l r u ~ i ,, ll i of ~ *"-r_:- w ’ ;l~ ‘i i" i \ .1 i i 4 i r _l l. _. ,_ if _. 3 ,. \ IIQQU - . - City Magistrates Court, 9' a'm' tori; ;‘rd`Vth;li"l:14ttl}Ti°`YYilyu:l:rtlt,S0'113ti,lJl: V '_ ‘ ' . mu _ ger ai s _ dA P0313' foughlty 511151; Summer School of Science ,resui‘n- th' “caption 0| -Mx; tl” ~g_»o;,'§,_°| 'I will IS BPI ' W0! °'- ' which isioonsidsrsiiiy_,unaiu- that of fl_“._lufY \5_ the *CHIP and Louzurs at Y. M. c. A., 1.36. n yw_az°-_ ‘ _, hllf. The teeth of C0lI’»l)S Special Meeting of City Council “Tha question of hariest hands ie ' 4,"-hould be nulher sharp 8. p.m. _ alréady being tsl-in up 'by the pro- _ ` vincial authorities, and it is being mf, “_’i':§h'W° “"1 supply russnav. JULY =o -9-a unuiono nun tum onlin s snort- yo \\ -_~-V---------`----; age of man this year again. It ises- `H and Finished _ Combs THE Ex|)|_Aql'|‘|0||_ timated, however, that more labor- ____ _ _ ers can bs secured this season in Perhaps the present financial situa- Western Canada than a year ago." _ tion in the west is i-es; sud n-.ost This proves pretty conclusively -combs with smooth teeth soouiutoly summed up by the New that there is nothing to leer ss to just sharp enfugh to peretr- York Journal of Commerce as lol- U19 °K*'i¢“1¢'-“'81 P"°°P°°t° 1” W’ gtg to the scalp without dan- lows: ' West, and that nothing that the got ofiufllotlpg tho least in- --The Domlolol, hoo do ol-oo ol present Government could do in its jury, We have strong combs 3_743_000 oqllol-o mlloo ood ooo). interest has been left undone-except that willeerve you long and pmol, onoolxtoonth ,ol the loud our. by the act of the Senate. face of the globe. With a territory SEE OUR WINDOW. as large as Europe, Canada has a _ population of only 7,150,000. Hsu - _ ~ well ' not public debt is within $350,000 - The Summer School for Prince Ed- J. G. 000, or only $45 per head of her` ward Island teachers, which opened ' population, while her annual income in Charlottetown yesterday, will bs from a riculture, minin forest ro- what the teacher-students will mah: DRUGGIST ducts, fisheries and mlinulactureg is it__ Its success or failure lies practi- _ ' close upon $1,500,000,000 or about cally in their hands._ Capable lectin- - $200 per head of the population. De- ers have been engaged to conduct the ducting $150,000,000 a year as the classes; every necessary arrangement I payment for which Canada is liable -as far as the management is con- _in respect of her indebtedness for in- cerned-has been completed to facili- // terest to British and foreign credit- tate }:oth teaching and study; the / ors, and there still remains a net teaching is assured, the study and l D income of 8,350,000,000, or $174 the ultimate results rest with the _ per head. Assuming the national students ,J ie* _ _ "su IEBCHERS SUIHEI SCl|00L.i see sir ian I-Iamlitou,`ofl.,said in. an interview tonight that the tour ol in- spection just finished was record bfeakins in several' ways. It was notable in particular for- the mileage \i0V¢l‘0'i. this being far more than when`Sil° . John French visited the Dominion, and the number of camps inspected being twice as large. Then too, it was the first time that a Can- adian Minister of Militia had accom-_ panicd the _Inspector-General for the whole tour. This fact was much ap- preciated by Sir Ian Hamilton, and undoubtedly am an immense* lot to facilitate his work and bring him in contact with the important men of the Dominion. _ Referring to the camps, the mln- ister said he had never been so im- pressed with the esrncstneea with which those who had -taken part in them had carried out their work. this year. This argued a new apprecia- tion of _the value of patriotism and the desire to tit themselves for na- tic-nal defence. ' _ ‘ Taking up the question of his ro- marks at the banquet at Halifax, the minister said he had received hun- dreds of letters from all over the country approving of his action in this respect. The keynote of many of these letters was that the writ- ers coiild not understand why the militia had not been run on business lines in the past and why the same energy, earnestness. and discipline not exactsd from the militia as d be required by a business man the _men in his employ. himself, he could say that no 'one more appreciated the good work being done by the officers of the permanent forces, but be considered it as up to the good officers' to was _woul from For _ ° w i wealth of Canada to be eight times The curriculum for the course has/ purify their regiments of the disc,_ed_ 'WA' ‘the amount of her net income, and been carefully uffuugedi the mal” °l" we have the impressive total of ject# We take it. N198 t0 El" lille my $10,880,000,000, or $1,400 .per head oi teacher-students a start along vari- the population. Can_adu has, more- ons courses of study which it is de- over, a comfortable surplus of reven- sirable that they should follow up hlellameued belt Plnsi bl'°C¢l'l~ ue over .expenditure in her annual later to the mutual advantage of ¢3i CDH lllllisi SIJCOUS- Sllllli budget and ber burden of taxation themselves and their Puliilu- - Pins and mb’ is relatively light. For n country sp But apart altogether .from its snciu s'°°k fortunately situated the bursting of strictly edu0iitl0u8l 188(-“T05 f-here is G T I an inflated real estate bubble can another feature which cannot be too . . only be a temporary disaster and strongly emphasized. uumflyi _Ulf 1 O t. _ one that can hardly fail to carry association side. The msl0l`ll»Y 01 ; .lewe er P lclan with it a valuable lesson. How much the teachers of the province will be ' A the lesson is needed may be inferred brought t08€l5ll°l`§' th°Y'i.`=Wlll “$55” ,_ , from the fact that as high as $5,000 in a common study; tllty Wlll flli' ' ~ f ¢ on i terest; was never so much room al Riot has been paid for landin “.12 cuss m,au1;er‘s 0 1 on;,m0tl`,,,:»o Boo- fm, ,he best as there cioicest part of Calgary, and thatln they wil earn o_ eac ' ' ' - f ~' il e' f each others _ is today. _an obscure little town a corner lot, cesses and fa ui' B. _0 ` 130 feet by 100 feet has commanded hopes' and asplrstlbuui U10! Will be' /3_5. in as high n, price as $60,000. In ports come acquainted with each other. ` ` ' of Edmonton land has been held as 'nw M91 lla! blwme current that ` New York or London, and in Winni-I community has l-lnd°3l`l¥°“e ff change peg and Montreal there are sites lu l`e‘?el\l5 F0511. f-0 the det”-m°“t 0! which their owners would scarcely the former; that heno lougci' 00111* exchange for a similar surface on ‘Hindi lille l'¢BD8Ct 8¢°°\'d°d t0 the , _ _ _ d ' ` (,ornhill in_ the British metropolis." 5°h0°lm‘“te" °f the °1del_1 days- AD su5;el;:’; l:;£“;g;?§;f"1‘f;°;O;t‘;i;l;(__the After some further detailed ana: there is some foundation for the - ' lysis of the situation, this recognlz. idea, not so much, perhaps, because N ’ ed financial authority argues '-too; the teacher has fallen below his C S Canada hos o golld pools of pl-“_ former standard as that the* educa- pei-ity and a sul-o llopo for the future tional status of the community has Q' J,nft€€ the town-lot bubble has burst risen. In the "E006 Old GBIYB" tl” nnd the fever of opooolafloo has been teacher was one of the very ,few lu » stayed, is beyond _qll¢o¢loo_~ the community who_ were, educated _ ’ ‘ f cases .. oodb _dn é--_-_ and was, in the ma.ority o . 'sg red Pouncs vs STRHHIEHCY. the nest informed of them all. Hence “-_ ' he was very properly regarded as an A" attempt has been made in Cer’ authority. His salary also, in com- tain quarters, notably in the Halifax parlooll with ordinary wages and sol- _ Chronicle and the satellites depend- al~log_ was fall-ly ,liberal and even ini: upon it for inspiration, to make tllen, as now, "money talked.” Collin Q (jo Sell our bread patty capital out of the severe money Today ooo position; ol-6 reversed," Hurry FOSWI' stringency in the West. Tiiese tactics The whole community is fairly well l [_ 1 -_ have been repudiated by' the more rs-A educated, molly of .the people being putable Liberal Org”-"5 which Tightly better equipped in this respect than ascribe the trouble to causes~outwith the teacher. He 'ls not now the ‘only politics-altogether. We have already authority. His salary also is not traced the Origin Ol this Bliflllgnlcy, the commanding power that it WM. and shown that it was world-wide, being in many cases' less than that not confined to any one Couutry- received by tradesmen. mechanics. But in the West the trouble has been lol-ln help, and even domestic scr- accentuated by over-speculation ln vs,nts_ And today, also, money talks ' real estate; when the banks drew in itll. ` ' l de ics than thenf M°“l°3"° B|“°|‘ F°" EX' to Protect themselves. the rash spec- :nd uiillolzsgotzlly its talk car-I Change _ _ ulators were i-adly hit. No govern- rlss more weight than that of edu- _ c°""p°:"’°"°° s°|'°'t°d ment can ‘lo anything to prevent, Ol' cation or even of ordinary common LM. Mclimnoll, Manager relieve. such a situation. The pro- ,,e,,,,e_ ' A I M Moniague, P. E, l. moters of "wild cat" schemes take To make our schools the' power ni; ' Q the risk- and when the lmbble .bufutu they ought to be the teacher must ` the" Victims “fe l-0 be °0mm19¢l`Bl-¢'°°°°“'=-' B°"°". er- ve-mon and vlwins him nf » ins. _ruoiouusrs .re;\>o:suiv.1oui¢¢f, vis l_ua,`p'i¢¢ru¢, ooinoa gun maui __ _ ._ _ .' liigli os ii it were in the heart ol the relstiilu °f tl” *»°“¢l‘°"’ *°“‘”‘° ”‘ itable ones whose actions did harm to the forces as s whole_` They should either reform them or get rid of them. He knew of mil career where there were such oppo .tunities, pro- vided a man were earnest and strove ~ns much after efficlufncy as hs would in other pursuits. ` The colonel concluded that there had always -been the greatest spirit of cordialitv and co-operation be- tween himself and the great mhlority of the officers of the various divid- ends, especially the Quebec one. Olttoeslsooejlltoane 0 THIS Hill IH HISIUHY °O0.0’ll'llllUOlCO.Cll 1583-The Spanish Armada dis- perssd. _ 1657-The first Sulpicisns arrived in _ Canada. 1759-.Drown ___ l?uint__ abandoned- by the French on the approach of the British. -, 1673-All earthquake _ and volcanic eruption destroyed the City of Gua- temala. '~ _ 1885-First general assembly of In- diana tcrritory met at Vincennes. 1853-Rev. John Baptist Lamy ap- pointed flrst Roman Catholic Bishop of Santa Fe, N. M. 1854-The Danish Government pro- claimed a new monarchicsl constitu- ton. . _ 1856-Robert Alexander»__ Schumann, famous composer, died near Bonn. Born at Zwickau, June 8, 1810. 1884-The Imperial Federation of Great Britain and her Colonies form- ed ln London. _ 1900-King Humber I. of Italy as- sassinated at Monza. -mm IIOOUCOOIOOOCOUIOI DUMINIUN HISTUWHY esotllttatollaotitoe ` Attempting the conquest of Canada was one of the principal diversions of the New Englanders of the seven- teenth centuries, and, on this date in 1711, all Boston gathered ni; the `w§tsrfront to witness the dual prc- paration-for the sailing of an expedi- ,tion which, it was hoped and believ- ed, would wrest the northern country is essslsso mo 2 5 3 < W from the "papists." _Tho fleet pre- sented a brave array, and the Sng- l h flag' flaunted over fifteen ships-of- war and forty _tra-nsports. Under the command of fir Hovenden .Walker wore seven regiments of veterans from Marlborough's army and a bat- talion of marines, besides the colon-l ial troops. The embarkatlon oil troops was 'completed on J'_1_. 29, 1.711, and on the following morning the fleet proceeded out to sea. The middle of August found the expedi- tion in the St. Lawrence, and suc- cess seemed certaln when, on t_he_22nd of that month, a storm 'wrecked eight of the vessels. The remainder returning to Boston, haviing accomp- lished nothing. ` O O O Tracy's expedition against the Iro- quois bore fruit- on this date, July 29, :in 1667, when 'the chiefs of the Mohawks appeared in Quebec to sue the league had already taken similar action. The Indians left some of best smokin condition in stent hu- lng this; come here for their sup- plies Call to today and look in our ‘large silent salesman and see samples V “mia R°w° _ \ ~ 01 the but Cigar! 111806; THB HSC' - Kfnnon Drug Co Corner Great Geo _ ». gnqllllol "" YIUYLE: . \ ` . ` . s-s-"se_ees‘ssssseee¢`seease Rev. A. B. Kirby. of Philipsbi\rg,~ St.}.lllrtin, West Indlll, a member of the Wesleyan Methodist Confer- ence, is leaving there for New Bruns- wick on the Sth of August with a view of entering Bio N. B. and P. E. I. Conference. Hfswife and family for the present are remaining South. He is expected to supply the Bunny Bree Circuit ,till next Conference. I _ .__ Mr. Warren' Hood, Grenfel, Bank., is visiting friends in Yorks. Heels on his ‘wily home from a visit to his old home in-'Englaud, where he .re-_ ports considerable unrest owl? to the euiiragette movement, ol age pensions, Insurance Act, etc. It is thirty years since he and lifrs. Hood and isiniiy isle P. s. 1. lor the west. Mrs. Hood, who is enjoying good lhealth, is s. daughter of the late Henry Hardy, York. ' -___._____ CCCCIOCOIOUOOOOOUOQ FIHST THINGS oeesseesesedeeeeoo .e stil IOOC The first -newspaper printed west of the Alleghany mountains was the Pittsburgh Gazette, which 'issued its .official number 127 years ago today, Jiily 29, 1786. At the Gazette Times this journal still occupies a promin- ent position iu Smoky City journal- ism. The Gazette did not long re- main the only newspaper' in what was then "the wild West," for in’ the following year the Kentucky Gazette was established at Lexington by John and Fielding/ Bradford. In 1793 fthe Centinel of the Northwestern Ter- ritory--a large mouthful for the "newsies,’~’ if such there were in those days-was founded in Cincin- nati by William Maxwell, postmaster of that town. This was the first newspaper north of the Ohio and west of Pittsburgh. The Western Spy and Hamilton Gazette entered the Ohio field in 1799, and in 1804 the Liberty Hall and Cincinnati Mercury made- its appearance. The Inquisitor and Cincinnati Advertiser was anoth- er early Ohio journal. The Canton Repository, still in existence, was founded in 1814 by John Saxton, who continued at the helm until his death ln 1871. During his remark- able journalistic career, Saxton pub- lished accounts of the battle of Wat- 'erloo, the American civil war, and the surrender of Sodan. l 1 The first of Blondin's extraordinary if foolhardy feats at Niagara was performed fifty-four years ago today, when he walked a rope stretched across the gorge between the falls and the whirlpool rapids. He carried m a balancing pole forty feet long and weighing ‘forty~ilve pounds. Several times thereafter he repeated the per- for ance, once triindling_ a barrow across, and on another occasion car- rying a man, Harry Colcord, his manager. In 1860 Blondin walked across on stilts, and this performance was witnessed by the Prince oi Wales, later.King Edward. Many tight and slack rope performers have since emu- lated Blondin, among them a wo- man, 'Msria Spolterina, who crossed with baskets on her feet. The first at- tempt to swim the whirlpool rapids was made thirty years _ago this month by Capt. Webb, who lost his lite in the foolhardy venture. Five years later a Philadelphia cooper, named Graham, went safely through the whirlpool rapids in a barrel. A Mrs. Taylor was the first to go over the falls themselves, which she ac- complished a dozen years ago, strap- ncd in a specially made barrel. ` li |- IOOIOUIIOOIOOCOIIIOI UOICOCUOOOIOOIIOIOO Congratulations too: Thomas S. Martin, -.United States senatoc from Virginia, 66 years old today. , William C. Brown, president of the New York Central railroad, 60 ycars__ Prince Christopher, youngest broth- e'r of the new king of Greece, 25 years old today. Rt. Rev. Thomas Sebastian Bysne, Roman Catholic bishop of Nashville, 72 years old today. _-irthilr M. Beaupra, United Rates miinistsr to Cuba, 60 years old to- day. Joshua F. C. Talbott, representa- lanh district, 70 years old today, _Stephen M. Sparlnman, representa- tive in Congress of the First Florldal district; 64 years old today. *mmm-lg ::No _matter what price. you want to pay, Bc. or 10o. straight or 3 for Bile., you will find our line of cigars the most satisfactory every time you choose. We keep all our cigars _ln S E i midors and all good smokers, know- THE HUMAN PH[lEES$|IlN` ` old today. g tive in Congress of the second Mary- h' .vu ssilousoftiisui sos with the dole _,Q _ V ' Buy I-Iyacinths to feed thy soul. ' _ _ 4 | \ ~ L See the display of 'Hyacinths at the _“Flo ner ` Eeslival,” August 28th and 29th. ` ' ' ' ' ' i 1 - ’ u _ ' Il _ 5z§»7-z6M1mo. ' 1 _ S ,-._|»-- t hlelsl-*from the McLaughlin, Dominion, Tudhope _ and Canada f t ualirlcet. You will find here the sty1e,grade and kind you want at the very price yon wish to pay. Four More Cqrloads of Carriages Now _Ready The carriage you have been waitin g for is here now.Four carloads arrived the other day bringing us the picked ries-the four leading lines of carriages on the Canadian These carriages have all the newest and perfected points -the utmost in strength, style, workmanship and good at the lines, we have agents in all parts of the Province who will be pleased to show samples. _ _ rials. If you cannot call at our twareroonis and inspect Harness Wraps; etc. C We have just received especial Then_ we have- -wraps, cotton shipment of hamess,msde especial- diisters--everything else of the ly to cern Call in and look over the 25 differ- double, all colors. You will find ent styles, ranging in price from our prices low and the quality high. $10.00 a set up. _ Call in and see theline. our order by the largest con- kind you could need for driving. of the kind in the country. See our umbrella tors, sing‘e a`nd A. H ornei-C6’ Co. '* _l V .J W K ’ l N o Matter _ _ s . _ _ How big a company is or how much business it may be wi i- ng, the only way to judge of the merits of strong Life Assurance ti Companies is by their ` _ ' 'C _ Dividends 7 _ _ The Canada Life, Canads’s tldest Life Company has consis- tently and persistently maintained its positit n as the glestest Dividend paying Company in America, ` ` Let one of < uriepleseniatvies pieunt the proof of this before taking a policy in any other compiny. _ ., _._ W. K. Roqers. i; =..“.:>..°.=;=.:..°:~::.:~ _.f Pm. Pinus", b Special Agents. ' ' , ' -A l \ » ‘ Now '°_ Good ‘ ill Ice-Cream 1 i.. ‘ \ `_`£v"<"f:`ie`afii‘>"5 ? _ With our freezers any. _.'=="` one can -make. good ice- \_'V:E_._.;_-_ _,,f_ _; cream. ' ""`:f‘-'¥.'~;f_`f;l‘~' ' ` Light running, quick freezing, smooth,” strcnlr, dur. able freezers, with every gcod point thatyou could des sire. You will find the quality top-no_tch.ia every case--_l and the pilces lower than you would expect. ' _ _I - _ Other Summer Su_pplies__ _ such as refrigerators, lawn mowers,oil stoves, garden hose, screens, etc-. can be h_sd here all of the highestquality and each marked at the lowest price. Fennell f-I Chandler I ima n do to l, 4 no ,l , *ul* ‘N Pm °l th' °°=\