a Sa he of ee ee SEs Fn ttnsinnnmalemeires “ » Gen ~<a Ath is THE D.aLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 24, 1599 ne 1 THE BEST BREAD ~iS THE Duchesse frm — Br eatl me phhph hits v aanhhLaAah®*A”%F 4 ahbah. KE BAKERY BAKES BSST BREAD _ A WISE WOMAN uses the best quality of DYE when dyeing at home and the latest and best article for | HONE DYEING -ientific article, nade isthat: in | ugi and | MAYPOLE SOAP ‘ashes and Dyes Any material Any colour For sale everywhere. me Book on Home Dyeing oo c. on application to i Cenadian Depot: || 8 PLACE ROYALE, MONTREAL. BIG BARGAINS ——IN MISSES’ AND CHILDREN’S ODD LINES AND SIZES IN BOOTS SHOES (ND SLIPPERS Just the xine you want for the holidays—for frollicking abrut the ountry, and scampering around the In fact we have a LARGE and well assorted stock. We can fit you ail. Mens, Boys, Laeirs and babies. Big, Stock Small Prices BEFORE YOU BUY PLEASE TRY Weeks & Warren FOR SALE $20 ACRES GF LAND AT LOWER | MONTAGUE The subscriber offers for sale her farm situ- ate nt Lower Montagne, King’s County, cen- sisting of 320 acres of land, 140 of which are clear and ina high state of cultivation, the remainder being cOvered with a valuable zrowth of fencing, fire wood and timber. There isa comfortable house and good out- buildings on the premises; also a large orchard of young trees, his farm is most convenient ly situated, being about midway between- Georgetown and Montague Bridge, and quite near schools, churches, mills, etc. For farther particulars apply at the office of Mathieson @& Bently, Georgetown, or on the premises te Mr. Benj. E. Wright SOPHIA McDONALD,= Mon‘ agae Bridge, July 99 DR. CLIFT. ures CHRONIC-DISE 4SES and RUPTURE by Ralisbury treatmrnt. Send stamp for infor- mation, or call at Truro, Nova Scotia. Office W rehants Bank ofHalifax Building. oe a W ANTED—A girl for general housework. & 4 CENTSPER LOAF ELETHONE 98 » F AUGUST 24, 1899. ONE OF THE STRAWS. rer al! the poise made by the disereet | Guardian, Mr, Jobn G. Scrimgeour con- | tinues to held the advantage of his Cus- | toms warehouse and bis offices under the | Liberal Governments of Oanadaand this Province. Notonly so. Mr. Scrimgeour | was one of the epeakers } at the Liberal meeting held yesterday. It is evident that Mr. Scrimgeour, ten times convicted a violator of the Canada | Temperance Act, stands high in the con» | fidence of the Liberal | Liberal party does not care the suap of a finger for the temperance men | Edward Island. Way ? men have not shown their power ia any The temperance ‘election! There have been no bullets in | their guns. Let them now unite, and at | the next election vote down the Liberal | party in thie Province and in the |Domirion! If the temperance should yote inthe province as they voted | in the plebescite, the Liberals would not | be so ready to bring out a Scott Act vio- later at their meetings, keep him in office, |and give him special advantages in the | liquor dealing business, alike men “HOW NOT TO DO IT-” A correspondent at Alberton writes: “The T. A. Stewart is here this evening. | She lost the Dredge, Stanley ard Henry | Aitken en route,and is earning $25 a day at | our wharf. "It seems very doubtful that the | service the dredge may render at Malpe- | que will balance the cost of sending her there and bringing her back. If the dredge had been sent to the north side im the spring with orders to improve all the principe] shipping places along the north coatt, there would be reasou in the move. ment. Buttoseaod her there now, when the season is well-nigh ended, with two expensive steamers to tow her, and anoth~ er expensive steamer to attend upon her after she gets there, and to pass by Cascumpecand other points in order that the may go direct 1o Malpeque, where the places on the south side need dredging and could be dredged during the fine days that are being absolutely lostonthe trip to Malpeque—this seems the height of mad. ness, ard illustrates the “How not te do it” Administration to a T, —The newspapers of Paris in comment~ ing On the riots, are unanimous in pro-~ nouncing the situation of a serious char~ acter. The Conservative and Nationalist organs accuee the Government of provok- ing the trouble by unjustifiable arrests. The Gaulois reproaches the Cabinet for not having taken measures to prevent the excesses, The Radical, Revisioniat and Republican papers insist upon more firra.. ness on ihe part of the Ministry and declare the ministers must defend the republic against eecret machinations and attempts at an uprising. The radical press protests against the disorders and hopes the police will prevent a recurrence of them. The Figaro expresses the belief that the troubles are over and says the Govern- ment has decided toact with the utmost rigor against M. Guerin, the President of the Anti-Semite League, who, with some companions, has been barricaded in the headquarters of the League since August 12th. —On the 3lst of July the Liberal gov. ernments of Nova Scotia and P. E. Island had overdrawn from the banks the sum of $386,409. How much of this amount is due by the government of P. E, Is!and cannot be told. —Correspondents at the West complain tLat their mails are “irregular.” This ought not so to be, most have reference. Apply to Mis Phili Large, Bayfield Street 7. 199 ” party and that ibe | | class of the electors | “Sir Louis Davies” will lie,—wiile sbippirg te $1.45. PARTY ORGANIZATION. Space io Tue Examiner is just now fu'ly occupied; aad as Mr. McCarthy imports some new matter into the discussion, we have decided to withhold his second some- what lengthy letter io replyto Mr. Buote —atleas\ for the present. Nothing can, in our Opinion, be gained by a continuance of the discussion. The importance of party organization, which Mr, McCarthy insists upou, has repeatedly been proved. We are glad to know that in the first dis- trict of Prince as well as in the third dis trict of Queen’s, and throughout the Pro vince, the Liberal Conservatives are alive tothe factand have active men,such as Mr McCarthy, to attend to the Iu the interests of good government it 18 organization, essential that honest men shou!d organize against those unscrupulous politicians in . ’ a iy * of Prince | office who rely upou the corruption of tbat which holds the bal« two with power between the perties. While we Mr. McCarthy upon many points, we also agree with Mr. Buotewhen he says :— “We look to the principle above the maa.” By keeping this sentiment in view and re~ solutely frowning down personal jealous- ies and bickerings, the people will be able to organize aud co-operate, and thas to secure @ better government. ance of agree THE PATRIOTS INDIG NATION —_— — Sir,—The Patriot is too righteously in- dignoant about Peter McNutt’s mudhole and the dredge. People who know anys thing about the job say that yon struck the aail fairon the head. Just thiak of it. Thecountry is paying enormous ex- penses for this dredge, Prince Edward. Many places are suffering for want of dredging; and this 22ad day of August, the dredge ic on the nigh sea, towed by the steamer Stanley and the tug Genry Aitken, and accompanied by the T A Stewart, Farquharson’s $25 a dayer. We bad a visit from The Stewart, which lost her flotiila off Miminigash,and didn’t know where to find them. She “hugged” our wharf bere, and was inspected by the faith - ful, who thought $25 a day a snap for the generous whole-souled Premier. The great majority, gritty as they might be, thought Sir Louis pretty fresh to be ang- led, by Peter MacNutt’s calling his schoon- er after bim, into sending an expensive dredge ajl around the coast with the steamship Stanley and two steam tenders. Cascumpec wants dredging badly, Would that some ungodly grit would build an old hulk, and callit Linger Lounger Lou. Mocc.. Cascumpec, Aug. 22, 1899. —— NOTES AND COMMENTS. —— ee —Mr. Eroest Pacaund is, we are tod, the chosen candidate—chosen by Sir Wil frid Laurier—for the repreeentation of the connty of Lotbiniere, in the House of Commons. Pacaud is the hero of the Bay Chaleurs railway steal. He is an ol hand at“ the machine.” His election is rot atall unlikely. With Paeaud at hend, the position of Sir Wilfred will be strengtbened,—in eo far as the present gov~ erning class of Canadais concerned. Pa- caud, and Scrimgeour, and Tarte are, mora!ly, well matched. —War in the Transvaal seems to be unavoidable. Lord Salisbury has pre- served peace with honor, in respect to many nations. But the insensate Boers are evidently determined to try conclusions with their Svuzerain. Kruger is, perhaps, more the creature of the time and the exponent of Boer opinion than a free agent in the matter. St. John Sun: We have heard much of Mr. Fielding’s great surplus for the year ending June 30th, 1899. Less bas been heard of the fact that the debt of Canada increased in that year by $3.538,176 note withstanding the surplus. = oer eee => Shirt Waists for 25¢e each at Stanley Bros, regular prices were 65 and 68c. Another lot fer 40c each, worth from S85c 199 d3i wli You May Have Tried Others now try The “HERCULES” Wire mattress. So called because under test it has proven te be ten times stronger than any old style wire mattress. WILL NOT SAG—Costs no more than the cheap kinds. MARK WRIGHT AND Co Home Makers AN AWFUL ROAD. Sir,—On Prince Edward Island] there are roais and roads, big roads and little roads, long roads and short roads, broad roads and pvarrow roads,—but of all the roads which the writer bas ever waiked over, driven over or gotten over in any Other way, the road leading from the Wes‘ern road to St. Nich - olas Station “takes the cake.” Oh, Far- qubarson, Farquharson, Farqul a-son, you who claim that the roads of Prince Edward Island were never in a better condition than they are at present, you who said that the annual deficits are mainly due te the large expenditures necessary to keep the at{{} af ai{{] Al «ill in the city, «|i roads in good order, if yor could but see drive over it, and it you kaew of the indig- pation felt by those —grit and tory alike — who have occasion to use the road, you would have another good reasoo for taking the advice of Tue Examiner, and get out of the way to make room fur one more worthy than thou. Leaving the Western road, the first part of the road is covered with about a foot of smal!-sized trees Jaid across it, with just a few shovelfuls of earth thrown on top, barely enongh to keep it in place, then comes @ place full of holes, up and down, up and down, then some more trees, and then the part which can beseea from the train windows when at the station is in a fairly good condition. Altogether it would be hard to imagine a worse road. We cannot suppose that a worse piece of road exists ou P. KE. Isiand. We hope that there are none as bad. The only good thing about the road is that it is short; the most inconvenient thing about it is that it is used to a large extent. Messrs Yeo and Murray, who operate a brickyard on the former’s farm on the Western road, have to haul alloftheir brick over it in order to ship it at St. Nicholas Station, Ther, betore hauling their last lot of brick,turned out with seven men and repaired a part of it at their own expense; otherwise they would not have been able to haul over it at all. Mr. Josepn Reeves who has a brick- yard at St. Nicholes has to haul all his brick aod clay over it, and anyone wishing todrive {rom Wellington or the Weetera road to or through the thriving settlement of Muddy Ceeek, or vice versa, has to go over this piece of road, We hope that the Premier, or the Com~ missioner of Public Works, or someone, late though it is, will attend to the matter at once, It is astanding disgrace to this section of the country, TRAVELLER. >< Catarrhal Deafness. The last stage development of Nasal Ca. tarrh. Japanese Catarrh Cure goes away past the points where even specialists on the disease have been able to reach. It's a pene trating, soothing, healing and stren henin compound, allaying the Inflammation an Seatae without leaving the slightest bad after-resulté, The onl ee Catarrh eure, 60c at ali draggit uy ee te) Sold by Geo. E. Hughes LAST PICNIC OF THE SEASON Grace Church Sunday School Will hold its Avnaual Picnic at ELLOIT’S MILLS, on Wednesday, August 30th. Visitors from both town and country will be provided for. A good refreshment booth on the grounds Games of various kinds and Athletic Spcrts will be indulged in. Train leaves Ch’town station at 9.30 am Return fare from Ch’town and inter- mediate stations, 30 cents. Specia) rates for families. Train will stop at any sta- tion when signalled, Good swings a specialty. LEM SELLER, Sec’y. N. B.—Should the day prove unfavor- able, Picnie will be held following day. — Corsets. Special Flack, Short. A New Line Usually Sold for $1.25, Our price SOc l this awful piece of road and if you bad to; «iff! one costume length. «ii{] Cart ie SS SS i there, «i «i <i di] sizes 20, 21, 22, 23, a <t{l «(| «lf «(| «ilk «ll «t(j ai{{ 42a424 2244 ai at— F. PERKINS & § ASALAAASAAACAAAAAS, DRESS GOODS We aim at keeping the most up-to-date stuff to be Fall Dress Fabrics of every de cumillating here with great rapidity. The gr q| richer and more varied daily, aii e . aj seta good dress that it will not be duplicated on ey it} corner; therefore in most of the high class stuff we gi We have some of the richest effaac from the looms of the best mills. We now stand in the { rank as dealers in high-class goodsand we ar tt _ e are bound ty CORSET WAISTS aif] We have a nice line of ycung ladies Corset Wai 24, 25 and 26. 95 cents, we are now selling them for 0c each, scription are ye 4 eat Variety It is nice to know whe, The original Price “ MILLINERY It is hard to think that the summer is passing: but fact remains and our fall millinery is ariving daily, ga are varied and very pretty. ticulars with reference to this line in which we are the RAILWAY WRAPS We have a large range of very beautiful wraps of «tll ent plaids, with fringe and without fringe, ranging in <i] from 25 cents to $10.00 each. PATTERNS The Bazaar Glove Fitting pattern which stands wif a peer in the world, we sell tor 15 cents each. 500 , latest fashion sheets given away every month, Ask k Watch our space for ary F, PERKINS & C4 ——C. A. Annual A oe po The Annval Sports of the Charlottetown Amateur Athletic Association held ori their grounds, CHARLOTTETOWN Wednesday, September Eth, 1 ; 1.—Cne Mile Bicycle Race, Novice—lst Gold Medal; 2nd and 3rd Silver Meval 2.-~Half Mile Bicycle Race (Time Limit) —ls* and 201 Gold Merale; 3:d 8. Medal 3—220 Yards Run—lst, Gold Medal; 2nd, Silver Medal 4—1 Mile Bicycle Race (Time Limit)— Ist and 2od, Gold Meda.s; 3rd, Silver Medal 5--One Mile Bicycle Race (Boys under 15)—I1st, Gold Meda!; 2ud Silver Medal 6—Sealed Distance Bicycle Race—lIs! and 2od Gold Medal; 3rd, Silver Medal. Leave Tignishb, regular train..........500 1m TR .. an cncktwasieadendesnl 540 a m ” Bloomffold... ce ....0s00+-900 -....606am i Cr eweb eenebe 62lam ~ SRSA scutes ck cee eune “ IIR, ns cena cs oe ckeeneo> ™ Miscouche............ ecssee....8048 M " PR OIED cnne ‘cancce oe eseues 2am . ER. sch 00 Oxcceenectonee 848 am eoe.7 14M 74am ” RL c ccce o0nbae auenwe ue 90am - EE ccene ocnceve 06 0ceeeese+0 SE e DEEIOD, . cece wkuieskh senese 919&m " DE SEEWOE, ..sc0. soeabecs Gone 943 am 7 Wiltshire...... | eeee, ee "a Royalty Junction .......0 s+. 025am arrive Charlestown. ..... ccssce ove 10 40am Special leaves Charlotte For West ~ town at 5.00 p m, con- necting in Summerside with regular for Tig- nish, leaving at 7.45 p m Leave Souris (regular train]............/ 510am ” DO TESCO s o.4 ivan c¥¥0O40-s08040- 54lam - ek. I ccs es 50 00000k. bean ese 615amM “ ee Le 637 am . Georgetown........geccees......5558m ” I oil coca koa aida oe 610am “ PN ob 6h code cs hancde cad ..640am ” Mou nt Stewart........ scccs 710am ” RS i se . Royalty Junction.... .... ch ae 8 0am arrive Charlottetown.....+.... ..... 8 15am For East—Srecia! leaves Charlotte- The fcllowing is tue yrogramme and prize list: — / Entries close September Ist with the secretary. must accompany the entry, otherwi8ss it will not be considered complete —Rand In Attendance —— TRAIN ARRANGEMENTS : town for Georgetown and Sonris at 5.30 p m J All Standard Time Admission 25c. Grand Stand 10e. B. C. PROWSE, President. Thursday, Sept. 7th. : 7—440 Yards Run—Ist Gold Silver Medal 8—Two Miie Bicycle Race and 2nd, Geld Medals; 3rd, Silver 9—One Half Mile Bicycie Bact a'nst time with permission for x 2od and 3rd, Gold Medais 10—880 Yards Run—Ist, Gold 2ad, Silver Medai. 11—Three Mile Bicycle Relay Teams of Three representing Cit otherwise, Silver Cup. 12-5 Maule Bicycle Massey-Harris Trophy. iintrance fees 25¢ each ents, Team FARES Tignish to Pinsville,....... coccennea ean Bloomfield to Portage. ....++c+++#00..08 Conway to Richmond.........<..-.-« Wellington to st. Kleanors......-++» +" Summerside to Freetown. ..... 00+ Emerald to Freetown... .......sss00e ht Clyde to Wiitshire.....+ ....0+ sesgeete™* Colville to Charlottetown, single fares Kin kora to Cape Traverse.... ...«0#* Souris to Bear River..........++s Rollo Bay to Midgell..........+s05 #1 Marie to Dougias..........0« » St. Andrews to Tracadice.... ....-.09 Bedford to Charlottetown, single fares Georgetown to Perth..........+. «9 43 Reed 66 Peake...ccc o+scsnse IE cacos oc sannee wo eoccscceenn oeaseeeee oo ceene™ es Arrangements are being maéde® IC Rto issue RaTURN TI One First-Ciase Fare from all Bt New Brunswick and Nova Scotia lottetowo on the Sih September s return up to and on the 8th. Pictou to Charlottetown, and Chene to Summerside, Single F for passage on Tuesday, Sept. 5iby Sports begin at 1 p. m. shat E. H. BEER, | mportant Notice Lancashire Fire Insurance Co. Victoria-Montreal tire Insurance Co. tariff rates. substantially reduced rates Lonpon Hovse ‘hs Ue Harris! 4 ~2aw tf The’above Companies are not connected with the P, ‘ Island Board of Fire Underwriters, and are not bound I am, therefore, prepared to effect ins JOUNSTOR, Agent, Charlottztown, P. E. lee J. i