eile’
To the Electors of the
FURNITURE. District of South FURNITURE, | ©’
GENTLEMEN,—His Honor the Lieutenant Governor having dis-
AVING enlarged our premises this season, which gives us a floor depth of ° . H eighty five feet, we ean now show the largest Ar and fizest neg: solved the Third Legislature, of the ment of furniture ever exhibited in the town of Qn’Appelle Station. North West Territories, it now be-
We can suit the most fastidious; or the new begiuner, with a eheap outfit. comes yuur duty to select a repre- sentative, for the next four years, In October last I asked your appro-
Wedding and Holiday Presents a Specialty, val of the step I had taken, in eX. cepting a position in the Firat Church and School Furn tur: of the Newest Designs Executive Council, of the N.
W. Territories, selected by F. W. G. Haultain, Exq. and you were
PRICES RIGHT / We are always pleased to show good enough to suuction my action
customers through our stock, in that regard,
Tiere ee ie Asa member of that Govern-
awe oo ment I now solicit the honor of bee
BR DOO LI I LK A CQ. ing your representative in the As- sembly about to be chosen. I remain Gentlemen
Your obedient servant
GrorGE H. V. RULYga.
Qu'Appelle, Oct. 14th 1898
~~ — assem cena
: )
a eS iO ee
A COMPLETE SUPPLY
2
‘ Our fall stock is now complete in every line. Special
$$ values in Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, and Fuot-
« wear of all kinds for fall and winter.
22 A stock of Groceries at lowest possible prices, = 2? .
¢ -~4 | g . ~—- > § H. Gaswu2ll & Go
¢? o = a
??
YADA RRR LOLOL IDOL inane e
Of cverything in Drugs, Petent Medicines Stationery, Jewelry aud Fancy Goods on hand for the winter.
6 ee en ee
PROFESSIONAL CARDS. _ MEETING
; oe MUNICIPAL COUNCIL of South pe : Qu'Appelle meets the tirat Monday of A SS Harrieter, Advocate, eachmonth The Secretary-Treasurer wil] - Solicitor, ete. in the office t ray as Be — or south of the Queen's Hotel, a in t ie _ eto attend to busincer every tice, tiret de Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Applica- | |
|
All kinds of Touet Preparations at
Tor Qo'Aprrius Davo & sSTaTIONERY Cu.'s Store,
Qu’Appelle Bt tions for Traument Traders’ Licenxex, to
Kent th- Town Hall, and for Intermevte in
the Cetuetery, must be made to J. A. Lidgate. | J. C. STARR, Sec.-lreas. id
—EE a
~ MBDIGAL. ; KR.C. E.CAKTHEW ,Qu’Appelle, Phy- sician, Surgeon, Corone: Ete. (rad - sate Turouto University and Licentiate Col- lege Phveicians and Surgeons, Unt.
Qu’ Appelle Lodge, A, F.&A.M., GK. M., meets in the Masonic Hall, Qu’Appelie Stn., on Tuesday's, on or beforefull moon, So- Journiiy brethren cor- digily invited,
J, P. JONES, W.M.
—THE—
Hrogress-Vedette
WILL BE SENT
Free ..
till Xmas, ’98,
to anyone living in the local dis- trict of the paper, viz, Qu’ Appelle Sin., Fort Qu’Appelle, Indian Head, Edgeley, McLean, Balyonie, etc
. HENDERSON, ND.C_M., W « Graduate of McGili University, Licentiate of Coliege of Physicians and Sur- geons, N.W.T. Office at house.
ss: BUSINESS CARDS.
The Leland Hotel, |
QU'APPELLE STATION, Assa, The most popular honse in the west. A. HOLLINGSHEAD,
Modern conveniences, Home comforts. ; - ‘ ae Firet-class cuisine. Choice liquorr and House, Sign andCarritage Painter. cigars. Good sample rooms for commer- Graining, Glazing, Paper Hanging cial travellers. Convenient 9 eal . and Kaisomining tleadquarters for stage to Fort Qa’Appelle.
ALL WORK PROMPTLY KXFCUTED,’ mae
. CHKWELL, Pro , eee J | QU’APPELLE STATION and
PGE REND PORT Pea INDIAN HEAD Send YOUr Nailile The Queen’s Hotel.
Thos. Hilliard, Prop.
$$
a TT — LE
and get two munths’ sample | copies free ! |
pet ene accomm dation fur guests. J. B. ROBINSON,
lable supplied with the best in the ee “ ; en market. Fine sample rooms fur commercial Contractor (> Builder e travellers. Choice brands of Wines, Liqu- | ll él] ors aud Cigars. Porter meets all trains. Pe ates $1 per day.
Ne
Estimates given and all work promptly | ; attended to. | To keee in clos touch with
| ——_ your customezs, issue busiuess circulars to your patrons, It
Ny H Caswell & G0., INDIAN HEAD hin te penal etemepnien; ll
busiuess nen have found 1: to
BANKERS, s be one uf the very best princi- Financial and 'nsurance Agents ' - "ae ples. It will meet the appro-
val of every individual.
SOLLECTIONS SOLICITED- RETUKNS PROMPTLY MADE.
Five Per Cent. Interest Allowed on Deposit Accounts,
ed
Launar JOB WORK AT RIOUT PRICES. ae | Envelopes, Letter Heads, Nute Heads,
Bill Heads, Post Cards, U'recuiass,
Cok RESPONDENTS :
MOLSON'S BANK, Winnipeg. ALL WORK. None bat first ciass. Hotel Suippiux Tage, Posters, Tickets, «sughts paid at par ina!l parts of Canada and family laundry at special rates- Price Lists, Pamphlets, Reports, at the Molson's Bank. Wedding Invitations, Cajling Cards, Bs r? Cc. O. DEMAUREZ, t thi hequesand Drafts for all parts of seg Programmes, Ip fac:, avythiug
or everything.
the World Bought and Sold.
. : To cateh the immense fail trade that will Qu Appslle Station. - - SAssa. cS Agencies in ae a ey towns of the go te other markets, advertise in “THE PROGRESS."
Vol. XIV QU’APPELLE STATION, N. W.'T., THURSDAY, NOV. 3, 1898.
ee conress.
¢ : e=*.
No. 3 7
POLITICAL MASS MEETING.
Largely Attended—Enthusiastic Throughout—The Haultain- Ross Administration an Honest and Progressive Govern- ment—The Opponents of South Qu’Appelle Alone in the Territories.
The meoting called by Mr. G.| would let me know as soon as it H. V. Bulyea for Tuesday night| was settled I would arrange meet- was largely attended. The majority] ings and discuss the issu-s, His of the electors of Qu’Appelle Station | coucage failed bim, however, till and surrounding vicinity were in| the 22nd of October because of the atten:iance, as well as a number of| refusal of so many to contest the ladies. constituency. For before this time
Mr. McCannel was ealled to take four Indian Head residents had the ehair. aud in dning so invited | been offered the position, and their all the speakers either fur or against | answer was that when they thought Bulyea to take the platform. Half; such a step necessary t.cy would the time would be given tbe op-| consider it. But Mr. Vicars, being ponents, Mr. Bulyea and Mr. | assured $3V0 tor election purp ses Hawkes, of Whit« wood, only res-| accepted. I tried to tind an ad- pouded. there being no opposition | dress of his, at the request of the speakers present. Mr. Bulyea|} premier, but could not till the 26:h was the first speaker, and below we; of October, when it appeared iu the give un account of the meetiug, nut | Indian Head Vidette, which might verbatim altugether, though written! be call-d his campaign sheet. in the first person. ‘They are the} What we find in that payer is the ideas expresse |. as fully as possibie, | only grounds we have fur argument, as the speaker prucecded. The Free Press had stated a day or
a Sines two before that he was a straight Conservative candidate. This was & surprise to me after what he tuk me would be his policy. However, [the Vidette said this report was false, although his address alongside suys he really is. Well, if ie is Ing for a year to secure an oppon- peg ee ee aa ita ent candidate, They have sueceeded | tip vite right? How can he rua at the last moment. The first thing | “i : 7 sik Py owen een L had expected from the opposition rf pers ys Phy | OPPO, and the was their policy, but they preferred» "" eget cst iene you a “hide and seek” policy—one story — the diawing of Federal in one part of the cunslituenvy and | cape - another in another part, A 800N as Mr, \ ~eaaay also claimed to have | learned there Was opposition io ous “ the result ola Unani- determin d to discuss the issues be- |@0Us call from the distnet. Where seit bessiciitiiina daeidt didi’ os we en the Unuuimous ones 2 Many Iny at Ladian Head, Versvuai and a here, but he doesn’t ‘tp pear Written Invitations were yiven my efore you. Have you chosen: him ?
Nu; , , px Opponeut tu be presont or send his} v5 Lt could count on Iny layers
‘those who ure rleeti representatives, but Llicy pul ib haw | H if cnt prohiog _ erection. wt a aozen uninfluential men are
appearance, thengli Mr. Vicars was | rs iTespousive fur lus bemg in the
sa the streets of Gu Appelle durts a! E ( ad ppelle during | field,
the Verv Uline vf Lie meeting \l Vj } 3 There was no reason Why heshuuid| —* fe Vicars Claims to be running
not have Leen there and given his | 0" strarghe party lines. Four reasuns Why | was unlit fur the) > °4' “8° he was a Strong supporter pusition, fu duing ov he treated |?! — He sew Bo heed ul party with discuurtesy the peovle ol | ies then and where is the differ-
; : , ? ; Jndian Ilead. However. 1 tried |@UCe ries ba, appear before you (DoW as then, itrespeetive of parts
T am fighting this cumpaign dif- ferent trom any other | have ever been engaged in, being in the dark. Until lately I thought things we1e satisfac_ory; though I knew that certain indiviauals had been labor-
ayn, aud LWW-Higel do tue result, ; | 1 wished to discuss fui.y and freely pain tu doing ao J aur acting con- the juestivns, and Wow lairer couid sistently, and if su, Why has he Luo¢ It Vicars could not attend, |SUse4 f Chtngs are the same at Where are lis sUppurtera f Are | a _ here now as they were they ashamed of tie policy they ees we he has the right advucate in cheit Cauvass? Their to change his mind, but he has ule policy is one of silemce. L ciral- | ne Miso bu ell you Why, Ile sadva lenge anyontie lu appear lele ayaliist! 5 Was forced by my actions | my past record, 1 am a pubuc | ne = vl party lines, I chal- lian and am willing to be criticized. | chge ey supporter ot his here to L have represented you fur four! stile ah action ul mine that torced years and | have a right to kuow | lu du su. Phe peuple will up- (be Chafyes Lrouglit agaist mie, bu! hold me ib dem.auding this, and | KioWw them pubiicly, li I cannot: aon talking tu au inteilivent people secure that, 1 can only conclude | sh ly be huodwinked. Another that they are ashamed of their plat- | Culmplait is that I ablanged Livel- tulln. , Mas Ugallist Neff. I claim that the Woen tirst I heard of opposition | B’Yetument of the Tetrituries bas IT asked Vicars if it was su and he! the rigut bu support Whatever men sald hie only had the matter under | HE ChOuses Lh ts calmpalyn. Net? had cuusideratiuon, but the avuwed, been a Colleague of Haultain’s auu grounds of oppusition were tu the | — red to displace him. That is Hauitain-Russ administration. 1) YY L went two Moosowin at tie said it was e wauly stand and if he| iti Pe = -enmpcce
lw
Cousiuu-jon Paye A.
— ee
Jit Ombroidery Qmporium. sci. Sia
ALL and see my Alloa knitting ~voi and other wools of ai] kirds. An immense and well assorted variety of Crocietei. Knitied or Fancy Work, Siik Cora», Pius Haiia end Pum-Pous. All kinds of tiireads, «ii kinds of trimusogs, ali kinds of ribvau-,
— aii kindsof cashion tops. Some new civuded silk aud iimen thread. ‘The verre | best qualitics kept for the finest work. Beautiful Doses, Ceontre-pieces and Huck- a-beck. 1 have anything )vu can ask for in stamped linen gouds. My Miliunery | Depatituest is compicte, Many of these gvods cau Le parebased no where eise 1
tuwn e s e°-
4+ Vatiues the best +4
__. MISS E. GRAY.
> s Rages
LONDON CAR STRIKE,
A Conference Arranged-—WUistory of the
Causes that Led Up to the Nirtke.
London, Ont.. Oct. SL.—NO serious trouble took place toxlay in con- nection with the street railway) strike. In fact, so far are anticipa-, tions of evli from being realize] that there are indications of a posible settlement. This is owing to the! excellent work of the peace commii- tet. and éspecially to the individual efforts of Mayor Little and Sir John Carling. The company is repre entel! on the committee by Manager Cart, Director Thos. H. Smaliman, ani! Messrs. Helmuth and Ivey, solicitors to) the company. Late tonight the company agree] to meet a commit- tee of strikers to-morrow forenoon, | ard the future of the strike depends om the result of that meeting. Not a Car Was taken out to-day. Mr. Carr says he is refraining, at the re- quest ol the police and city officials from running cars, and so inflaming the populace, though he is ready te do so if given proper protection. There was little noiiceable agita- tion to~<lay and little in the way cf a crowd gathering. White and green posters are placarued freely about the town containing quotations from the riot act, and the act respecting un- jawfu! assemblies. The causes which igi up to the present difficulty have not been fully presented since the strike began. They «late back to March, 1897. Up tt». that tims the poale «of wages was 12 1-2 cents an our for the first six months; 13 1-2 cents per hour for the next six months and 14 1-16 cents per jour for the
NeXt SIX Months, or S51) per week After a year at this rate of wages the men were given 15 cents an hour,
week on areguiar run cf teu hours aday. A new superintendent was appointed in Mareh, 1897, and
Tr at a
rogyn that time the seale of wages re- mained stationary until October 1 of i
the present year, and there was no mivancement. At the beginning «of the present month a change wus insti- tute! whereby the day men on the
ten hour Shift were change } with the night me@:. who wok even and a liad! hours. The
rs* fnen were given the day run for two weeks. ‘Thos fortnightly al- ernnting arrangement reduced = thi , oll emplovecs to the neigh- berhoowl of SG it aveek, without ma- bere fitting the men oon che : suift or the spare men. Dhis us the reason of the formation of vision of the Amalgamated Asso- ciation Of Street Ratlway employe s of ‘Amerrea. The division drafted = a petition to the company and s-veral of the men who waite! on the come pany to present & to the manager were Cischarged on the ground that they had left their cars without p-r- mission. The mein left eparc men in {f their trolleys as had been
had pre-
The *om-
cr : rh ari
wericaiiy
cChuArgz ©& customary and no objections viousliv been made to it. pany was persistent in its refusal to recognize the union, although adniat+ tei its willingness to trent with the en imiividually. After exhaus ing as the men thought, all reasonable peans. a etrike was ordered and the
rs were run inte the barmon Thurs-
tina. afternoon of Ins‘
Nikola Tesla, the Electrician, Propounds a New Doctrins. York, Oct. 26.—S. Nikola Tesla, Yeectriciar ‘ rity in to-day’s rit lect tl Revie L pos y in eleetrie power transmis- Iti venti s for transiultting ‘ity at high pressure over long have | : sstiuilly ‘ie I 5 3 Irces of rovuaty i! ost import- 1 . quauts | t » init » & rara i s, Whiecit s lj)- ‘ ricity to ma lnre faec- i x Pics electric }? f r the trolley lines o 1 , Bulfa twenty . on Ss uls- t I situ neo t 1 now ! { yf 1! “pp tus i ‘ { ipoce tol 1 ‘ cit Pressures wast ‘ ‘ | et iT fi is ' t Sourees « ; ve { I t i CO ‘Toul t I tau t n elovat ) ‘Tre Is ‘ ‘ ting [freely %] ! eur t a the: eis t peririt yhner 5 to b used mmereciwily to matmuain mn soeond fat al tC the same élevation r : ‘the current and » 4 vey it vw euri through means r transforming and utilizing it. With 1 articie an illustration is present- mis Wilke streams of electricity i+ from a si e terminal giviig an ‘ last electrical pressure of tw mifiion volts. tr i Review commente i - S hove s follows: “Tes- proposes to transmit without t i Wires, Uiiy iz7h the natur il m, the eart! i the ir reat y nis <« power to Instances of ON- _ f miles I s | ipperiari a resim . from = the Arabian ‘ ts bot t extraordinary discov- es T has made during a number 3 ‘s of ‘ossant bor, makes it er t that his work in this field ias pa t stage Of laboratory experi- ‘iki is 9 Vitora practh l te st ? [MiUSLTial acy The sueeess f s forts means that power from sources 28 Niagara will become 1e 1 nyY part of the world re ess [4 ane e pies (ris x Be MAP. Lokoiamaea Oct ; T wh net has re Fe Oh the ministers tne = ‘ ibie tl ivres tke Live Stilon of filling the pp rtfolie of kA TOT T Us, the first attemnot 40 Party rcovrernment WW} Japan has ” ver A failure It is prolgble that the pext cabinet will be a coali-
or ie |) } } t of Liberals ang Clan jeacers
{ ’
WCASSMANACS FIRS:
HE YIViPLY PICTURES THE RE- SULT OF WAR WITH BRITAIN. France Prevared to Abandon Her Claim to Fashoda—Hano- |
taux’s Blunder.
case ctu ssusevoca SERENADE
The question of a change in tho cur-| rency system’ of the island, the cuse | toms and internal revenue laws, suf-| frage and many other incidental, but) highly important subjects, aro now, uuder consideration and probably will) be treated upon at some length in the president’s forthcoming message to congress, | Eaten by a Grizzley. Vancouver, Oct. 25.—John Macken-
‘zie, who hag just returned from the
Peace River country, tells the evening
papers a norrible story of a prospec-|
Paris, Ot. 26.—M. Paul De Cassag- nae, in a remarkable article on the Fashoda question in L’Autorite, writes: “How could we make a stand against England in case of war? She possesses means of gripping us every- where in our colonies, and in our naval! «ities, along our open coasts, whereas we cannot Jay our hamis on her any-)
where. She would make short work. of our fleet. War with England
would put us in the position of Spain: towarni America. We should fight heroically, but we should be beaten.
/Qur Admiral Cervera is already to
the fore. It is Admiral Fournier who,
enjoys the blind confidence of the, Republican government. It is rot,
alas. Santiago that we should lack. Liter on we should have to pay the bill with Aigeria or Indo-China. | Tierefore, it is materially and mo-- ally forbidden to think of war. This would be madness, blindness. Novody coes to certain disaster with his eyes cpen. There still remains the other! alternative to Leat a retreat, am 1! we shnll not escape it. It is novthe evacuation of Fashoda that con- stitutes our Joss. The republic hav- ing alreaiy committei the irrepar- able blunder of coldly abandoning leypt to England, it ill becomes her tu-iny to quibble about this or that portion of the Nile valley, which In reality woull be useless to us.” PREPARED TO EVACUATE.
Paris, Oct 25.—Le Soir hears in diplomatie circles that France is pre- pared to evacnate Paushoda with the reservation that she shall receive some compensation, to ‘be arranged hereafter. “This result,” says Le Soir, “is the outeoine of a new argu- ment that, as the dispatch of the Marehand mission was not notified to Great Britain in accordance with cus- tom, Great Britain is entitled to dis- pute the major’s right to hold the territory occupied. As the Quai d’Or- say is thus placel in a false position through the fault of M. Hanotaux, the predecessor of M. Deleasse, the latter is foreed to recognize the jus- tice of the British objection.”
HARCOURT'’S LOYALTY.
London, Oct. 26.—The Keen desire to) hear the views of the Liberal leader) in the house of commons, Sir Win. Ver- non Hareourt, ou the Fashoda ques- tion Was satisfied this evening 9 by, his speech at Aberystwith, Wales. sir Wm. Harcourt said it was the urgent duty of everyons, without re- gard to political differences, to sup- port the government in maintaining, the righte of the empire in the pres- ant crisis, a erisis “specially danger- ous owing to the uncxampled situa- tion in France.”
KITCHENER IN PARIS.
Paris, Oct. 26.—General Lord Her- bert Kitchener, commander of the Angio-Lzyptian forees in the Soudan, ana Capt. Baratier, the French offi- cer whe brings Major Marchand’s dis- patches from Fashoda, arrived uere at ten oeloek this evening. General Kiteheuer left the railway station un- noticed, Capt. Baratier received = an ovation from hundreds of members of the Patriotic League and others. M. Mareell Herbert, a member of the chamber of deputies, on behalf oi the Patriotic League, presented Cuptain Paratier with a gold medal. The friendly demonstrations continued un- til Capt. Baratier reached his resi- dence. There was no further incident.
\itacked by Chinese.
Lomion, Oct. 25.—The Pekin cor- respondent of the Daily Telegraph “Chinese soldiers attacked a party of English engineers on Sunday at the Marco Polo bridze, on the Pekin-Hankow railway. ‘Two engin- eers were injureland a railway coolie was killed. The situation there is serious. The telegraph wires have been cut at Pao-Ting-Fu, in tie pro- vince of Pechili. The fore:gn envoys Will hold an emergency meeting to- morrow.’
SaAVs; «
Street Car Strike.
Lonwion, Oct. 27.—The diffieult’es connecte T with the street railway eomnpainge culminated this af'ernoon in the emplovees going on strike. They ask eousidjerable rearrangements, which would involve little or yo in- crease] expenditure on the part of the company. The company refuse j to treat with the men. Mayor Wil- son addressel a meeting of strikers teenight expressing sympathy with them. The citizens generally appear to sympathize with the men, and are showing it in many enses by wearing an bulge, “We walk.” The system has been tied op since half past four this nfternoorn.
Cuba and Porto Rieo.
Washington, Oct. 25.—At the eabinet meeting the situation in Cuba was gone over for the information of those members who did not see ile president yeeteruay. It was cxplained that the time limit for the evacuation of the siand had been extended from Decem- ber first to January first and that the United! States would assume ron- tro! of the governmant of the severa] cities and provinces as fast as ther were evacuated by the Spiniards. but no faster. Havana probably will be the last Of the cities to remove its troops
and the ‘ast to eurrender to the Unit-°. et States. This, however, must be ec-
. ts ' Comps:
@i by the first of Jannary. ? Dr sue qu Porto Rico shall bear to the general covern- ment of the United States is receiving the careful consideration «{ the pre- sident and the members cf the cabinet
bie question of the relation
tor being eaten by a grizziy bear two. months ago, on the trail. It appears | that the unfortunate miner, whose name was never learned, fired a charge, of buckshot into the bear whicn mere-| ly woundea and infuriatea it. The end came quickly. The miner was felled with one powerful stroke of the bear’s: paw and when found he was terribly. torn and mangled, life being extinct.
Another of Mackenzie's stories re-| lates to the disastrous trip of Major Moody of the Northwest Mounted Po-| lice, who was sent out by the Domin-. ion government to discover an all-land: route to Yukon by way of Edmonton. Major Moody had one guide frozen-to death and two others deserted him at difficult pomts on the trail. His out-, fit was burned by bush fires and for) cays he travelled on short rations.) When Mackenzie Jast heard of the major he was pluckily pushing on) north of Fort Graham. The major has been delayed in his efforts to punish) horse thieves who stole forty horses. beionging to prospectors and = drove! them into the woods evidently with) the idea of disposing of tnem at the) first convenient opportunity. One of: the horse thieves’ was named Carrol] and the other was a desperate negro. Major Moody was at last accounts unable to catch the desperadoes and, the United States prospectors on the’ trail threatened to lynch them shouid' they cress their path. It is over a year since Moody started out on his ter-) rible journey. He has still several months more hard work before he reaches the Klondike, if he ever does. North of Fort Graham his Indian)! guides deserted him and from Macken- zie’s account his troubles are not half ended yet.
Smallpox.
Cobeurg, Oct. 25.—A case of small- pox has developed here. The victlm is. Miss Simmons, 2 lady from Deseronto, | who came here in a steamer from Charlotte, New York. Dr. Bryce, pro-, vincial health officer, cam here from) Toronto and overlooked arrangements) for isolating the patient and disinfect-| ing the steamer. All Miss Simmons’ fel-| low passengers, however, had seatter-: ed to their different homes and Dr.
Bryce fears some of them may carry
the contagion. ;
— — j The extra sleep obtained by the use| of a mosquito bar is so much net gain.
|
| THE MARKETS. |
New York, Oct. 20 —Wheat reveipts, | 242,350 bushels; exports, 257.597 bushels. sales, 1,800,000 bushels; futures 160,000 | bushels spot. |
Chicago, Oct. 2%.—Futures closed as, follows: .
Wheat—Oct. 659; Dec. 661; May 67.
Corn—Oct. 52; Dec. d28c; May 342.
Oats—Oct. 234; Dee. 253; May 2823c.
Pork—Dee. &7 85: Jan. $9.02.
Lard—-Dec. 84.8); Jan $4.92. Ribs-—-Dec. $4.62; Jan. £4.62. WINNIPEG MARKETS.
Wheat—No. 1 hard, Fort William, 72 Flour—Patent, $2.20; streng bakers, $2 00; second bakers, $1.70; XXXX, per sack of 98 |bs, $1.35. Graham four. | $2.0, and whole wheat flour $1.85, Oatmeal—Is Jaid down here from the States at about $1.60 for 8) Ib. sacks of! rolled, Oays—2S82 per bushel.
Barley—Nominal at 30¢. Butter—Creamery, 2) to 29¢}; dairy, 141 to 15e. i
Cheese—Manitoba, 8 to she, Milifeed—Bran, $9, and shorts $11 per ton in bulk; large lots, 50c per ton less. |
Ground reed—Barley chop is quoted at $15 per ten. Oil cake is quoted at $25 to
i
2-1 per ton.
fggs~ Dealers are paying 18¢ for re- ceipts here, |
Dressod Meats—Beef, 5 to 5}c; mutton ve to The; lambs, Se; hogs, 7e to’! 740; veal, large calves, Se to .3e: real | veil, ble to Te.
Poultry Mixed lots of dressed chick- | ens will bring lve per lb, and 12¢ has’ been paid for nice lots of spring chick ens. but the teudency 1s lower. Dressed
urkeys will bring lle, and ducks 1c
per lo (rame—Mallards, 30 to 40e per pair; canvas backs, 40 to 50c, and small varie-
tics 20 to 25e per pair. Waveys and small geese, 1) to 50e each; large geese. ove each; rabbits, 7 to Se each, Vegetables— Potatoes, 50¢ per bushel: turnips, 15 to 2ve per bushel; parsnips, the per 1b; carrots, 40c; beeta, 4Uc per bushel, celery, 2'¢ per dozen; cabbage, to 40e per dozen: onions. &1.00 rer bush.; Spanish onions $2 pcr crate: eit. ons scarce at 1 to Me per Ib. Rides—No. 1, 74; No. 2, 64e; kip, 6c to The; calf, Te to %c; sheepskins and mbskins, 24 to 40c; horse hides, 75c to each: colts, 25¢ each. Wool— Unwashed Manitoba fleece, Se Le 8) Sle, dallow—No 1, 3he, No. 2, 2ke to 3c. Seneca Root—20¢ per pound. Hay---Baled. $7.53 for cars here; loose. Zl)t $15 per ton on the street. Cattle— Butchers’ cattle are Zhe to dc
Export cattle quoted at 3c to Sie.
Sheep—Ske for good to prime animals:
la $1
Phe z bie TN ON r q thoe : Ta ; 4 . ior horses, and those offering have met
with a ready saleat .rom $50 to 875 each A Jot « f
Montana horses were auctioned off
on Friday and realized the aghove| prices. The average would be about $53. Hogs—Good bacon hogs at Ofe off cars Lere.
ART OF HOSPIPALIDY HAS IT BE@N ENTIRELY LOST IN THE RUSH AND HURRY OF THE DAY?
A Tribute to the Good Old Days When People Were Asked to Stay to Tca —-The | Guest of Today Takes “Pot Luck,” anc the Guest Doesn't Like It.
There is a nuticoable and deplorable cu cline in hospitality.
Of course it is easily enough accounted for—everything in life, you Krow, has reason for being. It is the rush and hrov; of the day that hag brought about tx change.
In the ‘good old days’’ which somo et us remember and others of us only nos about agit is all told of in stories or re counted tenderly by our elders a har-ne meant a place into which one’s frienc- might come and be welcome.
There were no street cars to hurcy away on from place to place, and so there wis no such thing as getting around to pay a! dozen calls in one afternoon, unless one was fortunate enough to have a carriaze.
In the ‘‘good old days’’ people were ask ed to stay to tea if they were belated ata friend's house. It was counted a teribk oversight of the kindly art of hospitality to let one go hungry from one’s bome | has gone out of fashion, though. to ass one’s friends to stayto tea. ‘Vheo bus. housewife says she is glad it bas, thet st must have been a dreadiul amount o! trouble for her mother when there was i ways the chance of having a yuest in to: house. But her mother, now a silvers haired grandmother, shakes ber head ana persists still that they were “goad ol days”’ and sighs ever the lack of hospits! ity that exists in modern homes,
Long ago it was bot uncomnnon to hav: a guest remain a weck who had original, thought to stay onlya day. ‘here wa little or nothing thoucht of suchan even! for homes that were situated far apa”. wero not easily reached if the weather v: not fine, and besides that ‘‘family friend- shared so many common interests.
The guest of long ago was not lnade t feel that he or she was a burden, no test ter whether this was really so. A hous without a ‘guest chamber’? was an 2 tmosi unknown thing. Nowadays the ‘spar | bedroom”’ is hard to tind in the ordinary | home.
Don't you remember tho ‘spare bed room’? of your childhood? The bed i: that room was always higher and pulli: | than any other bed in the house, and it: | spread and pillowshams were the best The green and red carpet was alway: speckless and spotless, and the linen ket | for that room was the fimest that the) household boasted. There were cheerful | pictures on the walls and mottoes worked | in worsted cross stitch, with clusters o/ red berries and bright autumn leaves put about their frames if it was winter anc flowers if it was scumimer.
Nothing was too good for that chamber where would rest the chance or inviteo | guest. In your childish way you krew it was something very nice, and there was: feeling of awe that crept over you wher ever you were sent to that bright, cheerfu: | room to get anything.
The guest of today ‘‘takes pot luc.’ | Does the guest like it? Ithink not. The | chiefest delight in visiting a country home lies in the fact that you are made company of. It is so flattering to have folks appear | anxious to please you and interested ir making you have a geod time. And by) letting the country hostess do all this you | are making her far heppier than yor} would by going into the kitchen ‘to help,” and insisting that you are to be treated “just like the home folk.”* Don’t you know, my dear woman, or man, that yea. ‘annot make yourself oneof a home circle | inaday? And don’t permit yourself t& ever make that vain endeavor. When you | go a-visiting, be glxd to be treated usa) visitor, You'd feel very awkwerd if all in ashort day you were trented “just like home folks,’’ when these same folks have grownup used to the “‘treatment’’ ther pet.
I know that in a crowded city svery ex tra room ineans so inuch extrarent. Ti may not always be possible to have the) spare room) all ready and waiting for th: coming guest, but when the gucst doc- arrive for a Gay ora week, do make thi stay as heppy and comfortable a onc a- possible. You may fancy that this is what | every housewife will baturally do, but it isn’t. We have got so practical that even hospitality is faust being looked upon. as a foolish sentiment that is best put uside and done with,
One does not need to visit for any preat. length of time to learn that hospitality is sadly on the decline. There are, to be! sure, homes where it holds sway in the good old fashioned way, and these are not all homes where riches abound — either. There is one home that I know where the Btrictest of economy is from necessity practiced, and yet one never goes ther but one feels that the welcome is so cor- dial and that the plain little dainty lanch- eon isthe best that could be served any- | where. The delightful air of hospitality that pervades it all makes one forget to notice that the rich old brocade is sadly worn on the chair bottoms and that the draperies in the dining room are much faded. ‘The mother and daughters of that household do not hesitate to ask the yrost fashionable caller if she looks tired to tuke of her hat and have acup cf tea. They take it for granted that if any one thinks. enough of them to visit them they expect | to be made cordially weleome to the best their homme affords. Are these old fash- ioned people popular? Well, ask the foll:s Who always keep their names at the Very tops of their visiting lists,—Muargaret Hannis in St. Louis Republic.
Se ——
How to Care For Gems.
Pearls should never be dampened. They should be exposed to air as much a possible.
‘Turquoises must not be whetted and are liable to change color.
Opals must be kept from fire and beat, a3 a hich temperature renders them liable to split and fall from their settings.
Coral may be washed with soap and water.
Jet must be repaired by means of jewel- | ers’ cement,
Ivory may be washed and exposed to air and sunlight to keep it a good whitecolor. |
a grizzly bear and her two cubs.
_ to hope that he might escape.
rs ees ee SS Ses
THE PREY OF A GRiz2Ly. By a Little Oversight Bruin Was Robbed of a Good Meal.
a the early settlement of California grizzly bears were numerous and trouble some, but few men ever had a more sin. gular experience with a grizzly than Pau! — = rt & tannery near Santa
‘ruz. e story is told by Mrs i ‘*My First Holiday.” salma ics Mr. Sweet was one day w:
; alkin lone in the woods, when he came ZX alion
suddenly upon He was quite unarmed, and before he had time to consider any plan of action the bear was upon him. She struck him down, but 4, kept his presence of mind and lay perf... ly quiet. ; The grizzly stood over him for a»); or more, then seized him by the wajc:) ane and began dragging him along He g;) not resist, and she dragged him for 4 q,,,. en rods to a little sandy hollow, whore she dropped him and began digging a bole ip the sand. Intothis hole she rooted ¢)
e
/ man, and then nosed and pawed the sand
over him until he was buried from sight. The prudent animal, not being hungry at the moment, was making acache of her prey.
Mr. Sweet's heart lightened as he rea’ ized the brute’s intentions, and he began hie waited afew minutes after the bear had covered him in, and then, thinking that she had retired from the scene, he began to work himself free very cautiously. The grizzly was on the watch, however, and at tie first movement of her prey rushed to the spot and with two or three strokes of her paw snugly tucked him in again. *
Mr. Sweet instantly became motionless again and allowed himself to be reburied in the sand. Luckily his hat had slipped over his face, so that the sand did not fi!) his nose and eyes, and by raising his head a little he was able to throw off the sand sufticiently to breathe.
He was more wary next time and lay still for an hour or two, until he felt pretry sure that the grizzly had retired from the spot. Very cautiously then he worked himself free from the sand and crept awar
A KING AS AN AMERICAN SUITOR. Louis Philippe Rejected by a Merchant, but Accepted by a Menarch.
“One day the Duke ef Orleans prepared his attire with all the solicitude of a young man and lover,’’ says William Perrine in an article in The Ladies’ Home Journal on the times when Louis Philippe taught school in Philadelphia. “If his white knee breeches were of cloth, his stockings were certainly of silk. He picked out from his traveling chest the shirt most lavishly lace beruffied at bosom and at wrist. He don- ned his silk waistcoat, artistically brocad ed on a white ground. His coat of dark green silk had tails that reached his ankles, and in one of the pockets was an elegant snuffbox from Versailles, while the other held an equally elegant kerchief. Witha bunch of seals pendent from either fob, a long polished cane in his hand and a bea- ver hat of most graceful curve upon his long black hair, our royal suitor put his best foot foremost and was off to propose for his ladylove’s hand—to her father Hoe halted under the twin buttonwood trees that shaded the front of the mansion of Mr. Willing, who might be his father. in-law, and he rapped with the knocker at the ‘loor, whilo his heart went pitapat at the thought of Mistress Abigail, who might be his wife. The wide, generous hal! admitted him to the parlor, the fold ing doors a little lateradmitted Mr. Thom- as Willing, arbiter of his fate, and the pro posal was made in form. Mr. Willing re- plied: :
* Sir, should you ever be restored to your hereditary position you will be too
great a match for my daughter. If not she is too great a match for you.’ “More than a dozen years elapoed.
Louis Philippe, still poor, still exiled fron his country, was in Sicily. Freneh armies had driven thither from his throne Ferdi nand IV, king of Naples, and in that king 3 daughter, Marie Amelie, Louis Piilippo found the living image of his early love The king of Naples was not good at ant theses, His acquaintance with politics was better than his command of rhetoric He graciously answered, ‘Yes.’ "’
Tired Metals,
It is a fact of comparatively recent dis covery in chemical metallurgy that metals lose their vitality from repetitions of shocks and strains and may be said, as the expression is, to suffer from fativue—that is, ther may be worked till their molecul s fail to hold together, and then they are in & state of exhaustion As is familiarly known, bars of tin, rods of brassand wires of any metal will separate, owing to fs tigue, if bent backward and forward cou tinuously. But by careful experiments however, the fact is made to appear that 4 remedy exists for this condition of metal- if the overstrain dses not border on ruy ture, and this remedy is very much }is: that which is applied in the case of a overworked human frame—namely. Feather edged tools recover their vital’ better than any other. Of course length of time required for this rest varies with different metals and the amount ot strain to which they have been suljectes Hard metals, such as iron and steel. > up one and two years’ time in the proces On the other hand, soft metals, like load retain their cohesive force longer and aiev require less rest,
Not the Maine. She—Do you remember the— He—No chestnuts now. She—Errands I asked you to do ft ad
And he collapsed.— Boston Couricr.
A Simple Version. The Spaniards had some colonies Not very long ago All scattered round from east to wes? As every one dues know.
But Weyler and some other chaps, They didn't treat folks right,
And Unele Som, he eouldn’t stand Such actions in his sight.
And go his anger riz and riz Until he felt no doubt, But set alout his hounest biz And cleaned those dagoes ont. —Cieveiand Piain Dealer.
The Progress and Vidette
E, N. W. T.
TA PPELL
4Amarrns Cleverness of Birds. oe ¢s something very remarkable
{ soon almost reasoning powers manl- ;,-+-4 occasionally by birds in eluding ' r in turning attention from ‘nay nests and young, but in few is : » NOTICE al le thanin the duck
rT. ¢ *"s marrafive of
ants? %} Black’s ion the tollo wing
iand expedit
this Is given:
of bis companions, Mr. King, shot a female duck, fired again he thought. disabled its male
Accordingly, leaving the
which he bad the mortifica- : --cing shortly afterward carried ' of the white headed eagles, | into the water after the drake,
far from being fluttered or | remained motionless, as if ‘to be taken up. Still, as he it glided easily away through little nooks and windings. es he reached ont his hand and, having at last with uee managed to coop it up from which there appeared scape, he was triumphantly , wh to take it when, to bis ment, it looked around at ‘Quack!’ and then flew ’ so strongly that he was convinced : rhitit at all. The bird’s
riy wasto draw the gunner |
a I ts npaniol Pagodas as Sin Offerings.
Just rewers and other evil men in Eng { cenciliate heaven by erect- i s sot bold, bad, bloody
irman makes it all right for stence by erecting pagodas. ntothe height of the pa-
: | }eap of sin disappears. And as
1¢ rest of us, looks
n, ilse tl > ‘
/ 2 oWn wants rather than those stors, he builds a pagoda all t ina allows his grandfather’s ver. An uncle of the deposed Eing must have — round shouldered - with the weight of his wrongdoings.
at
rs) ,
the breezy
foot of Mandalay eminence, admi- ‘e youan appetite and a pain
in the back—he built 729 pagodas, though the guides count wrong and Te are only 450. But perkaps
ller number ‘ch’s uncle,
out not
y to expose t real magnitude
: ness. The pagodas are all
i set oat in rows, and under
were what 4 pronounced to be
. We were wrong, for the
? were not tothe dear de-
parted, but coustituted a complete copy , } .
: Pali tongue.—Travel
When Wellington Was Mad.
I ar Ni ho] Jas’ Visit to Ww 12 :dsor ja 1844 af i Muteay an opportunity | to } r nt at one of the few occasions when the Duke of Wellington lost con- t fh f He did it at a review
re the queen, her imperial guest,
and the royal family, when, contrary to
his : ied f the queen's con-
: venir t guus were fired. The hero
i hundred fights stormed in ‘‘a most ‘ na a
When the pri tried to pacify him
t is dow *s a mistake,
iti ry good of vou
ss {oO ¢ use if, but there
IMIstauk Mili ar) orders
inctually obeved, and so
ig as Lcommand the army they shall
The peror Was astonish-
and t suits hed at each otker a é
K faces, 1 the artillery
wus ordered off the maneuvering ground
Cardinal Manning's Humor. Dr. Manning had a strong sense of humor and delighted in telling Irish es. One related to an Irish laborer, v was thus addressed by a passing Englishman: \ at s that von're building, Pad-
: Shure an it’s a churrch, yer
r isiata P stant church” ‘ r honner A Catholic church, the Indade an it is that same, yer r ‘I’m verv sorrv to hear it,
Pat. So's the devil, yer honner.’’
The cardinal on one occasion arrived n full ril t, though informing bis friends that he had been all but run ‘ i he added: “If the accident bad been more « ial, my epitaph
tf pia Ve been
~ = - ¢ i. 13.
Hi s Tt i
— Westminster Gazette Foxy Ways of the Japs.
T first ten days that ome spends Nress 1 wit the idea pie th are t best to be t But httie bv httleth vns thatt bowing and
i i Shamnred and tf t th re as unscrupulous as any cannot be trusted to keepa itis not favorable to the:
ve establishments, espe
t els, OF alW avs fin is a
is CH r, Seemingly the Jap- iiraid to trust one another
ire gnite different. They liand honest and kave a lov- ture I have met a large num- toreiguers who have — se Women al they are all en-
c Mm their prals Tacoma
> ide to Ir urh anda scme seem to think they must put in 9) y fa ‘ a . wat |
CYtSiGH! FOR LIBERTY.
A Missouri Convict’s Desperate and Ori¢- inal Efforts to Escape.
An inmate of the workhouse at Kansas City named Bond exercises exceptional in- genuity in h‘s efforts to escape. A skort
ime ago he became so rebcliious found necessary to lock him up in the dark cell with his hands handcuffed. While there he plazned to escape by assaulting the guard, hoping to knock him senseless and escape before assistance could be sum- moned. The scheme was well planned, but miscarriea. Shortly locked up in the ce, which also contained another prisoner, he called for the guard and complained that the handcutls were s0 tight they hurt his wrist. The mz: were lengthened out a notch end guard left. As soon as he was gone Bond slipped his Icft hand out of the irons, leav-
ing the handcuffs dangling from his right
hand, Then the other prisone r, who had consented to aid in the plan to escape, called for the guard, Shes he was sick and needed assistance. As the guard en
tered the cell Bong struck him over the
head with the handenffs, knocking him te the floor, but not rende ring him uncon- scious. ‘The latter was on his feet in an
instant, grappied with the desperate pris- |
oner and called guards rushed in secured.
Bond was quiet for some time after this escapade, but lately has been complaining
for assistance, Other and the two men were
ricles | the |
after he was)
of being very sic k, and on several occ a: |
sions tried to induce Assistant City Pliysi- cian Lapp send him to the Daceiak The doctor examined the man, and, ascer-
to
taining that the sickness was imaginary | and convinced that his only object in
wanting to be sent to the hospital was to secure a better chance to escape, ined to have him sent there.
dec!
Subsequently Dr. Lapp was summoned |
to the workhouse to see Bond, whost eyes were found to be terribly inflamed and al- most closed, and as the nature of the case was serious Bond was taken to the hospi- tal. where it was found that he had rub- ed some poisonous substance in his eyes
in order to make thein sore, so he could be |
pent to the hospital.
He succeeded only too well, it is the
as
opinion of the attending physicians that as aresultof the injection of the — nm in kis eyes he will become totally blind,
In the
4 Cary
meantime he has been c ‘ate em toa in the hospital for in his ent condition he may make an effort lo get away. Should he recover and serve out his time he will be at once rearrested on the charge of felonious assault on a
fear even
rors bea 4
guard and perhaps for some even more |
serious crime, which he seems tothin been discovered and azcainst him.
nay be charged
KING OF THE NIGHT.
k has |
late of an isiast kpinen Monarch Whe | Staid Out Too Late. Keven the emperor of China is not so!
much a slaveof court etiquett« of Porto Novo, a Fri
teasthe king
writes neh explorer
of Africa. ‘Tradition forbids him from going out after dark for fear he might
meet the terrible king of the night. It is
believed that if the two kings, he of the
day and heof the night, were to meet, they would provoke the divine anger, and one or the other of them would die, ac-
mectin to twilight or to dawn. After his accession Toffa, the new occu- pant of the day job, decided that he would ys go to bed early and that his court uid do the same. so much severity that he had occa- sion to execute a large numberof relatives surprised while taking nocturnal strolls,
cording as the
miwit
with
“took place nearer
He enforced this rule |
The night king ther®ore had the field | to himself, His munifestations consist in ; running through the streets of Porto Novo, with his followers, shrieking and
t the moon.
he king of the night plotted against the lif his majesty of the day King Totfa and his counselors held a con- nee astothe best methods of outwit-
ting the night monarch without offen:
shuking rattles a
3 : Recently 1
ng
(* ¢
¢ ry if
din g
against customn. Therefore Toffa resol teed to prolit by a lapse from ancient tradition nthe part of his enemy. Toffa’s follow-
ers W aited f should ree ad «
raday when the king of the
retnain up until the dawn tf slinking home as usual just be- {sion the
tabout 7 10%
lwo days after thei i? Night was ce:
i@ morning,
king lock as he was about to
ATTIR®?
rinto hisown palace, followed by claves rryving bottles of gin He was i fantast i ly bey ma descrinpti i had rings in his nose and ears, his face was painted. and he wore a headdress com sed of human bones and vultures’ feath rs. He was very drunk. loffa’s men gagged him carefully
ed him in a hamunock and carried him
i t i pi ~on. ioifac d have killed the man. but on bys tercession of the French resident he ‘elv banished him. Another king of t now reigns,-but he has a whole respect for 1 fa, king of the day.
ne a rR Ne ee
\- ae Ut eee a OT ee Ua Na et re eee
Healed.
Nothing like B.B.B. for healing sores and ulcers, no matter how large or how chronic they may be. B. B. B. applied externally and taken internally according to direc- tions will soon effect a cure. It sends rich, pure blood to the part, so that healthy flesh soon takes the place of the decaying tissue.
‘I had beea troubled with sore fingers and sore toes around the nails. The salve I was using did not help me and I was getting worse. I was advised to try Burdock Blood Bitters, and after using nearly two bottles my sores were
ail healed up. ‘Burdock
consider B.B.B. a wonderful blood - a purifier.” ENOCH 00 G. HORST, Bloom- = Ont. sitters. The Returned Soldier. **IT couldn't interest that girl at all.’’ “Why not?’ ‘“‘Every time I began to describe a battle or a neval engagement she told
ine she had seen it in a biograpb."’ Detroit Free Pr
A Masecniine Mouth. **She has a you think?’’ ““Wery. I fancy she couldn't hold more than a dozen pins in it te save her life.’’—Derroit Journel,
—
masculine mouth, don't
a--s 8021 Dread.
**No.’? muttered Creneral Blanco. as
he appended his mame to his written resignation, ‘‘I am not afraid to stay here and meet the Americans, but I can't face that typewriter joke any longer. Human endurance has its lim- its. "’—Chicago Tribune,
TO CUCRE A COLD IN ONE DAY.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to onre. woCs
Helped Him. ‘*The war bas developed John’s mem- ory wonderfully.’’ “In what way: ‘*He can sing four lines of the ‘Star | Spangled Banner’ almost correctly.’’ @oveland Plain Dealer.
Le
Some Still Living. “I see a Utah man has risked his life | to paint ‘Remember the Maine!’ high up on the face of a great cliff.”’
“What of it? You didn’t suppose the |
’ es
fools were all dead yet, did yon?’ Chicago Post.
Made Them All Work.
Mr. Luxoe—Then ta foreign servants? Mr. Tariff—With a wife and threm grown daughters? Not I, I believe in| encouraging home industry. —Brookiyn | Life. af Mingle folly with nobody will associate
your
ir
wisdom, « with you,
PLae..
BARGAI NS
2.
FARM LANDS
Call or write for my hs
Aj pls Lo WM. HARVEY
210 Portage Ay., Cor. Main St., WINNIPEG.
- lla J meee > oe x =e Le BILLIARD AND POOL TA" NEW AND SECG®D D-2 AND, Bist! , ETS AND SEPPLI—S. aE REID RIS 2 : RRO Se 2 Se se YP § § i ‘ j } j oe Oe ha a re
Set you don't believe
| Kastern
You drink tea because you enjoy it. You will enjoy
MONSOON °°, TEA Because it is perfect—and
you expect your grocer to have it when you want it.
Moonson ts a tea of such wholesome, appetizing strength
that, «nce drank, no dealer can persuade you to have any ‘rin price than others
While ew * WAR BTS OUD
othe: —and Monsoen is hy hicrhe
ABs
d i
BOVRIL
¥ Is pure beet
cooked ready for use, and in the most
VUONTDENSED PORM.,
ar at
Te
a
mere e@Xtract or’ essence,
8...
strengthens both and brain.
PREPARED
BOi RIL. Lssiteo, LONDON, ENGLAND. Canadian Branch:— 27 PETER STREET’
SY
ite
a ad =
ves LIMITED /
> ~~ > ey
THE MASTER >A ECHANIC’S) MECHANIC’ Ss)
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pes TOILET 150
mo NTREAL.: «AN
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os Weg t Chain & Charm
oS Ne doz packages f Exgut-
i vs Verfereee an Sen cesch: Send
acaires 1d we terward the perfume. tpaid, and cur PF enium List ‘
n ¥ fequired. Sl the perfume
| “mong your friends, return money, at a
i esend the watch. prepa! Ths ta @
venue American Watch. guarnteeda
‘ geo? Mention this paper BemeSpecialte Co 60 Victoria St.torente
iMmeprece
The Fashoda Question ——.—<_-
eth f
and quality o
ldier. with the resnit never in
doubt. bE plli ‘ly reliable is the British man-
ufacturer.
ENGLISH BRACES @ @ @
the hour .
OUR
of need.
MYRON BRIDE & CO.
Wholesale
rT ‘a
‘fen’s Furnishers, Winnipeg
724i Ska
by he A Solid Gold Shell Ring * : Ae a or Curb Chain Brac:!et
' ON'T send y. Just your name a : . +424 ea y Dd. uidress on a POST C49, and (Sb * oa z | nid n VO ‘ f° he. (35 7 we Wii Send yon } er Kayes © a AROMATIC CACHOUS, ack Gas con- —— feciion to perfume the breath, to sell m + , for us, if vou can, at 5 cents per package. When sold sen Genuive us our tioney, $1.00, and we will send you FREE vour Padlock choice of the beautiful prizes illustrated, Goods return and able if not sold. Mention this paper.
Key
TISDALL SUPPLY co., 2 TORONTO. Orr
Sun Insurance Ofiice, ) Assurance Co, {
Quebee Fire Insurance Company.
London and Lancashire Life Ins. Co
British and Foreign Marine Ins. Co
Licyd’s Glass Insurance Corapany. W. R. ALLAN,
Genrersl Agent, Winnipes
HAVE YOUR FALL STOCK WELL BROOMS Toronto, Ont.
ASSORTED WITH BOE AND WOODENWARE. —— : |
oe
Manufactared by BOECKH BROS. & Co. N U. 11
bk: eee Sa ee = ~ To bear disappointment brave ly is to | — rv worsan is as old as the neigh disconcert the fates bors remember she js.
= OF — LOW YDVUoN ENG.
PHEENIX ASSURANGE CO°Y
First British + Insurance } anada, A. D., 1904 } ; . : . ‘ — P ° ["— @ ‘ — | The above company is desirous of opening agencies in all towns throuzhont M: ee he ana ¢) \ hy x o le roe rea ot +) “ , + sa°.¢ ponresent j wWanirooa anu the NOTreuiwess err. Ti} vw littl P| ¥ aro RO L pr scrit ] reseuy and will be pleased tor ees eahi eek? ine apnad Wial De Pleaseu pa t VE ay pista ii% > , aD PAI RSON & SON. Chief Agents for the Dominion of Canad,
Montreal, Que.
The Manitoba Assurance Co. iS A HOME FIRE COMPANY. MONEY AT HOME BY INSURING
DIRECTORS:
{CGH
KEEP YOU;
Joun MacDona President.
A.}3 H. H. Beck. Vice CROTTY Agents, Winnipeg. AGENTS WANTED IN UNREPRESENTED TOWNS AND DISTRICTS. W. L. Wait, Agent, Qu’Appelle.
LD. CROTTY HALL.
H. S. Roper.
JOHN RUSSELL, [ p as - Le ATTON, W.J. TUPPER
- « Seen +
mas iter
i ics ei
and Manage r.
Dn CROSD,
>
OE FS evi 8 ee tw hoe
THE
ee
ease
~
Vol
ae |
Che Ou Mr : licies. Wedoen’t say one thing es: i here and anything contrary else- where, though we may not say the same. If we come tua man that the well augur has passed to get to some one that supported Bulyea, we remind him of the fact. That Lotge Cureulation--Good Advertising Med-|isn’t very dishonest, (Rulyea: juw— First-class Jou Depait- “Name?”) Mr. Vicars, One man ment, was told that the augur wes in the | district that elected Mr, Bulyea and All orders by mail or otherwise executed would remain there, Bulyea has promptly and satisfactorily. | been negligent xbout the trails ‘around here. Que man is taking | whent to McLean and losing 24c a ener because of the trails. I bie os ‘may say, however. that I like | Bulvea better than Vicars as a man “THE PROGRESS,” and outside parry lines would vote Asea., N.W.T, | for him beforu | would for Vicars, but I am keeping in mind the next Dominion election. I don’t think | Mr, Hawkes needs to come here to == | tell us how to vote,
Political Mass Meeting.
A weekly paper deaoted to local and general uewe. Fablished every Thursday morping by
DJ. ZARTLEY.
Correspendence Solicited.
— a
Qu Appelle Station,
THURSDAY, NOV. 3, 1898
MR. HAWKES, FOR MR. BULYEA.
A few years ago my right tu be ‘here might have been challenged, request of the premier, and I did but then affairs were entirely local. wow Violate my neutrality in doing | Now there has been a great change. so. Another complaint is that 1| We have responsible government tried te influence electors at Wol-| with acabinet, the members of Well, I only was there an | which are in the same ‘position S| hour end was only in conversation | members of a Provinci 1 yovern-
ith Jerley, so there’s not much in ‘ment. One clear issue is before tliat [the country for them, they must
I find that Vicars uses two | either stand or fall, and no one 1s
ments in his canvass, (1) In compelied to be cramped in. their!
12, 13, 14 his appeal Is on | own CoMsliLuehcy with these en- |
ie 5 (2) la Ranges 15 and ‘larged powe rs. Another leason for
1G he telis them they have been | my presence here is that the W hite- | eclectd by nct having a wel] | wood member is a Conservative, |
They don’t mention Con-| yet the Liberals supported him,
wy there. Is that an attack and I hope my presence here will jublic works system? I) repay them to a small extent. |] | hve him to say that Usat work |am a strong,Conservative, as von | udiciously laid out. They ‘all know, and itisa novel exper: | ns inly settled parts and ience for me to be speaking for n| e people that they should Liberal against a Conservative, but, | ) ave il good roads thee. Gentlemen, il Was hever clearer to “ T mein my life that [ was doing my li n the electors to frown down , ouly asa true citizen of the North- h appeal to the individual. ‘West. I don’t know enough about | Now. before Mr. Hawkes takes the Mr. Bulyea personally to support: sdatioam, Linviteany of Mr. Viears’) him as an individual, but [I sup- up potters to come forwaid in his port the Haultain- Ross admyinis- celeace. for I see his tration, of which he Is a member Wolhers present, and i! i emove thie their arguments I wall usk von to vote far IV Gp pure tits. iy J. Hi. Mac aul, ll support are hob a conlition brut a comhine | of Mir, Vicars. ‘ation, and we can’t afford to ex- | Bulyea said Viears had been , ye ment at a ciitical period ot
the history ef the Termtones like | Maes Conservatives, do you. re-; the present, auc turn them ont oa r the meeting whe) “we de.'men that we don’t know what
) O}}] OSe Mir. Neth: rare } erfect
Continued from Page 1.
: | ~——ety o
SNC) A CANVASS Teast nal ?
Haultain-Russ com- |
|
BOTne Ol
Lination and no other two men will do the work they are doing,
They | tok the platform. tout atthe last bv ai tew
A they will do mnect haut thes have pr Ved
Bulyes ? lee Was appointed to
thre moelves indian Ilead Ci
rscrvatives and | to be honest, capable aud tried, |
out a man. It was although not- faultless. You have |
while ago. Now. Mr. Bulyea no guarantee as tu the ability of |
l have been good triends ex- uny ol the others. Who is) the} t election times. but as seon | opposition leader ? A Conserva- |
key was turned on the ballot: trve, but we lave a Cuuseivative |
' ose feelings were forgotten premier and why put in an in-| I hope it will be so again. J ferior man? — Tam not dictating |
Mr Bulvea has done his;to you, but lay ng down a bread |
me well as our repres- , pvinciple. Upset the government |
Appelle Progress Mr. Bulyea said we had two | that there are parties, I won’t sy eak
| nig ¢.
VEDETTE.
ee
No. 4
ST i A
for Mr. Bulyea, As Vicars comes forward he is an opponent of Haul- tain-Ross in that he believes in party lines, He has no broader issue. But if Haultain-Ross are worthy our support, then support them. Support those that support them, particularly support Mr. Bulyea, a colleague with them in the cabinet. Mr. MacCan] said Ross wouldn’t support a Cunserva tive. That is not so. He is at this very minute either on his way tu support a Conservative at Sas- katchewan or else he is already there. Mr. Hawkes mentioned other places where Ross had also supported a Conservative, and said this shows that Ross is not drawing party lines. Haultain-Itoss are uot a fraud. There’s is a real and honest government. Outside Qu’Appelle there is not a party fight going on in he Territories. Is Vicars addreag sufficient do intro- duce it?) Gentlemen, think if you
A. E. IREDALE
Fort Qu’Appelle, Assa.
Fall and Winter Goods to hand"
This week we have just opened up a large consignment
consisting of General Dry Goods, Gents’ Underwear, Cloth- Ing, etc. °
We also have a most complete stock of Men, Women and Children’s Rubbers and Overshoes in all styles and at prices to suit the times.
Parties wishing to purchase any of the above lines will do well to in- spect our goods before buying elsewhere. No trouble to show gouds.
weeitt Geulenen. wok itn! = AE [REDALE & CO.
are doing. He will be the conser-; “™
vative party, all in himself. Think H KN RY H. HAYWA RD,
of the State and Grandeur of the General Merchant, Company Ave., Fort Qu’ Appelle. man, alone n the house. People
will point him out as the Conserva- tive party of the Territories. For go dness sake out of mercy for the man defeat him. He will not be able to sit with the government; he will not be able to sit with the Cp-| G@ENT’S position, for they are not conserva- tives, but alone in sate and grane | deur, there he’ll be. There will be ne seconder tu the Conservative motions;. The Conservative party will alone vote for its own motion. What a position to occupy, by the FOOTWEAR ‘
Conservatives of Qu’Appelle, dis- All sorts and sizes of boots and shoes in leather and felt goods.
tinguished, standing before Canada | MITTS and MOCCASINS ie a
different from every other constitu- itis: bese buchshas malte=a apecmnty,
nev! Again, gentlemen, I say, out! G
us the ies Bi of your i: ee See Tinned gooda of all descriptions, inclading and in pity for the man don’c place naa himin such a position. McCaul} MEATS has admitted here to-night and ev- |
The attention of residents in Fort Qu’Appelle and its vicinity is res- p‘ctfully called to the largeand varied stock now on hand, consisting of
DRESS GOODS
In alljstyles and shades—Ladies under and over skirts, Golf Jerseys, Skirtings, Underwear, etc.
Heavy Underwear. CLOTHING
Ready-made for Yen, Youths’ an d Boys’ suitable for the season and all prices
Shirts in all sizes and weights.
FURS
Hats, Caps, Overcoats, etc.
‘Tinned in all lines. The best dry salt meats procurable. and brewkf «st bacon highly 1recommended.
ery body in the Territories knows | TEAS Headquarters for the follominy choiee brands of package teas—Lipton's that Bulyea isa good man, Why Ram Lal's, Salada and Blue Kibben. Bulk Japans, Congoes, Pekoes. throw him into oblivion for a man | that can simply sav, “ll am a con- servative.’ It would be a disgrace tou this constituency te do so. Me-| Caul said Vicars was canvassing to- | 3
Well, considering the con- | Qu Appelle Valley Hote dition of the roads and the time of | night T dou’t think he is canvassing T don’t say She 13 not, I say 1 think he | isnot, There i3 no law to prevent aman thinking what he pleases | and Lam justtelling yon what | think. Vicars should be here: if | that is the conrse of conservatives, | a man ashamed to defend his actions | before the electors, I will have to | reconsider my position.
Sugar cured hams
Crockery aud Glassware Silverwa:e, Xmas Goods, 1 carload of freth Groceries from the east}; 1 carload of saltin bbis, and bays. Green winter apples by the bbi. _. Piices grestiy rednced, Call and examine for yourselves.
THE ONLY LICENSED HOUSE AT FORT QU’APPELLE,
A full line of the choicest brands of Wines Liquors, Ales, etc., is kept at the bar for the convenience ui tue pubiic and visitors.
Parties sceking HEALTH OR RECREATION find the QU’APPELLE LAKES
just the logaity to mest tier réqjuiremuats, as well as a SPORTSMAN PARADISE, ae ia RnB
ROBERT S. SMITH, Prep., Fort Qu'Appelle, N.W.T
NOTICE
v* } W hy, I | None is hereby given that in acer d- | can’t express my astonishment on i HN TON ance with the provisions vi 1@ arriving here to find that Vicars | a 5 — West Irrigation (ct, te waders n- ie =
bas fied the memorials and plan e- | quiredjby Section 1} of the said Ac « th the Commissioner of Public Works, at Regina. ‘The applicant applies for the right t- m- pound snaflicient water from a tribntar)
did’nt Intend to address the electors | 1 would be extremely sorry if the | electors should set their seal to such | a proc-eding, in this enlightened |
Headquarters for
ardware,
| , : ave of 1898, with our advanced civ- | the Qu’Appelle Hivevon the 8. W. 3 ui ‘ive at Mevina. and his policy {and it will result with great andj} ©. ‘a li hick . G +] Section 1%, Township 19. Ranga 12 Wee a wlie expeuditure has been | Jasting detriment to this important | lization, endorse a poncy © iC 4 est a ‘et ary of the 2ni Meridian, for domestic and ee presi : ee oe } = “, ., | date nut be made public. Stock-watering purposes, and for tue night better than ever before. Mr Bul-| part of Canada. dt is sald Moss | Mr. Hawkes here pave a descrip. STOVES to constrnet the necessary works as shown id Vicars was broneht cut as) is the real premier, aud he is a|.. ; ‘ee 5 Pe ae and eversthing in the Tin an | by the plaus and memorials filed, to enaii+ D 5 . : Be se ‘ tion of the history of the Territories | Granuiteware line, . . «tthe water so diverted tu be used fox tue a (Conservathy Grit. My Conservativeism 1s 4s ; : re ' vy a | as any iI say R showing the advancement of the | —— said domestic and stock watering purposes Mi Buly ea: | simy ly quoted goo! as any here, anc aay Ross Jast IY years Haultain. Russ. Oli- , Call and see my on the following iands; Southwest } Sect: u a the ladmwu Head Vidette (is not the real premier, lL looked , ~ nf 3 ; ps new get-uv ot 19, Town-hip 1y, Kaugesla West of sud a ee Ser facts. and 1 een cama: shaetee and others had brought it suc- | Meridian. rs jac a: aon aAgTER a) acls, If v 1av | : 5 . ae - Mipsis = - sat Sis aailesiia. séclain: foc. mail aan cessfully to the budding point in its. anterns JOHN A. REID rit Shalapyears 1 the idetle auita PHO 1s ( ONStT Va | ,. + | ’ : ouncl ' AY n Un eT ae e : history and if they are left to pur- Clerk of the Executive Cou! . the tacts at all. Now,!tive, is the real and not ouly the i
(is an honest Gnt and I res. vominal premier. toss, though a
1 rot. He wante us to| Grit, Is a vood Westemrp man. | Glink, OUlL We want a Con- These tWo men are the ablest in|
, hit becanse of w, but for fear party lines: gether tor the public good. Don’t introduced. ana vou aw party lines. It will mean
know La Win Stlwtion up there is an| disaster to the Conservative party
low society!” that pat each Usroughout the Territeries. It is ' the back and say. “We'll to our interest to let well alone. each other” When party ; Whitewood has always been a hot Does we ciawn Bulyea will be a party district, yet Gillis, though a/| (it. Vicars
came into the field hot Conservative, was put im by ac- te and as tew votes are influenc d 'clamation by the Liberals,
Tl know “A Meeting of this kind. he js NO politics in Territorial elections batt
er employed in canvassing to- | and the lounger it remains that way Bight. the better. When the time comes
i is Nothing to beat | sue their curse a iittle further they
‘Sig hee These men know what they are do- | the need | the Territories, aud are yoked to- | :
Dated at Regina, 28th Oct., 1898.
_.. NITIC.E | N © i¢e ie hereby given that in accord- | LN danee with the provisions of the North
| Went Irrigation Act, the undorsigned 144 4 d | ' » = ‘ * Swe ‘ing and though not hurrying mat- led the memorials and plane require? Dy
: : | Section 11 of the sand Act with the Com-
ters have a noble end in view. Brett | M FE missioner of Public Works, hantee the oppesition leader, would slice | The applicant appiies for the right to 1m it up into two or more, with the —_——_ je nase Sf seotoe si tes. western capital at Calgary and we | ship 19 Range 12 West of the 2nd Meridiad ' would likely be joined tu Manitoba | pate 9s a = stock-wateriug pur, '*2>. ; - ‘and for the right to conatrnucs the neces-4F¥ aud share the debt of an older pro- worlig oe dlicitn We thabiiinanaaummariel
vince without receiving acent of val-
uein return. Sucha policy. But!
file, t0 enabie the water au divertep for the raid domestic and steck-wateriug purpost* that of Haultain should strike a | saan
on the foliowing lands, viz; the Northeast Don't palter |
quarter of Section 27 Townsbip 19 Kange J.R. NORTH
ouths market.
will unite all these powerful terri. | tories into one great province. |
We do a general buicher busi- ness in all its brauches.
Salt and fresh meat
Best quality ! always op hand.
Prices right | chord in every heart. 2, west of the 2nd Meridian. JOHN A, Keid Clerk of the Executive Connt.! Dated at Reg-na. Oct, 28, 1898.
Continued on page 8.
EE =m, Fort Qu'Appelle Grain Show.
+ the liet of Prize-Winners . eas atthe annaat exhibi- iv, Oct. 21s er AND DOMESTIC MANUFACTURES.
4 butter 1. Clifton Webster.
. 2 ib. rolla or printe—1 D, White,
CF (owl wWiN.
rs ayes home made bread—! a
2 F. W. Seymonr.
con ‘gmnon ted preserves frem garden » frait—1l J. Leader.
” ost axsorted preserves from wild trait—
0 siete
‘a / > Webater . Meesrs. Hal! and Anderson.
ROOTS.
,/ bashel Early Rose potatoes—1 J. on 2 Geo. Reed. “<2. ¢ bashel potatoes any other variety— + teaier, 2 Clifton Webster. rT : jozen Swede turnips—l F.W. Sey- _. 2+ F. Goodwin. “uy | gem white tornips—l F. W. Sey- ‘or, 2 J. Leader ‘lozen mangolds—l F. W. Seymour,
eave
I nae balf dozen heads eelery—1 H. J : L ond
Ha f peck essed onions—l J, Leader. Half peck onions any other kind—1 J. Leader
He f Jonen parsnips—1 J. Leader.
Half dozen table carrots—1 J. Leader, 2 y W
Half dozen
peymour, round r 2J. Leader Half dozen tong beets—1 i Leader, est aesortment vegetables—1 J. Leader. nesa—t J. Leader. -yetabie marrowa—1 H. B. Joyner. ‘ zo c trone—1 J. Leader. mpkins—1 J. Leader. a f dozen cobs of corn—1 J. Leader, 2 1 Webster. viges: Mesara. Pinlay MeKay and J, D.
beets—1 F. W. Sey-
* * 088
al pa
LADIES WOBEK.
s woollen shirt—1l Mise J. V. Cam- ~ F. Goodwin.
kuitied woo len socks or stockinge—
Jobn Dalrympie.
imitts 1F. F, Goodwin.
iwin, 2 aTi1tte *k gufit—2 Jobn Dairvmple.
1 FF. F. (se0d win. ee ] +" sJ. V. Cameron. t wWork—1 Mies J. V. Cameron. hild = Miss J. V. Cameron, 1] Miss J. V.
rf
steet da ned sock- Cam-
Mrs. McDonald and Mra
GRAIN,
. Joyner.
h Red Fvffe wheat—] J. Dal-
iftou Webster, 3 F. W. Sey-
shels white oats—1 F. W. Ser
Jedge: Mr. 8. UC. Elkington.
rectors in charge of exhibits: Mesers.
A lcDonald. KH. B. Jovner, W, M. Thom-
on, George Need, J. Ormiston, and Robt. ine . ser
-* > -e-
XiLLED ON THE TRACK.
}
t dressed fowls—l Geo. Reed, |
~") goes: Messrs. Finlay MeKay and J. D. GARDEN PRODUCE. T~- heals cabbage—! J. Leader, «, peadered cabbage—1J. Leader, > beads Savor eabbage--1 J. Leader i> beads eanliflower—l Lemler, 2 L.
{ madre coverics—2 John Dairymple.
| | | | | |
| |
;
{ '
' yroceries,
i
| }
evenings express killed & poor " under who, while under the fliqaor, lay down on the track wleep uever to wake. His name -~ = , tin Yozt and his h me waa on Col- ; . Buffalo, N. Y.. He was@ mar- 45 vearye of age and ieave hk o ul ight life alone. i n the grave tf a Me iv. With several c niseiien gu Aprelile lie cashed a Stee Si i ang after drinking vy wm bitti eft i Me Lean rey roe ab T ij@ Sume time a a e satisfactor 2 as ‘ t Yorba. 7 bod i ena i ¥ i t ry I A nd round the axle cf the car, the | he wheel first making the fact n that something was wrong, and the | twas the ing of the ghastly specta- Yesterday mn ning his ‘lothes with nev werefoundon the track where had been torn from his bedy by the } trai if there ix auyiuqguest it will be held la’ : : —__— -—. oo > +o LEBRET
The weather of the past th roe weeks has sagreeable Ojd Sol seems st anythiug except
been ettremely di a: wisllng to de alm
‘ A rch has been t pomag over the do sublic school. The buotiding 19 also
y whitewashed ay otherwise renova-
Messrs Caron and Miles paid a fiying Vis-
a t le Station on Sunday.
lai watan d Mr. F are removing to Qe i Appeile iren will ber
ch moixsed at the publi
; 7 } Barnes and family | Station. The ;
echoo!l Where they have been & ttending for | the past teu months. We sincerely wish that measure of success iu their schoo rk at Qu Appe le that has so marked t r efforts at Lebré at. We are pleased to learnthat Mr. D. H
Donald, the a pul tive Assembiv for this district, 18
pe returned by acelamation—a compli
lar tu eniber of the J.eg-
nt well-merited ou the part of Mr. Me- paid The Qu Aprerte Prooress with its Fort
22’ Appelle edition, will be mueh appreciat- here. We have always felt that the Fort
i vicinity should bes epresented by a local | ¥sp ator Mr. C. Conpal bas recently received a well-
Sseurted consignment of dry gocds aa
like y
——<— =
—
The Sacred Heart cemetery is’being con-
siderably entaryed and utnerwise improved iu APpearance.
+ o> @> -e-
AN EXPLANATION
In order to give the report of the public political diwenssion in South Qa ‘Appeliie, we have foregone the other local news fur this week. As the people of thed istrict are very much interested just now in this cam- paign, we need make no apologies as it will meet the approval of the majority of our reade*s.
To the Electors of the Electoral District of North Qu’A ppelle.
GENTLEMEN — The Loegis!ature having been dissolved, you will again be called upon to select a re- presentative. Two years ago you were good enough to elect me your representative for the then unex- pired term. I trust my actions during the term I have held the seat have met With your approval.
I shall, if elected to represent you again, endeavor to carry ou} and support to the best of my ability, the platform 1 then plaeed before you.
I am. Gentlcmen, Yeur obedient servant, Doxatp H. McDonatp. Fort Qu’Appelle, 21st October, 1898.
_— + Or aD +O >
NOTICE
otice is hereby given that in aecord- N ance with the provisions of the North Weet Irrigation Aet, the undersigned has fied the memoriais and plans requied by seetiod 1 of the said Ae t, wit h tue Ceom- mimioner of Pasi: Works, at itey ne The applicant applies for the right to impeuud sutiicient water,from a tributary of the Qu’ Appetle River, on the road allow- ance between Seestous 31 aud 36, Township 17, hanges l2and 13 West of the 2ud Mer- idian, for domestic and Stock-watering pur- and forthe right to construct the
by the planus and
poses, necessarY works 48 shown
memerin’s filed, to euabie the water so di verted to be nsed for the Said domostic and Stuck-watering purposes, on the following lands, V1IZ.; p TODS of Sections $1 and 36 fownship 17, Rauges 12 and 13 West of the 2ud Meelis an.
JOHN A. REID Clerk of the Exe Dated at Regina, 28th Oct.,
utive Council. 1898.
E.B.ROBINSON
VETERINARY SURGEON, All calls promptly attended to.
Office: - Fort Qu’ Appelle, Assa
“SKIN LIKE BABY’S
Skin diseases from the merest pimples te salt rheum, running sores, are quickly,
Ac A ALA LLLL LLL AOS it lt tt ee ee ES ee
ete RE CIE LL LCC
THE pairs NOV. 3, 1898.
ree eee _—- ——— +
FOR FALL and WINTER ©
ie
Don't forget that we carry full lines ‘of General Hardware, Nails, Bucksaws, Oil
$
Oil Cans, ete.
Notice to Creditors.
Don’t miss a chehce of securing s nice, cheap fall hat—they are selling fast.
Gents Fur Coats and Caps
at all prices
Jtudson’s Bey @ompany,
Fort Qu’Appelle.
ool
"Ladies’ Jackets, Flannelette Blouses and Wrappers, Shawls, Underwear & Footwear.
= «it
D. H. McDonald & Co.
Bankers and lasarance Agta, Foit Qn’Appelle, N.W.T
Money to loan. Notes discounted. ‘Advances on Wheat.
Collections made. Ezchange bought, Money transferred to and from Great Britain.
mt tek ae London, Eng.: Bank. Bankers: Im-
perial Bank of Canada, Win.
Farm for Sale.
——_—_——_——_—_——
W. Half Sec. 28, Tp. 19, Rge. 16
25 acres ready for crep; small frame and log house on premises. Rasy terms. All Seo. 15, Tp. 20, R. 16, west 2nd mer NE } 14, Tp. 17, B. 16, w. 2nd merd. Agents for sale of H. B. Co.. C. P. R., Ont. & Qu'Appelle Land Co., and Can- ada Northwest Land Co.'s lands.
D.H.McDonaid &Co.,
(FORT QU'AFPELLE, wrt
IN THE 8U PREME COURT OF oe Better late than Never I
NORTH-WEST TERRITORIES. | Judieial District of Western Assiniboia,
IN THE MATTER OF THE E&aTaTE | LAUES.
OF ERNEST WILLIAM BRINE, de- |
ceayed.
Pursuant to the order ot the Hon. Mr. Jue- tice Riehardson, dated the l7th day of | Gerober, 1898: TARE NOTICE that each | creditor of she above estate is required to send im to the andereigned, en or before. the 19'b day of December, 1898, his claim against the,said estate, toget her with state. | ment of secniity,if any. helé by lim. | And take notice that ex¢h claim is re. | Ruired to be verined by sta :utary declara- | Lion stating therein whether such credito: acids auy security for hia ela) m oF any part | -hereof; and yiving full pa ticalare of the! same, ancdif auch secarity ix on the estate | of the said decaaxed or on tlhe estute of a third party for whom said deceared is only secondarily jiable, he shall p ut @ specified vaiue thereon. Dated at Regina, this 17th day of October, : 1898. NORMAN MACA\ FNZ_E, Public Adua Inirtiator. |
oe eee
WANTED
{
}
first class Laundress. For particular | |
~“
Pa apply at the PROGEESL Office
the most obstinate eczema, pleasantly and permanently
cured by Dr. Aguew’s Ointment—35 cents.
Who does not envy a baby its soft velvety How many suffer from distressing
skin? skin diseases—Do you suffer? Have you
tetter—salt rheum—scald head—ring worm _eczema—ulcers—blotches on the skin—
chronic
notelseo disorders which disfigure and Agnew 3
= i, Ointment al lavs the dis-
discourage? Dr
tions which are part and parcel of such
. ’ troubles, and in a thousand cases where internal treat-
ments have failed to heal eradicate them it has worked
and wonderful and perman- skin dis- oO matter of andi ng, has baffied its curative qualities. In cases of chronic eczs its creat worth,
aia “ypaceg where this Gread affect:
ent cures—and no
b Ow long
ease,
erysipelas—liver spots and what { these distasteful and aggravating
na it has proved aga cases are on record n has been the
birthright of its patient and constant com- A lady livinzin an ern Se yanty town writes that for anleen Vearssh eiw hsalt rheum, Sb k ®octors’ treat and :sed matv lotions w a.Y manent Fr &, Reading ofthe cures made t Vv Dr. Agnew's Ointment, she decided to try it. The first appleation allaved the irmtationan
she contin ed using it—the disease fapicty dis- appes Land now for two years there Sas been no
sift faret urn of it.
panion until past middle life, and Dr. Acnew's Ointment has cured speedily and | permanently. It is a boon to mothers because it is a boon to babyland—scald head and its irritations, which are accom- | paniments to the teething period,are quickly | driven off and restlessness passes away— and where torture reigned with | baby this balm brought rest and a cure—it affords in- | stant relief from the itching distress... . | Do you suffer from | piles—itching, blind, bleeding or ulcer- ated ?—No remedy has brought so quick | relief, spared painful surgical operations as Dr. Agnew's Ointment —it has proved itself an absolute cure for piles in all forms and at all stages—
one application will relieve the itching, imitating sensations in an instant—and i sta 7 ng cases disappear after from th ) ive nights’ treatment—the pain and pei quit you and the tumors vanish.
ea)
The b-by of another lady living on Pacific Ave. ta Toronto, was terribly afflicted with sc ild-head and ecroenia eh tried wash a bed by her physi- rant aregen o> aps advert ised f such Dur USES, bi it the digease rem ained—Dr. Agnew's Ointment was _ good friend; half a box cured the baby and cur
of ber life since baby's birth.
DR. AGNEW’S CURE FOR THE MEART—Cares palpitation. Guttering, shortness of breath and
all heart disorders—renef in jo mene
DR. AINEW’'S CATARRMAL a catarrh of 50 years’ standing—relieves
Gold in the head tn 1o miautes.
; herself of troublesome ptles which bad been the base i
DR. AGNEW’S LIVER PILLS—Srro sick beadache—cure constipat‘on, billousness and Liver = —pieasant li
litske doses— qo in a boz—o cents.
Sold by F. E, Parker.
LEATHER—Sole, Belt lacing the b
But we are to the front now with :
eet in the Toarket. Shoe thread. Skate straps, wholesale or retail, Russett Calt Leather.
Cork soles. Leather
and rubber
cement.
Boots and Shoes still repaired.
M. BAILEY,
JUST OPENED see
Frank Miller's Leather Preserver. for shoes cr harness. Makes the leather as soft a» a glove. Gilt Edge Shoe Dressing, Awls, knives, rivets, uaile, ete. alweys on
hand}
Qu’4ppelle Station.
A GENERAL BUTCHER BUSINESS
Bran.
Feed.
_GRISTING—
Shorts,
GEO.
Chopper grinding feed stuffa.
SUPPORT HOME INDUSTRY
Chop, Chopped
“eee on hand :
Fresh and Salt Meats.
FARMERS
The Highest Cash Price Paid for Good Beef Cattle. Pige
Beef, Pork, Mutton, etc.
, Sheer, ete,
Tamhere to STAY. Acharecf your “ageet solic‘ted.
AMBLE
Main Stiecet, Qu "Ap pel le Station,
ww.
. =—_ G72
Qu’ Appelle Valley Flour iviills
Fort Qu’Appelle.
(Established 1884.)
FLOUR—
Hungarian Patent, Strong Bakers Grabam.
Fuil supply alveveon hand at CREAMER & GRAY'S QU'APPELLE STATION.
JOYNER & ELKINGTON, Proprietors.
C. FETHERSTONHAUGH,
LIVERY STABLES
QU’APFELLE STATION and FORT QU’APTELLE
First class rigs and horses.
Daily Stage between Fort Qu’Appelie and Qu’- Appelle Station.
Careful drivers’
Stage leaves Qu’Appelle Station at 8 a.m.,and the Fort ut 2.00.
- - * 2 >
‘
Pe
= 4 a SE -
* xi
4 4 io a
.
> oe
oN, eee La diet
\ v¢ “ i we,
+
AUTIVE PREPARATIONS (REAT BRITAIN STILL ACTIVE IN OUTFITTING HER SHIPS.
A
London, Oct. 50.—There has teen the reatést activity at Devonport tocar, tle site o he large.t arsenal n reat Britain, ani of two o! the
west deck varcs in the world The roverzmgnent is assemblirpg an emerg- ews) squadron, which, it is ug .er- stool, will go io Gibraltar. Despite the far that the wind has been lela> yr almost a aie, the Secon] cjass atilesi p Colossus arrive! from Ho vie the first clas tlattlesh } Howe, from (ueenstown; amithe first clans battiestip Benbow from Green- ock. The third class crulser Calliope, which was © the way to. the Cauaries intercepted, and has returne) unexpectedly io Pivmonutti. Other warships are coming to join the squadro:, and the government has
ei ?OO O00 tons of coal
f rrival of Major Marchand at
lm oO! Sway to Cairo wit
ic ule { Ss report w Was Bi Capwin Barstier
ee regarded as a rift
r clo Verhanging Yngioe “~iM reli OIS Tor “Pil of th <xi lt) jal deni! is l , iuris qr rs ore Srit t I mijor
, to Cairo t is fuliv beVeyved
T i ie sf I j oif i oul liis yay tO Cairo iLlf>>5 received a hint to that j- [ i the French governinent, who ‘ that his leaving Pashoda will tuk Ss gy ont of the situation t Sime time prepare France ‘ 1 eventual withdrawal of the expeiition, which now con- sts «<f seven officers ami 120 men ‘he British view of this litest move that the Marquis of Salisbury and n ~ters re delighted to afford Ml mr Marchas the faeilities for f n@ Cair But they would thard- re te send him back, except in tin pacity of guest or scicatific ex- ye r. that is to say France wonld ive to renounce her political
baset on his mission
QUIET IN PARIS P Ot. 30.—The Breach press y ng to moanifesb a mueh 7 CO latory pirit rezarding pparent with a viewto pre the public mind for the
, ot the Marchan! expe lition
I | makes the announcement 1 mr aie vy upo: the reasemb!-
f 7 chamtler o° /eputies a pro- will be issue! decharing
and has annexel Egypt.
Pit Y°s TASK
Tr hideyne to «ompleie the f.--MOrrow it IS announced ? M. De Frevoinet has rocepte ithe of poor i fais sulrect tom thie 1 Oo Thin the selection for the ‘nl , eabinet officers meet with
: app 4 M. Paul Veytral, min t al moe in the late cabinet of M ' s«lecline! to accept the oe i! portfolo, oar the grouml of
ti The anti-Semite members chamber of deputies have issu-
1 fexto to the eountry de that the government of the
, must be divorce! from Jew-
P “whieh are ruiming it, rance to the vote ! nee and Lnited States, { 3 i - i i ymerican t ri If ‘ int t c sts [ rv record of - ,ith Ma I . I tlie I oi ( i i \ it i t li ~ ) mt j? t ice negotiations b ‘ at Paris, saying that President i i stat 1 : i ~! vrov- fits good w mond + @aoni \ t T I ‘i (ritiilooo mts st 1 announecs thre iL l s that j \i ‘ } i\ t Ira ‘ ol tisfact t « List > VW ' 1 s MI. 4 , I ‘ leased of t : t 1 ‘ ic. I ernment Lis \ Ns th MI rsse's s- , 3 rs mt . YW ’ an 6 , 4 * : if t ’ ‘ Drowned \ 4 y ng 0 ~ I t . It} - ( ¢ bw ¢ ‘ it > \ I — . t ‘s by mb- $ : % t r thre Cony t’ s | } 1X ‘ This t . ne ae ? AN 1ng pds I ‘ ‘ lian ? i tis is 5 stignt)
Perfect Calm
Warlike Ebullition in Paris
Succeeds the Recent
Dupuy’s Task.
ENCVTRNENTIN PRANEE
} ! '
TURBULENT SCENES IN THE CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES
The Minister of War Resi_ns and the. Brisson Government Suffers Defeat.
Paris, Oct. 25.--The chamber of dep- uties cpened today amid great excite- ment Caused by the announcement of the resignation of Generai Chauoine, minister of war. During tho suspension of the business of the house the discus- sion in tue Jobbies was animated on Genera! Chanoine’s unprecedented course in resigning in the midst of a session and without giving a previous hint of his intention to his colleagues. The Moderate Republicans maintained that in view of Generali Curnoline’s uct ali poiitical differences disappear and the Republicans of all shades must vnite and face the situation. Commit- tees representing the Radical left, tue
extreme Radicals and the Progress- ists met and agreed to support the
order of the day, affirmiug the resolu- tion of the chamber to muke respeci- «i. under ail circumstances, the en- premucy of civil power and to adjourn the discussion of the interpellations until Thursday. ‘The Socialists also’ promised to support the above resolu- tion. <After the chamber of deputies Lad resumed business at five o'clock, M. Brissou announced that the irregu-' lar resignation of General Chanoine had been accepted. The premter pro- psed that the chamber auajourn until ‘Thursday next and he concluded his remarks with reaffirming the suprem- acy of the civil power. |
After attempts upon the part of various deputies to discuss the alleg-, ei military plot, the insults to the army, ete. M. Ribot, in behalf of his friends, inctuding M. Meliue, approv- ed M. Brisson’s statement, and add-) ed: “We have every confidence in the army and do not wish to see it attacked. All Republicans are united on this subject.”
M. De Mahy propos~{ 2 resolution calling upon the government “to end the campaign of insult against the} army,” but M. Brisson refused to ac-! cept it.
M. Cavaignac, the of war, rushed to the tribune and de-| manded an immediate discussion — of| the resolution. ‘He was greeted with)!
former minister!
hostile shouts, ineluding “forgery,’'! “razor,” Which caused a great up-| roar. The shouting of the word)
“razor” was probably an allusion to the suicide ef the late Lieut.-Colonel| Henry
M. Brisson accepts! the order of | lay, proposed by M. Ribot, affirming!
-
the supremacy of the civil over mili-j tary power, which was adopted by! a vote of 259 ayes to JZ noes,
An amendment propos~d by Mr.
Berger. Censuriig the government “for not causing the honor of the army to be respeeted,” was lost by 274, to} i61 votes.
M. De Mahy again proposed his reso- lution calling upon the government “to | end the eampaign of insult against the army.”
The premicr refused to accept the motion, however, and a vote was taken on jt amil sueh confusion that | serutiny was demanded. Later this showed! that the government had been defeated.
After Tie pitic or oul
rejected
the serutiny had been an- M. Dertenaux moved a vote lence in M. Brisson, which was
by 286 2a x 2
votas to Bok.
When the vote was declared, the | ministers left the ehaiuber. After the | ministers had withdrawn, the eham-, ber adopted. amid eries of “Down with the Jews,’ the order of the day, ! coubining the inoetions of M. Ribot and | M. De Mahy, by a vote of 460° to OR
\ fresh tumult was arous™! by the! eclaration of Af, pe Daudry D ASSO that ali the ministers exeept General Chanoine ought impeached. The chamber adjournmd to November 4th.
it is the general impression among the deputies that President Faure will invite M. Alexandre Ribot to form a cabinet. This evening detachments’ f municipal guards, cuirassiers and are masse! at the various ap- proaches to the palace of the Elysee) for fear of disturbances. M. Brisson} went to the Elysee at 7 o'clock. Pre-'! sident Paure has signed the appoint- ment of M. Loekroy, minister of mar-
to he
ice
ne, in the retiring eabinet. as min- ister of war ad interim. When ac- cepting the resignation of the min-
stry M. Faure begged M._ Brisson ind his eollengwues to continue to act until the formation of the new tcab-
STREET PEMONSTRATIONS.,
After the adjournment of the echam- ber there was jntens® excitement. fol- lowel by strect demonstrations, prin- cipally maintaine |) by the arti-Nem- tes Jel by M. DPramont, in the viein- ty of the ofiiecs of the Libre Parole, other anti-Dreyfus papors. At any pouts the boulevards soon be- eame nimost inpassndle, and = thera Ne urnerous collisions between the. hemonstrasors and the police, who 1d been fasting since early morn- g. Only with the utmost difficulty vas semblance Of order preserved, nd 1 many cases it was necessary or the cujrassiers to clear the Streets , JEW ATTACKED, Paris, Oct. 26.—1 a. m—About mid- might a mob of members of the Patri-
tic League smashea the windows and 2ilass staircase of a shop whos. own- er is said to be a Jew, at the corner of the Rue Auber and the Rue Scribe. The vigifance committee oi the Soeial- ist pirty twught a manifesto condemning the action ef General (Chr- nolne ana denouncing the “makebe- lieve Republicans who have Strancind debate in the chamber and created a crisis.” The committee has decided to organize all the Socialists and Rey lutionary Republican ferees in the c untry ‘against military and cler- emi reaction.”
M. Faure has received po stategmen tonight but he will consuit this morn.
issued
| been
first class battleships, a cruiser stroyers. The distinguishing feature is the believed, when ready for service, the most pow- erful vessels of their class afloat. They Will have a speed of 19 knots. cruiser will be 14,100 tons and will be desicned to vessels Wilf mount excepttonally strong| quick firing guns.
ing, Wednesday, with ths presidents of the senate and the chamber of dep- uties.
ee ee =
Diseussing the Case.
London, Oct. 25.—All interest to day is centered in the Marquis of Sal- isbury’s addition to the Fashoda cor- respondenece contained in thea publica- | tion of the British blue book on that subject. The Conservative newspa- pers express themselves as being high- iv pleased with his rejoinder to the French yellow book on the sam sub-| ject. They declare that it dispels the. idea spread by the dispatch of French ambassador here, Baron De) Coureel, that the British premier is | willing to negotiate on the whole) cuestion, but the Liberal and Radieal| organs stil! eonskier that the Mar guis of Salisbury’s attitude admits of | negotiations promising friendly ar-! rangement. The
entire press, how-| ever, scouts the idea of the possession | of Fashoda ceming within the sphere | of the discussion.
The St. James Gazette, this after-! noom, Says: “We are prepared to ne- gotiate the question of the western frontier of Bahr-el-Ghazal district, but we must control the Nile, both banks and watersheds from its course to the sea.”
The Globe thinks: “The Marquis of Salisbury has made it clear that Ma-
jor Marchand must quit Fashod: without conditions,” adding: “Until that is done there can bea no diseus-
sion of the French claims in Africa.” Continuing, the Globe points out the significant announcement in General Kitchener's report that he sent gun- boats south from Sobnat, toward Meshra-or-Bek, the principal trading eentre of the Bahr-el-Ghazal region, with instruetions to establish neces
sary outposts, and that before he left Sobat the eompleted arrange-
CC A nt tenses nents
ments for the maintenance of those stations.’ The Globe then adds: “This move brings our position down to the eighth parallel north latitude and the valley of Bahr-el-Ghazal, at this moment under the rule of the Khe- dive. It will be interesting to see the effect of this revelation upon the French government.”
The Pail Mall Gazette from the publication of the blue book that the Freneh government has been given to understand that wholly apart from the Fashoia question, the claim to territory abutting on the left bank of the Nile is “rejected as utterly untenable and Franes must accept the position or take the con- sequences.”
The Westminster Gazetic as a solution that the French be eranted “way leave’ and an “enclave” for commercias purposes in the Bahr- el-Ghazal district. “Wayleave’”’ is the right of way over another's ground.
“Pnelave’ is to shut in, to enclose,
coneludes
suggests
ritory within the territorics cf anothe power. The French papers today were more
~licopeful, and beheve a pacific solution (of fhe dispute will be found.
NAVAL OPERATIONS.
The English newspapers are full cf naval particulars, put the only fresh development is an order received at Portsmouth to prepare all ships in the leet and reserve tor immediate mobi- lization. The eight additional warships there in consequence Cominenced conl- yr this morning and working purties
wiil immedlately be piaced on board the otner reserve vessels at VPorts- mouth. Although not connecte1 with
war preparations much attention has attracted to a request received by the ICyde ship builders from the Pritish admiralty for tenders for four first
boat
ClaASS
and twelve torpedo de-
which, it is battleships
armiment the
Increased
will make
The
steam 23S knots. All the
The Heart and Nerves are Often Affected and Cause Prostration of the Entire System. |
A Kingston Lady Testifies to Her Exe | perience in the Use of Milburn’s Heart and Nerve Pills.
| |
People who suffer from any disease or disorder of the heart nervous system, such as Palpitation, Skip Beats, Smother ing or Sinking Sensations, Sleeplessness, Weakness, Pain in the Head, ete., can- not afford to waste time trying various remedies, which have nothing more to back up their claims than the bold asser- tions of their proprietors.
These diseases are too serious to per- mit of your experimenting with untried | remedies. When you buy Milburn’s | Heart and Nerve Pills, you know vou | have behind them the testimony of thous- ands of Canadians who have been cured by their use. One of these is Mrs. A. W. Irish, 92 Queen Street, Kingston, Ont., who writes as follows ;:
“T have suffered for some years with a smothering sensation caused by heart disease. he severity of the pains in my heart caused me much suffering. I Was also very nervous, and mv whole system was run dawn and debilitated.
_‘‘Hearing ef Milburn’s Heart and Nerve Pills being a specific for these troubles, I thought I wouldtry them, and theretore got a box at McLeod's Drug | Store. |
** They afforded me great relief, having toned up my system and removed the | distressing 4ymptoms from which j] suf- fered. I can heartily recommend tbese wonderful pills to all sufferers from heart trouble.”
| | Snonichnisomeentanoe ne EES | i
CARAAPAPAPLGSD PSL IGILLDAG ISS RE EPPPALLBS 4 POPP AGS
Laxa-Liver Pills cure Biliousness, Bys- Pepsia and Constipation. Every pill perfect.
the!
HOW A SORE HEALS.
WHEN THE BLOOD IS PURE AND RICH IT WILL HEAL RAPIDLY
K * * * * K ok oK * * as * *
‘ :
This Fact Demons:rated in the Case of Chestor Gawley, Who Had Been Troubled | with a Running Sore for More Than al Year.
may live without Poetry. Music and Art:
K WE may liv science. heart,
From the Times. Owen Sound.
In the township of Sarawak, Grey | county, there is probably no better) Ye known or respected farmer than Thos. ! 7 ; Gawley, of East Linton P. O. Learn- YE WE may live withont friends: ing that his nephew, a young lad now | we may live without books, about ten years of age, had been cured | of a disease of his leg, which threat- | K ened not only the Joss of the limb, but | KK also of the life of the little fellow,a re- | porter of the Times made enquiry, and | ye
e without con- and live without
But civilized man cannot live without, cooks,
And cooks cannot live des, ite protests the louder.
KE KK OR IEE OE EOE
we are convinced that the wonder ° Unless they can use * working powers of Dr. Williams’ Pink Me a Pills for Pale People have not ex- “4% hausted © themselves. Meeting Mr. ye WHITE STAR “4 Gawley in one of the drug stores of the | >
town, he was asked if the reported cure was a fact. His face lighted up with a/ smile-as he said, ‘Indeed it is, sir. I was afraid we were going to lose the |
BAKING POWDER x
; ee YW lad, but he is now as well as ever,
at
! - hearty and strong.’’ Asked for particu- | Me THE DYSON-GIBSON CU x lars, Mr. Gawley did the most natural! \ 4 thing in the world, referred the re- | RSI KEK KR KK porter to his wife, who in telling the} case said:—‘‘In the month of Septem- | i a Se maa ber, 1897, my nephew, Chester Gaw- ley, who lives with us, became afflicted TO PU BLISH ERS —__ With a severe pain in his left leg. Inv few days the limb became badly swol- len and painful, and the family physi- cian was called in. The case was a per- plexing one, but it was decided after a few days to lance the leg. This was done, but the wound inflicted would not heal up, but became a running sore. The little fellow soon was reduced to
* K * *
We take pleasure in in- forming you that we have put in a complete
PAP Bike SLockK
Printers’ Stationery of all kinds.
almost a skeleton. This continued Our motto in this department is: through the winter months, and we
pe ‘** Prompt delivery and rig ices.” thonght he would never get off his bed pt delivery and right prices.
again. In April two of the best physi- cians of Owen Sound operated on the leg for disease of the bone, resorting to scraping the bone. Im spite of this treatment the wound continued to run, and we were in despair. In August t friend residing in Manitou, Manitoba, advised us to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. We commenced to use them at once, and in a short time several pieces of the bone came out of the sore, and before the boy had taken four boxes the leg was completely cured. This was over a year ago, and Chester is now well and as strong in the left leg, which caused the trouble, as in the other. Of course I recommend highly the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.”’
Such is the story of the fourth cure which it has been our pleasure to report from Owen Sound. Chester Gawley is growing up into a strong healthy lad, and it is but adding another tribute to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills to say that they were the instrument in his restor- ation to bodily vigor.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills create new blood, and in this way drive disease from the system. A fair trial will con- vince the most skeptical. Sold only in boxes the wrapper arcund which bears the full trade mark ‘Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People.’’ If your dealer does not have them they will be sent post paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, by addressing the Dr.
EVERYTHING FOR THE PRINTER.
Toronto Type Foundry
co. LIMITED. 175 Owen Street, WINNIPEG.
ATTENTION Difference between Paper and Wool Roofing: Paper dries and becomes brittle. The Wool is elastic and tough. Has never Leen known to ernaek: % years has established its reliability— wind and water proof.
Write for samples to W. . FONSECA, 705 Main St., Winnipex. SL I TET LTE CLD LTE CTL EOL DO OT I IIIT IIE IEE AES LE CEE,
automatic at- have sheriff's at-
Some machines have tachments and some tachments.
Minard's Liniment the Lamberman’s Friend.
The only material differenee between a cold and the grip isin the doctor's bill.
Dear Sirs, —I was for seven years a sufferer from Bronchial trouble, and would be so hoarse at times that | could scarcely speak above a whisper I got no relief from anything till |! tried your MINARD’S HONEY BAL.
TT st ihs-~-e-ssssstessesestesensne-
Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, SAM Two bottles gave relief and sip
Q ; , ahalhe b ‘ ‘ BLA at s a bottles made a complete cure. I world Tribute to Ogilvie. jheartily recommend it to any on
Victoria, Oct. 25.—J. Livingstone, e.'- suffering from throat or lung troubl:
itor of the Dawson City Miner, ar J. F. VANBUSKIRK.
rived from the Klondike to-day. He | Fredericton. pays a very high tribute to Com-| missioner Ogilvie’s work, and says
most of ~he complaints of official; All women are pleased with th faults were due to an undermanned judgment of Paris—when he comes to ani underpaid force. | fashions
There is danger of infectious dls- |" ip eases in Dawson, owing to want of sinitary precautions.
Minard’s Ligiment is used by Physicians,
Whenever a bachelor begins to inves tigate a girl’s cooking he means bus:
ness.
REPORTS DENTED. Victoria, Oct. 25.—Naval officers at Esguimalt contradict the statement | Keep Minard’s Lipiment in the house that extra activity exists there. They | — piniahienaeticcighenains say the work being done is the or-; A driving rein is all right fer the dinary routine at this season. | horsemen, but a light shower satisfies
the cyclist.
| | |
wee ee
—_———
We are well balanced when our wills | can control our prejudices.
Ask for Minard’s Liniment and take no other.
5,000 Cured
Last year with my Famous
KNOWN THE WORLD OVER.
To men suffering from any Weakness, Rheumatism, Varicocele, Nervousness, ete., send for my book which 's Sent Sealed Free. [+ iclis how I can cure the most stubborn cases without the use of Drugs.
Call and consult me Free—or if you do not Hs near enough write for the book to-day. Address
DR. D. T. SANDER
132 St. James Street, = Montreal. PAPPIPP ADP PIPE IL IADIGE PEL IIPLLIPIIESPPPE EEL E EL PL IOS APSE
ARLE PPAR FP PAARAAAARAP AS AARAP ADL IARREAS
|
.
= 5 {PTER VL T t oT g c] Cx Cn i m ff ~s = iy were ‘ie n tl had r nin the : time, but to the im- attorney, whose future ee stake, to yin or iose g the hour named, they ep ime i Wanted wo When he reached I: mn. (sertrude was in rien ] enters d pk. i seen her lock i ean ind held if tha he shonld t she greeted him S t were successful - moment id &re gai to own t inselt sas m it sen as ever. The i rein r so = fe - 4 t Ve 1s > re : blue ey «* : . = pagan nnflin a | pocid 4 iii li sifieliv, 110 dich) , suffused t exquisitely rounded + Instead, he read deep trhoughg et inxiety on the fair high-bred \ Dris is heart went out to her rit iove so great it was almoct nain. lam prompt, Ger—Miss Hamilton,” @e murmured ending low over the ind she extended ‘Dare I hope it 3 ire pleased to see me on this > : n above al] others “T am pleased to see you on every ' Mr Van Driscoll. she an- Swered Vasivels “I have assured vou t Fore [ think ; “i glad. still he persisted: z m3 ssion 1 surly are ‘ ised or sorry to sce me on this an’ the r } T Keep mea
~ - Pr a i pair i > * ‘ ‘ 4 Le) ae e y =e a mn sus 5 c AaWAay tu TT < . " | e *. wd i ~ Ww ‘= a nh ac ’ a look of ite r rie t strange - there should appiness and 1@AC n a
yes, she answere...
He stood for a moment irresolute, fairly dazed by the great happiness that flooded his soul. He did not dare throw his arms about her and kiss her beauti- ful lips, as many another acceoted lover would have done. There was an air of coldness and hauteur about her that for- bid anything iike that.
‘You have made me the happiest man in the whole wide world, answerd, huskily. ‘‘I do not know how to thank you; language seems to fail me. I will devote my life to you. I will take all the risk of your happiness. I will an- swer to heaven for it.’’
she saw him start back hand over his troubled manner. It was strange that in that moment there came to him the memory of a face white with anger, and
abruptiy and forehead ina
pass his
the sound of @ passionate voice crying out: ** You have my curse. Heaven wil] take a terrible vengeance against you.
Every joy will turn to Dead sea fruit on your lips.”’
He shook the thought from him. How strange that it occurrei to him in that
moment above all others. Ere he could utter another word, Mr. Hamilton en-
tered the drawing-room, and Gertrude made her escape. Van Driscoll held out his hand to him.
‘Wish me joy, sir,’’ he said, eagerly.
‘This is the happiest hour of my life. Your daughter has promised to be mr
wife,
‘I am heartily glad clared the old gentleman, warmly grasp- ing the young man’s extended hand. ‘'I know you will be kind to her.”’
‘IT will worship her!"’ exclaimed James Van Driscoll, huskily. ‘‘She is a little cold and proud and shy with me now, but that will wear away in alittle while, like snow beneath the genial rays of the sun.”’
‘‘Her pride is the
to hear it.’’ de-
greatest fault she id Mr. Hamilton, *'She is proud of her ancestry, proud of the position in life which she fills. She will be proud of
- 39 lids, re |
you and yourachievements. These proud, id girls change into the most affection- ate wives, depend upon it, my bor. Don’t appear to notice the coldness and hauteur fora time. That's the plan I adopted with her mother, who was just like her in disposition. Why, this is quite confidential between you apd me. I could | not prevail upon my betrothed to give me a kiss until a week before we went to the altar—actually a fact, my bor. But I can teli you I felt despondent enough at times, thinking she did not love me, and all that sort of thing, when
she was fairly idolizing me in secret all the time. Ha! ha! ha!”’
His words dispelled the troubled on the roung man’s face, smile to his lips.
I will take an example from you, sir, and be very patient.’’ he declared. add- ing: *'f am not very well versed in ways of women; but I hope to be an apt
li INK and brought a
pupil, taught by so fair a teacher as Ger- trude, bless her heart !’’ Mr. Hamilton followed him@#to the door, and wrung his hand at parting. Van Driscoll is a_ fine fellow,’’ he said to himself, as he walked slowly up
the broad staircase to his own rooma
little later. ‘‘I could not have selected a son-in-law who would have suited me better had I looked through the whole world of men. I wish my son were like him. If he was, I should be a contented man somehow I feared I should have trouble with Gertrude over her love affairs. Widowers witb pretty daughters isually do, tor they don't see the mis hief that is brewing until it bursts upon them ] a thunder-clap I have been extra ca i to guard her against lovers, It always pays a man int end ) take
e enough from s business t ook atte se matters. [t has hbe-n my secret Wis! come tir nas tt (zertrude and Van Driscoll ¥ id fall in love with ‘ f t wise ger 2 W - ‘ ’ ris t c iTest h ma. iif i they would i : ated ich ot] l thoug I itched them pretty close wid wel fr Kne it (gert ared for him. = pretended to tal no ir rest whoa ver n his 4 eZ nvited ti ise, ft siy puss!
\ mor i Richard, his son burst into the r k » whirlwine OF seas r is = il
\ vernor. I'v eard the news ‘i Oisters Ih Mur Gert 5 going to marry ; i 1ighness
: t attorr i taxed rw t st now, but she Would neither admit no | i
How « you learn about sked id < i! curti
[rus = sfor fi > Oo t . 5 > css Ss
+ 7 \ >. ‘ ) or ; Wi i y W iim sing " ich
t as I car wh since jus bow he T poser ind T whole i —rnust lave been liste y of : W the Ss any one n the
r ws f ‘em is stand z h r with a r ind, ’ — ~ s 3 " il
excuse ain there listening
Mr. H n made no reply to his S sr ks frer a fev nts
_ nce i- i! ri'nyti —
Wher go when you the < ist night
: ird Ha s fa t “i f na
ull red to ghas n alr stant
} nex sd ree red himself. i wa ti > [ris i n littl ind I cht l w i rrake I ig ir away i the ™t There was a vin your room last ght. I hear that rou have discharged ‘' r % t sshuta iad f ati au sh v looking keenly into the handsome, dissi pated face of 3 son—the son who had r his brightes pes isted all his * ’ = > -~ ° > -_e > had -_ } z ned F lard ire- ,. - as > | - Ss. hi OTe Ww TOALIV mp 1clent i inned | i sent him adrift ag and baggag you kept him here to Wii me, follow me about and spy upon n Il simply kicked over the traces—re- I as it were You are driving me pretty close to the wall, Governor, and you may find out some day that you have gone too far. It hurts a fellow’s pride to
~ have Lis footsteps dogged day and night Ned valet. but in reality a spy
Gertrude,’’ he
the
| my father has set upon me to watch my | | movements, If I am ever driven to des- | | perate deeds, remember you are the cause
of it."’ ‘‘T suppose you are here for your) | weekly allowance?’’ exclaimed the old) | gentleman, harshly. ‘Here itis. Take it, | _ and go!’ throwing the money down up- on the table.
‘*You have cut me down again!’’ erted Dick,excitedly. | “*} have taken out the amount allow:d sou for your valet,’’ was the decisive re- sponse uttered in a harsh tone.
The young man’s eyes glittesed. With compressed lips and an ominous scowl, _he thrust the money into his vest-pocket, and with a muttered imprecation on his ‘lips, strode from the room.
| '
'
(To Be Continued.)
IN LONDON LODGINGS.
| What It May Cost the American Visitor
In Engiand.
{ In England, thorc’: in London at least there are many bourding houses, it is
| more usual to live in ‘lodgings’ ’—that is, more usual to hire a furnished room by it- self than to include the taking of meals at the common table, Frequently, however, you arrange to have part of your meals in the house, but served in yourown room In that case you may buy your own ma- terialsand pay forthe cooking, or the land- lady will buy what you direct and cook it for a slight charge. In a thoroughly con- venient and respectable location in Lon. don $7.50 a week would be a low price for a plainly furnished sitting room and bed room and the cooking. You can do bet ter than that in the suburbs. but distances are long in London, and it is economy to pay fora convenient iime any object.
Prices are lower in the smaller English places and the landladics more cndurable Dhose of London are often so bothersome that many Americans advise against tak- ing lodgings there. Figures from the ex
pense book of Is wh
9 et cle +g ; iocation li Is
two American girls took lodgings wherever they had addr show that in Lincoln for apartments ina delightfully quaint little house just out side the cathedral close, where the land- lady and everything about the place was §T otlessly clean, the <3 aid $1. it) aj iece for the night’s lodging and three meals.
Pe a
In York they had lodging. supper and break- fast for $1 apiece. At Oxford the thing with a fine grate fire cost #1 apiece In Edinburgh they had lodging and break fast for a week for $3.50 apiece.
In London and the large cities it is the custom to go out for dinner. London res- taurants are more costly than those of the same grade in the States, and so London is not the cheapest place in which to dine To live in this way abroad is much sim- pler than at home, for restaurant life is so much more common. It has been said that a third of the people of Paris dine at cafes. Women seldom have any scrious trouble in finding a restaurant where they can dine unmolested. and a great many of the art students abroad live in this fash- ion, often not spending $1 aday for the whole cost of existence. Furnished rooms however, are not so easily to be found in Paris as in London, but they are there.— Robert Luce in **Going Abroad.”’
same
High Bred Americans.
Here a couple of hundred years ago was planted a little obscure trading post by a few score of broad breeched Hollanders History records nothing more remarkable
f this small colony cf Dutehmen than
that they lived at peace with one another and drove the sharpest bargains with the untutered red man, It iscertain that none j of them ever talked of his ancestry or re-
garded himself as a founder.
g practice huroepean
if deporting their social dregs and
the aMonge
colonizing their undesirables in the new world marked no exception in the case of the Batavian commonwealth. <A span of
, T ' : ‘ tives nor;r, torso nh, Thre
Howards,
<') Venrs 1s
+! 1
antiqu
ty of
ie Percys or the ut few of the sons and daughters of whom we hear so much could prove a descent half as long At any rate, it admits no doubt of a grand father, or even one to spare, and as M
louet observes, that is the greatest desid-
eratiuimn of the high bred American.— Phi
Sori s~tiiit
4 ’
Finding Tar River. here ig really and truly a tar river in North Carolina, but some folks will not believe it. An old Johnny Reb sent the fol! wing story of how the Yankees found
: When the { ‘onfederates evact
eS.
tated Wash
. they rolled 1.000 barrels of
inogTon in? tJ.
tar and turpentine into the river at Taft's store, and two months later a steambont the Colonel Hill, with 400 Yankee prison ers going from Salisbury to Washington to be exchanged. tied up at the wharf to let the boys bathe The y stirrs j up he tar at the bettom of the river and were } smeared with it from head to foot When ‘
we came upon them, each man had his ra tions of meat in one hand and a small stick in the other, scraping and greasing x dear life. ‘Hello, boys! What's the matter?’ I asked. And they replied Durned if we haven't found Tar river at
last: the whole bed is —New York Press
Dressing For Tame fmckes.
rhe usual accompaniment for roast duck is, as we all know, stewed apple
But apples for a stufti: novelty, not of >; origin. Notapples alone, but combir with prunes. >tew the latter in the usual way, using a little sugar; then when mix them with uncooked appl
twice the the /atter fruit.
: $ , == anish. but of Hawaiian
ite «of ake A
quant
as forstewing. Then p
Duck
How to Remain Young.
— > — * 40 remain Youn must
ga woman
heep
her joints limber. [f neglected, they be- @ome painful and stif. Women groan with rheumat
; i - cha ¢ by . atic pains when, if they exer- 7
cised pr: . fheumatism would be un- beard of. Women sit by a fire and shiver with a cold when if they encouraged gym- nas the blood would circulate vig
iy through the body and the cold would disappear.—New York Press.
tine ests
jrous-
THE PREHISTORIC
Lost Race of Aborigines In the
Mountains of Mexico.
HANDSOME AND PURE BLOODED.
Wonderful Discovery of Dr. Hrdlicka While Explering Urder the Auspices of the American Museum of Natural His- tory—Living Remnants of the Ancienis.
While conducting a tour of exploration and research for the American Museum of Natural History Dr. Hrdlickaof New York identified strange tribes with the foremost prehistoric nations of Mexico, and by his researches among these tribes he has found out what the ancient people were like when they held undisputed sway over the American cantinent. He conducted his studies frem anthropological, physiological
CAVE OF MEXI¢
AN MUMMIES. and medical points of view. In the almost inaccessible heart of the wild Sierra Madre
mountains of Mexico, says the New York | a dark, handsome living: just as they have done since the beginning |
Herald, he has found people, pure blooded aborigines, of the sixteenth century, when the Span iards destroyed their vastempire They are direct descendants of a once mighty race, its exact counterpart in physical ap pearance, in mental aptitude and in every thing by which the real civilization maj be ascertained.
He had found bonesand skullsin neigh boring caves, and he knew that they were the remains of a great race, among whom were the Aztecs, Zapotecs, ‘Tarahumares and other ancient nations that the strange people were in some way related to the cld. By comparing bones of the ancients with careful scien tifie measurements of the dark, handsome race he was able to identify the new tribes bevond all doubt as the pure de scendants of tions.
Regarding t part of his work Dr Hrdlicka says: [In order tomake any sat isfactory investigations of these tribe had to approach them very carefully, fl of all guining their complete confide In their erstition they bones and bodies of the evil influence them, and they think a man who is willing totake sheletons out ot their graves niust be pos-essed of super natural power. Whenever I excavated for bones they all stood in awe around me_ I had to dig them If, because my Mex ican laborers were lazy and so clumsy that they destroyed the scientifie value of every thing they handled Mexican mummies are in almost every respect like those of higypt, excepting that they have been pre served without artificial means
‘It Was nece-sary to have at least 26 skulls or skeletons of each sex of a single tribe in order to complete beyond question
: the identification of their modern descend
S$. His
that
dead exercise an
sli! i
over
wVse
rt
ants and to deterniine to what particular i rar’ i} of the ancient race the rer ains be longed goues which I excavated I mark
riving each skeleton a sep
arate I i iney were packed in sacks or sometimes boxes improvised from the recs. Many times they were wrapped in jeaves torn from the branches, there be ing nothing else athand When ail were carciuily numbered and packed, they had to be sent on e backs of mules ten or more days’ jourrey to the nesrest railroad station and from there shipped to the
miuseum in New York jor further study
I found the people to be possessed of great mental « Their cognitive powers are far in advance of the ordinary Mexican or spaniard. Their life is simple romantic, and, while they have lost many of the urts of their great ancestors the main features of their civilization are
‘The
ApPAcity
and
the same as they were centuries ago tribes consist of called Indians for convenience. They are really nine teenth century aborigines, who have been hampered but not contaminated by Euro pean civilization. ;
* Physiologically the tribes aré far in ad vance any of the white races. The greatest difference berween the aborigine and the well known American’ Indian is
in the shape of the head, which in the
farnilies
of
former is invariably ::uch longer—that is, of greater depth from front to back Lhe skin, too, is of a chocolate tan hue
rather than copper colored, like that of the Indian. It is quite common w find among the aberigines bodies which would stand for a physical type with the most exacting sculptor. The women are often very beau tiful The men are remarkable for their walking and running, and, incredible though it may seem, often run down a Geer with nothing but bow and arrows« “so far as traditions zo, all these peo ple say that they came originally from the borth. Not a single tribe shows any trace of Indian cruelty. On the contrary, they are peaceful and hospitable They love feasts, dances and sonzs more than any thing else. In fact, feasts are going on somewhere in every tribe almost al] the
time, often although the people have
He suspected |
the}
the foremost prehistoric ba
Deus CY ashy iissee ws Cut Lise Lita Uay | They preserve more or icssof theirancient religion and. connected with it. many su- | perstitions
‘For centuries and centuries Mexico and parts of the United States were thick- ‘ly populated with these same people | Northward the tribes at present are of a | lower grudie than the pure aborigines whom I found in the seclusion of the Si- erra Madre mountains. The marks of civ- ilization increase tothe southward, for the region of the highest prehistoric culture extended from northern Mexico almost uninterruptedly through Guatemala, Hon- duras and northern South America to an-
cient Peru.’
GEN. E. T. H. HUTTON.
| i | i | I | | } t
Sketch of the New Commander-in-Chiet of the Dominion Militia.
'
Gen. Edward Thomas Henry Hutton, 'C.B., who succeeds Gen. Gascoigne as | commander-in-chief of the Canadian | militia, is a soldier cf wide experience in lactual warfare. Gen. Hutton, who was | born Decemter 6. 1848, at Torquay, has | been in the army ever since he lefi Eton at the age of 19 years. Serving with the | Sixtieth Riiles his military ability led to
bis assignment to the college,
tnilitary
@EN. E. T. H. HUTTON, CB
where he was a stuuent at the onthreak of the Zuin war He then fejcined his regiment as a hentenant and participated in the victory at Gingindhlovn, as well as the relief of Ekowe. After the Zulu war the officer returned to college and com- pleted his course, when he was assigned to duty in South Africa durmg the Hoer -war. His good service in this carnpalgn led to his detail as commander of the mounted infantry regiment in the Egyp-
tian campaign of Iss2, and his gallantry and military ability at Alexandria and fel-el Kebir won him mention in the dispatches, a brevet as major, a medal
'and two decorations. After five years in _Egvpt he returned to England. where he (was on duty at headquarters and later commanced a regiment of mounted in- \fantry. In 18¥5 he was given the com mand of the military forces of New sonth Wales, which he held until Ise8, when he was appointed assistant adjutant-gen- eral for Ireland. Gen. Hutton married, in 1890, Eleanor. the daughter of Lord Charles Pantet
Major-General landed before he was at gave some eciat to the Association matehes which he attended. Since then he has formulatid his policy, and ho has taken steps to put into mo- tion the idea of-a system of mobilization, a medical and « commiissariat and tiansport department, with the plan of having the Canadian militia receognize that 1t is an integral part of tha British ariny.
Hutton had = searcely work, and he
Dominion Riile
nervice, rIED
fINncre
AM’S DOUBLE. He Is @ Davenport, Ta... school Princip»!
Johu BB. Youns by Name.
Uncle Sam's double lives in Davenp Iowa. He is Jonn B. OY been superintendent of the pulilic system of Davenpeortfor 20 rears. [here is a striking resemtlince between the super- intendent and the man who I!s used to represent the Uasited sf in the pic- tures drawn by the political caricaturists He has the same goater, with smoothly shaven cheeks wrinkled by many while his mouth firm and shows great determination of chara
oung, ww?
enool
ates
' Sitrplies, 13 as
he
were to Wear the old Unele =am usually has on the trousers with straps
white beaver
that head and he would look
his
nee
Las
as ifhe han stepped from one of the popular cartoons of the day. Ag it the
1. stranger who is introduced to Mr. Young ig instantiy struck by the striking ra semblance, and if Uncle am had not been drawn gencrations beforas Mr. Young's birth you would swear that the
superintendent had been the model for the artists. superintendent Young was bern in New York State, gractu ating
from Middlebury College in i861. seven years he Was at the head of acade.- mies at Lawrenceville and Fort ing ton, N.¥. In 1565 he went to Davenport as <uperintende of the schoal system of
Coving
"Ff bau
the city, and hia record of 2) years’ con tintous service in that office is one that is belicv+d to be uncyualed in any other
American city.
Patti First sanz in Cuba.
It was in Cuba that Adeling Ps sang for the first time pubsic, when she Was 14 years old. It was at a concert ind her success was complete
eee & Us
iu
#6
# © te 4 CFs vier i: ’ ee tee.
ke 4 — Ny = es eee oe
tee
>
sere
:
sgl Fae oe
wae i} whet bat
rome ae... ate) sees,
Te ey a SSG tae a ag
& PD ta
a wie es
be
al _ se ¥ : “| i J A fs id ‘, 4 \ we
= *\, We Th 4
ip Pe att we B *,
* *~
- oe a . ee Mb, 7
———-
Moccasins !
Now We Have |
Them-
THE QUAPPELLE PROGRESS, NOVEMBER 3, 1898
=
° Moccasins ! :
MEN’S FIRST QUALITY AT 81.18
Men’s Suits
.. . From $4.00 up.
ED
White Wool Blankets
_-—, eee
Moccasin s!
Our Stock of Groceries is large and well assorted, al rock bettem prices, Our Tea still leads at Slbs. for the 8,
Yours for Equonomity.
Why, those TEA
all the rage iast year! UWle have them from 1Se up... :
Contined from page 4,
between the issues. This election is no time to be gambling or taking chances upon a great future. When the issues are momentous do your duty to the Territories and cast your votes and not on a narrow basis. I could mention the work done by tle government in schools and for avriculture and it is a good record notwithstanding that their condition has been one of chronic penury. Their policy is now a small one but good which is better than any- thing great that can’t be carried out It has been said the governinent is dishonest, but I can say that I have watched them as acat watches a mouse, and 1 can deny that charge They are nov perfect in every way, that is a quality we only find in flowers, ect., yet they are as perfect as is found = on two legs. The great need of the political governments of Canada is honesty aud we have that in the Territories Krom east and west we hear of cor- ruption in the provincia: govern- micnts but no man dare bring such a charge against this government. I tell you for this quality I would support this yovernment, even if they made many a blunder, rather than the brightest genius that ever flashed across the political horizon if ne were not honest.
Now in conclusion, though the Conservatives will keep a blur against me for a good many years, yet | know | have done my duty 1 speaking tu you @s I hsve done to-night, in the interestsand for the welfure of this great North West.
MK. BULYEA
Mr. McCaul has helped me more than I think he intended, by his re- marks to-night. He says he would
te for me before Vicars if it was not for party lines and that is satis- factory to me, so Il need not refer auy further to his remarks. The chairman has asked me to refer to my expedition tothe Yukon and “as the Indian Head Vidette charges me with on temperance principles, | will do so briefly. Of course the Vidette publicly acknow- ledges that it is not respousible for the statements, as it recelVed 350. as remuneration fur the publican ilowever when the question of the Yukon was brought up in the House the matter had not been considered but Mr. Haultaiu promised to study the question at once, That was a When the Sessiou clused it was decided to send a man to ene
year ago,
RAL Ree SOA nn ws
Have What ?
We have the
POTS that were
you no reason for not supporting me On the other hand Mr. Hawkes has FA R Mi S pointed out the policy of the Haul-
tain Government, which was fully
laid before you ayear ago. It is FOR SA | -E your duty to vote for Mr. Vicars or
myself on Friday next and I be- IN THE lieve that Mr. Vicars policy will not be sanctioned in any particular part of this constituency and that the result of the voting will give me ten times the majority I had at the last election, I know you will resent this last fling of the opposi-
tion. They have not made a pub- lic utterance and a candidate afraid GOOD SOIL and || WELL WATERED.
| of a public policy will surely not be elected. I ask you all to sup-
Paymenis extended over ten years, if required. Parties can be taken over
NEAR QU’APPELLE STATION .. - «+
port me as your representative. I the lands at any time by giving notice
ama supporter of the Haultain-
Roas administration. meme
a - oon Tam a mei beforehand, and all particulars will be
ber of that Government aud I leave : supplied by
the issue in your hands,
WwW. C. CAMERON, Edgeley P.O.
Edgeley Farm. A PLEASED CUSTOMER,
Always ca Hand
Fresh fruits aecording to season. General line of Groceries, Evaporated and dried apples, All kinds of candies. Soribbling books, pencils, slates. etc., at
Mrs. E. Ambler’s.
Ocean Steamships. ROYAL MAIL LINES,
Cheapest and quickest route to the Old
Country. From New York How’s Your Clothes Line 9 Paris American Line Oct. 36 St. Louis American Line Nov. 16 Our line is most extensive. | Fornesss Cunard Line Oct. 29 If you need anything, then Ethiopia Cunard Line Nov. 12 we want to get together, We Teutonic White Star Line Oct. 26 lease you with material : ——— -— ee oe ; erla!,! Laurentian Allan Line Oct. 27 fit and prices, and would like | Numidian Allan Line Noy. 6 nothing better than to try. Lake Ontario Reaver Line Oct. 26 You can please us with an Tongariro —— Nov. 2- der Ottoman Dominion Line Oct. 29 orcer. Ps ee Dominion Dominion Line Nov, 5
All the finest... Cabin, $50, $60, $70, $80, upwards.
Woo0L VESTS ye pesarsce $80 to $35. Steerage $24.50 d upwards.
COSTUME CLOTHS “Passougers ticketed through to all point
Ix dress lengths in Great Britain and Ireiand and at specially
BLOUSES, WRAPPERS | !-w rates to all parts ot the European Con-
tinent. Prepaid passages arrunged from all points. Apply to the Station Agent, Qu'-
| UNDERVESTS. Etc.
. i ES et sessestesstspensenessestensnsesenene
FARM LANDS - FOR SALE. | — APPLES
Our Gents’ Furnishing Department is a stunner.
Rdgeley District
.. Fruit and Confectionery... IO
The North-West Lands of the
From $2.50.
eee
Alfred Dolge
Felt Boot in stock.
C. T. BAILEY
Ladies’ and Gents’.
- & CO.
NOTICE 8, Peter’s Womeus’ Guiid is now pre- LOST pared to reeeive orders,—knitting, mending| Strayed from 22, 18. 14, one mile from and other needie-work. For particulars ap- | Qa Appelie Station, 1 Koau calif. When ply to Miss Norah Boyce, Sec.-Treas.; Mire | #8t eeen, it bad a rope around its neck. Barnett Harvey, Pres.; Mrs. Muayrove, Vice J. K. Brown. Pres.; or any other member of the Guild.
~~ TAILORING
Latest Fashions. Perfect Fits. English and Canadian T weeds, Serges,
Prices Cheap. Good Workmanship. Panting. Worsteds, and Uverevating. . Everybody likes to be dressed A choice collection of samples to} wel), Leave your order and get a
good fit.
J. A. TRUSLER,
ae
select from.
Main St., Qu’Appelle Station
McUAUL & HARVEY,
Lumber, Coal and Insarance,
COAL SOLD FOR SPOT CASH ONLY |
Agents for Galt Mine, Pennsylvania and West- ern Antracite, Souris, Lignite and Llacksmith Coal. : . P ‘ !
oe _————————
NEW Feed, Sale & Exchange STABLES
Cer. Pacific avenue and Walsh street.
ANADIAN
PACIFIC Ky}
First-class accommodation and EAST VIA THE LAKE ROUTES,
obliging attendants. | Charges moderate. . . .
S. T. GIBSON, - Proprietor.| sSTEAMERS LEAVE FT. WILLIAM.
ours most anxions to please, rte WILLIAM STITT, — awe cnin Qu reeme ke ATHABASCA. “ Sunday a J. P. BEAUCHAMP General Agent, Winnipeg | WAGHORA'S GUIDE ar a MANITOBA... « Tuesday.
_Trains from Qu‘Appelle connect at Win- nipeg with steamboat express leaving th«re every Sanday, Wednesday and Friday + « 16.30, making direet connection with steamers sailing Wednesdays aud Frida)s.
By the bushel or by the barrel,
force liguor regulations and I Was i Estate of the late W. R. THISTLE, chosen Lo go. It wasnita pleasant comprising
4,000 ACRES
tmp. Ll had to walk 500 miles a- cross rough ice and endure other hardslups, On arriving there I found uo restrictious yu liquor, but
a
falta toate them Wat| FARM PROPERTY
ARKE NOW OFFERED
“wave me difficulty but I fought the vase Lill I established the rnghts of the Territories. I was surprised to
boar that this was a breach of my Most Reasonable Terms
I have'nt dene anything derogatory to my character in doing so and besides
Mel polauce } neh Ie s.
by nearly $150 000 Mr M Caul, the sole advo ‘ate of Vicars who is present, tas given
For full particulars apply to the Territories have beeu enriched A.D. DICK SON . °
APPLES
Of Valuable Improved always on hand
FOR SALE ON freshest and the best.
BARRISTER, QU'APPELLE
for keeping, cooking or eating.
A full stock of Flour and Feed
Biscuits. Fresh Cider and Lemonade.
A. MWPKENZIE
Main Street; Qu’Appelle Station,
To the Klondyke via Wrangel and Skaguay at cheapest rates.
Confectionery and fruits of all kinds, th\ tn” (om savee and Vistar
City of Topeka Oct, 27 Danube “ 24 Queen City Nov. §
Apply to nearest C.P.R. agent, or to
ROBERT KGRB, Trafie Maaager, Winnipe
oe
WASKORM'S GUIDE SMELT SOc sty