-— er > ee , re. sect, at Alli =p. ster saree ii THE DAILY EXAMINER Qamued every afternoon from the office ‘ at the Examiner Publishing Co. | BATES OF SUBSCRIPTION, } (IN ADVAKCE) Year, . - 7 - - - e 4. Menth, ---+-+-*ee2e 2. Month i+ 9 648 8 6 O xy Month, - + - = 0 ‘Bazi post peid to any part of Canada or de United S ‘ates. THE WEEKLY EXAMINER ) aad Friday morning. It is made - a ane which has appeared in the Cy, and is a first-class newspaper, con- waning all the latest news. Subscription GD 2 year. ——$—$—<—$—— J. J. JOHNSTON Real Estate Agent Res) Estate boughtand so!d on Commission, Esiates Managed. Houses Rented. Rents Collected. Stamper Block Coarlottetown, P.E. I. uses PROPERTY FOR SALE ‘OR SALE.—On Upper Great George St, aay tena sec et house and jot 89x40 * ean be purchased for 3 00.00, ; Apply to _ Jo bnston, Real Estate Agent, Stamper Biock, Shariottetow a. FOR SALE. .—Plot of land, 93x38 ft, on up- ane’ onan? treet. excellent location, price 0200, JJ Johnston, Real Estate Agent, FOR SALE--Three acres Of Jandin Char- wat etown, cornmon, near residence of Arthur Peters, Esq. will be sold cheap an 1 on easy xrms, JJ Johnston, Stamper Block. FOR SALE-—about four (4) acre« of land in ihe City of Charlottetown, can be divided in- to twenty building lots, a genuine Bargain, 23 Johnston, Stamper Block FOR SALE.—In the business centre of @nariottetown, a iarge three story house with lot 84x52 ft; also excellent outbuildings, a suitable place for a first class boarding Souse, Will be sold cheap. Apply to J J Jonaston, Real Estate Agent, z LE OR EXCHANGE—A double iSeelt tes se on hestnut Street, now in eourse of erection. Will be completed in one month. Wil! be sold cheap or exchanged for property in snother part of the city. JJ Jonnston, Real Estate Agent. FOR SALE- House and lot on uvper Pow- aal Street. near Euston Street. Price $350.00 JJ Johnston, Stamper Block. FOR EXCHANGE.—A three tenement house, situate on Euston Street, newly built, brings in a large rent, will be exchanged for # suitable place in another part ofthe city. 3.1 Jonnsten, Real Estate Agent. POR SALE ~A two story doub'e cnemioet house On Bishop Street,each tenement con- talns six roores and large yard. Apply toJ J Soknston, Stamper Block, Houses To Let. T® LET—Dwelling houss and shop on lower Geen Street. house contains eight rooms. Large warebouse attsched; «verything in “rst class condition. Rent 3:'70.0., rent of tonse alone $'00.00, Avply toJ J Johnston, Real Estate «gent, Ch’town, TO LET—A house in the westendof the iy, containing five rooms: rent $3.00 per mouth. JJ Johnston, Stamper Block. FOR SALF OR TO LET.~— That well known Sasiness hote!| on Richmond Street nearthe market. Thix hotel contains 29 good rooms and shop, ali in good reruair, good stabling jer 39 horees, with large yardin connection, wi)) be sold at a bargain on easy terms, or lensed for a termof years. Apply toJJ Johnston, Rel Estate agent. TO LET—The large hallin the brick build- ing, On 132 Queen Street. This ball is 65x30 feet, is finishe:| in first class style, with easy approach from Queen Street, a splendid lo- eation for a society hall. Rent very low, JJ Johnston, Real Estate Agent. TO LET.—On Kent Street, between Queen and Great George Stre*ta.a carriage black- senith’s shop. One of the best standsin the wity. Rent $3.10 per month. J J Johnston Weal Eitate Avent, TO LET.—A house on Dorc' ster Street, sontaining five rooms. Rent $1! vl per month Apply to J J Johnston, Real Latate Agent. TU LET.—A house containing six rooms, Stuwate inthe east part of theeitv, Rent $7.00 per month. Appiy to J J Johnston tamper Block TO LET.—A house situated near Dundas *"pianade, containing llrooms and large rodern arched hall. This house is new and *eautifuily situ ated, and toa suitable tenant ‘ne rent will »@ moderate, Apply to J. J. temaston, Rea) Estate Agent. i have severa! other properties for sale aad bt» léton reasonable terms, and which may ve Known at my office. J.J, JOHNSTON, Real Estate Agent, Stamper Block, Ch’town Wedding A TRAVELLER'S TESTIMONY Sin,—Paradise is lost. If any P.E., Islander doesn’t believe it—thinks it may be sought and found somewhere in Amer- ict, anywhere but at home, that individual bas not been off the Island. Let him travel that Le may the better judge. Is he a mechanic ? Let him visit any of the great cilies on either side of the boundary and learn that the average city mechanic works half his time and _balf starves the otter half. Is he asmall trader? Let him visit Bosion, New York or Chicago and know that the corner grocer’s custom- ers may buy at retail certain goods in his line atthe big department stores at the rate he must pay by the box, barrel or gross, and some such at less than cost of production, the big store selling other goods in the grocery department the value of which is not as commonly known at prices which coverthe loss, And so of shoes, tin ware, etc. Goods are regularly sold in all departments at a manifest under valuation to induce reteil purclas- ers to gotothe department stores for all they buy and so force small competitors out of business. Is the dissatisfied des- pondent one a farmer? Let him havea look at the here brown pastures and meadows in Ontario or the Western States insummer and fail and see the whole stock living off the stocks and being fed directly as inwiater. Lethim eee che barren(stony, boulder- burthened New England farms such of them as have not already starved stock and owners of them once and finally—such of them as bave not had the shame of their nakedness hid- den by maniling forest growth, the dwelling bouses and barns and ort houses and stone fences upoa them visible among st the foliage,—and there are thousands of such utterly abandoned farms in Maine and New Hampshire. Do let him visit districts in northern New York along the inland water front and fiid that milk delivered at producer’s nearest R R station to go to New York City, say three hundred wiles away, briogsthe farmer four cents a gallon iu summer and five in winter, the cans returnable of course. Hence, milk in New York city aad Jersey City sells as long as three cents a quart in tome groc~ ery Stores—good miik too. Or let the Islander go to Indianaor Lllinois and see as I have that the timothy hay crop may be failure tee-totally, theclover crop next to nothing, potatoes the size of mar - bles, and oats actually too short to be cut by reaper and therefore pastured, and such where v0 wavure is applied or needed. And let him note further the canal—like open ditches made end kept at immense local public expense and the equally indiss spensible tiie ditching and draining, the latter at corresponding individual cost, — aod the great cost of gravellicg prairie roads where no gravel is to be hed near bye, that spring and fall they may not be bottomless muck bede,—and corn bringing fifteen ceuts @ bushel! and oats, if any there be, at ten cents, and hogs aud turkeys selling alive at four and a half and five centsa pound; let the Islander note this and wish bimeelf @ prairie farmer. Or let him go to the cotton states and fiod most of the white people, as of course all tbe blacks outside the city, town and village, living on hoe cake,corn cake and fried pork, when they can get the pork, on that and little else all the vear—living thus in the worst of human habitations, hovels that have not, that never had and never will have a equare of glass withia their open window holes—bovels thro’ zhe log walls of which pne might fling his hat, yes, live in such, ete born and die in such winter and summer—huts that bave nothing within them of value worth mentioning save three Or four shotguns and rifles, ADY one of which would seem to be worth more than the shanty they are in; the building elevated about three feet from the ground and supported by blocks, dignified by the name pillars, 80 raised that the snakes may not enter and that the starved yellow doge and biack and tan hounds to the total number of four to sixOn the premises may have shelter from sun and rain and the pigs a place to sleep in at night. Let the dissatisfied island farmer go down South, rent twenty to fifty acres or take the land on shares and live thus amongst a horde of thiey- ing negroes, swallow quinine and cal. owel for malaria chills aod fever and so forth, work undera broiling sun with a hoe in one hand anda fan in the other at raising cotton for five cents a pound baled for shipment,and be ever liable to be seized by a howliog mob and hanged and bullet-riddled without judge or jury, should some man or some woman raise a lie about him or should he be suspected of criminality in act or intention. Oh, but you say, as for the open conditions of the dwellings, the country is warm. Yes and hot much of the year; but to my personal knowledge the temperature in Northern Mississippi was down one morning the other winter to five above zero, aud during the bight previous twelve inches of snow fell — snow that took ten days to go. But enough of euch tales of woe. I have seen much of British America and very much of the United States,vorth south, east and west, and my conclusion is that there is not another area of like ex. tent in either country the eqaal of Priuce Edward Island in agricultural re. sourcesand annustl produc‘iveness. and Rings| Our assortment of Golden Bands, i wy complete in range ot price and quality od we invite our friends in town and antry to inspect them. ©ur prices are liberal and we are sure eam you will be pleased with the etyle and ‘aiah of the goods, G. F. HUTCHESON Cueen St. Jewelery Store, for renumerative tillage, or for the genera] health, prosperity, comfort and happiness ofits people—a people whose intelligeace, political economy, thirft and industry have with the help of God made the great little country what it s,even to its gre:t fer~ tility productivenese. How strange, how regretable, that a little breadth of intervening water serves to keep people spart in person and in sympathy. Instance, the inhabitants of Grea’ Britain and continental Evrope—fo England and Ireland,—and nearest home, of Cape Breton Island azd Nova Scotia proper—and last not leastof P E Island aud the Maritime Provincesa few miles away. Is it mot quite too bad J ’ that to the Prince Edward Islander the people of New Brunewick and Nova Scotia are ‘‘foreignera” rather thau fellow citizens rnd neighbora? Brooklyn bridge made New Yerk and Brooklyn one, atunnel would powerfully tend to unite and unify yon P E Island and us main- landers, but why wait for it? ~for the unat- tainable in our day? Will nothing break the shell? Why not run Neptune’s blovk ade? Why not look upon and re gard the hand-breath of intervening water as ore should so much—so, littlhe—inte:y.e'rg land? Has any Prince Edward Islander bitherto eufiered bimeelf to be cribbed and cabined and combinrd body and spirit in the en- groaning isvlating waters of the Gulf? If 80 let him take leave to depart. Let him remem ber , P. EK, Island is not a St. Helena. Let bim narrow straits. Let him visit Nova Scotia or New Brunewick, one or both, if ne go po further. Let him journey therein in one direction and another. By travel on the mainland and the ac qnaistanceship with its people that come of personal intercourse and the exchange of courtesies and ideas such Islander if any such there be, should have the range of histhoughts widene: and his sympathies widened and deepened. He sbould not love his island home the less—he ghoul retain and cherish a special regard for it, but he should incline to look upon it ever after as his home district, a8 a part only of his home land—of his and our common couptry. He should go back resolved that thereafter no pent up Utica shall contract his powers, he should awake to the real izaiion of the fact that the whole Domi- nion of Canada is hisas di.ectly and ar fully as ours, his aad our magnificent es- tate in commou—al appy hunting ground over which at will as by kingly right he may range and roam in quest or in pursuit of knowledge, health or pleasu:e— pf fame or fortune. Then how much all mag learn by travelling that books and periodi:als and lecturers canuot tell him. How travelling serves 10 correct misaporehension —t o liberalize—to enlighten. How promotive is it Of spiritual and mental growth. My letter is long enough I must omit allreference to matters and things con~ erova the cerning which I intended to write when | set out. May wrileagain soon. Britirsa-AMERICAN. Qa Best to take after dinner; : oi iq prevent distress, aid ciges- = | b ee tion, cure constipation. gi es Purely vecetabie: do not gripe or Cause pain. “old by all druggists, 25 cents Prepared only be (|. L Hood & Co.. Lawell, Mar- se3kTHE MODERN se aA F Foundry and Machine Shop We would call special atten - PPS x Zy tion to our“New Foundry De- 4 partment” which we bave prov- ~# ed to be adecided success. We bave spared no expense in fitting up this department. Having imported from the Uni- ted States a special “grade of sand” and emploving one of the ey best moulders in Canada, we are pow ina povrition to meet the long desired needs of the people. Machine Shop Dep't which is equipped with the best modern machinery and exper- ienced workmen, is capable of turaingout work in a strictly first class manner. To those in need of anything in our line we invite them to call and be thors oughly convinced that we do work in an Al style. BRUCE STEWART & CO’Y, “THE MODERN” Founders, Engineers & Machin~ ists, S.Nav.Co’s Wharf, Ch’iown, P. E. I Phone 125 Our DSF AG EF LNG SNS GLE AG a GS: Gaiters and Leggins * We have just received our fall stock of Gaiters for Ladies and Children, All lengths 6, 8, 10, and 12 button in Biack and Tan. W. H. STEWART & Co PAINTING Miss M. H.Chisholin has reopened | er studio in Morris Block and wil] give lessons in Oil, China, Water olor, and Tapestry painting from October Ist 1898 to June 1st 1899, 226 dew 6 weeks. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBBR 5, 198 wee Fall 0’Coats Black, blue and brown o’coats for men or youths $5.00, 6.00, 7.00, 8.00. 9.00, 10,00 11,00 and 12,00, rall and Winter Uister Brown wine fawn and grey uls‘ers all sizes from 22 that will fit a bov of three up to 46 breast that will fit the biggest man on the {sland for $4.50. 5.00. 6.00. .700, 8.00, 9.00, 10.00, 11 00, 12,00, 13.00, and 14.00. Fall and Winter Suits Mens }eavy suits in imported Scotch Canadian and Island tweeds Scotch serges Knglish worsterds from $5.60 up to 18.00, OUR $10.00 Scotch Seree suit isa Corker avd would cost $18.00 in any tailor shop in the city. Don’t be foolish and throw away $8 but drop. in and see this suit be- fore you buy. FiT-REFORM See our $10 Fit-Referm O‘coat blue beaver made and trimmed as well as cus- tom made our $12 15 and 18 is such that you cannot find elsewe:e in the city. We have just opened the first shipment of fall and winter suits 75 per cent of those goods Pant Ling, To Boston COMMENCING MAY 10th, rhe favorite S: 8. “HALE FAX” will leave Charlotte. ‘own for Roston : Every Tuesday, atl p.m calling at Hawkesbury ang Halifax. + RETURNING leave Boston every Saturday at noon. : Passengers leaveing Ch’‘ow, Wednesday morning via Pig tou, can make close contieg ey tion at Halifax with . S. S. “HALIFAX,” ~ Sailing Wednesday evening at ne , Tickets for sale at stations P, R, L Railway. 3 For further rates and all inform tion apply to H. Li: Chipman, Oanag } ian Agent, at Halifax, or to sr W. W. CLARKE, Agent, Ch’tom Juebec Steamship Co’y, Lit “STR. CAMPANA” Sailing Sailing rom Montreal from Charlottetown at 2 p. m. about6 p.m, Monday 10th Oct Monday 3rd Og Mondry 24th Oct Monday 17th Oct Monday 7th Nov Monday 3lst Oct Calling at Summerside, Perce Mal Bay and Father Puint. Delightal summer trip for tourists, P, accommodation unsurpassed, “Frege carried at competition rates, Eggs band- led with great care. ; CARVELL BROS — Agente® Beaver CHARLOTTETOWN and LIVERML ad DIRECT SERVICE 4 It is proposed to sail the 8 b- “LAKE WINNEPEG”, 3500 tons | From From Charlottetown Li oh Sept. 20 Oct, 4. Oct. 27 Nov. 10 Nov. 26 The above steamer is fitted with cold storage, und has modern improvements = for carrving live stock. Excellent accommodation for passengers For freight, pavsage, statemoons, and other information apply at the office of N. RATTENBURY, 106 PICKFORD & BLACK SEASON OF 1898. 8.8. CITY OF GHENT will sail from are made of the Scotch and English cloths 9 UX DERCLOTUING Winter Underclothing from 4c a suit up No doubt about the quality no doubt about the assortment, no doubt about the price, If you are sure you want underclothing we can show it to you and sell it to you for lessmoney than anyhouse in the trade, PROWSE BROS. The Wonderful Cheap Men "== day evenings. classes. | 227 dy tf Uharlottetown every Friday at 10 a. during the the season of 1898, for Halifax, — sallicg at Summerside, Port Hasting’, Port Hawkesbury, Arichat, Uanso, lease Harbor, Salmon River, Sheet Harbory returning will leave Halifax every Tue® day at 6 p. m., makiag same calls. Steamer has excellent passenger accom@=—— § modation. Saloon amidships. § freights will be given this season. For further information apply to WwW, W. a Ch’town, May 13,1898 a AT LAND COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, on Munday, October 3rd. And will be continued through the season on Monday, Tuesday and Fr Same courses as in day Apply at once. ISAAC OXENHAM, ey. J