~_ ~ Ja ' :_ 2 fé Si __§*1`? _Vi I 5 u ,il <- r an v 9 ,3- 'P _"-r .jV,_ ga , 2 1'-. if. ,-__ . .-a,_ ~. 3? ‘ . _ w s, fine and warmer. knife Liaimaet For ltleamatiaiu. .-'_'f.>~_>. V 4 1~°¢,,,», p,.,,|,,_|,m¢|,, .1 ‘” now Bama smtsnss nrcoans. l CANAMAN M353, _ ibnlnoi Jn’ 4°"`(Sp°°“l)'_u°d"“t'° u,£ldl;§';i::l°°`1l°.,,y"Y;l 2:? gi?,:,:‘:J,e;'in; low a New and Premable Canadian la- PQR1' 0f" CH west ind ' ' aa a smasher of the Democratic organiza- tion and a.. an architect of Democratic defeat.-Philafie hia Record lp . KILLED BY ELECTRICITY- VNWAVKAAA , stantly killed this morning while engag-L , . fr ka sur had a* Laundry Starch Wheat Laundry Starch which has been thoroughly tried and giving entire satisfac- tion. Try s sample pound and rn- courage borne industry. loc. per lb. »J.D_llacLeod&Co. V\¢\l~§AAAA\A~ Scassscsanr, N. Y., July 2.-T. ll-i. Horth, of Rugby (Eng.), a student in the general Electnic Works, aged 30, was in- e in ma ngate wo un re an forty-tive volts in lalternaling currents caused his death. THE COAL STRIKE HAS COST $40,000,000. Winxssnsnmc, Penn., July 1.-Over $40.000,000 or close to $1,000,000 for each week day of the seven weeks the coal strike has lasted,in the estimated gene: al loss. The items are: Loss to operators is prices of coal (normal), $17,730,000: loss to mine workers in wages, $8,860,000; less to employers fother than miners made idle by the strike. $2,195,000; loss to bu.- iness men in coal regions, $5,900,000; loss to business men outside of region, $3500,- 000; cost of maintaining coal and iron lic $~i80.000° cost of mainiainin nan m- _ __-1,-,-_,Q-_--_Q ages to mines and machinery, $1,800,000: total, $40_5‘dl,0w. JESSIE .IANES REBURIED. Klanxlr, Mo.. `Jnly 1.-The body of Jessie James, Hissoui-i’s bandit king was buried today for the last time in the Bap- tist graveyard hare. The body, which had rested since his tragic death at the hands of “Bob” Ford, in St. Joseph, in 1882 was disinterred this morning, placed in a new black casket and was buried by the side of his wife and little brother in the family lot in the cemetery on the edge of the town. CANADIAN STOCKS V Daily Quotation List Furnished by E G ' nYKnn'r;s¢ co., mnmnns or 'rns ~ a L soirrnsan srocx sxcnsnen, Jlontreal. I Jloaing prices July 3 July 4 - c.P.n. You can make the very best '¥°°5°°l 3*- "3 _ 1195 Ice Cream with little trouble . and in a very few minutes. The Gem Freezer Does lt. It is easily operated, make quickly and costs little. | “ Bands iio 112; =` 2 __-' _ , r m= --= - A book of recipes 'with every Amalsupericm- 1351 rwin city 119 lfcecntoky Halifax Street 104 Bicheiieuk Ontario 111 _ 111; Dominion Coal Common 1% 135* Dom. I. and 8. Com 532 52* “ Pre’i"d. 93 932 “` Bonds 90% 93 ileva Scotia Steel ` 194 105 Montreal Power ian 1191 27% 119% 104 ini; 10l§ 292 Ogiivle Common ` lw lm ‘ Preferred 110 ul f-w mulls aa; Italics Initial Stadtnlagn- _ __‘. _ ~ e ` 5 '=¥[’~ 7 5 _ A . ' '_A Buy and sell stocks on London. New York, Tor og l onto, and llontreel stock &chaux¢S Lan siren J. HcCnuo, Conn! H. M¢CUA!G k-Manager ~” \ ._ uoimra sank, Quebec. ¢ 4 if _: e.`»i»~ *- \ AMERIC NS Y SSW. along now. PRUWSE V, ' They are here, came yesterday, nine cases filled with the neivestfnobbiest, nattiest, ’ American;iHard, and Soft 'Hats you ever 3 Pearl, Slate, Brown, Di' Slate, Black, Grey. All the nicest shades of bands. These are the prettiest lot of Hatsxwe ever had. a Many§have;been waiting for them, come _ .vi F 1,. _‘_ _ Y ( I ' `0 n i. 'di f ‘-*_ e ~f yarns., 'rHE1sTvLisH;HArrER. po ei 1 g '_ union workers, $115,010; estimated dam- lllltfl Lllllelf dultry sprang Up. It will surprise a good many 093°’ dians, as well as Americans. I0 *HOW that the finest roses sold in_ New York city are grown in Canada. If- is only within a. twelve month that this' has been so, for even the flor- ists ihemselves had no idea then that hitherto unnoticed Canada Could grow thc iinest. roses in the world. But one of the New York frater- nity, wandering about on his vaca- tion in 1900, smmbled upon ii place in Ontario that made him gaSP- H9 saw at Brompton, ten acres of glass- covered houses, with a regiment of 150 men working about them. ~ He went in to investigate and found that an Englishman had been for ten years growing a lot of su- perbly-oses there-roses appreciated by the swelldom of Montreal, Toronto. and Quebec, who know from London and Paris what roses are. His Bowers grew in popularity from year io year, and he increased his plant proportionately, but- he had never dreamed of sending roses to the United States, and was dazed when` the New York man ma-de him an oder for his entire ycar's crop. His business sense came to the res- cue, and he secured a. high” flS“"e» chuckling to think how the New York man would rave on Ending Out that Canada charges a twenty-five Der cent.' export duty on flowers. But the New York man did not rave a bit. Ho paid the duty cheerfully, as di~d his rivals, who immedia.tely be- gan prospecting Canada for like treasure trove, and they have made oven more than their usual large pro- fit on the blooms that have been sent here. Ina a. business way, the Canadian rose is superior in that it lasts so long, The average northern flower lasts a week, even in a hot drawing- room, while the blooms from local or Southern greenhouses rarely keep their beauty for more th-an three days. The rose takes longer to grow in the Northern climate and the buds have necessarily more substance and take longer to (develop. They are picked “close” there (that is, - just on the verge of opening) and ex- pressed to the States in long. dat wooden trays. The buds lie on their pillow of leaves. and their long stems are covered with crushed ice. The water -'dissolving from the _ice, moistens the stems sumciently to bring the flower here in just its per- fect stage of opened beauty. ‘ The demand for tgc hardy products of Canada has already grown so great that 100,000 roses were ex- pressed to New York alone in two months. _ f'l’he Canadians cannot now begin to supply the new demand from the United States, and every grower is putting up additions to his estab- lishment. The average new house is 840 feet long. just the size that can be looked after by one man. _ _ More than one hundred houses of this size- are being built now, and they are full of the latest improve- ments, steam boat, automatic boiler feeders, etc. British Ililee Qnnrrioa, A Blue-book just.;pub1ighoq oontain, statistics of the persons employed in mines and _quarries in the ,United Kingdom, with statistics of _output and accidents. In 1901 the total number of persons employed in and about all the mines of the United Kingdom -was 839,178, of whom 806,785 worked at the 3,397 mines imder the Coal Mines Act and . 32,- 443 at the 731 mines under the Met- alliferous Mines Act. At tho quar- ries under »the Quarries Act there were 94,188 persons employed, of whom 59,968 worked inside the actual pits or excavations and 34,220 outside. The total output of _minerals at the mines under the Coal Mines Act was 231,343,224 tons, of which 219,037,- 240 were coal. Adding 9,705 tons from open quarries the total output of coal was 219,046,945 tons, which is lower than that of the previous year by 6,134,355 tons. At the mines under the Coal Mines Act there were 951 separate fatal acci- dents, causing 1,101 deaths. At the mines under the Metalliferoug Mines Act there were 27 fatal accidents. which caused 30 deaths, and in quar- ries 97 fatal accidents, which result- ed in 98 deaths.-London Times. A Compulsory Holiday. Mr. Kingston, the Australian Min- ister of Trade and Customs, has de- Cided views on 'fire subject of holi- days, as on most other matters, says The London Chronicle. He thinks a. holiday ought to be a holiday. Eight Hours’ Day this year happened to fall at a. time when the English mail steamer at Melbourne was replenish- ing her coal bunkers for the home- ward voyage. The local representa- tive of the P. &. O. Company applied for permission to work, odering to pay double day and night rates for the privilege. Although the applicat- tion was endorsed by the Wharf Lab- orers’ Union, Mr. Kingston remain. ed inexorable. He is of Irish parent- age, and there is something suggest- ively Hibernian about a compulsory holiday. ‘ Proving Death. 'A means of distinguishing death from catalepsy has been devised by DP- T09-fd Of Marseilles, and submitt- ed to the Academic des Sciences. He illl¢¢ts fluorescin, a strong coloring matter that is not poisonous, into the veins, ~ A gram of fluorescin so- lllfiilll. will color /45,000 liters of wa.- t8l'- If there is any circulation, the bvfiv Wlll turn crass green in two minutes,but the color passes away in g couple of hours without doing any arm. _ * All' the Year llelld. There is no good reason' li should not be produced they weligli Ye” =\‘°“11¢l and why broiler. some not be sold as well in the fall ag in the BPfi¥1K- Spread the business over a great deal or the year and make a demand for poultrygproductl by sup- Plying them in an inviting mahuer This is one way the business can he carried on all the year round.-Might. gun Farmer, " - _ \ _ xml* ‘ ' Jury s ur. James sample, Robots. Pivwvs m.ra.,uumy.san» Rim ---------f e - Lorena, McMillan, Wood Ielalldii 305° Wilma, seem, Nom. sydney; B- S- City of Ghent, McNe~rin.Halifax; Annie. LeBlanc, Marble Mountain; Rialto. McLean, Picton; Lizzie D. Scnier. Tracadie; SJC. Cove, ’1ecgere, Sydney; ' S. S. Electra, McLaren. Montague. J ulyticld. Ant, Le-Blanc, Picton; James V Semple, Roberts, do; S. S. City of Gh¢I1¢»_ MeNevtn, Summerside; Lorena, Mc- Millan, \Vood Islands; Electric, Flash, Tougei e, Picton; We asse, DeCosta, Harbour Bui t;Riaily.McLean,Chatham; Day Spring, LeBlanc, Pictou; S. S. Electra, McLaren, Montague; Hanr. a., Elcridge, Roberts, Sydney C. B. AN ACHIl\G BACK Is the first indication of kidney disease. and sltoum be taken ws a signal of danger _ -a warning to use Dr. Lhasa s Kidney ` Liver Pills while yet there is time to . avoid the dreadful pains and certain fatality of_this terrible disease. There is _ no guess work, no experimenting when you use the prescription. It brings relief in a remarkable short time, and because of its combined action ot liver and kidney s, cures complicated cases which cannot be reached by any ordinary treatment. MONCTON BOY COMMITTED FOR TRIAL- 'MoNc'roN, J ul; 2.-Thompson Gray, the _ 13 year old boy who stabbed George Milne f another lad about his own age, 14.-t Sat- ` urday, was to-day committed for trial by , Police Magistrate Kay. , ANOTHER CANADA EASTERN REPORT. MoN'rmzaL, July 1 -President Sangh- neesy refuses no confirm or deny the story from Freda-ricton.(N. BJ, to the effect. that the Canadian Pacific is about teafiquire the Canada Eaatarn Railway. i I Yon want a holiday i We want a holi- r day i Our clerks need a holiday-this is our reason for closing our store each I Monday at 1 p.m.nntil the second Honda in September.-Paton & Co. 7.2d&cw if Nine cases of new American Hats and Caps. ` See our north window for samples of ‘themi Nobby? We1l_ you bet they are l -Prowse Bros. 5 3i Come along now and get _a Hat, _from those nine cases of new V Americans we got yesterday! Yours is here sure, -Prowse Bros 5 si ' _wants Lasts. Fauna. gn; , sld;o(:{dSééz£'¢?_:;;>l$'at’lhT::rf§c:m5t° p-in t warren.-at niirfaafoagu asm, 'me 1...' idenee el the slut-f fthe 11 uf k , _ _ o o .s coo . Ap oixeation 'o be made te Mrs. G W. tioogsn, t Grafton street, 7 5 tg ` l FOILNJ-A _ildiel Lupe, nwner an hgvg t ‘LJPP Ylllil to Wm- Carew. Whvat ey ‘ paying for this ad. 75 ipd _ v. _ ./.~fq‘°e'-‘-:?‘~*i-=, ff l / - /!°e' 4'/' f~-"~-°~'¢’$ ' -f 0.9.3 ' _'.. if 'g ru 97"'..`~'¢?¢" _ ' V _-5 " ) YE’ f--I ' _ rf/ °_'=*'t € r W e l *d ‘s Wat, . 1 . -'.i`\>.-' 4*' \\`,»,‘ ' lh Fruit attl|a.tlaah Dou’t forget us for any thing in the fishing gear line. The season is advancing. I-f yon wish to secure a rod at cost price now is the time. a. w. hEr>1>rN,r>hm., B. The Square Druggist Sunnyside. ':___ _ _ I We Sold Lots a ' And chains but scarcely touched our stock of gold rings, brooches, pins and studs, etc. Anything you want in this line we will sell at reduced prices this week. New watches, chains and other goods A daily expected. L haw. rhrhoh, ure Asn »aoeinsi\rr4 5 _ v . - . Summer Underwear We show such a big line of sizes that a and comfortable it for every man is here, whet er he selects the plain or fancy balbrigans, natural wool, or cottons, which are priced from zzc. to $1.50 per garment Neckwear Straw Rats -=f Colored .Shirts Negligee Shirts Q'-`;:f_; 5 7 .}`°"W _a'¢1-‘»""/»_§ .v§\li_\Y 3 ’ _¢"“~'~; -me _' ., é A selection which contains all -the newest in shirtdoin and there i_sn’t another store in Chtown, showing a larger or better assortment We sell the W. G; i& R brand of shirts, collars and cuds . F. Pilili 1 THE MILL!! ' . raison, Cloihsoflhe Thaf is that our stock oon‘ai`a‘l bf all potions who lt” ‘RB tm' suitings pi-monaco them the laeatfsslrction they have scar rg-gl, give us _h -ve your order for a 'summer suit. John 5; Flour Millers to H. R. H. the Prince of Wales by ' Royal Warrant. I 4. 5 The World’s Best Family Flour 6-zid&wom, i of WatchesThC l`lechanics"Mfg f _ a0GlLVl£ S H9-Vi!!! made extensive improvements ` n ue in a_betm_ position mm "um neweedthe hate! Ihehiaerv ' Was r¢culredinthebui1dinsilne.n¢a¢aaas°r¢uki»a»xq.¢ia.¢¢¢|=. da °'°" “Wi WU- bllvltm. mir nu, me mnnsniae si.. mms. °f.....¢i. ...te hemlock and spruce boards., lathe. All the diterent grades cl shingka including °°d*"- E*5”\l¢=l sivtll at short acitce. All orders iiied prompt! mum” In our UNDERTAXING DRPARTHEN ogg", y casa work in CASKETS and COFFINS. W.itl1i`:Lla:e and va.:ie‘:nstockl i. tu-rigs* im. Prepared to Eli orders both WHOLESALE and gg 1-An* 'N-hu Nl we li! ' *h°"¢fY"“*'*i\i¢¢- ‘Up-is-dare heme ie connection a' mm' em' 'im' 1' ma T°l¢Ph°”» wit” _5¢¥¢¢t. Summer-aide. A _ ...'.... GEO- w.iRoB|Nsou, ug. WE if _' , Cimaaawcx. F, l'iyndman&Co, =~»-=-1-~»»»Vm=...... “rss °°°°°,,,e““== w Montreal Friday I _ A V '°“"f"f*7°""‘°°¢Y°'\*\` ` l4th,willbedue at _ nsuretnee dents. ’ . mms, ...ia » H Momiay mommg, July Charlottetown, A P, E, 1 _ T §>.iis1foiéS:1n]ohn s,via |811 011 y ey, C B _ y ~ . » , _ cattle and sheep on V _ FIRE, _ A ,_ _ _ pftewmder deck at , _ 9*°\lN¢vi:?cn-ce~»wiiari,- fiigthef P9-¥*i¢\1l3l1'S 33 .,,__` a t r _ K -_ fp ' V". . Cilsr|o1,eg¢oq'yo,..` _.5 ‘ , , ,I¢_lg 1 PQ$ag¢, 3 tg _ R¢P?°?¢”**“S_*hf=i¢=dms zB“*\S1¥_- r - ~ - Psaxs ssoldih 1-Mm- tC°mpwe. _ z _ ~ is ’t"°'°‘r . . ~=,_,- 4 .,. _ S" ' Ch"l'own, July 454, DIAMDND