THE DAILY EXAMINER, ¢ HARLOTTE!OWN, OCTOBER 29, 1909. pain . q , ‘ M0 i\ n ust r of all the powers now Fol 1iical ELECTION, di I — Oe ce ea te ° ox niniohagn a ter 4 at is NOW dealt with a4 Mecetis ee ° : routed tet Panel toe O00 ‘he Popular (| : t in Eneland, in which Lous tH l \ t rs of West QO “ | \ Milton Hall, \\ ‘ y, as | | New Haven H l { 2 Sg y, ms Afion Hall, | e. Friday, ‘ rs. Mm. North River {i t et , - ws 1) *} j ‘ iad ‘ } Market Hal!, Charicttetown, Wea y Q ’ ” , > es scay, Oct. JI, at é | n. New Gla: gow, ; INOV i £7 m. hiepe River, I Nov 2 : m. Granvill ‘ ry, N > R enter R 5 N et & 30 | | Ire O “and \ \ x awa I \ » be pr c E Mr. S ewart wil atte d the abev]e mectings. wat cl elias —_—— est Queen's, IN P. E. IS Alexander Martin W. Stewart A. Lefardey cast Queed s, 5. A i. Rist Prince, West Princes, - Edward Hackett ‘King’s, - - Austin C. Macdonald | POINTS IN THE IS SUE Mutual Preferential Trade within the British Empire. POLITICAL MEBTINGS. | Weetinzs of the Electors of Fast Queers wet be held at the following times a1 lace m which Alexander Mariin, [sq], tm | Spposition candida'e, is respectfu ly invited Pownal Ilall, Wednesday, Oct. 24, al “3k m. | bake Verle, Schoolhouse, Thursday, Oc «| Kh, <t-7. mM. % Uigg Hul, Friday, Oct. 26, at 7 p.m €2atedon:a, Schoolhouse, Saturday, Oct. am 2p. nu Geand View, Schoolhouse, Saturday, Oct. [Romi Fp. le don Hall, Monday, Oct. 29, at 7 p. m. | , Bee Rives, Schoolhouse, Tuesday, Oct. | 2% 7; m. : Milton Cross-Hall, Thursday, Nov, I, a! 2 me. Marray Tiarbor North Hall, Thursday. Bse 3, at 7 p..m Sten William Hall, Friday, Nov. 2, at) 2h ™. Murray River Hall, Friday, Nov. 2, at “Rm. Siigh Bank Hal!, Saturday, Nov. 3, at 2 mM. Wood «s'ands Hall, Saturiay, Nov. 3, at ~~? x D. A. VcKINNON, Li‘e al ‘‘andidate. Alexander Martin, the Conservative card age will be present at the meetings. ' as she is in fact. Rebuke of Politicians who vroke their pledges to the peo- nle — increasi:.,, expenditures ind debt when ihey promised to reduce them. Honest Governmen’ ‘or Unit- ed Canada. Down with Tarie and Tarte-| ism. A TN THE DAILY EXAMINER OCTOBER 25. 1900. THE VIEWS OF THE MASTER. La Liberte, of Paris, France, of Oct. 12, 1900, says : ‘*Mr.Tarte is too well known to the French to make it necessary to re- call his attitude during recent events. He is a resolut2 partisan of = separation from England,and wishes | an-+ Cit Canada to be independ by right, He does not cease + to protest against the deplorable Political Meetings. of the 2 riding o e held at the following times and ich the opposition candidate Meetings electors of the n Giing's will ! pjaces to Ww saspectfully invited : *t. Colum 0, Tues. Oct 16, at 7 p. m. kingsboro, Wed. ee i Souris, Thur. 7 ee a Monticello, Friday ‘“‘ 19, “ ” #u. Peters, Monday ‘‘ 22, “ - Bozell, Tuesday “ 2 e Batdwins Load, Wed. ‘‘ 24, ‘ is Summervi'le, Thur. ‘‘ 25, ‘“‘ - Canligan Bridge, Fri ‘* gg26, * ss Hieatherdale, Mon. ‘* 29, e Rewer Montague, Tues. Oct 30, 7 p. m. meoszetown, Wed. a " Bendas, Friday, Nov 2, " %- Elous-, Saturday, was . J. J. HUGHES, sob & w guar Liberal Candidate. POLITIGAL MEETINGS KINGS COUNTY Meetings of the electors of “King's County a 8 3- held at the times and places following s3mb.ch Hon. Senator Ferguson and the waders'gn2d will be present and spzak :--- €arligan bridge, Thursday, 25th Oct., 7 3m. Dundas, Friday, 26th Oct., 7 p. m. Peake’s, Saturday, 27th Oct:, 7 p. ». A. C. McDONALD, Candidate for King’s. £. theeting i also called iy. She Nov fWingkes, the f the King’s Courty electors it Montague BriJge on Mor- mber, 7p. m., to waich Mr. aberal camdidate, is invited. A. C. McDONALD. POLITICAL MEETINGS The undersigned will meet the electors at West Queen’s at the following times aad places : Boaday evening, the 29th October, at 2 aScex, pm,at Clifton Hall. “Bae-day evening, the 3)th October, at 7 #xcek, p m, at Irishtown Hal!. ®r Louis Davies ia invited to bs an%. pres- spirit which reigns in E.jgland to- day, to censure British pharisaism and egotism, and he joyfully seizes every opportunity vouchsafed him to assert aloud his sympathy anc ‘filial attachment for the old land which was the first mother country of Canada, namely France. * At the opening of the Canadian pavilion at the Exposition the Brit-| ish High Commissioner, who seeks in every possible way to be disagree- to able to the Canadians, wisned arrange that the President of the Canadian jingoes set up ayainst ou, W.S8. STEWART. B®: fi. POLITICAL : MEETINGS, W aet_ngs Cf the electors of East Queen’ wet the “held at the following times ard places, @wm=pe> . A. McKinnon, Esq., the Gov- comment Can lidat2,is respectfully invited. Nersoa River Bridge Hall, Oct. 31, at Pe ma Sa Mary’s Road, Schoolhous Bios torier) Nov. 5, at 7 p. m. : Samay | arbor South Hall, Nov. 6, at TO LET. —— ont office; in New Prowse Ble - (near Faic of Brins; © ‘Prowse Eros <cemmaseamannataiiaiaanan j 'from the side commu Republic should enter the pavilion €110C7 aivad ing with the British exhibit. Mr. ‘arte op ‘he | Lauricr was to disport h his friencs at St.Steph r Charles tid he had de unced that policy as tco Erglish for him. and he denounced it nos and added that no man who realize the tremendous power of Canada | having complete control of her ow! | affairs, would sell that birthright for a mess of postage and allow Parliament sitting 3,000 miles away | to impose upon Canada what i ever taxation they lik d= an to spend the money after it} oe has been taken out of our pockets. | That is the policy which h:* ha said was too English for him. He¢ had been attacked by the G!>hv newspaper for attacking Sir Wilfrid Laurier’s imperialism of|that char acter, but what had hap :2ned? | Edward Blake, a man hei! an shoulders higher and great: : tha Sir Wilfrid Laurier ever wa; °r wil! be, had sent him his speech which he deuvered on the Commonwe.icno ot Australia, in which he said that rc- presentation for Canada in the Im- | perial Parliament was an i lle dream | that no intelligent Canadian would | adopt fora single moment. Experi-| -ence had shown hii the utterfolly | of it, and there was no Canadian _who would listen to such a proposi- | tion for a moment. Sir Chaiies also) /quoted Mr. Chamberlain, who saic jac Was not to be summosed for a sing l« _nstart that Canada would give up | he gi riou, rigfe aud privuege ctf | roverning herself and managing her wn affairs and hand it over to the British Parliament in return for any representation that could be given her in an Imperial Parliament. | | Sir Charles, he said, was happy to | ;say his friend Sir Wilfrid Laurier, | who went from platform to platform /propounding this policy, has now | ‘taken it all back holvs bolus, and says that he would not take it at ‘any time. Therefore Sir Charles felt he had accomplished something | and shown the Premier there was something ‘he did not understand, | and that something was a_ policy that would array every sensible man in Canada against him if he at- tempted to carry it out. It was on that ground that he had said that Sir Wilfrid Laurier’s policy was too English for him, and he said So again, and that no inde- pendent Canadian of any party would listen to it for a moment. He was happy to say he had compelled sir Wuitrid Laurier to take back that which he went from platform 'co platform proclaiming as his de- sire and the means of promoting the | ‘unity of the empire. As for swim- ming with the current, he defied Sir | Wilitid to show one single instance Where he hid ever propounded a dolicy that if the current was not, cunning that way, the | noment he found himself | breasting the current ke did not! wheel about and abandon the prin-| ciple. He challenged him to put his: finger on oOxe principle he had ever »xvpounded in pubic life which he | could not show day and date when had trampied that princip’e under foot. Sir Charles said if there fast are made of chinchilla ad We Them just the department. from a two year | Winter Jackets For the winter now approachine so cloths, such as beaver, melton; serge, calls for a jacket a shade shorter thon last season’s, but rot too short. Canada, the home of co'd weather w2 need them a little longer than in Eng- land or the United States. right length, atjust the right price-— $3 25, $5.50. $8.00, up to $18. 00. Over 1000 to cho se form. year was our banner yer year in this This yeu we're deter- mined to outdo last years record. Our jackets are priced accordingly. Sizes sioutest lady :n town. PROWSE BROS. The Stylish Ladies’ Outfitters. _— _ Wilfrid Laurier, who wished to adopt sa man incapable of breasting the current in favor of principle it is Sir | Wilfrid Lawier. #rom the first — : — hour of his public life Sir Wilfrid in spite of the cries whicn the | Tayrier had adopted all kinds of | policies and principles, only to aban- : - - - /.gn and denounce them when he demanding his retirement from the Fe ther ‘ | & a posed this with a liveliness that 1m- pressed all his assistants. Ministry, Mr. Tarte remained in it, | | »Ower.’’ firmly upheld by, his colleague art This clear statement of Sir Charles friend’ Sir Wilinid Lienion | sappy ought to onre those who ‘heart Dr. Douglass in Afton Hall ‘‘ Here they are today almost (on Friday evening that the at- | support for Sir forced to fight together, and it is}tempt to gain probably Mr. Tarte who, in his turn, | Wilfrid Laurie: on the strength of |Sir Caarles Tupper’s declaration that ‘‘he is too English for me likely to prove fruitless. TTT 4 QM NOTES AND COMMENTS. will save Sir Wilfrid.”’ Ane ‘‘SIR WILFRID IS TOO ENGLISH.” The Toronto Globe and other or- gans of the New Liberals having from day to day quoted in large cap- itals the words of Sir Charles Tupper, ‘‘ Sir Wilfrid is too} English for me,”’ and misrepresented Sir Charles’ meaning, Sir Charles addressed himself to the task of setting himself stitial right upon his arrival in Torontoa! —We are told that the keynote few days ago. We quote the Globe's | of the great speech delivered jby Mr. report Of what he said: | Cramberlain after the : elections Sir Charles said that what he real-| ole Jae eet ae ooomgee a ly did state was the policy of Sir) marks were Sieneloat to a spirit , | worthy of such a great theme 4 an Imperial Parliamentary federa-|" > 8 °3* Shee. tion, which he proclaimed ‘on every, platform in 1897 was his means of —Sir McKenzie Bowell is deter- mined that the sale of Senatorship Scandal shall be investigated, -——_In the betting circles on the election of Mr. Foster and Dr Stockton. Significant ! —-Two industries of importance to -are no steamers to load and get sup- n standing in the way of. ,change in North Norfolk, Ontario. \Sir Wilfrid Laurier lc } ’ isi of St. | John the odds are now, three to one | plies in St. John this winter. The answer is plain. It will! mean hard times. Will it be sufficient compen- sation for this to have Mr. Blair roll- ing in and out of the city in his pal- 9 ace Car ! ---There is evidence of a great caused the hange when he and his colleagues ' forced a prominent Lib who had ,sat in Parliament for twenty-eight ‘years to repudiate his party Gov- ‘ernment. aT CTai cine —Mr. Gerge Ham, whom many of |our readers will remember, has re- |turned from athree months’ trip in | Manitoba and the Territories, and ‘he reports that ‘‘the Canadian west -will ship out 15,000,000 bushels of ’ | ’ . . . . ‘wheat this season, which isn’t so bad for what is called an off year. | In addition to this amount, there is Aa&y ‘enough in the country for its seed ‘and bread.’’ He adds: ‘The grain is large, good milling wheat, and} the high prices realized will make} -up somewhat for the smaller crop.” | —The Summerside Journal re-' marks that ‘‘Rev. Dr. Joseph Mc- |Leod, who, our readers may re- “member, was one of the members of 'the Royal Commission on the liquor traffic, has accepted the Conserva- |tive nomination for York County, |'N. B. The reverned gentleman is is opposed to the base and shame- | FALL MILLINERY There’s many changes in tke fashion of millinery this fall. We are up to them all, and we have searchea the markets of the krown world in search ot the leading novelties. That we have succeeded we need not tell you. But if you will visit this great store the goods will tell you all about it. all the most wearable cheviots. The style In Our... Milliner . And her assisiarts will be pleased to show you all the new fancies and to create a hat for you if you wish; and they’il do it cheaper than most people would think possi>le. Come and talk it over with them anyway. Don’t for- get to ask for those pretty felt sail rs we've got. They're pearl, grey, brown, black and blue. Prices—75c to $2. 50. Every one stylish and up tod te, and down to buttom prices, PROWSE BROS. Advertisers of Fact. Have right cloth, just the Last COT SE eS Ne ye ae old little girl upto the 3 ce —- ne SUR RDR DRE | -_—_- Oi SP eal SEE OUR LINE OF NEW Fall Neckwear 500 Different Styles to Chcose From Nothing adds to a person’s appearince for s> sma'l en ovt'ay as ant® No matter how well drissed a shably tie spoils the w! ole appearance. We are Giving Extra Value in Men’s Gloves See our Moleskin gleves for workirg mer. at 252 and 55c. Kid gloves and mitts from 50c to $1.25, Moche. gloves trom $1 to $2.25. Fur ‘ined gloves and gauntiets, able Under» ear. tie, A full line of Stanfield’s Unshriat GORDON & McLELLA MEN’s OUTFITTERS. xX horoughly Good Time Keepers A watch purchase is rarely decided upon and made ia afew moments. Usually it is the outcom® of csreful consideration. If you have such an invest attaining the unity of the empire, and who said that Canadians were not satisfied with the present condi- tion of things, which could not last, and that the time would come when they would be at the turning point and then they would demand full citizenship and representation in the Parliament of England. That, Sir Charles said, meant no nor any less than the transfer to more | our farmers have been deliberately |!@S8 Course of the government in destroyed by the colleagues of Sir Connection with the prohibition Louis Davies. The makers of binder | @U¢Stion, and many of the disgusted _ twine have been thrown out of em- Liberals of York County have de- |ployment. The makers of barbed| cided to support him. This should | Wire have been hunted out of the P€ 4 pointer for the prohibition | country. electors of Prince Edward Island. } | AJPERVOUS troubles are cnred by that working men and shopkeepers. Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which en- | are asking themselves, very serigusly, | riches and purifies the blood. It is the | what it will mean to them if There best medicine for nervous PEOPLE. ———~— 2 i | --The Sun, of St. John, reports | mentin mind we would like to have you spend a lit tle time in our store, We will be much pleased to show our stock of wateies. They are thoroughly re.iable and sold with a yositive guarantee. W. W. Wellner Watchmaker, Jeweler, Engravel Charlo ‘tet. wa