: : : ' : ' : : : ' t ; : % : } j ’ : ‘ ’ ; ; * ; ‘ ’ * ' ( ’ ' : * ; i : : : : ; & ‘ a 4 a 2 2 DF , ' ’ e , a y ef ' : } : 1 ' ‘ ’ i ; } 7 Ce iil . ime | it i . ibm itt Bt a oe 7 . ' ‘ 4 } i f i - of THE SALE OF OUR aew BREAD Y increasing every day, that . sure sign that it is all right Tey t he | DUCHESSE —am- BREAD ; on! ne puaill ¥. + cents per loaf. .. bes ES BSST BREAD TENDERS. fAAAaAAAAananAsAAAAasAAssassssssasssAAhAhDDQS c } Ten lers f{ Southnort School, addressed to the tr s of the Sc uthport School will ived up to the 25th August, inst, »t the store of Fennell & Chand er vhere the specification may be SHARLES BYRNE, | F. GUARD, ~ Trustees N — TCH, So Aug. 15, d&w THE WEEK’S GROCERIES... — Perhaps you would like to get « littie more for what yeu spend. P:rhaps you would like to ave everything fresh and nice. If you will try my store I think you will find that your money will go farther. And all the groceries you get will be good and fresh. Jo Je McKENNA, QUEEN ST. GROCER sulle DIAMOND Litt ae Fo. Mentre: PONAVISTA ¢ail'ng from . Friday worving, Avg, 18:b, will be ct Ch’town, Morcay mcrping. Aug Zist, taile for St. Jcbn’s and Bone- viele. Newfovndland, carrying lherses, cattle d sheep cn deck tnd _ pro- duce nder deck at lowest rossible rete For further Farticulars as to tre gi! : nd passege syply to PFAKE BROS &CO., Chitcur “ et JE—*99 Agente rO R SAI FE. J) lretble wai stet faim, situated bt} Peier’s Road. «ight miles from Ch; ‘own. which wee cwred by the Bie EY ’ M Mcleced § ‘This ie ore of the n ‘+ reble ferme ever offered for eale I + VICVIT CE It is siivated in the «1 miry seciicn ir Queen’s County. It ccrs + s of 125 ecree, £5 cf which are nel ;). ste! ae veticn, the balance Leirg cevered th kasd ere ec{t wood. It v reed with spruce hedger and has a ls ‘herd. Railway Station, Queen’s Coir: Court Bcvre tre Schccl House ellen ile prey ; vlc’ ava cheese fac: Ci) toe within cesy reach. The dwelling cri Lex: ¢ ere oll that cen be desir fc gue tre ip gecd weqe'r, Intending yi btil fc Fe yrcper'y to ap- pre le mipy edverteges it offers to | be ut J Lt property } tri recicd 2) CBF VFI the first | f $s mn ber ‘L fe partice interested full y: vier exrd terme wil) ke given by the 1 s Arcil fein ¢ xtv ecres balf a mile mile trem the boxe witb three never fail- Reiplage cf ria y iz ecld seperately CF )} { ‘ SESE S VACLECD, F}D213 & VACIEOD, Z 7 ’ eli « ‘ Le late AS WP Pe 16C€ €6i w3 Wenn natitie atin ; . “oe Liluel- Ca scrvative Association Aomeeiiy }. be €4 trexcd. Liberal- Cares Brveeere v le held in Meu iré 3 hi i. Fe:tcr South on Brest #1 &«’cleck p.m. A i re: ne f recrestd. 27.7 EC Pte. Cer cere. Pi¢E s}T BUITIEY President, 3. Siee, ) ~ Tr LEPHONE 98 D. STEWART ; ECLIPSE BAKERY wv building an addition to UGUST 16, 1899. THE LIBERAL RECORD. Ar ‘he close of the recent long session uf Mr. Foster submitted, in the form of a res sol il on, a sbort statement—-a summing it were—of the results of Liberal Canada for Wi quot e it up as rule in , the past three vears. in the it will be lly noted hope that caretu Prov by the electorate of this ve ane cut ont fox reference : MR. FOS®TER’S RESOLUTION. That the wing facts with reference to the taxation, revenue, expenditure and public deot of Canada are established from ] i foli the official records :— = sleeit $ & & - as - cse=|e8e5eSk 2 3 sk=-8 | Resasa, : Saseis = & = Z “o” S ” r on — An £ s ~ = - Rn & S m i ST oe S 5 5 £& :S8e3°5 % 6 aoe ve 1 8 N Sj oi a a we ww se eS > sil eeniiithiatiimeai ep ° ‘ile oS 5 2. a a. S _— Nn oo en at 26 > li e :S252-S a) a = tf HOSEL _ ak - q oo x & a eS = & a a & &F | erat ae Din ~ 3s Uf a | R = _ @ a be > rt = © 9g pom wn “>. & & = = :*28 >> ’ = | * Ss é t~ ot Se mS - im x _ . é ne. ‘ < a 8 aa: 3 | he te ao & : gaia Ses °e . a ~ ae . . ss nnn er wes ee as 2s ome “= “ee omca «6S oe ate > o wm eee MS U8 eH eS ee’ 6S: fees Ce. ie (0 . - an 6 : =o58 ow ee . - +S -S& : @.-g4:2 GZ°- ::6 23 AauSf i= a2t [SOUE we Sa-—-7°? “a _— -SSa2oua ~O68" 26 & -C50 2% S os L ‘Seaeso emmpes28 e= 327.058 s@™séu s8 ~@25%so feo e oS BM 2a"8 55 a fh, bins Setissare =F seoageee™ m@—-=S-F = 2s $a. SSevrs— = mSogoue Ox & @ oO Cee =A = That the Liberal party wert to the country in 1896 witn a policy declaring, among other things, for :— (a) Reduction in taxation. (b) Decrease in expenditure. (c) Diminution of the public debt. (d) The extermination of the principle aud practice of protection. (e) Independence of Parliament an purity of the electorate. * (f) The abolition of railway bonuses or | eubridies. (g) An honest, ecosomical and business Administration. That, comparing 1899 with 1896, the amount of customs and excise taxation has been increased by nearly $7,000,000 or by over $1 per head of the population, aud the total amount collected from the people by over $8,000,000, or about $1 27 per head. The total expenditure has been increased by about $8,000,000, or over $125 per head, whilst the total amoant, not includ- year 1899-1900, reaches the astounding sum of $51,796 344, or $13,000,000 more than was voted and $14,847,197 more than was expended for the year 1896 Phe net debt bas increased about $6,000,- 000, and must be seriously augmented by the enormous expenditures authorized atthe present cession of Parliament. ibai, instead of exterminating protection and establishing a system of free trade, or tariff for revenue only, they have incorpor- ated the principle of protection into the tariflacts of 1897 and 1898, and the result of the year 1898-99 showed that they hve imposed a rate of 28 74 per cent. on al! dutiable goods imported for home consump tion, as compared with 29.94 percent. in 1896, or upon dutiable and free imports for home consumption of 16.95 per cent., as coropared with an average of 17.47 per cent, for the years 1892-96 inclusive. That the independence of Parliament and the purity of the electorate have been il-~ justrated by the traffic in seats in both Houres of Parliament for purely party purposes; bythe arbitrary and indefen- sible dismissals from and by interested and unnecessary appointments to public offices in all branches of the service; by the written and authorized promises of office, emoluments and eubventions given to | ‘THE DAILY EXAMINER | ernment for electoral and party purposes, members of Parliament and others by the rremier and other membere of the Gov- by the practical repudistion of the sa‘e p'inciple of open competition, tender and | contract, as ap) lied to the expenditures ot by private arraugement to party friends who thus make profit for themselves at the expense of the country. addition to the payment ot for the Drummond County $140,000 yearly for 99 years this year, in $1,600,000 Railway aod as rental tothe G.'T. ized the expeodiure of not less than $6,- | administration has been iliusirated by : (a) The entry upon ent+rprises unau- thorized by Parliament and tor which no appropriation had been made, whica io volved the eXpeuaiture of millions dollare and the diversioa of moueys speci fically voied for distinc: and well defiacd services to these purposes, thue sett ng at of naught the constitutional principle ot Parliamentary sanction aud appropria- tion. (b) By undertaking the consiraction of public wharves and buildings which are either totally unwarranted on grounds of public necessity or which should be lett to Provincial, municipal or private enter- prise. (c) By an extravagant, inefficient and useless expenditure proposed and carried out in the Yukon district, and a manage- | ment of affairs there which has exposed the wiole system to general suspicion aud | provoked Gharges seriously affecting tbe cbaracier aud efficiency ot tue Administra- tion and its officials, and compromising che good vuame of Canada, which bave been refused thorough aod adequate investiga- tion before an independent and judicial commission, (a) By ite inefficient conduct of the business Parliament; is failure’ to achieve much~veeded legislation for the good of Canada, to secure a fast Atlantic service, to settle any of the vexed inter- nations! questions at isgue, to induce any mutually preferential trade with other pore tions of the empire or to open a eingle new market uader improved conditions,7reci- procal or otherwise, in any quarter of the | world. ing next year’s supplementary ,voted for the | f That this House is of the opinion that the violatiou of public pledges, made defi- nitely and solemaly by a party when seek - ing to change the administration of tbe | cOuntry, is corrupting to public morals and reprebensitle in the highest degree, d | aad io the case of the present Government | calls for the severest condemuation. That the astounding increase in all manner of expenditures by the Govern- ment and in the indefensible nature of many of these expenditures, enha.cing as they do the already too heavy burdens of taxaiion, is cause for anxiety aod alarm aod th:ea’ens great public danger. That the extravagance, lack of prine ciple and incapacity showo by the Ad- ministration calls for censure by this douse and the Country. The deserved censure of the “House’’ was withkeld by the party majority. but what w.tl the Qountry do when it gets the opportunity ? Chamnencntinnanntctnmnn @ @ -Q-<eewnnsemmnmninnneal NOT OPPOSED. Tue usually discreet Guardian 's ‘* very much mixed ” It seems tothink upen there just now. that the civilized One point at least, are no two things world is all wrong, deciares that *‘ more diametricaliy op- posed than prohibition and license in deal- ing with the liquor traffic,” “ the esteemed Examiner professes great regard for prohibition, but condones the principle of license.” Yes, we regard drunkenness as a public and national evil, to be fought by various kinds of weapons. If we cannot have the weapon we should prefer, we are ready to take up another and fight on. When cheated out of pro hibition we fall back upon Scott Act, or License, or Regulation, just as a soldier deprived of his rifle wovld take up his eword or pistol. The rifle is not opposed to the sword or the pistol, though it is a more deadly and effective weapon. Nei- and says that You May Have 1 Tried Others now try . ne 7 _ 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. Sg. . tos Pg Se MARK WhithT AND CO Home Makers public money and the giving of contrasts That instead of e#»olishing the system of bonus and subsidies the railways they have | wing enacted it, and though we know that | .. Campany, aurhor- | the obtain prohibition, or some other better) 500,000 for general railway bonuses, in many instances for wanecessary and par- | alle! lines. That the promise td maintain an honest, economical and busimessiske | | — | j ' ther 18 prohibition opposed to license cr | any Other means of controlling the liquor traffic and reducing the evils resulting from drunkenness, We sey prohibition,” But that has been denied by “ give us nas who sre morally bound, as a result of their plebiecite, to give the country a prohibitory law. So, though we condemn ntterly the barefaced treachery of tho-e a much betteract might bave been framed, we are willing to do the best we can with Fan unti! ‘uharecn§ license law weapon with which to keep down dranken- If our discreet, but just now very much flustered, conte inte Li sure, also, that the public will apprecia‘e te sincerity aod consistency of the “ pro~ nibition organ ” which professes to abbor license, and yet declines to advise its read~ vote ae “ insulters,” and “ traitors,”’— Dancan Marshall’s prohibition has kas been ziven. DIRECT COMMUNICATION. point, an gent pur blic can. “s down ere to * deceivers,” we use Mr. language—by whom been denied and license ” ir is pleasing to learn that a steamship, is, at length, to be put upon the route between P. E. Island and Great Britain. We hope that the incalculable loss sustain« ed by the farmers und dealers of this pro- vince on account of the failure of the Gov- ernment to fulfill the expectation that one would be provided last spring will, tosome extent, be made up in the coming fall. That Premier Farquharson is personallY interesting himeelf in the matter may be taken as avidence that the honorabl. gentleman fully appreciates the necessity of improving his political position. @2+6-e so-o?+o REUBEN TUPLIN, ESQUIRE. A sTERLING MAN—one whose ability and integrity have been repeatedly tested— has passed away in the person of Rueben Tuplin, Esq., of Kensington. He had more than fiiled tne tale of three score years and ten. His death was anticipated. | Yet the community in which be lived, and the people of the Province at large, will experience the sense of shock and regret that is felt when the community loses s man of character. We sympathize with | } his bereaved childrer. and other relatives. ae - | | THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 16, we; ae Canvot Fee the | to hold We feel | —The travel via the Plant Line between | Boston and the Provinces this season has been the largest in the history of the | Line. with accomodation for 800 people has been full each trip, and the popular S. 8, **Halifax,” so well known ling public, has eachtrip carried her full complement, The autumn travel to Bos- ton via these popular steamers promises to surpas® any previous season, —— The scrutiny of the ballots in the North Waterloo (Ontario) election shows gross irregularities, that it is anticipated, will compel Mr. Bret vannt, the Liberal mem - b r, to resign. CHARLOTTETUWN Business College ——A ND— Writing Academy Will re-open for the Fall and Winter Term ON AUCUST e2octh. (‘Let the Searchlight of Practice illuminate the aark places of Theory’’) A | THOROUGHLY Progressive, Practical institution, in which young men and women are not only taught Bookkeeping (in all its applications. to Commerce) both by single and double entry, but are trained how to do business by actual business transactions, The s! udents act as buyers, sellers, traders, benkers, book- keepers and accountants in actual business operations, and the currency | Seed purchased from us this season. to the traveim} | Third Best Boquet The 8.8. “La Grande Duchesse,” | issued by the Co'lege Bank, and the mdse. issued from the Emporium are used in bona- fide business transactions, just the same as | in mercantile a. eS houses. Book- keeping in itself learned at home, but a knowledge of how to transact business i cannot be thus acquired. That our curse! and sy stem oftraining is emiently practical | write for testimonials from business men and | from students who are now holding lucrative and responsible positions, | SUBJECTS: Book-kee ping by single and double entry (theoretical and practical) Actual Business Practice, Business Penmanship, Busines Correspo ndence Commercial Arithmetic, Commercial Law, Railroading, Steamboat- | ing, Banking (actual practice in the College | Bank), Typewriting, Shorthand, and Nayi- gatioa. % FACULTY: . B. Miller, Principal, Teacher of Book- } | ie ping, Arithmetic, BPusiness Practice. Business Correspeadence, Typewriting and | Navigation, A. C. McMillan, Vice Principal, Teacher } of Railroading, Steam boating, Banking, Ac- counting and Actual Business Practice. J. Harry Williams, Penmanship. Wm. Moran [licensed] Teacher of Short-| hand, George S. Enman, Esq., [ Law Firm asd teacher of’ Business } Donald & Inman] Lecturer on Commercial | Law. For circulars or full or apply to : L. B. MILLER, All interested are cordinally invited to call | atthe College and inspect our system of training and work in genefal, information write | attained /MILLINERY. 1899 rt Pays to buy at =e Fs ee bs oes jit We have tought hard for first place and are proud to say that we have and our position as in High Class GOODS being sl are bound over a leaders DRESS +. ®-. 8. ae ee 884 OS and ae the >a ~~» eae 2&2 4224 & SOO Ff Ff i Women’ Jaunty s Shirt Waists We have a large range of Shirts Waists still on hand very stylish and pretty. prices, Every one a bargain cheap at regular price but with bows. and st ’ 1 3 . first off the price ever i Pp yone is siaea snap. . are the ties =@ Ma Chi These are among the noveities that are now 1own at Perking They are very pretty nice shirt waist you should get one be. y are all gone, § Neckwear tyles and easy The newest and most up to date ties in the ring ties. Firs, served. These that bind. F. PERKINS & Co, : SUNNYSIDE, CH’TOWN MILLINERY LEADERS...... SWEET PEA GOMPE ——-1899-—— TITION. GRAND SWEET PEA SHOW AT OUR STORE, SUNNYSIDE AUGUST 22nd, 23rd & 24th We offer the following prizes for Sweet Peas grown from —-— FIRST COMPETITION Best Boquet......(all blue shades or al! red Second Best Boquet do do do de SECOND COMPETITION — Best Collee stion eeesee eee0e006¢ 606086 26866 6 Second Best Collection.. Lhird Best Poblection. « «sane; cakes cele The conditions are that the competitor shall bring » envelope the Seeds were in when purchased, and that no else be used except what is furnished by the sw eet pea. HASZARD & MO SUNNYsID a SBCOC6S6 624068 G6 4G484E 48 UE . Have yon been trying to get a pair of boots to suit you, and tailed to do so. If so, try the Model. SHOK Department You wili find every- ei that is kept in a seen MODEL SHOES. 3 @Oe806264+4 2 sf Oo»? SOAs well appointed shoe store SO 624eeBt 464407 *' OT” a 4 woe wee cle 1 5e e\ecebee ae ith the exhibit the green or anything ORE, E SEEDSsMEN nc A 6O8F MODEL SHOES, oe ae il R. H. RAMSAY & C0. Piucpal | MODEL STORE—— Tus Outritters shades) $1.00 do 7 do 0 © city in diamond knots, fancy § + See 0) i Bag fees la mee EO een? ee ‘el My RE: pee 7 jp wai Aedion a? She a ip ae a “A es i SV OQPRARSRRPREHRESOLOLS 197 SOVORASET SERS CRRGRRSEORECOCHOCESORCR SE DOOTer. coeoeeeneesenaeenbess wr f _—_~ zs ae ee lt —' ————