AE OLN “WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 189]. — ae ee The Government's Majority, enamine GRANTS FOR P. E. ISLAND. SENECALS’ METHODS. [SPECIALCORRESPONDENCE OF THE EXAMINER } On Monday, Mr. Welsh, in the absence of Mr. Davies, asked, **Does the Government intend to take, during the present summer, avy and what action with respect to the report made by Sir Douglass Fox on the proposed tunnel between P. E. Island and the Mainland? Is it proposed that any further surveys of borings should be made or had with respect to such tunnel, or any other and what steps taken to obtain accurate data upon which reliable estimates of the cost could be based.” To whick Mr. Foster replied: ‘* The Government does not intend during the present summer to take any further action with respect to the report made by Sir Douglass Fox on the proposed funnel between P. E. Island and the Mainiand, other than to consider it. The matter referred to in the second part of the ques- tion is also under the cousideration of the Government.” Mr. Perry asked ; ‘‘Has the Department of Public Works received, at any time between the Ist June, 1891, and this date, a petition from the fishermen and others of Little Miminigash, P. E. 1., for a break- water at that place? If so, is it the inten- tion of the Government to grant the prayer of the petition?’ Sir John Thompson replied : *“‘Such a petition was received on 2nd June, and is still before the Govern- ment undisposed of.” In committee on the Bill respecting the inspection of ships, Mr. Welsh agreed with the principle of the Bill that, for che safety of life and the protection of property every shipowner should be compelled to have good and proper gear for discharging and loading, hauling and mooring. But when an inspector went on board and said : “This gearing is deficient, these blocks and these ropes are worn out and unfit for use and dangerous to life and prop:rty, Mr Welsh could not understand why the in- spector could not compel them tw be re- newed at once, but had to report tu the Minister of Marine, while in the mean- time half a dozen men might be killed and the vesse] get off to sea. Mr. Tupper said it was desirable to provide against arbitrary or hasty action on the part of the ofticers. We had some good inspectors, but there were others who were not so competent. When a bona fide case was brought to the notice of the captains, they were only too glad to take immediate action. Mr. Welsh asked ; ‘Suppose an ignorant and incom- petent inspector goes on board a ship and condemns perfectly good material, whut appeal has the owner or master of that ship for redress for the injury that is done him by the inspector condemning good materi- al?’ Mr. Tupper replied: *‘The same as the owner of a steamboat has; when the inspector orders certain things to be done, the owner has an appea! to the Depart- ment.” Mr. Welsh said a sailing vessel is different from a steam vessel. He agreed that in the steambost inspection we had good men who could be depended on. But the steamboat inspector does not inspect sailing vessels, and the Minister admitted that some of his inspectors for sailing vessels were incompetent. It was danger- ous to have an incompetent inspector, and a real remedy should be provided so that if the iuspector condemns good material, he shall be liable for the damage, and the shipowner shall have some redress. On Tuesday, on motion to go into com- mittee of supply, Mr. Davies moved a lengthy amendment censuring the Govern- ment for matters in connection with letting the contract for steam communication be- tween Halifax and St. John and the West Indies. Mr. Davies charged a lot of im- proprieties, if nothing worse, and somehow rt was hinted by someone, or the opportu- nity was Offered for inference, that Mr. Foster had benefitted by the subsidies. Mr. Foster made a spirited reply, and when the vote was taken Mr. Davies amendment was lost by a majority of 25. Some objco- tion was taken to the votes of Messrs. Fre- mont and Godbout being counted, as both these gentlemen entered the chamber after the reading of the motion in English had been finished and when the reading in French was nearly over. The rule requires that a member shall be in the House when a question is put, if he wishes to have bis vote counted. The question thenturned on the point, “‘when is the question put?” Being asked by the Speaker if they were in the House when the questisn was put, Mr. Godbout unhesitatingiy replied yes, while Mr. Fremont would not be positive, but at last, urged by his opposition friends, he said yes, also. Next day the qvestion eame up again, when Mr. Fremont, convinced that he had no right to vote on tie previous evening, requested that his name should be erased from the division list. On this occasion 189 members voted, with the Speaker making 190, twenty members were paired, making 210—three members were absent without psirs—Tarte, McGreevy and Edgar; Sir John’s seat for Kingston is vacant, and Sir Hector’ sits for Three Rivers and _ Richelieu. This completes 215, the full strength of the House, The present majority of the Government cannot be definitely determin- ed inasmuch as Messrs. Tarte and Savard are impartial in their favors, sometimes supporting one side and sometimes tlie other. Mr. Tarte rarely votes and is never paired. On the general policy of the Gov- ernment he is a supporter, and sv is Mr. Savard, who voted directly against Sir Richard Cartwright’s Unrestricted Reci- procity motion a few weeksago. The Gov- ernment had 25 majority on Mr. Davies’ motion just referred to. Take eff Mr. Savard and add Mr. Edgar leaves figures the same, so that the Governutent majority just now stands this way, 25, without count- ing [arte and Savard on either side, w.th- out the Speaker, with Sir John Macdon- ald’s and Thomas McGreevy's seats vacant, and Sir Hector sitting for two seats. In other words, Government majority 25, without Speaker, two doubtful and three vacancies in Conservative constituencies. This much is certain, that the Government have net lost asnpporter, except by death "Da ———— er resignation, since the session menced. On the motion of the second reading of the bill to encourage the production of beet- root sugar, Mr. Beausoliel, Grit, congratu- lated the Government upon their decer- mination to assist this important Quebec industry, and hoped that, next session, still greator protection would be afforded. This is the measyre, which on its introduc- tion the week before, was so bitterly and rabidly opposed by Hon. David Mills, Messrs. Muloch, Armstrong and Gillmor, all of them, colleagues of Mr. Brausoleil. What a united policy the Grits have ! How harmoniously they ‘‘in their little nests agree” I shall shew later on. In supply, on the vote of $6,000 for re- pairs of piers and breakwaters, P.- 3. -t4 Mr. Perry thought theamount too small Last year $12,000 were voted for the same purp.se. but only about $7000 were spent. What became of the balance? Mr. Foster replied that itlapsed. On vote of $1000 fur Miminigash Harbor, Mr. Perry said last year $3,500 were voted for inprove- ments on Miminigash Breakwater, but only $1000 were expended. In the spring tea- ders were asked forand the contract was let, but the man to whom it was awarded gave it up. He wished to know if the con- tract had been re-let, and all about it. Mr. Foster answered that the work was let, but the successful tenderer had declined to sign a contract unless the time for the comp!etion of the work was extended, and this revote of $1000 was for completing the work in 1891-92 The new contract cannot be jet until the vote is made. Upoa the vote of $6000 for harbors and rivers wenerally, Mr. A. C. Macdonald made a strong representation in favour of the breakwaters at Souris, Campbell's Cove and St. Peter’s. He said the struc- ture at Campbell’s Cove was the only re- fuge the fishermen of that important section of country had for their boats. It stood very well till last fall, when some of it was carried away by the great gale and enor- mously high tide. St. Peter’s breakwater was intended to deepen the water on the bar. It was an-important fishing place and harbour of refuge. The same storm had serivusly damaged it and, if not attended to, would be probably all carried away this autumn. He hoped the Government would not lose sight of these important works, so valuable to those people who earn their living on the sea. Mr. Perry followed with a bitter com- plaint that the Government had not ex- pended the grants of last year but had al- lowed the Public Works on the Island to be washed away and destroyed, while the people had to tura out with augurs and axes and repair the wharves, to save the lives of their horses and __ their fellow creatures. Mr. Perry complained that when the Government did expend money, it was not until the winter had always passed and the contract- orwas unable to get stone. Grants of money were made which looked very well ou paper, but they were never expended, and yet we are told that the Island receives more than she is entitled to. In Cascumn- pee harbor tenders were asked last epring tor new buoys to be built and placed there. A party got the contract, placed the buoys, got bis account certified by the harbor master last June, but it was not paid yet ! If this man goes to make a comp'aiat, a lot of red tape las to be used to send it to the agent at Charluttetown, who sends it back tu Cascumpec, whence it is again sent to Charlottetown and thence to Ottawa, and all this red tape costs as much as the buoys, audthe man has not got his pay yet. If that is the way the Island is to be used, the ssoner it cuts adrift from Con- federation the better. It is not afraid to go on its own hook ; it lived and prospered before it was humbugged by the Dominion into Confederation, and it can live yet.,etc, Then Mr. Perry gave Cascumpec harbor an overhauling, after which he got down to Summerside, where the Government, in a moment of weakness, had ordered the dredge, and where she was doing good work. But the Government should know that the dredge does not work more than three months in any season, and that all the rest of the season she is idle. The Captain gets $90 a month, whether the dredge works or not. Why should he be paid so large a.sum for doing nothing? it was pleaded by“ the Department that the dredge could net be put to work last spring, as she was being repaired, Why were the repairs not done in the winter ? Why did Captain Doyle not see that she was kept in repair, instead of drawing $90 a month for dving nothing, and walking about Charlottetown distributing boodle. One dredge was not sufticient. [In Cascum- pec harbor $20,000 have been spent, and not more than five per cent. of the work has been completed. In the Public Accounts Committee on Tuesday, investigation was made into the working of the Auditor Genersl’s office, and the result was disquieting to the Grits, as, on account of the Auditor General’s close relationship tv their party, they one and al] scouted the idea ef any irregularities being discovered therein. Mr. John Lorn Me- Dougall, who presides over that depart- ment of the public service, is a worthy, hard working gentleman, and no one doubts that he conducts it carefully and } honestly. He was a Grit member of the Commons, supporting Mr. McKenzie’s ad- ministration, by which he was appointed to his present position, from which he is only removable by atwo-third vote of the Senate and Commons, his tenure of office being somewhat, if not precisely, similar to that of the judges. I do not wish to be under- stood as saying that any irregularities were discovered, but it was proved that his clerks had occasionally been afflicted with sickness, the same as had troubled clerks in other branches, that they had received leave of absence of greater or less duration, during which they had received their salaries, and furthermore, that Mr. Mc- Dougall had put his own interpretation on the Civil Service Act, going so far as to dis- pense with a medical eertificate from the Government physician, and accepting one from the official’s family doctor. One clerk had been absent, Mr. Mc- Dougal] stated, 43 days in 1888, 45 days in 1889, 71 days in 1890, and 49] days since January last, yet her salary was piid her as usual during all these absences. She had been sick during the whole of Janusry and February, 1890. Mr. McDougall said that, mn his capacity as Auditor-General, he would not hesitate to pass an account for any other department under similar circum- stances,and pay beththeinvalid and hersub- stitute. He proceeded to give a synopsis of the absences of clerks in his department during the last three years as follows : 83, ILY EXAMINER, } come | 95, 116, 41, 108, 75, 65, 64, 43, 92, 95, 187, 123, 55, and 115 days. In none of these cases were orders-in-council asked for, nor were Sundays nor Saturday hol dtys in- cluded in these figures. The grits who, one and all, swear by Mr. McD >ugall and in- variably quote him 33 an authority, have concluded to waste no more time over the case of Miss Craig, the young lady who was paid by the Post Office Department during her illness, and whose absence they en- deavored to connect in a shameful manner with Mr. Haggart, the Postma: tor General. Oo Wednesday further enquiry was) made into the methods of Mr. Senecal, the suspended Superintendent of Printing. He was not in attendance, as he should have been, but a letter was read from him to the effect that he had got tired of waiting the committee’s pleasure so long, and, a3 his health imperatively demanded it, he had decided to no longer risk his life, but to take a trip as racen- mended by his doctor. Mr. Chapleau said that Senecal had not consulted him, nor was he a party to his absence, and he did not know where he was. Senecal had ten- dered his resignation, but of course, under | the circumstanees, it had not been accept-| ed. R. L. Patterson, Toronto agent of | Miller & Richard, type founders, testified | that he had sold the Bureau type to the, value of $90,000 ; and at various times had | given Senecal sums amounting to about | $5,000, on Senecal’s representations that he was ‘hard up.” P. T. Perrot, of Barber | & Ellis, paper makers, had supplied paper , for the Government and had paid Senecal | $2,000, and Bronskill, Superintendent of | Stationery, $400. Mr. Craig, Conservative | M. P., stated that his brother had waited | on Senecal, asking for an order for leather for the bindery. Senecal had suggested that he should psy him a commission, ostensibly fur ‘election purposes” Craig had declined to do business that wry. Afterwards he had got an order from Me, Chapleau for $2,000 worth, but no comm's- sion or allowance had been asked or made. Senecal’s absence was reported to the House, and he was ordered to attend on Tuesday next. It is said that altogether Senecal has received some $25,000 from parties from whom he purchased materisl, etc, i As I said last week, the details of the Bay Chaleur railway busivess are very intricate. All that your readers are interested about is to know if there was any boodling. That bas been sufficiently provei, and Messrs. | Pacaud, Mercier, Garneau and other parties; who are charged with having robed the! Quebec Treasury, have steadily declined to appear apd defend themselves. Mr. ; Francois Langelier, member of the House of Commons, has been im daily attendance to watch proceedings on behalf of the Qaebec government, but otherwise that boly of boodlers have persisted in ignoring the investigation, ccasionally, when it suits him, Mr Langelier takes a hand ia the pro- | ceedings, as the other day when he produced a legal Jooking document and ceclared that thereby he could prove that the old Bay. Chaleur Railway Company had embezzled $118,000 of the Federal subsidy to that road. Senator Robitaille, ex-Governor of Quebec, and a Censervative, who was the president of the old company, promptly denied the! chaige in vigorous language, and demanded an investigation by the committee. The decument which Mr, Langelier produced, turned out to be an affidavit made by one | George <A. Taylor, before Chrysostom ; Langelier, brother of Francois, and when read, proved anything else but what Francois said it would. seuator Robitaille’s investiga- tion which he demanded, was subsequeorly taken in hands by the committee, when this Mr. ‘Taylor, a railway contractor, was, examined. He testified that the affidavit was dawn by Chrysostom Langelier for the pu: pore of helping McFarlane, a contractor, that he had never sworn to it, that it was not an affidavit at all but a bogus one, That bis firm had never threatened Sevator Robitaille with criminal proceedings but that Robitaille had always acted like an honest man and paid witness’ firm every dollar due them. The use made by Langelier of the bogus affidavit, witness declared to be false and unfair. Thus Mr. Grit Langelier’s charges against Mr. Conservative Robitaille exploded with disaster to Langelier, Mercier and Co, This same Mr. Francois Langelier found himself last week in what an honorable man would consider a very awkward position, bat which probably did not occur so to Mr. Langelier. Mr, Cockburn, a director of the Ontario Bank, testified that the president and general manager of the bank (two grits, by the way) went to Quebec to see what could be done about the bank’s claim. They saw Mr. Mercier, who promised that every dollar should be paid them and strongly to retain Mr, Francois Langelier to look after the bank’s interests. They did so, and every step the bank took was upon his advice. When the bill came before Parliament, Mr. Cockburn was instructed to consult him and did #o. He strongly advised against making any enquiry ebout the pay- m2nt or disposition of the $280,000 (of which the $100,000 paid Pacaud formed part) and it was Langelier’s anxiety to prevent any investigation of that sum which first aroused Cockhurn’s suspicions and which led him to’ send for Mr. Barwick, who has -been pro- secuting the investigation before the Senate Committee. No wonder that Mr. Cockburn ) himself, should open his eves when the retained’ , Counsel of the Ontario Bank, Mr. Langelier should appear for the Quebec government, in epposition to the bank’s demand for investigation. Mr. Chrysostom Longelier was the gentle- man appointed by the Quebec government to handle the $280,000, which was to pay off contractors’ and laborers’ claims. He testified before the committee that he ‘scrupulously examined the genuiness of every claim presented except Armstrong’s. That he paid Armstrong $175,000 —$100,000 of which was in 5 cheques of $20,000 each, which he handed Armstrong ia Pacaud’s presence in Pacaud’s office, that Armetrong and Paecaud then retired to another room together, but he knew nothing what Armstrong did with the cheques. Uf course not. WwW, C.D, fe STORE WANTED, To Rent or Buy. ———— AC Y person owning property on the North Side of Queen Square, that will sell the same or build a Brick Building for Store and Warehouse, Store not less than 30x60 feet, three stories and basement, will find a tenant who will rent same for a term of ten years or buy, on application at Tie FxamMIneR office. Building required in May, 1892. sept2—3w 2aw pat guar OUND.—A Pocket Book containing a small s"m of money was found at Souris on the 15th day of August by Matilda MeDonald, Bay- field, Lot 46. The owner can have the same c i character, upon advised them [ Notes and Comments. —The Toronto Globe declaresthat “there will be an early appeal tothe people.” Ot course the Globe “‘spesks with knowledge | of the plans and movements of the Conser- vative forces.” Yes, the Globe knows al about it. —_The Week pertinently remarks that “so long as individusls are chosen for positions, high or low, in the. public ser- vice, on any other grounds than those of merit, which includes, of course, moral fora thoroughly honest and competent public service.” —A special despatch to the Halifax Herald reports that ‘complete returns from the district of Alberta gives the population | at 26,123 instead of 2,056 in the estimate | which was m de part of the’census returns. The total numerical increase for Doninion is therefore 504,601, instead of 498.534, aud the per centage of gain is 11.66 instead of 11 52. —Referririg to the Jetter of ‘* Sufferer” —published on Saturday—-we are requested by the Sanitary officer to state that he was eue of th se who, when City Councillor, voted for the passage of the by-law ** relat- | ing to the keeping of pigs, ete., within the city limits.” He desires Toe EXxaMINeER to’ state further that he has invariab'y acted information received by him in respect to the presence of any nuisance in any locality. —A correspondent at Stanhope desires Tue Examiner to “call attention te the way the grit supervisor and contractor have spoiled the bridge there known as Darrach’s Bridge: This bridge was, he says, to have been built of good sound wood, But, in- stead of that, it is nearly all old material aod net sound, most of it being old fence raila and any old !umber picked up about the old bridge. Further, it was to be graded fur a distance of thirty or forty yards, but the contractor did not put a shovelful of earth on it; and, altogether, the job is of no benefit whatever.” This is a sainple job. The bridge known as Roger's Bridge at Freetown is also, it is stated, in- vulved in favoritism and incompetency and downright carelessness. When the Gov- ernmeut is not doing nothing, it is doing tat which is wrong. ———- <> ~<a Shifting Ordinance Competition. Tue team to represent this Province in the shifting ordinance competition which begins at Quebec on Monday next, is made up as follows: Sergts Oifer, Connolly, Whear, Quigley; Corporals R McDonald, Murley, L McDonald; Bombadier Proud; Gugners, Gillis, Wood, Harper, Scantle- bury, A McLeod, Prowse, Munro, Sabine, Bryant, McDonald. Lieut. E: D. Sterns goes as No. 1. . Eleven members of the team are from No. 1 Battery, and seven from No. 2. The detail of the ‘“‘A” shift is as follows: A 64-poundér gun standing in line of fire on centre of ground platform to be shifted breech fore- most to another carriage, which is to be brought thirty feet from the rear and placed on the platform in rear of the first carriage, the gun to be lowered into the trunnion holes and shifted hack by slewingto theearriage from which it Was first taken, both carriages to be left in the positions they occupied when the com- petition began. The detail of the “B” shift will be made known on the grounds- There will also be a shooting detachment of four men from the Souris Battery, in ad. dition to the two detachments drawn from the shifting team. The shifting team and the shooting de- tachments have been doing good work at practice, and will, we feel sure, will main- tain the reputation of the province. They certainly have THe Examiner's best wishes. =_- Horse Notes. Mr. George E. Hughes has added to his stable of well-bred ones a valuable son of Administrator, 357, record 2.29}, dam the fast pacing mare Lady Larkins, trial 2.33, by All Right, 5817. This fellow is three years old, and resembles his sire in style and color. Ja his two-year-old form he showed quarters in 43 seconds. We con- gratulate Mr. Hughes on his purchase, and consider he has a sure candidate for the charmed circle. At Bush Park, Independence, Ia., on Monday, Pat Downing, who obtained a rice record of 2.18 on Sacurday, went against the clock in 2.16. Alex, to best 2.19}, trotted in 2.16}. Allerton lowered his record from 2 12 to 2.11 ; the quarters were in 33, 1 06}, 1.39} Manager, holding the three-year-old stallion record for pacers of 2.13, reduced the mark te 2.11}. Manager is by Nutwood, sire of Preceptur, out of a mare by George Wilkes. Amherst Drving Park is to be the scene of a large gathering of trotting colts for the ‘Maritime Stakes on Sept. 9 and 10, in ad- dition to which there will be on the second day a 3-minute and a free-for-all race. Everything indicates that the meeting will be most interesting to horsemen. Golden will be among the starters in ths free-for- all, and several other Island horses are ex- pected to start in other classes. Some very good trotting has been done on the Moncton track lately, accwrding tu the Times. Troublesome, driven by Mr. J. P. Dilahunt, is reported to have done quarters in a 20 clip, and Mr. Jus. E. Steadman’s colt, Sir John, trotted « mile recently in 2.43. The Humphrey mare is credited with doing a half in 1.153. The Eastern Maine State Fair races be- gan at Bangor yesterday, and will continue for four days. There are fourteen events and besides the subscription purses, $3859 will be givea in prizes, $1,C00 for the free- for-all trot. There are twenty-one entries for the three-minute race. Dawson's Loafer is entered in the 3-minute and 2 45 classes. The match race between Kennedy's Maud K. and MeMillan’s Lady Pilot, which was to have taken place on the Summer- a Driviag Park to-day, has been declared t Boots and Shoes. 7s undersigned has opened a Shop at the corner of Weymouth aod Porchester Streets, where he is prepared to make new Boots and Shoes and to repair old ones. Orders will be thankfully received and promptly attended to by proving property an? paying for this edvertise- ment, aug27 BERNARD DOHERTY. Charlottetown, Sept. 2, 1891—Iw pd { | i so long it will bs vain to hope, the | | LENDERS. Se ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY To Secure Some Rare Bargains, aia We have secured One Case of sample WOOL KNIT SHAW LS—German make—which we shall offer for a short time at VERY MUCH below their value. A few of them slightly soiled will be sold for half price. STILL ANOTHER. We are now offering the balance of our SPRING SACQUES, DOLMANS, CAPES and FICHUS at prices reduced sufficiently to please the shrewdest buyer. As we are anxious to completely clcse out these Vinal to make room for our immense Fall Stock, we shall not allow price to interfere with sales. BEER BROS. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND EXHIBITION AND RAC (x)—— | The Annual Provincial Exhibition, Gpen to the Whole Jsland, ——-WiLL Be HELD 7 AT CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, ¥ e Bee ties Salat eile tibet Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, OCTOBER Gth, 7th, Sth anid 9th, S91, (x) ans LL ANIMALS acd Articles for Exhibition must be entered at the Office of Mesmm, — Warburton & Smallwood, Cameron Block, on or before FRIDAY, Qad cf October, The Exhibition Grounds and Buildings will be open on Friday aud Saturday, 2adand§alof October, aud until 2 o’clock in the afternoon of Monday, 5:h October, for the reseption and arrangement of Exhibition articles. Exhibitors of bulky articles, requiring large space, should apply to the Secretary not later than 26*h September. - Priz: Lists, containing full information as tu rules, regulations, ete., and with entry forms, will be sent or given to any person applying to the Secretary. The entry books am now open, and entries can be mide at any time witia the Secretary. sae The Grand Parade of Prize and other Animals will take placson Friday, 9th Gctober, at 11 o'clock, a. m., sharp. #: (x) TR SUAS The following Races will take place during the Exhibition :— . First Day—Wednesday, Oct. 7th. | Second Day—Tharsday, Oct, 4 Three-Minute Class....... ogy ees Purse $150 | Three-Year-Old Class...., oo+s Two-Year-Old, Futurity (with en- | Stallion Race.........+-sccsesess) Ean trance money added),.......... oe 308 | © 48 Giltivinsoats "yr o90se4n ee Preeaee-All ,.. «00 eden tase « ried <i The entries for the two-year-old race are now closed, twelve hors*s haviag made second ‘ig paymeot. The entries for all other races will close on 24th September. Yai t£WO SPECIAL GRAND CONCERTS are being arranged for, and Amusemenis # other kinds (advertisements later) will be afforded during the Exhibition. i Special rates are being arranged by rail and steamer from all parts. B. ROGERS, President. A. B. WARBURTON, Secretary. Charlottetown, Sept. 2, 1891—3aw & wky THE INCREASED SALE THIS —— OF a CAMPBELLS QUININE Is the Best Proof of the Esteem in whieh it is Meld, — —_(x)—_ --—— T IS THE GREAT INVIGORATING TONIC OF THE DAY. __ It is invaluable % _ cases of Loss of Appetite, Weak or Painful Indigestion, Malaria, o. Spirits; Fevers of all kinds, and as a Genera! Strengtheaer of the System weakened by Changes of the Season It is necessary to remember that there are many so-called Quinine Wae7 that the GREAT ORIGINAL is CAMPBELL’S, ani that the genuine signature upon the label CAMPBELL’S QUININE WINE has & fe 25 years’ standing. iy & why ef z JOHNSTON'S THE GREAT | FLUID BEEF, Strength- Gin, The Most Perfect Form of Conceatrated Nourishmeat. STIMULATING - - - STRENGTHENING - - - INVIGORATE September 1, 1801—dy & why jo ; —— City of Charlottetswa |City ol Charlotta TENDERS FOR GOMb ALED. TENDERS will i S" f the City wwil we > the office 0 ev of MONDAY, the 14th of separa for supplving and placin in City Hall and Market use, 48 s@ Tons Acadia B siid Coal to be of the os - . year's mining, be before : os = JouNsTon’sFLuip BEEF ——$——. =. eo oe rile TENDERS wiil be received at J the City Clerk’s Office until noon of MONDAY, the 14th of September next, from parties willing to contract for the lease of the | Market Tolls, according to specification to be ‘seen at this office. Ss or F | The names of two good and sufficient securi- | 5°28 444 ' eliveced on OF gist @ 7 er must accompany each Tender. . ae vent 9°65 next. The Toa to e The Council do not bind themselves to | POUC* bivd ‘ ‘ ’ i not acvept ths highest or any Tender. BR Ai eet any Tends 40a . By order a? By order pat ; ot E H. M. DAVISON, H. M. ¥*" sed ; 2 City Clerk, ‘ | City Hall, Aug. 26, City Hall, Aug. 26, 1891—eod 1sat—ewd >