"'f ' ’ ~=;»'i.` '-~"" “ ' ' -'-“_§'-1‘ .2.~:,»‘1.»1'.: I _Z i THE QUARD1AW.GH WN, QGTGBER li, l898 l_ ‘ .g thousands of wise wg- iiien in this country vi tio, when they found \ that _they were suffer. ¢/ting from weak- ‘ness or disease of lit y reaSOY‘|Q \\ ` ’ I* 1”; course Fli tlinplces arotliilt an hysician ~iii;i‘ practice will *$583,* ti'ou‘i‘t- ol' t_liis_na_ture prop- U if ),¢ dow lit will insist on the anno” e.xaiiiiiii.i.>iis and _local treat. from which t\ rs sen>1iti\'C, modest Wnnspemaiiqt rf 'red to_ is Dr. R, V_ for ttiirtv \t ir~ chief consulting to the ln\ ` Hotel and Sufgi- at Biitla , \'. \'. Thirty years ii inontlerfiil medicine ciiliir to women, that may be in tht privacy _of the home, swat with all necessity for exam- and local tri itnient. This medi. own a~ I>r "ierce':- Favorite Pre. It -' ¢ . 1 e a¢t~ dirt ttlx on the delicate nt orcfim concerned in wife motlierlnifwl It makes them altl \ and \ igorous. It allays in- heal iilttr:-itiori, soothes pain build- i o the nerves. Taken period ol' otmpective maternity the usual discoinforts and coming Q isy and almost pain. th little _new-comer‘g md an ampl~ supply of nourish_ 3 0v¢i' ninety thoiisand women ligve égdto its man elous merits. Medicine iulyuggists bn~irics.< to give yon, not h t ii “ant W 3 V0 _ .ggsriig woman m \ write to Dr. R. V. |h¢_BnB'nlo \ Y and get free advice. nmiwng 31 out ce it stamps in her *.’;¢;gp¢r mx! nf t uvioms and mailing gigmay secure 1 papercovered copy ¢ People’s Lomiiion Sense Medical Cloth bound, 50 stamps. There are many their distinctly woiiianly organ- isms, promptly wrote to an emi. nent and skillful physician, with a world~wide repu. tation, instead of trusting their cases to some ob- sciire plivsician with but limited practice and ex. perience. There i wise woman fol. iililiiiiii ixiiiiiiiiiiii. MUVEIJ UHAHLUTTETUWN. ‘hilt iuaToronts attending the bought Exhibit lil lligiiii (iii. now on sale at our Ware Quest looking and Best Toned ever brought to the in prices. m and see them. B308., 1’ E. Island Music House. Building St liriisiiiiiiiil ex schooner MAR fl'0m Barbados, 500 barrels oss sugar, 200 puns molasses. N RATPENBURY. imos Exam 2 mos by the Compaiiv’s screw Steamers and express trains offers who appreciate safety tabl, ‘dobk .sr we csivi,i=ssi.i., i, G “um eneral Manager i 1 F-lv- it :uni 0! Rouiteymore favorable to machinery than to. line ener Passenger N S or 'ran onictivai. 'rwi~:N'rr-Fivn onrlcicss I I ll`illSSES, ElASl|C 0 l Si l.[Kllf|i URUTBHES, Glllllllll 1 4 V t_'_t°_mBtTA)ilElllES. E iitioi-iss." ElllllA6ES. ‘HILL ‘ aifeeli “ vans; i »~¢>l.f»f- 'cflnquest by rupsrsoi filllllfll Eg, A GREAT i i llie Siiuilan. -ii HIS Rise From the Ranks- A Man of Destiny-Cold and Inf|exible~A Master of Detail-Trusted Impli- citly by His Men. Major General Sir Horatio Herber Kitchener. whose :pn eiiige is ofliciaily announcid in to-dny`s psp-r, i.- f -ity- eight years old by he butk; but thin is irrelevant. He stands rev. ral inches over six feet. straigh' as a lance, -.in-i heads; his motions .lie di liberate and strong ; slender but iirmly knit, he seem built for tireless, steel wirc endurarce, rather than for powei or agility; that also is irrelevant. Steady, pa>sii.~nli»ss eyes shadel bv _decisive brows, brick~ri d, rather full checks. a long mustache, beneath whici you divine an immovable mouth; his iacc is harsh, and neither appeals for affection nor stirs dislike. All this is irrelevant too; neitler age, nor figure. nor face, nor :ny accident of person hasanv be ri- g on the essential Sirdar. You could imagine' the character just l.hB 881118 8') lf 811 lb€ 6Xl8|.‘D8.'.B WéL'6 different. He has. No acl-: BUT 'run PRIME or Lira, no body but one to carry his mind. no face but one to ktnp h’s brain behind. The brain and the will arc the essence and the whole of the man -a brain per- fect and will so perfect in theis work- ings that i the face and of extin- mest diliiculty, they never seem to know what struggle is. You cannot. imagine the Sirdar otherwise than as seeing the iight thing to do and doing ii. His precsion is so inhumanly unerr- ing, he is more like amachine than a man. Youjcel that he ought to be pat- ented and shown with pude at the Paris International Exhibition. British Emp- ire: Exhibit No., 1., hors concours, the Sudan Machine. A ls was aptly said of him" by one who had closi ly watched him in his otlice, and in the tield. and at mess. th ti. hs -is the sort ot “teller” that ought io be made manager of the Army and Navy Stores. The aphorist”s tastes lay pci- V hops chiefly in the direction of those more genial virtues which the Sirdar does not possess , yet it summed him up perfectly. He would be a splendid manager of the Army and Navy Stores. There are some who nurse a desperate hope thai. he may some day be appoint- ed to sweep out the War Olhce. Hn would be a splendid manager of the anything. But it\so happens that he has _turned himself to tlie'managemenl_ of war in the Sudan. and he the complete and the only master of tiiai art. Beginning life' in |the Royal Engineers -a so.1 human nature-he early turned to the study of the Levant. He was one of Beaconsiield’s military vice-consuls in Asia Minor; he was subsequently di- rector ol the Palestine Exploration Fund. ‘ After that he surveyed Cyprus, whence hc escaped-some whisper, without leave-to sec the bombardment of_Alex- andlia. At the beginning of the Sudan troubles ' he appeared. He was one who set to work on the new Egyptian army. And in Egypt and the Sudan he has been ever since-on the staff gener- allv.lighting_ofttn, living with natives sometimes, mastering the problem of the Sudan always. The ripe harvest ot titlet-n years is that he knows everything- that is io be learned of his subyect. ile has seen and protited by the errors ot others as li-v their succt ssts. He l-as inheriicd thc wisdom and the achieve- ments of his predecessors. Ho came at the right hour, and he was the right man. _ _ ln the Egpytain army a captain Of R- E., he began as secoi_d-in-command oi a regiment of cavalry. _In W colseley s campaign he was lmelligence Uliicer- During the summer of 1887 he was M K; ro.-ko, negotiating with the Ahabdrh i~heikh‘s in view of an advance 8¢l‘0=S the dfsnrttc Abu Hauisd. and note howi characieristii ally he has n0.W uttered tus then abt nd-ned pro:-‘oh by giiing thmt Way 10 Ind KDHTIUUI , himself--only with a‘1'a1lJ~lYl” jijhn idea of the .sdvgnco .scrsli 1 *P01 &’g¢§ lp took over froth ‘1'r.u.. 'rwe..»y` S' WE “IVE Tnfla and 'Small Shoes For Little Gllaps. Legg‘il1S Strong Shoes For Sturdy Boys Stylishshoes _4 For tllolr Fathers. “nainfy runes ’ ForL|i‘l3_O3l'|lH"|'°¢' "”*"'“",i'f'.°'§',..»¢-'stunning . Us Q, ‘-2,.; 1 ._ _ 1 ~ . ,_ nn , rn . iwiilrg, jf. iv# s \ #ff