b. ...............i.,,- Wm-.. ,. . .. , 1. , “fly”. a _ .P. .. m...pb~o~r -_.~...... '7 1...... a... “7,, "ha a . up... ~ .... -... ~03. l mu: . .ww «ml-l . ... .w,..~.,.... ,. i I i i g: l 1 p z i: : .‘...-........,,.,:.; Today's Probabilities —. Tum, October 8.-(Speeisl)—l[oder- do westerly winds, fair and warmer. Waldmbscnrecmanumbyum Cresolene, which has been extenmvely . Ice {or twenty-four years. All drumsto A WAMM JUST AR RIVED W'e have just received a large quantity of NEW SPANISH ONIONS In extra fine condition and to clear out out quick— ly will sell for a short time at 3 cents per 1b. 10 lbs. per quarter. J. D.lacLeoi&Go. Mechanics OUR TOOLS Will please you in ' ‘ QUALITY and PRICE _ fame. A few months ago his personality ,3 .. - . - - ‘ .“l’.‘;«".';‘7 :4 . !. \‘- F _ innau‘; t 3. ._ , . '5 THE HOME OF THE GUARDIAN North Side Queen Square. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. Business Office Telephone 133c- Ofice Hours 8 am. to 6 p. m. J. P. noon. Bus. Mgr. Residence Telephone, r33d Editorial and Ne-m-filephone 133. 050: Hours 12 noon to 6 p.m.; 8 to 13 p In. I. E. B. MCCREADY. Editor Residence Telephone 3: iii, lllllll llllllll WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 's, TRANSITORY FAM E. The illness of Lord Salisbury and hie retirement from public life 'is another‘ illustration of the transitoriness cf manjs was the pivotal point in international politics. To-day there is a prcfnnctory reference to his illness while his death would hardly cause a ripple on the surface of affairs. Except that of an actor, says the Colonist, the fame of a statesman is the most ephe- meral of all. It is great while he lives 1 but after he is dead it is nothing. Those statesmen who are remembered owe their fame more to their connection with partlch epochs than to any individual performances set against their own names. If we look back,in Grecian history we remember the names of Solon and Lycurzns, dim figures, of Pericles and Demosthenes, and of whom else in all that marvelous record of human achieve- ment in the art of government, Rome THE GUAnmAN,‘ ' Ioplnion and incorporated thought in laws. who enjoyed unexanipled’ who died and straightwav on re forgotten. In the dark ages prece‘eding the revival of learning, there was no r t~tesmanship,. but since then how small is the list which the popular memory retains i ’In our own history, we have two great stat; esmen who were also great in other res- pects, one of them the greatest man of modern times, we mean Francis Bacon most of his life crawling‘ for office, and Burke a great part of his, in argry lamen- tation against the lack of suppleness in ed new by their political achievements? Vi’hat is it to us that Bacon Was for a few years the greatest man in the realm of England, when we know that he was the greatest mind in the modern history of the human race i Yet the trumper new. gaws of place and power were of- infinite concern to Francis Bacon himself. This is the most remarkable thing about stat- esmen, or not to be overly exclusive, let us say politicians. They crave the ephe- meral fame which is all that is realizable to.themselves from such a carer r. Plut~ arch, who was a philosopher and lived in a village, has outlived in rme all the the other hand, their impersonal addition to the structure of civilization in the shape of ihstltntions'and laws may cut» live Plutarch. The deeds or imam. live atter them, thoulzh their names per- ish. Burke may have embodied inalnw some principle which will endure forever. His fameis built on political literature band literary politics. So it inay be for- givento statesmen that they are eager for-fame‘hnd recognition whileihcy are in the swim. for after they are out of it, they are rap’dly forgotten. Sill it is a strange weakness common to them a'l, or to ‘ almost all. One has only to read' of how ‘Walpcle zloated over the spectacle presented by the fa hionable people whom he saw going to the home of crime] while he was on his way to an audience with the King, knowing that before the day was over they would be knocking at his own lately neglected door.’ to realize‘lhcw much the mightiest minds are moved by these little vanities, Mr. Pitt was liter- ally hilled rbyV-oiinllar neglect. In a momentof half-crazy vanity George‘IlI. forced him to quit and took Addington in. To the astonishment cit-fall, and ofPltt most or all; that mediocrity What The La'diCS’ f ’ .~ W A“: Saying Abolit‘ _ It . and Ezirnund Burke. Bacon spent the - his knees. Are either of them remember- I iety of novelties, and splendid values of low price. Coats and Ulstcrs, for .1902, great men who patroniled him. But, on)"‘ t I} extensnm that?“ i ' botte'red. ~ insii a That our Mantle Department stillwleads in'th‘e var That our fall, of ; "L «’rfi‘ v x. r r fifiwfilieaifi '1'; {EC 2; new . Ir "2‘s; '- * - " i'é’lq ‘.e."’ That the prices as usual are Very; lies I, f ,1 *- ATHE; MILLINERY Leanne‘s. , - hard to mention in the instant of nonl- Icotiou. Yet for. hundreds of years Rome ruled the world, and bravery genef. ation, produced men who wielded enor- mous patronage;:‘whn.:mou1ded"pfl1lic * DOBD & ROGERS? : staying. Pitt was overlooked who had worshipped him, fiafhl‘sijpimw spiritywas broken. Earl Grey, he who experience. Thinking himseii neoclasary eiphabecieellr-i Gitwmnqmt‘d,” hound to this atonce save " ' incarnations!» v Mi v “35‘” Gmrem is new, *mseetlonI me. -» a..- the‘ who "for— } merly. came to him in droves pass by his , door on their way to the houses of others, and did not conceal how it hurt him. 7 Melbourne, years later. ‘ont of edits ' , . t Boot ’ deprived of his daily excitement, Went to Lam“ l-Get a box at my Paton pieces. His friends did not come. When v, A OF FALL suns - AND OVERCOATS Getting near time to drop in and have a new suit sent up to your home. The new styles and coloring are very catching this fall. One suit we’llmention is a splendid dark ,- Scotch Tweed, small pattern, also in plain r15, r: $10.00 there’s many suits sold at $12.00 that’s not as good a quality. . now NECESSARY . To have an over coat that fits - the figure .. nicely, hangs“ well, wears we‘ll.f2-. Our. coats ' made by W. R. Johnson and the Fit-Re- form People are well known for these h peculiarties. . _ - y _ I _7 You may be prejudiced against buying an ' overcoat ready-made—Half a glance 'atfour .. / S 9.00 or $1 "=‘values will cure you in a . l known remained. peers. in”. y ; , pro. " . collimation, the ‘ Dorchel-ter so. lately «any hr. Dc . My my to M-JADBLPriaceSt. _‘ whoa-nope Janitor for“ z?rcamfli. "-‘ " 4, I. one commons - SMMfflR-P Suitcand o .. w filly. Overcoat chlors mostly worn this > are Black, Blue, and Grey ahead.ffor-p0pularity,°we ha. L imam.“ to $15.00 . .etcoats at little prices. with-Hi? . v’e them in " ' Wmdfiofi. we! o b‘ nemesis-than any ' L‘s‘r‘ .. 35% Ins essentiallya "nerve » bracer is: «? ; Hate that are becoming at Paton’s. 6t! r _, r quarters for; all nudge! 'it' ' ' Toilet Setts—the» best in the City.—W. P Colwill . 9,1 1d&w4w Buttons, self adjusting. Full directions ln,each box, all for 10 cents—Conroy the Lord Holland. died he was alone. “if shaman. Pownal street, Ch’Town. 72! you had net comes, he mumme can"! Use our 'Perfect Liver Pins and you “I Should have 3°“ mad- “lave set will be free from constipation and its here and-listened to that clock strike evils. Price 15c a bottle ‘at Central 'four times 'withont seeing a human Drugstore. V Sdlwk face.” He would not believe even» Trunks ‘nd v‘nseg,_'Another 1017qu what a Dateline stroke told him in—our low .prices makes .quick Selling. _ . and was overcome when his friends had Y“ ‘3‘“ 3"" m to 15 99' Ice“ u m b” ‘ mm. him out or their next cabinet, min“ “413' gnaw“ 8w“ ' Brougham, at ninety, looked down the aisle of the ,House of Commons, and burst into tears. No one ‘ whom he _ p . V _. , I, The ephemeral You cannot always buy Under-clothing- . of summanship bringqa wmsmdfig aton'r verylow prices,.but we are very bitterness in the neglect which - ,_ J A ‘ 6 4i‘ British cough Cure, the favorite cough: heavilystocked. Out they ‘39 whilst Pom. Tax ’ taxman-Notice is. . . hereby elven that percentile-s, he - ' island‘er ell unpaid 2911 Tas,,_’,.withont_, ~ reformed parliament, had alikebitt‘er W‘ “gym-m" ,3". mm .5 bgi'ng. taken “ kery',"Gl'ase and minim" ', ' _ Bee those nice Dinner Sette,‘ Tea Setts and care. Theonethatcures. 8d‘lwk’”. - - . »»»» -~ . last. Remember yen save a lot by buying ' "he" the a" has m‘ Tl?!“ 'h‘ppy from nan—J. B. Macdcnald 8:09. 6 4i” 1 those whodie in ' . ‘ . e . . mdowoi thefevc‘niilgfiihi ' the millionth». - individh N colors and perfect fittmg its price is only " .“eéer lire_af,‘inlthe suave: ‘ ,_ 1A. snap in pretty dishes at Taylor's - hi : 1a.; Bookstore. Gall andee‘e‘them 1i I'niofiritot‘iiiasefl‘rult {mend Ber bundling-reams” also ‘a-lot ,ot J? , ' Tumblers, with or without covers. , THIS.isthe,Flonj,fg ,, ,, _ I. Maxi; because itis the-snore 9.111W..&Il; wi’ivi ‘ slurs, hosts, tartaric. ply to 8. A. lewd, See‘tfy L, 8'; ro Ln'rL-a home situated 1: - nutrient-891i 5dr lain. a homeowner-,1... ,; = - A .33? - EST. inconcnrcAL 'ahd ‘xosr’ FLOUR. :Qfldfillfliie for V I» "‘dn4monegeode.——w.r.oeiwm. NJ . _ upset, M ' I ‘ here" applyto solutes: Prcwse f j 1‘0 BEE—ifsmhhed hos-e. Apply. it this? olice _ . v . 3%!- . .i'.‘ '37? ' CA.“ insane-x! new i d was “the ' ’ ; l it ., «2V . a TM, -,1,.