Q; if you want SATISFAC- full swing. They controlled the town s were Scattered an through the Camp, juntil the time of our departure, when them. Crockery Store. P. COLWILL, i " B P. E. ]sland’s reatest .ff - t 1 ... W B' ‘is assuming avery serious aspect for the Do you desire perfect satidaztion with your corsets ? Of course you hi Then trys pairlike those shewn gboue. You can geta pair tofityol jim as snugly and which will _almost tire you with the long weartbéy will give. The material, fit and finish mono! be surpassed. The E. T is A. I. I 'concludes with a rgret that fores- _ 7 _ 7 i I * if of the United States would now be in 8. e Supply of raw material.“It is not too late,” g it, adds, “to legislate for the next genera- WOLFVILLE, N S. F0 U I DE D I 838- m“"°“§.§‘€°’§i.Z‘f§.f.“-"6 “yi” untouc Y _- Canada not only possesses these vast The sixty-third session of this éollege f0r€SbS 0fSDl`UC€. but She has _lt Witlfin VIII on October 3rd. Prescribed her power to say that the vast industries wane uringthe first _two years,generous necessary ,O its conversion ingopuip, and wggrglesctlgfslidurlpg las.” two' Tian even into paper, shallbe carried on with- within two hundred feet of our tent. The l I _ ~» ' <1 - d BON. 80 t0 me ODI! Place Whffe You can ‘One of the worst- cases of smallpox was , Gelieral Randle a""‘ed and intro ‘ne martial law.`-Edward W. Myers, in ‘Les- lie’s Weekly.` _ 0ur Spruce Wealth. The question of the future pulp supply American paper manufacturer. The spruce lands of the United States are be- ing rapidly denuded and it is becol_niI1E increasingly manifest that the future raw material must bede_riv‘hd_from the Can- 'adian forests. At present spruce logs are imD01‘f'¢d into the United States subject to a _Can- adian export royalty» but Am°’i°°‘” paper makers are -me P°S' sbility of the imposition of a regulation prohibiting the export of the 1088 *md N' quiring thatthe pulp b¢ ,m3°Rf§°§‘¥¥f‘?.‘1` in this country. Already American ‘cap-w ital is being invested in Ontario and `Qii`c_- becin acquiring limits and erecting mills for the conversion of the spruce into pulp. The1\`a.tiona.l Advertiser, New York, ` ing with t.liis~sub.ieet~ Sayer- ` `“ The American consul at Vancouver re- ports that a large mill for tliemanufnc- ture of pulp is soon to be built notpifilr from that city. Its capacity will behbout, seventyfive or eighty tons a day, and its raw material will be drawn from a vast, area of spruce forests lying Q one milei or so north of Vancouver. And try preservation and ltivation did not thirty years ago receive attention,in which case the pulp and paper manufacturers perfectly independent position asto their tion, but meantime Canada has a decided advantage over us, because she possesses Eighty-one Miles ii Minute. A mail train on the New York Central Railroad recently made the run from Rochester to Syracuse, eighty-one miles, in eighty minutes. 1-1--Q--M 'fratment for Paralysis. An ostrich in the Cincinnati Zoological Gardens is undergoing treatment by electricity for paralysis. Un der this treatment the' bird has been able to swing first one leg and then the other. F! - af- ___ - _ _ _ ___ in EVBYY I of Backache IKRG N. ¢llU'¢ KIGQQ-EWU? Hill., loonuoo They hot Directly on the Llior ‘ lo Noll no the Kldnoyo. - - Pains in the small of the back, over the kidneys, are usually due to de- rangementl of the kidneys., and._¢1i;._, appear when -the kidneys ax:e.net.:.ri$L_.: But there -are other klndk-nt`1:a.¢k-» ache. -by far the greater proportion. ~ that can never ‘be reachedby :treating-=`_ through the centre of the back, and" in the sides are caused by a torpld ac- ` tion of the liver, and can only be driv- en out when the liver ls made healthy and active. ‘ To reach the liver. as well as the kid- neys, to set the filtering organs ln- worklng order and to cure every kind of backache, there ls but one unfailing remedy, and that is Dr. Chase' Kid- ney-Liver Pills. It ls the only treat- ment that has this direct and combined action on both liver and kidneys, and the only one that positively and per- manently cures hackache, whether caused by liver or kldreys.- _ Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, one pill a. dose, 25 cents a. box, at all deal- ers, or Edmanson, Bates and Co., To- ronto. ts in their res ecti e _ " elitspe S p in her own borders and the immense pro- Btration o_f undergraduates last Hts thereof reaped by her own citizens. | mtl? isqargest m the history of the Col' I Americans who have long preached and ntly added tg the ei;-1-i¢u1am 3- practised the doctrine of America for W cxufaf; i§aP@d3808Y C0DflI\J1C%>d byf Americans, are anticipating -that we will i V. . . Wyer, D. D., L. . . T like lic with our vast spruce nm h!ferm;w,M,_ (Other Island papers copy ) _ v 'Prim ii. i.. Britlain. Temptations for the _ ill Thirsty. @ The Ginger Ale, Creamiul ~,/,I Soda, Lemon Sour etc, menu( will featured by us are unequalled as summer beverages. Whenl ul l I properly served no drinks are _- more refreshing or pleasing. X( `/' -l"` Ask your grocer for themw cegd ii. _ sim|i|o|\\s.@ UUIS & SHUES p BIG l --SEE one-_-_ V 1.00 IIINDIIW ;,°'-‘IX $l»00- - _ ` Come early to I I Wolfville, N. S If you wish to cure scrofui. or salt , i i spain u wuibe ` rheum permanontlv, take Hoods Sarsap- l _ -'iiiittlihsfactoxy rai';;?xl=‘o¢i-n funhcr féirillai. It expels all impurities from the I I _ wquire of i>_ S, B1-awe, R¢v¢f¢ -_ r-ioo . _ ,i ` > i . BARGAINS which to me as an old cricketer w exe most pleasing, and of which, as characteristic of the national game many of your read- ers doubtless, will he glad to hear. TILE. day, you will rememher,w.1s a very warm challengers sent their opponents first to the wickets which were upheld for- _an hour or so until the rain fell-and fell so heavily that it necessitated an interval of three quarters of an hour. S wv.iu'st was promptlv sent for in anticipation of the break in the clouds as the players were I determined to await, Their pitience was at length rewarded and aboutfour o'clock, duringthe clearing up shower, pla v was resumed; and it was continued in fair weather until a. sudden heavy squall of rain, shortly before six, fairly drove the the challengers’ team were at the bat. The match-a. one innings one-was very close, and keenly contested. The chal- lcngers had fifty-one runs to their credit for eight wickets, with two men still at the bat, when stumps were drawn, having di3P0S€d Of eight of their opponents (with one of them still to bat) for an even fifty. I regret I cannot give you the Scores in detail. For the challengers Mr. -' Macleod and Dr. Murray made a splendid-_ defence-the former continuing at the wickets for an hour and a. ha.lf,deepite the scores of Messrs. Hutcheson (20) and Sullivan (9 and not out-) converted an mpending defeat into a draw which, had time permitted, might, victory. To their opponents’ score Mr. Carvell contributed 21, and this side was much strengthened by the timely ar- rival of Mr.: Vernon Longworth, whose bowling was delivered with its old time effectiveness. Mr. Longworth secured three wickets for no run= in his third » over, his first two being maidens, and only tour hits-two of them sin es-were ' _ _ 81 I made oifhetfort-y two balls he delivered' Trulv amost creditable showing! ` It is' satisfactoryato see these old cricketers-not I forgetting Dr. H. D. Johnson-taking -a- practical interest in our national game form. The perseverance and patient determination, together with the skill; endurance and unm|irmuringfaoi';uies‘oence'~ this king of Held sports, and betokens for' tions thatsuccess' which characterienii sores. There is, to my ,mi-nd,,no placenta fl`¢¢l'°lbi0,n where- what are com- Jmonly termed the manly virtues .mgtv be more readily -developed, inoréadvantageously exercieedfor where their exercise is more 'productl ve of direlct * practical results than onthelcricket field.- While on thissubject let me say thati _hope to see this _game revived in the schools and colleges here, and again culti- vated as of yore._ While~ the iiel:le,rs,,on Saturday didfnot do themselves justice, both the batting andihehoiwlingittilist- of Messrs. Heartz and Hyndman included), and the unva.rying~courtesy of every;play- er, regardless of -all sorts of trials and un- pleasant surprises, made it most interest- ing from an onlooker's standpoint and I repeat, was glad to be present.--Com. = Caiiada’s Pulp Supply. -_-il Mr. George Johnson, Dominion Statisti- cian, who has compiled the statistical pamphlets for t-he Paris Exposition, makes an interesting calculation based_ on the f forestry reports of 1£_B4. It is estimated that from 3800 40 per cent of Canada terri- tory consists of woodland and forests. That gives a forest area of 1,400,000 square miles, and if half ofthat is spruce we have almost 450,000,000 acres of pulpwood in Canada. By the present methods of manu- facturing newspaper a cord of spruce- wood, or 650 feet board measure, will make half a ton of sulphate, or one ton of ground pulp. News paper stock is made up of 20 per cent. of the former and 80 per- cent. of the latter. It is estimated that an acre of spruce contains on an average about 7,000 feet, board measure, which would make' about five and a. half tons of sulphatepraeleven tonsof ground pulp. If the production of ground pulp be est- imated at ten tons to the. acre there is the incomprehensible amount of four bil- lions and a half tons of pulp in sight in Canada.. This is below the' estimate of Dr. Bell of the Geological Survey, who places the area of the northern forests of Canada at 1, 657,600,000 acres. If half ol this is spruce it would yield eight and a. quarter billion tons of ground puli . Great Britain and theUnited States con- sume yearly 900,000 tons of wood pulp, which is the product of 900,000] acres of spruce. If the entire amount were taken from Canada it would take 50 years to ex- haust the present supply according to the mo st conservative estimate. But asspruce produces itself to the size best adapted for pulp manufacture in 30 years, the pro- blem of exhaustion is evidently in the re- mote future. ~ tight in t e chest, is dail getting der if ' 'r' and deeper into the broncliial tubes an is making directly for the lungs, to become pneumonia, inflanimathgf the ungs or consumption. Such co yield only to the wonderful efflciemriy of 'Chas_e’s ,Syrup of Linseed and urpenti-ne which loosens the tightness and cures cough and fcold together. 25 cents a. bottle. amily ` size 60 cents, sold everywhere. llllllllllll llllllllllll , I “ ‘l‘heFlorida Hotel opens for thesggson June pai Pownal one, with a most showery out-look. The" players from the field as the last men of- and continuing in such remarkably good Y displayed on that cricket Held on Satur-i_ day evidences what may be developed by _ its devotees, in their more serious avioca-A L WHEN IT HURTS TO CQUGH ‘ excellent bowling of Messrs. Scale, Mac- t lean and Longworth; while the timely' I 1 a i 8 I 4 .I l i ,. ~ ri _ >`. ,'. *, .. as v. E possibly [have resulted 'in their 1; nd _"business sense, ~Sh<_>es 'am Remy uma wice the -piioa of 7 l' _ "MoULDE_D'intoj the -~-shape of chest-. shoulders” and col-if-1 _lar by"-l¥Al€iI_f “ with needle-and -thread.. .- CHEAP i*‘C`iist'om " “ and ing isimem yf- Thai I eu _ ' .. - .YL- “Fit-Reform” coats ;_arei ` ia sembla.n_ce"of this form, wit ,hot fig; iq., ` V One, being linensrAYED l:I;,rough‘out,< taped 5 ii he edges, and worked into concavity by sim( s'ri'rcn,_ NG, KEEPS its shape whiletlie cloth lasts. _ __ _ _ The _0ther,i.osEs_its form the first day it is vfdrnlk <2- 1. . .-,f . .~.. ... 13"* ~ ~Ys.°|»p\ -.. “'»=' There is a. little difference.-fin the ,cos'r,,_bnt an, NoRMoUs difference in the,w1utn and appearance of . -is - hese two kinds TA .__ kde: _ ,.1 i V IB ff f' - , il' I 1) 'l Rich men _must ftiiirii re the ,natural prey of . But,-tn'en _ As carefully. Brand and size and kansas’ .\ z V _ .`. ...’ i'P0cket,.- - ~l ~ suits $io, 12, it and i1s..,,» ~ " i Trousers-ee, -4 anas- l . D M ` =a-* 4 J ` ` 1 _ " f. » `~ .V . "’_ 'l rw- ' _ - . _ - ~» -. 1.- ~..-5.1* ,__ _ _,_ ___ - A ~sn||T|lE~|&'mQ _I - l :__ -_ 'if-"@~r¥3`_'=-rl-_-11-9"-' ` .I » . . , `. ’»‘~, I __ 5 , ~- -.L _ ‘ - .- \ . .»lnJv~ ._-_ V . ~ ilu; (ti .,,, _ -~.- ` ' ‘ ov: “Htl ew -,_._.x. " in ._ P, . 2"# ‘. s . T. V ' " ; fi '> ` *_ X 1 ‘ 'vs what raids we nm we 11 Hola md wha Hmm " - We’re After. ’ 1 '-:‘:.;~:i':'~.f:;::‘1:1.. CURE ILL. “Nl PIII; 'HI .Pafi§l‘\'Ki|I¢l°.` I -lldloho Clit! ll lilo", sinplo, into an gum cum in iiaurs, oinnnnora, couoils, CULDS, RIIEIIIITISI, lsulmein. 28 and 50 cent Bottles. WARE OF IUITATIONS- IUY ONLY THE GENUINE. -‘ PERRY DAVIS’ __A,x,. ~.. ~ - ~ »-.-- ¢_!,.-kv. ._.,; _._. The cough that hurt§,thecough I To 4 .af2"’°' \ ' 5§Rvg i - in.; - le gl? "_, ' .. $3,-.-.lf {‘ ' ., J 3.7:' I I ti," _ xl, _ _ t 'ii ‘ -VF what and but snort- of oonfooiionlryi -~ _ t miss seeing _ _shells of places of interiiiton P. E3 " Island- __ ._ CityH'oi1ol Corner. ' A- I f '0ponfrom7a..-m,tol0 p. tn. ‘N Y, 'Y'xAA__,x_ .4 "4 ,_-,4 fl' '_ *I pl wi, V, (V. _ P' 9- '\*` .Y v \‘ ' Y es, to serve you with the kin Underwear, Shirts, Hats and Clothing llullllélli L.. 1-31’ :. `-‘_ _...~_ .Ci he 3;' ` » .' f T5' -1 il' 'if' ef 2’f"£"1. is . v _ gf ;. Y _ ¢.»§o» ci » Z ', ér You require for the Warm wear ther. Call and see how little money B; takes to buy an outfit at " ~