- a ET Ee AA DAMRMRM MMMM MM be tebe tate he bebe ee teh, ~ i\—<- > Everywhere 3 Ese 3 ’ then trv 13 f von want O’TCH CAKE Ours *t be > ve Want you to 444A ” s 40 KnHOW ry day. Prie L eve : {Go PER LB. : DD. STEWART ‘ ECLIPSE BAKERY . BAKES BSST BREAD ptinien . NAN NENG NG NE etme ofa te & ewe > “@° “™@° October — MAGAZINES NEW BOOKS ALL UP-TO-DATE Lines of Stationery. Novelties in Crepe Tissue Papers from 6c large roll up. HASZARD AND -.. MOORE SUNNYSIDE. AZ 2 Fe Oye Ore crtre os a4 oo ce DS D> DS BS a DANCING Sesses AND...... PHYSICIAL CULTURE. PROWSE BLOCK, SUNKYSIDE Miss H. C. Macdonaid’s select £. ool opens for the season, Oztober ord. Afternoon and evenirg classes w forming. Just time for one t +m before Rink opens. Choice of to those who come first. Ar- rangements can be made for private classes and private lesscns on »pplic- n 233 dtf Se d ‘Ss 12°00 Bags Common £alt new landing 600 ‘ * now dus factory filled te arrive ‘suyers ordering ex. ship save cost Bilis at) ef'scoring here —‘ For sale low to the tude. Kor prices write CHARLE: HAKPER, Shediac, N. B Your Music Room f vou have a music room you know there is always some- thing neeced there. Tf you have no musical instru- ments, you may depend on us for THE BEST. Excellence of Tone and.::: Rightness of Price are two of our leading features eet COREE CH Rete ee HEHEHE eee beat musica! instruments: ‘st Lowest Prices. : Miller Bros QuEEN Sr esr OonNOLLy 3 BUILEING ~ oS ~, a | | SALT THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 7, ‘THE DAILY EXAMINER OCTOBER 7, 1899. WHAT'S THE MATTER ? <a Wray the Belfast aud Murray Harbor railway bridge? We formed that steps have not yet been taken and Hillsborough are io- towards the location of either the rai way or the bridge. It cannot be said that the | delay ie due to the want of money ; for | Parliament placed $250,000 at the disposal 'of the Government for the immediate | prosecution of the work. Will the money | not be expeuded this year ? Are we to | have a repetition of the Summerside bar- hoe works fraud? Are there political reasons why the line of tbe railway sbould not, just now, be located? le there & | party quarrel over the location of the What’s the matter, anyway? OUR ISLAND MAGAZINE. | bridge ? ' Prince Edward Island Magazine ber contains number of valuable THE i for Octc and interestiog articles, which, we venture | to say, will be read with pleasure by P.E. | Islanders everywhere. | and has already achieved great eucsess in is action not begun in regard to} 1299, NOTES AND COMMENTS, —— —The opening of telegraphic commani~ cation with Dawson by the C. i’, R. is re~ ported. : — We have great pleasure in recommend - ing “The Germania” a monthly magazine, pub! ished by the New England College of j anguages, at Boston, Maes . to all stu sanguag denis of the German language, To read it carefully is a cap tal exercise for begin- nere; and it is exceedingly interest pg to those who Are able to translate. The price is $1.0 per year, ld5c per copy. A corres] ondent at Cape Town writes: ‘I have accumulated evidence that there is a bona fide belief among the Dutch that the Beers can beat England, A promin- ent Free Stater says: We are sorry for your soldiers; our burghers will walk over them like sheep over the veldt.” Avother Free Stater ‘You may have an even chance with as if you send 100,000 men, not less.’ It is tbis belief that is at the bottom of the trouble. The Boers and their sympathisers veed @ lesson as to the power of Great Britain. sald : —hirty-eight years ago Sir Charles Tupper visited Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, »nd saw bimself buraed in effigy on the pubiic equare. On Thursday last he was there asthe honored guest of the Yarmoathb County Agricultural Society, and addreesed the schoo! ehildren, who were attending the public schools created under his public Month by month! j ; | this magazioe is increasing in popularity } | the the the the ite chosen field—tnat of collecting | historical matter connected with | settlement of this province, and at | same time fostering and encouraging aspirations of our local writers. The low eubseription price—fiifty cents a year— places it within tbe reach of all, ~o-ere THE ALASKAN BOUNDARY Apvices from London state that all the nonsense about Canada’s selfiehness and obstinacy hindering an amicable arrange- | ment between the United States and Great | Britain is now discredited, and that the strength aad reasonableness of theCanaiian claims are in a fair way of being fully understood and acknowledged br the Im, perial Government. With Lord Salisbury aod Mr. Chamberlain backing the Domin- ion, there can no longer be any talk about *“ Canada’s Cuseedness” in the matter. If the boasted Anglo-American friendship is | worth anything, it should surely be able to | suggest a setilement which will re estab~ | lish on fair terms that goodwil) which is |sodesirable. It is hoped that before Sir | Louis Davies leaves London the Commis- sion will have the present deadlock re- moved, and that when it resumes its eit~ tings & conclusiou, final and satisfactory, will be within easy reach. A CANADIAN CONTINGENT. Tse Master of the Administration has returned from France to put his foot dowa upon the idea of a Canadian Contingent | for the Transvaal; and Sir Wilfrid Lau rier, who moved the resolutions of syms pathy with the Uitlanders passed by Par- jiament while Mr. Tarte was absent, has been moved to offer some excuses. These excuses are condemned as insufficient. I; bas been shown thet the law offers no impediment, Sir Charles Tupper has publicly pledged the ‘‘Opposition’s ‘“co- operation.” with the government in case a Canadian Contingent should be deepatch- ed. Australiaand New Zealand are send~ ing forward contingents and Canada cuuld do #0, aleo,—if only its government had the will. —It has been decided to use coke fuel op al] passenger locomotives on the Inter- colonial system, Boy Waxrep.—An intelligent boy as ) apprentice at ‘luz Examiner office. schools law. Inthe afternoon, he addrees- ed a large gathering at the Yarmouth County exhibiion. Hon. L. E. Baker, of the legislative council, presided, Sir Char- les received the heartiest welcome. TEACHERS ASSOCIATION Organized for King’s County. A meeting of the teachers of the Eastern Inspectorate was held in the Y, M. C. A.. Hallatl p.m., yesterday. The meeting was called by Inspector McCurmac, and the objest was the organzingof a Teachers Association tor the Eastern Inspectorate. The following officere were appointed for the ensuimg year. President—J E Jay, BA. Vice President—A B Campbell. Secretary~Treaeurer- Permeneius Mc- Leod. Executive Committee—J A McDonald, B A, Miss Kat e Shaw, Miss Annie Lannon, D J McCarthy, Wm O'Briev. The date and place of the firet conver- tion are to be decided upon by the ex- eculive. ——P> 2 ee A SOURCE OF FEVER. Sir,—It may not be unknown to some of your readers tbat there bas been for some years on West Grafton Street a drain or sewer with which a number ofthe houses in that neighborhood are connected. Of la’e years this drain, having never been anything buta wooden box, bas been in bed repair. But stil] inthe long run the drannage has managed to reach the sea. The outlet however ha8 now been entirely closed because it was in the way of the new sewerage works. Havethe users of the drain been warnedto useit no longer? Nut at all. Se from this time on, the West end of Grafton Streetis to become more and more saturated with sewage, which, when the surface water finds its way iato the o!d draio, as it does after every heavy rain, wil] be washed into the neighbouring cellars. And even if the old connections should be cat off so asto keep the water out of the cellars, the street must in time become dongerous to health through the satura:ion of the soil. People have been expecting the new sewerage to lessen the daoger of tever. In the case described above the unfortunate dwellers in the neighbourkood are likely to be worse off than ever. CITIzEN. ~— Buy The P. E. Island Ma g- azine to-night. For sale at | all bookstores. For to day, Saturday—50 pairs ladies’ boots in Dongola Kid and polished calf. Price $1,25 to $1.75; to day 90c pair —J B Macdonald & Co, A big line of umbrellas from ,20c each and upwards, good value.—J B Macdonald & Co, ae Satisfying Satisfaction.... Is afforded to those who buy and sleep on the Hercules wets _ WIRE MATTRESSES Our stock of tuff mattresses—in mixed, ~-hair, etc, isa arge cne and the prices are ali wcol—-mos ilt at usua MARK WRIGHT AND CO Home}Makers What we Say! x mame ° Warm Woolen Gloves by the 100 {at Paton’s. Good, fleecy, soft warm Blankets to meet Jack Frost with these cool even- ings at Paton’s. Poy’s Strong Woolen Stockings, all sizes, al! prices at Paton & Co’s, Warm Lined Woo.en boys at Paton & Co’s, Gloves Job lot ot Bed Comforts going at a snap at Paton’s. Scotch and English Blankets cheap at Paten & Co's. Our Shamrock Overcoat at $10.00 is sure to win.—Jas. Paton « Co Our tailor-made, Blue Beaver Overcoat at $15.00 will save you money.—Jas, Paton & Co. Direct from France, our Ladies Plain Cloth for costumes, all shades low prices,~-Jas, Paton & Co. See our Dress Gceods, the largest selection in the city at Paton & Co’s 50 Ready-to-Wear Skirts, Blister Cloth Serges and Lustres, all sizes up to 44 inch, from $3.50 to $5.00. Save time and trouble by se-ing ours.— Jas. Paton & Co. Our Ready-to-Wear Costumes are worth seeing.—Jas. Paton & Co. Our Fur Goods are selling.—Paton & Co. Our Grey Flanneis are going quick come if you want any. Jas. Paton Co. Another counter ful! of that warm woolen Underwear ata saving of 25 p. c. at Paton’s. See our stock of Jackets and Fur Lined Capes. JAS. PATON & CO Clocks... We have them the fine ornament time piece to from the little nickel tellow that keeps watch while you sleep, and calls you any All are The finer ones are marble, en- time you desire. fuliy guaranteed. amelledo irn and wood; in- laid with metal trimmings, Come in and see them. W. W. WELLWER Engraver. Chancery Before the Master of the Rolls Apert E Smirn, Complainant and EsenezeER WILFRER SmiTH and Davip Acory, Defendants eee To David Acorn, of Providence, Rhode Is- lands, U. S. A.— Take notice that Albert E Smith has com- menced a suit against Ebeneser Wilford Smith, and you in Her Majesty Court of Chancery, of Prince Edward Island, by a bill filed in that Court, on the 28th day ef Septem- ber, A D, 1899. anel you are hereby required, within twenty one deye after the date of this Notice, inclusive of the day of such date, to defend this action by causing an appearan to be entered for you thereto at the office o the Registrar of said court, at Charlottetown, in Prince Edward Island, and in default of you so doing, tue said complainant may pro- ceed therein and a decree may be made as prayed. Dated this sixth day of October, 1899, WILLIAM A WEEKS, Registrar RATTENBURY & TWEEDY, 235 Solicitors for Complainant St. Dunstan's College Classical and Commercial. AFFILIATED TO LayaL UNIVERSITY The classes in St. Dunstan’s Colleg will be resumed on TUESDAY, the 12the September next. For further particulars apply to A. P. McLELLAN, Rector $: Dunstan’e College, Ch’town, Aug 30, ‘99 for | | for Spring. Half-hose, Bicycle Hose, Sweaters, shown in Canada, Wool Underwear and half hose. ceived. Al! wide turning in. perfect satisfaction. The Specia\ The Queen high you go. pointe Our travellere axe now on their grounds with full Tange Shirts, Collars and Underwear Bathing Costumes. Hundreds of exciusive designs fabrics and shades. For Fall_—Immediate Delivery. Entire collection of men’s furnishings is shown. 2000 doz new English Neckwear just m me CLOVER & BRAIS. 194, 196, 198 McGill St., Montreal If You Want a V7ire Mattress We would ‘like to caii your attention to TWO{LINE3 which are giving A real good mattressfat the price ofjthe cheap kind —price $2.85. Price $4.00—This we consider the best mettress og the market—You may pay fancy prices for fancy names, but you wil!l’not get better value than the “Queen” no matier how We would be vlzased to have see?these tprings— We will explain their gos JOHN NEWSON Largest range eye Specialties in Fleeced and — ————— Church Services. METHODIST Prince St.— Prayer meeting at 10. Rev J J Teasdale at il and 7. Sunday School and Bible Class at 2.15 Grace Church.—Prayer meeting at 190. Rev J W McConnell, B A, at ll and 7. Stran gers cordially invited. Seats previded for strangers. Sunday Schoolat 215. ELofC E atcloseof Sunday School Sacrament at close of evening service. PRESBYTERIAN Zion.—Prayer meeting at 10. B. McLeod at ll and 7 and Bible Class at 2.30, St. James’—Prayer meeting at T F Fullerton atll and at 7. and Bible ciass at 2.3@ CHURCH OF ENGLAND. Rev. D Sunday School 10. Rev Sunday school St. Paul’s.—Morning prayer at 11 a.m Sunday School and Bible Class at 2.30 Evening prayer at 7 All seats free and unappropriated. Everybody welcome. St. Peter’s Cathedral -Holy Communion aiSa.m. Matinsat 10.154. m. Childrens catechising at 2.3). Kveasong at7 p.m. All seats iree and unappropriated. BAPTIST. Prayer meeting at 10.30. Rev G P Ray- mond at ll and7. Sunday schooland Past- or’s Bible class at 2.30. Strangers welcome and vrovided with comfortable seats. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Rev Rob * Whiston atlland 7. Soloat both services. Ajl welcome. sunday School and bible class at 2.30. CHURCH OF CHRIST Services at ll and 7. Morning subject— “Him that overcometh shall inherit all things, and ] will be his god, and he shall be my son.” Evening theme, ‘If this man were not from God, he cculd do nothing.” 8ST DUNSTAN’S CATHEDRAL Low Mass at 7 36am Cbildren’s Mass at 8. High Mass and sermon at 10,30. Vespeis and Benediction at7 pm, SALVATION ARMY. Sunday Services at 7. 1l, 8, and at 8 p.m. Week night Services—Monday, ‘Tuesday Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8 p. m. GOSPEL MEETING, GOSPEL MEETING —Remember the Gospel Meeting in Prowse’s New Block, Sunday afternoon at 4 o’clock. Strangers always welcome, Lesson, Isaiah 9-6 *"Ihe Prince of Peace.” ~ — a ee et BLACK DIAMOND LINE The S. S. *‘Bonavista” Montrea], Tuesday morsing, Oct. 1@th, will be due at Ch’town, Friday morning, Oct. 13th, and saile for St. John’s, Nfid, via sailing from North Sydney, carrying horses, cat~ tle and sheep on deck and pro- duce under deck at Jowest possible ra’es. For further particulars as to freight and passage apply to PEAKE BROS &CO., Ch’town, Oct 7—’39 Agents | $ A Splendid Offer § FOR SALE A very desirable property at Cardigan Bridge. The farm and residence of the late Wm. P. Lewis, Erq., comprising about 100 acres of land under caltivation; 10-roomed house, a good orchard, bares, stables, etc. Apply to DANIEL F. MACDONALD, Vernon River Bridge WM, A. LEWIS, Curdigas, or the owner, Mrs H. McLellan, 837 Keefer St., Vancouver, B, C. 235 d&w5i pd Dr, H, L Dickey Late of Roya] London Ophthalmic Hos pita), Moorfields. and Central Lon- _ don Throat & Ear Hospital Specialist in diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose & Threat Office—CAMERON BLOCK. Residence—* HOTEL DAVIES.” Office Hours—-9.30 to 1 p, m., 2 to 3p. as p. m, Eyes tested for glasses 129 daw — | CARD. DR. DICKEY wishes t2 notify his patients that he will resume practice about the 23rd. @eee et Do you want a whole year’s read~ ing? The best reading that can be hed. I am able to offer you the following combination. You can- not get the same offer at the same price frem anyone else. The Daily Examryer, for one year, The Montreal DAILY Star, for ove yeer, The Ladies’ Home Jouraa), for one year, and The Prince Edward Island Magazine for one year, al] for $5. 00. If you already get the Ladies’ Bome Journal or the Daily Star, you may have instead the Saturday Evening Post for five months, or you may subtract 85c. Drop mes post cardand I will be happy to call on you. R. L, COTTON AGENT | ! | : ! 7 © P O. Box &4.... ¢ Charlottetown. Se eae 428888 Beet £6444 42444 O4S84-25°466 40646 = 286 : ,