_ereneeT ABSOLUTE SE PITY, er ee A Cenuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. “Must Bear Signature of fieee¥ ard See Fac-Simile Wrapper Below. cmc.” Ae, | TA Se (a 2 ; oer, Ga Rare & ae a SR * Very small and as eacy 4 to take as sugar. wn |FOR HEADACHE. CARTERS ror aizziness. 4 ) FOR BILIOUSNESS. | VEN FOR TORPID LIVER. PI ER FOR CONSTIPATION. + |ron SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION ( CURE SICK HEADACHE. —————$—$_ ANE CE CAMERA NOODLE URAL | Hillsborough oo ridge Th New Bridge iscom- ing and so are the dry streets'and roads. Thet some-— you will need thing nize in footwear. Fe Have a fine Selection Selling Very Low TT B&B. BELL The Bargain Boot and Shoe Store. iMITATION IS THE SINCEREST FORM OF FLATTERY.” the be ‘o proof that WINARD’S LINIMENT has extraordinary merits, and is in good repute with the public, is, that IT IS EXTENSIVELY IMITAT- ED. The imitations resemble the genuine srticle in appearance only. They lack the generai excellence of Genuine This ‘notice is* necessary, as irjurious and angerous imitations, called WHiTe# LINI- wer, &c., liable to produce chronic inflam- mation of the skin, are often sn stituted for AMINARD’ LINIMENT by Dealers, because ‘hey pay a larger profit. Thay all Sell on the Merits and Advertising of MINARD'S. ‘It im particulars claiming to be made by a the eer of Minarp’s LINIMENT, whieh simply is a lie. INSIST UPON HAVING MINARD'S LINIMENT C, C. RICHARDS & CO., Yarmouth, N. 8., The Relief Or. Lady Smith, of South Africa, was nothing com. pared to the relicf that is felt by 3 RS. SMITH, and hundreds of other women of P. E. Island, on wash day since they have started using.” GILT DCE SOAP All first clase grocers}SELL ‘it. 2 WOKINNON & | WHOLESALE AGBN1 THE SIR CHARLE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN AUGUST 31, Makes an Able Address at Liberal Incapacity Sir Cuaries Turrer, in the course <f his excellent speech at Amherst a few ds ya ago, showed up the inconsistency and incapacity of the Laurier-Tarte adminis- tration in grand etvie. After dealing at some length with the history of the two parties and pointing out what the Liberal- Conservatives had done inthe way of bringing Canada to the position which she occupies sto-day Sir Charles to k up the matier of expenditures, Everv intelligent man, said he, whetber Liberal or Conservative, re- members that for eighteen years they (the Liberals) were harping npon_ the monstrous extravagance of the Liberal~ Conservative government, and declaring | that if they were in power they could save one, two, three, four, and probably five millions per annum by governing the country. They declared that they would have free trade; they would lessen the taxation of the people; they would gov- ern ihe country economically, Where do they stand in the light of the figures now patent to every man in tk. country? That Government that came in denouncing us for extravagance, pledging themselves to economy, have spent last year nearly ten millions more than the Conservative Gov. The expenditure for the ‘ive their coming into power amounted to a little more than $42,000,000. After they came into office the expenditure first came up to $50 ,000,0000, and now by tbe estima’es of this year it bas got up to $60,000,000, an increaee for the present year of $18,000, 000, and so instead of carrying out encon- omy they have followed a policy of extra- vagance, and they can not but shrink from loaking the intelligent people of Canada in the face when they contrast their axtravagant pledges with the actual condition of things. They said they wou'd ligkten the taxaticn of the people. le that right or wroog? How have they lightened your taastion? By adding ten millions of taxes to that which you paid before they came into power. And yet these men are actually standing before the people of this country and trying to de- lude them into the belief that they have kept the pledges which they gave tothe people. I say this shows incapacity, to say the least of i', with utter inability to grapple with the firet fundamental princi ples of statesmanehip. Now I asx you, the circumStances and facts established by their Own records and public statement of facts being before you, whether the time has not come for sou to suppuit a party libera] in principle as wel! as 1n profession, and who are able to govern the couotry for ernment. years previous to TEN MILLIONS LESS have charge. (Applauee). But there are one or two subjects of a still graver character, and which are worthy of coneideration. You heard a good deal about corruption in olden times when theee gentlemen were eriticiz- ing the acts of the Liberal-Conservative party. Letthem point the finger to an act of such extravagance, and which can- not be accounted for in any other way than as corrupt, as the purchase of the Drammond County Railway. Gentlemen, the propoval of the present Minister of Railways was that it was absolutely neces- sary to bring the I C R into the city of Mottreal. There were two or three ways by which this could be done— One which only had to be looked at by sny business man to -at- isfy himself that it was the true policy, and that was build a bridge to connect the I. C. R. and Grand Trunk railway On the Levis side with the city of Quebec. All it would have required was the expenditure of a million dollars, and a very wise expenditure that would have been, When that was done you had not the I. C. R-opnosite Quebec, but into the city of Quebec and when yon were these all the minister of railway required to say to the Canadian Pacific Railway was—take our traffic, our cars, our pas- Sengers into the city of Montreal, and give us the benefit of your terminus, and Halifax and give you the benefit of ours, and the whole thing would have been accomplished without charge to anybody. What did they, do ? Thev adopted the policy of buying a ramshackle old railway at an enormous price for getting from that into Montreal. The minister of railways brougttdown a proposition to get the I. (. R, into Montreal at a cost to the people of seven million dollars, thereby HANGING AN ADDITIONAL DEBT of seven millions around the neck of the people of Canada. But there was an easy way todoit. Allthey had todowas to give a million dojlara towards building a bridge at Quebec. “he senate—thank y tyne” tran these honorable gentlemen who now Amherst. and Extravagance Exposes. The Mill-Stone of Debt for: Which the Liberals are §Responsible, Jod we have a s nate—inrew it our and rejected the proposition they made as monstrous, and, owing to the patriotic ac- tion of the senate of Canada,they went back to the same people and reconstructed the bargain and got them to doit for a million dollars less than the amount which they had tried to choke down their friends and colleagues in the House of Commons, but which they could not swallow. The re« sult was that that work has been accomp- lished by the present government at a cost ot six millions of dollars, every dollar of which could have been saved and an _ in- finitely better arrangement made than that which exists today. I think it will puzzle men to know why the minister of railways, unless there was something be- bind the scene, should throw away eix miliions of the people’s money, and he has = to account how it was he gave, and tried to get parliament to endorse sivirg, seven millions for what he could have ob- tained for six. But that is a comparatively emal! matter to the next I am going to mention, which I have no hesitation in 3aying is thoroughly*corrupt,and tbat is the Yukon railway. Mr. Sifton, the mivister of the interior, madea contract—he had no busi- ness makisg contracts about railways, it was not in his department—with a firm of contractors to build a road for the purpore ot getting what they called an ‘‘all-Cava: dian route ” intothe Yukon. Well,what do you suppose was the arrangement ? This proposal was to give about FOUR MILL!ONS OF ACRES of the mineral land of the Yukon territory over tothese contractors for bailding 150 miles of tramway. When we said :**What do you meau? You say you want an all- Canadiao route; look at your contract tbat you have laid upon the table of the House of Commons and you will find that this contract, the day after itis ratified by | parliament, can be sold in New York, put in the hands of the Americans, and not a British or Canadian subject have anything todo with. it.’ They said: “Well, we did not see that; we Overlooked it; it was an oversight. We will see the contractors and get them to change that part of the contract and put that right.” But what next? I took a diegram and held it up before the bouse and showed that under a clause ofthat contract the contracters could cover every acre of gold laod in that country and leave nothinz for the country. It profeesed to be alter- nate sections, the government owning one sectionand the contractors another, but we held up the diagram before the house, and down came the minister of agricul- ture a couple of days after and said:— ‘T bat was an oversight it has been put all right. We did not see that, and w. have got the contractor to change that clause ot the contract.” Well, I dare cay you have heard of the casein which an American gentleman had a lawsuit in Canada, and he applied to a friend to know what lawyer he should employ. He nameda lawyer and the lawyer undertook the case and was not particularly auccessful, in fact the case went against him. The gentleman weat into an agitated state of miud to hie friend and said ; ‘* What do vou mean by recommending such a man as that, I may teil you by ihe way that the man whc made the {Yukon contract was the ex~Attorney- General of Manitoba. He lost my case, he mismanaged it in the most shameful manner.” His friend said: “Iam very much eurprised. He is a Queen’s counsel.” “ Well,” he replied,“ if he is (Jueen’s counsel, I say from the bottom of my heart forthe first time in my life, ‘ God Save the Queen.’ ” What doyou think of disposing of a kirgdom of mineral territory to a rsil- way contractor to BUILD 150 MILES OF TRACK? You have not only my word for it. Take we wili take your .raffic from St John to. the records of the House of Commons; in which the thing was all brought out and established as clearly as possible, and you will find no less than four prominent men, supporters et the Government, , Zou up and deevounced the contract, so it was not only condemned by the. universa] voice of the Conserva- tiyes of the House, but it was condemned by their own friende, and many of those who did not get up and condemnit went a, to the senators and begged them for God’s sake to throw it ont, .and it, was thrown Out, and I say again—thank @od we haye a Senate. They saved usa milliow dollaré.en the Drummond teilway and they saved ue a mineral kingdom in this con- tract. (Applause.) ::- ‘e 4- “> ot —- ~~“ S TUPPER 1900 2 z ons ugs Rugs Rugs Rugs Rugs A Rugs n % Rogs Rugs ~ = Te @ SoM ie ee Bu:, the maladministration and corrup- tion in the Yukoo was such that in three continents the name of Canada was covera ed with great disgrace. The coztinents of Europe, America and Australasia were ringiog with charges, not only of malad- ministration, but of the grossest and movt shocking corruption that ever disgraced sny country in the world. (Ap- plause.) WHAT WAS THE RESULT ? The London Times sent out a lady of the highest character and ability to the Yukon to investigate, and on her report (and the Times has been alwaya ready to give all the support itcun to a goverowent in Canada, whoever may be in power) that paper came out and de- pounced the adminis:ration of the Yukon in the strongest terms, Sir Hibbert Tup- per brought up the question in the house of commons and moved that a royal com mission be issued, composed of three judges of high character and stand:ng, for the puryose of examing, investigating and reporting to the house of commons. What ought to have been done—and what was actually done? Well, Sir Louis Davies and a number of gentlemen who are obliged to come to the front on such occasions said : “Who ever heard of such a thing as a minister of the crown put on his trial before judges by parliament?” Nobody proposed that. All we proposed wasthat they should take independent testimony, and that that independent tes- timony should be reported to the house for them to dea! with the minister of the crown. It ended in this, and this was all that Mr Sifton would agree to, that a royal commission was issued to his wife’s uncle to report upon the matter. Ina case of this kind, if their hands were clean, if they were not guilty of malad- ministration and corruption, would they not have agreed to this proposition? 1 ask you as intelligent men, vhether liber- ale or conservatives, if ippocent, were they not fools not to take this opportunity of clearing themselves of the charge by appointing that commission? All that was asked was that _ AN INDEPENDENT Commission] shuuld make an independent report. Again they found s number of members of the Houee of Commons giving them steady and constant support, joining the opposition in condemning them for voting Rugs Rugs Rugs Rugs. In many beautiful Tartan Plaids. blending in these goods is a work of art, onl by the beat artists in the world to-day. Surely in the goods we bought they have excelled them- ‘elves. The colorings are simply beautiful. If you want a rug for travelling, or one for that new cape of yours, or one tor the carriage, Why, Get it Here Hundreds to choose from and every one select, The prices are very small for the much beauty and wear combined, Every Rug guaranteed pure wool. Prices start at $2.00 and End at $12.50. PROWSE BROS. What trade we have we'll hold, and what we haven't we’re after. Rugs down ‘that resolation and declaring that they would permit no examination of the conduct of the minister, and admit of no report except that of Mr. Ogilvie, who was his wife’s uncle, and who was depen- dent upon him for bis salary from montb to month, ashe had to get it voted and given to him, and at the end of his report he received a gratuity in addition to his salary from the minister of the interior of $1,000. Now I bave given you these facte. They are not resting upon my statement. You have in the journals the denunciations of their own friends behind the treasury benehes joining with us in stating that if is utterly unworthy of a government. (Applause.) New, I say if ever there was a case to which, in my judgment, you are bound by whst you owe to your own characters and reputations, te your children who are to come after you, by what you owe to yuur common country, it ig to examine these questions and find if they are what I have stated. Ono the one side you havea great party wno have been eminently successful, even by the confe*sion of their opponents, in carrying on the affairs of this country in @ way calculated to advance its pro- grees and prosperity, aud brought it to the proud pitch it now occupies. I sy you are bound to CXAMINE THE QUKETION and say whethar the time has not come to support that great party to which Canada owes the great position it bas at« tained today, that great Liberal-Conserva. tive party Who are in a position to come bere and appeal to independen men, irree spective of party, and confidently ask for that eupport which will enable them in future to deal with these great questions so vitally importent to the Dominion of Canada as they have dealt'with them be- fore. (Applause. ) _ At O’Leary.—Tae Day Examrver is for sale at O’Leary every day by Alfred Adame, re —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—__—_—_—_—_—_——— Nervousness is cured by making the blood rich aud pure with Hoed’s Sarsa- pariila. It gives the sweet, refreshing sleep of childhcod WANTED.—A smart about 15 ye ars of age to attend a new oN who had eee experience preferred. Apply at t Just opened, the color y to be performed Rugs itera aanaeeeoREO | — por ee ORE The Examiner Calendat EF OR AUGUST... MOON’S CHANGES First Quarter, 3rd. Full Moon, 10th. Last Quarter, 17th New Moon, 24th. autilina. High Water Sun - oe nel | er "|Men ' Aft’n Rires,| Sets, - —— — Classen —_—_- l\Wednesday} 142 2 3451 72 2!Thursday 216, 238 52} 19 3\Friday 257, 3 20 533.8 4/Saturday 3 57 421 5 16 5|Sunday 5 4 5 30; 56 | 15 Monday 6 32 639) 57 «G 7\Tuesday 7 47; 815) 58 13 &Wednes «| 845 9145 0 1 9 Thursd 4) 0 9 1 | 10 Friday lo 28 1053 2; 9 \lSaturday | i lv! 1135 3) 7 (2 Sunday li 34 01 6/| § 13 Monday 0 3 0309 6 | 3 4 Tuesday 0 40 24 UP 15\Wednesday| 135 159 9 6 59 16 Thursday, 2241 25 10 ; 3? 17 Friday 32, 3 55} ll | 55 18 Saturday 454 5 23 12 | & 19 Sunday 62, 6 49) 13 | Sl 20 Monday 73:\ 8 0 1s | @ 21 Tuesday 852 350 16 | i 22\Wednesday 919 939 17 | 23 Thursday 9 25,10 24, 18 | 45 24) Friday 0 25 10 59) 20 | 43 25\Saturday | 1058 11 3, 21 | 4 26/ Sunday 11 16 1141 22 | ® 27| Monday 11 44,12 5; 2 37 28) Tuesday 02023 6 | 3 29; Wednesday 033 0 55 26 cS 30| Thursday | 1 9 181) 27 32 31jFriday i p42 2 6528 63 I am instructed by Mr. J. A. Griffith, to sell by auction, at the pre- mises, King Street, East, on Th the 30th day of August, at 12 o’ele noon, alot of land 42 feet on Ai Street and extenalng back 30 feet wi cottage and out-buildings, Terms cash. a. Auctioneet, F dySthur, sat and wed. ae ale 4% —— es crenneet. Fe aS YS ee A fan «&%,.a om» a % I % 1 LLL LLELL LLL CC LN I ee rer ee ~ -