\ 4 I I \/ D.~'\.BY’S 4 SOAP is made p:lr‘;i:':_l:~.rly for little folks. It is the purest soap in 'Clie W01’ld- Really and titily the purest. It looks goocl; smells good; IS good; _ :md does good to the pink and .tender skin of infants. Thousands of men and women use B.\nY’S OWN SOAP-be cause they like it--but fo* Babies it is indispensable. 'rs i"...§‘..-'.`l§.'i.'fi'.:§’=§l'.§'.?.°" °°"“°""“" BEWW ll Illlllllllll l. W ::=- § . . fm 'H `f»l‘°ll ..“..°..S were ..:=.......°- Fddav morning. hut- 23th, Sha lr _ ' dlmd, via. . orth §(lnzt‘él;o§sLrr%i)d||¥ i ug;td§&l:d 00 UD 61' -l antics. l‘&nt mm as to freight e. to " ' " ww Phan nnosaco. .- Agents. &‘to1rn Aug. Dth"93 ' ¢ _ __ , llllllill LINE .-s-~-» <1 1-.srwls§~ - f?":7§ l F.*1"'I` ‘f-z-si WY. _ vu |_ v"~\ 7)' K l , \ 1- --~1\~"¢ f_f .*’.-°*-.{_~" #" ->_'__ _ *t-» _\ -___ -,.= ,r_- ‘ - 1. ` _,f » S. S. “GREE'1`LANDS” is due here from Hnntreal. on Tuesday 23rd inst. and sails for SE J'ohn‘s Nfld. via Sydney St North Sydney Live stock on deck and produce under decks earriedatlowcst rates. _ _ For furthpr tinformation as to freight or assa e a 0 » P g pp RATTENBURY, Agent. Lug. li- 3 . 1: Summer Drinks Lemonade, Dream Soda, Orange. Pllosphai e, Kola Champagne. and all other flavors manufactured from -ineral Spring Water, By Biglow tb Hood, Truro, N. S. SOLD WHOLESALE BY l. A. FABQUHAHSUN & C0. Agents. An g l 7 -eod Qrn aes-has-assess-uses an aeaassasusaassas lilllllll llllllllll lllllllll IN CANS. om io crurs rrcu. JUST Tl-IE" THING FOR PIQNIC PARTIES. IIAWSBI &. C0., Grocers, " Gt. Gee. St. #=l########~#% %lHl lllllllllllli Gllllllllll . fit; ’ . . ’. - ‘f` ~ ft _..§ . -_~ 4 ‘.'___-'_'-_ 3 SATURDAY- AUGUST' 2°» 1898" cacies for wounded soldiers contribut- li 0 1 --Q _~ . , ,M -ii ._ 0 ed by individuals _and relief societiesfp _ I _ _ I ' ' r s l 5Dn'0RI5L H0135' but which remained unopened for* "`.`f ' ~ ~ . . . , » . l vote on prohibition in the Yukon dis- l on the question. Prohibitionists in the older sections of Canada will not greatly regret this. -Z-_.ii ing resolved to exempt the cot- ton mills in that town from taxation. The cotton company pays about $4.500 per month in wages which is a great benefit to the town. The ex- emption is conditioned on the mill operating during ten months of the year. The war taxes _in the United States are said by the World to bring in half a million dollars a day. This will _go on till Congress makes ,a change. The effect of the war is thus to create a surplus in the nation al accounts where before there had been successive deficits for a number offvears. Hon. R. W. Scott, the author of the so-called Scott Act, is faking charge of the arrangements for the plebiscite. Already returning omcers have been selected and writs sent out ‘to all the electoral divisions. Pro- hibitionists may rest satisfied that the venerable Secretary of State will not play them false, and that the machin- ery for taking the vote and recording the people’s verdict is under safe direction. Mr. Ogilviegthe . administrator of the Klondike;-has . lieith in that region. At a banquet mama of Ieweehs we .ist over milBons of milas,th¢= d colour- iwas' foo-mi -everywflxere. . -Half the `w6’r’rld`piy"wlie`n' labour was cheap. Thawing would be done by electricity. The gold of the Klondyke quantity of that mother lode would yet be found. In the next ten years the Klondike would prove the greatest gold area in the world.” ' ` The political muddle in British. Columbia appears to have terminated in the formation of a coalition govern- ment in which Mr. Joe Martin be~ comes Attorney General. The pre- vious report that he had been ap- pointed fo the bench was therefcre premature. With parties so evenly divided the formation of a coalition seemed the easiest way out of the dilii- culry. The weakness of the new government will probably be found in the fact that Vancouver Island is not sufficiently represented in it, as there is much jealousy between the Island and mainland. It is stated that within the past twenty-eight years France has paid the $2,400,000,000 which the war with Germany cost her, increased her postal traliic threefold, her telegraph . lines have been multiplied ninefold, 1 the number of railway passengers has tripled, and the banks have increased their business enormously. The re- markable progress that France has 'made under republican rule, coupled 1 with the vast sums spent on the army navy and public works is one of the marvels of the time. It is also a monument to the industry, energy and economy of her her people. The estimate of Canada/s annual drink bill at thirtylive to forty msl- llions of dollars is based on the cust- oms and excise ret-urns. There is reason to think that these'ligures, large as they seem, are within the mark. There is the product of illicit stills and the smuggling trade to be added, together with the extensive adulterations. It is well known that large quantities of stud" that is sold over the counters, especially of the- distillery. It is made on the premises, . from cheap alcohol and cheaper and nastier colorings and if account is taken cfthis. class- of _ liquor the monetary'cos`t of the intoxicants con- sumed by__t'l_ie _' le of Ganadd ma. safely beplaced at a not far short of fifty millions dollars a year, 1 or enough in live years to pay oil' the national debt. img ‘ had not been exaggerated. A vast* P 4 Rosy Since Taking I'¢0od’s. ‘ lower class of °sa1oons,' neveri saw a ' military hospitals. She found there a. storeroom filled with boxes' ofdeli' “lack of authority' War a lighting family and has married in- tape. ‘She ripped open the boxes, distributed pajamas, jelly, tobacco, ginger ale, devilled chickens and whole stockings until the wounded she went to Washington and applied at the Wav Department for permission to open the boxes. " Dr. Russell, M. P. of Halifax, in a letter published by the Chronicle de- clines to-take part in the plebiscite campaign, his principal reason being that Nova Scotia is now a very tem- ` perate province and he fears that the enactment of a prohibitory law would .not efect any considerable improve »ment. Mr. Russell is an astute poli- tician who naturally desires to retain the votes which elected him in 1896. It will please the distillers and brewers pal Grant, predicts the failure of pro- hibition. |.But his reasoning' ’ will _ to know that Dr. Russell, like Princi- ~ - rr MOWWU °]°°l*°f3 M 3' Pubmi meet" cheered themselves half well. Then ‘ ~' ‘ *f* 7 ii” _, f-e;___ 'J . u FIBES _-F80” c l 6lll|ILO'l"l'ETOWH: . ineither convince nor satisfy the pro- . hibitionists. The latter know full ~well that the counsels of ekpedieney never yet promoted- any genuine re- form. Cabinet ministers' and politi- cians want to save their positions. All true reformers desire to save the _country and benefit the people. 4 The figures compiled by the Inland Revenue dapartment show, that since 'confederation the consumption of spirits ‘and wine has steadily declined in Can- ,.,ad¢§..wiereas the people have taken mo freely to beer drinking. t The following- shows the 'quantities per head iur the last nite years. as compared with the record ortho two previous decades: g _ Spirijs Beer . Wine » Gallons' Galllous Gallons ' 1.8691 1.124 2.290 1829 1.131 2.209 o 1889 .7 76 8.263 . 18~9Q~ .883 3.360 .097 104 1892 " ,isee .roi asia . .740 3.4.95 '_ 1.994 ‘ -.142 3.722 ,rest - .see 3.4711 reefs .ses 3.528 issv Avz. 101 094 .089 .090 .070 Nervous Prustratinn | 1- ; Sick Headache and Dizzihess- ii All Cured. 1 Little cirl Has Grown Plum and Nervous mothers and sickly children endure a vast proportion oi the suffering which is caused by impure and impov- erished blood. Hood’s Sarsaparilla gives relief by purifying and enriching. the blood. Bead this statement: “I was bothered with sick headaches 1 and dizziness. I ako had nervous prostra- tion and weakness in my stomach, which made me feel very ill indeed. I decided to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which was highly recommended by many, and by the time I had taken four bottles I was in perfect 1 health. About a year ago my little girl, then six years old, had bronchitis and chicken pox. We were told that her Only Chance for Llfe ' was the careful treatment she might re- ceive nt the hospital. We took her their 1 her recovery, but later she had 8 ehangu for the better. Her sickness, however, left" her very delicate and weak, and she did not grow any for a year. It was then"I- thought I would try Hood’s Sarsaparilla, inasmuch as I had used it for myself ami_ found it such a good medicine for build- ` ing up a constitution. She had not taken two bottles before she had improved won- derfully. She has grown rosy and plump and is quite herself again. I have great faith in Hood’s.” MRS. M. Hlcxrizsou, 988 Bloor Street, West, Toronto, Ontario. is me best- in tact the One True Blood Puriner. §old'by all drnggglsts. $1; six for $5. “` ` needs :fins neu "Ann f .whhzpif orial edition of “The Lite of Gladstfpned' by Castell Hcpplkins with’ introduction by the honorable e Hinlster oLEd.ucation`.Dr.Ross. This bopk is a. Canadian classic. Thgstory 0! his life 1_8 told with thrilling intermgt. death and imbfbfing national fune'ra1"wH1=._ bothbe described and illustrated. 512 x10} I inches. Retail 32.50, worm $4.00 Magninceu BRADLET?a`ARR-ETSON COMPANY, Limited, 1 .115' 11.891. .745 3.760 -lI1` and for eight-days they had no hope oi - Hood’s Sarsaparilla f‘ lil* .ll Hun nu ~ Come arid-se¢{Sal1ipIe'i`atour`Stufdio, 2 ,. pdrréusplty illustrated. Prospectus 75 oeniwp, ra e lgolrl: or wrlie io u- f"iCf» am °°“"@fl“e°‘15' th? mine” °f to one as well, and she declared war e' ` " Kl0"d§'l"e will have D°°h\D8 *O "Ylright thenand there-war on red- s, ._ 1 ave any point or Satllrllay and relurhi Boston the follo 5. rx .¢_ . l . , , _,_ 'nf ‘ i ~. _ 3 . ._:;.j. 2;." Qi 'rss GUARDIA N cHAs1.or'r,mo';wN,._AuoUsr zoflsss. g- . . f ' A good story is told ofthe _visit of 1 ` ` ' ‘-the Mrs General Miles to oneiof the . . . . _ - , »’»`1: _-s There is no provision for taking a Departmel-“_” Mrs Mu" wma' from 5 f' , r . gf- 3;- .5 , _-» _im .» ; fr ‘ '- s ' ~ vf - ff 1' . _ _. _.3 ,r _ %,__;_, ~ ' R . ; `§ ' ~ ; , ',- » ` _ . ' _ . -_'vs » ` ' '»' 12:... z.-< ~..¢. .-.. ' i assengeref mn e . ~ '= ilu - ' - - 7 *lf--' ‘ff-7 "'-’ 3 f;l1."]@' , ` i . A*/.. ', -1sr.e|n» ,_ _ . .*._;,. l ,1o.f56. elves. i_._).|- S- is--,_ :- ‘ ~ ~-...'_ . Low rates from all;_ot_l|e_|~ ppolnhti. _ .. . in 'aw », , » . _ . " ' ~. .., fs’ H ’ * .5 7 ft .- ~ . U l ‘R Q Mr" . r - ‘_ _ _ ~ 1 -» fl' '~‘ s 7 f '1 . 5- 'fi " f- 12 _ .» . ai = 5 ' / . _ ' _ I , . Aug 2, d tl Sept 10. T REV THOIIS TRUTTER D D KISS ADELAIDE F, TRUE,l4N..Pr|nci|lll. 'WOLFVILLE,_ N. S. ` If you are intending to take -a» thorough course of study vou had better try those schools, as the best advantages. with the most pleasing surroundings are here provided at cheapest rates. _ ~ The ACADEMY courses- prepare- for matriculalion to the University or ior business life. ' Thereis in addition a well equipped Ma,nual¢Tr_aining Depart- ment and the opportunity for tree in- strutticn in the School of Horticulture. Collegiate Course and first class instruction in Inslnumental, and Vocal Music, Arl, Elocution, Steoography and 1 Typewriting. - The quality of; the work' done at the UNIVERSITY is cerliiiecl by thesuccess, of tha Graduates in attaining to import. ant places in the-Educational world. and i the large number seeking' admission to its classes. " Academy and Seminary open Sept. _, 7th. 1898. ,University Ocl. 5th,- FOI fuller information or- calendars apply to I Principals or uhdersrgned. _ ‘ - A. COHOON, ~ _ Sec’y Ex.Com.. il Aug.~S,d~& w, 6 w. i H The SEMINARY furnishesa thorough 1’ , .- o_o.-E. .»`_ _ , . ' -. -_ ._-.---pf icuii- Glnjltiléitl _‘ii‘“*- __°°*‘*_l||o|t1'oN noaueaw ’ ' iscs 1.026 2-9-20 .iso-l un__\. B. cures, n.A. Pfnnral. 1 ’ ; ,a. " ' IGMIIA SEHNAHY ' A v ' ‘- ' ’ Wiltbe Held? a Wednesday an *rseptember IEIC)IEl.§SE 51,050.00 Prem Three.M1in_u.te Class.... - -»-- . . .. ._ 2.26 Class...... .. ... .. ._ 2.40»Gluss (Trotters and Pacers) . ._.,. .__ _ ` Second Day, 18th Free For All . . . . . 3 30 Class . . -- . . Eames close 7th September. 1898. l\o horse barred by record made att All further particulars given on app In addition to the above, _the Guidel give three exhibitions of sneed ,ouoaoh 1' Admissionlo grounds, 250; Children Special rates by steafners and railw Pof|mi|.lrimiunl”. all work guaranteei and no deposit mV§§g3a°§§uf§b1;=;§§§=3:;=;;§~é';8 <1g§e;u';i§em_.Treqinsul. .. Lat' 'jjfé I Plunge '.¥g.=°`.wA.a`D i-‘tina Special arrangements with photo-M S. F. TARBUSI-I 1 TORONT __ . ~ - . - -r RESIDENT AG,EN'I~ H Charlottetown Juno 11 1898 dlytl F. L. HASZARD. ' __ All communications to be addressed ~ - President. y" ` . . \ __ ~ lAug3-tu,-fri,,sat&wytd; may lava-new-vin 2.5o<;'nss.......~......... .~.1... .. __¢¢s»»a ns-» _ »»»o,` °/0 o ~ Q 1 8 1 8 . . .. .....-L 5. . 1.; ~ T West side Qa'en_SpqChlrl;u.‘t°*n_ :Img ‘T0 if Cpens June 25th, 1898. “‘ i lCHALLlgr' ~ J @1411