Xgreney Chewing Tobacco- i BUWELS, 1 O f i&h\ll.ll|~eaderodb¢_!n& 'ras eoxnmaiv, onannorrmows, ramen nnwann 1sLAND_‘ AUGUST 23 W1 » ! 5-. -. . 2?' rv '- =z . - -. ., . A... . ‘. 1.f'1'~>e’>°>¢»""“i"~1@°"¥W ”aY~fs=#'.;.'=s.sE . ~-.-.. -.,. ....-,_ --,. Y __ _ ,_ . _ ,. . . M- »_'.' “-111°' 1. ;='»',i -. - of ~~-~ ,.¢ -A ~»:., ,= :`-"\ , , »,_ _ <12-', .~ -:;‘ ' '».~.>.~ ’;.f<~$. -.,- Jw; >-,_’ -.;,,»-=.-Vi ._ _-.3 '- » V ._ ,.»..{,__.,;, _E,._.,§__,_4,__;T,,._. i ig, .,.__.. ,f‘,§;.,g. n.: _V fy. £533: `,)_».~_‘..&].,,.,r;__...,,..~,e..v.,._ ¢_.__,, ;_.__*,_.., » ~ _ _J _,-~», -w . _ . ; “ ’ ~. ff ,, ~ '..;} :str .7 1., ‘ ,qar ~', in -,»,,,_-,_v_~ -/,,,¢_;,.- __,*»',..>,,»-VT., "‘. -\ > __ 1.. , _ , , _ . _. , _-e. I ?_`.:H,; .,_-jn`_,;,v>~.._Vj :._,_~,;,`,»}.> ‘ »_ 1” - ill' ' ` :_. _ * T' - - 1- '_ _-1- I I ‘ iUON’T THROW THEM AWAY Itls just like throwing away money, you throw away the SNUW SHOE TAGS men ewfy ohne Of Bobs. Pay Roll and you can have your choice of 150 Om! presents. Ask your dealer for a catalogue. Ang. xg cod 81 wif. when which Bhd Save hand ' ` K i FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1901. Lord George Hamilton,Indian Secretary, in presenting the Hnancial statement for F i Crown Gem Jars We have alarge supply of GEM JARS and asthe pre- serving season is now on. will sell especially low Pinto 6.: each. Quarts 7c each. , ggallons oc each. ubber Rings I2¢ (193, .l.D.lllACLE0l) & C0. the Indian Empire, said it was the most favorable showing since India came under I the direct control of the Crown. Notwith- - standing that the famine relief in three A years had cost £l5,(Il0,000 the same period £6,- f` 377,000. This season's rains, though some- A thing less than normal, were sufficient to give a fair outlook for the crop. ,j showed a surplus in the treasury of The proposed new steamship line in- . tended to shorten the Atlantic passage _ will be composed of six steamers, four of which will ply between Berehaven ,Ireland, and New York and two between B __' haven and Halifax or Sydney. They ere- will ;}_` burn Texan oil instead of coal for fuel. By . building 60 miles of railway and a short ferry from Ireland to Wales passengers landed in Berehaven will be able to reach ` , Digestive rgans ned* bymoeeasiomldeeeol |»lc6ALE svrrtnnur , S ._ .."_l.l.-.l.§...._ Constipation ; Foul and Dilotdlrod Stomach: they havenoequll . . . . ron eu.: rv:-|wvn|:n¢, 25c nn neu.. on uv nut on nrcrilvr or nies. 8‘I’ANTON'8 PAIN RELIIF, ul urrunui use nxrnnnui. nllnlv. Clue Rhondda; Colle, Spnins, Neunlgia. ' roleasltvanvwunnl. runes 26¢n||no1'1-Ll. . Solo pope-icton, T W Cnxmcu. ' c... u......1, u.....‘.‘»fe.I.’1‘3‘L" » i London in 12 hours. It is hoped thus to make the passage from New York to London in five days and from Sydney to London in four to four and a half days. Among the great enterprises of West- ern Canada is the dam of the Keewatin Power Company at the outlet of the Lakc ofthe Woods 120 miles from Winnipeg. The dam is constructed of granite and cement and holds in an expanse of water one half larger than the area of Prince 1 Edward Island. It gives 30,000 horse power. It is now proposed to utilise this ,power to light the City of Winnipeg. l Buffalo uses 12,000 horse power from ‘Niagara, 25 miles distant. A plant is now being constructed to deliver electric power in San Francisco from a water fall i155 miles distant. There is loss in the transmissionso far, but it is claimed that a copper cable, one inch in diameter will 1 transmit 50,000 horse power with a loss of . less than one fifth of one per cent per mile. It is claimed that by this year’s census \ France shows a gaiu of 412,364 since 1896, , _ _ -fu Dessert Get The REAL THING Takeno Other. Pure A Gold Jelly Powder Joyfully Quick” but this is disputed and the real gain is said to be less than one third of that number. Takingalong period of 80 years past it will be seen that the growth of population in France has been surprising- ly slow, when compared with other great nations. Great Britain, Germany, Russia I in Europe and Italy have doubled or more than doubled their numbers in that time, while France has gained but eight mil- lions since 1821. Here are the figures: ‘ 1821. France . . _ . . . . . . . . 30,462,000 190.1. 38,641,333 ftnited Kingdom..2o,9s4,o0o 41,460,678 v Russia in Europe.52,:000,000 . Italy . . . . . . . . . . . _ ._.16,000,900 , Referring to what the Examiner has ‘to say atout the commercial travellers’ tix we may remark that we took up the subject at the request of a well-known member of the Commercial Travellers’ `Association. \Ve have presented what might fairly be said on both sides. We regard the tax of $100 upon resident ge nts of firms in other Provinces as less 110,000 000 35,000,000 defencible than the tax on travellers generally. It is quite true, as the Examiner points out, that these agents might be tempted to remove to Picton or lPoint du Chene to reside, .md by trans acting their business from thence could escape the greater part of the tax of $100. ,Their removal, should they take this course, would be on all hands regrettable. -i-O-*_ ;;_i-_ ' "YZ" Closing prices _ I Amalgamated Copper Insurance Agents. Fires Marine, Life- ~ Representing the leading British Companies. - New Your niarsrs. American Sugar Atchison Common Brooklyn Transit Burlinrzton Louisville Nashville Manhattan New York Central North Paciilc Common Rock Island St. Paul United States Steel Com. SL £5 ‘L ni Atchescn Pre f. Southern Pacific Q Ff_l To months it to turn out 'iestion 118.50!! RBS is on anineld & Smtllewartl Ronan' S ` ___ Work. 8 ‘ (Furnished by Mcfluaig, Rykezt & Co business has been so great for Montreal St Ry has beeéi slmostini Toronto St. Ry 0 r - °§..§..“‘._ °&’i.‘§. Si M” be RY rush ? 61115 Halifax Tramway ‘ii \ Twin City St. By. none but Montreal Heat 8C Power ;“;g§§;°Cf 1 Dominion Coal C-o.‘ ` asuniisn- I Dominion Iron and Steel Common x 4|, , ss .5 ss .g1_*--l` Montreal.) _ Closing prices Au 112 Germany . . . . . . . . _ .27 000 000 56,345,014 . 134# _ American Tobacco 1344; 761]; 70% nil 103% 1185 nil 93% as 58 Canadian Stock Quotations. . I 22 0110 pl ourgreat Specialities lc. P. P. _ ig; l ` ' _ _' ° .° nog grade of Granulated on 99 9:.; i si 2.- lli Mlliliii lllliilllliii A C. P. R. OFFICIAL IALKS 0n|y 17,000 Men Carried West Short of Number Asked by Govcrnnicnt. . MONTREAL. Aug. 20.-Mr. McPherson. general passenger agent of the C. P. R. western lines, who has just arrived from the West stated this morning that there is work in the West for all the men who have gone out there and who are looking for farm work. “The trouble has been that in many cases the men have congregated in large numb- ers in the centres.Iu Brandon and Winni- peg a. thousand men could no more find farm work in a couple of days than they could if they were dropped down in Mont- real. The trouble has been the men have stuck to the main lines instead of going out on the branch lines, and thereby get- tinginto the heart of the farming countr_v_ The people we have carried out there fail far short of the number the government intimated would be needed to harvest the crop. The government’s estimate was that twenty thousand harvest hands were wanted. \Ve have carried about seven- teen thousand people out on our- harvest 1 can fine work there. ln some cases home- p sickness has caused complaints, and excursions. These have not all gone to the harvest fields of Manitoba, for we know that many persons have taken ad- vantage of the extroardinary cheap rate to go to Winnipeg, and from there have gone to visit friends in the States along the border. When such large numbers of men are carried out it requires some days ani sons in o .venlences for their distribution among the wheat fields, but I have no doubt that all who are looking for farm work will find it. The C. P. R does its best to distribute them. Station agents send reports of the number of men needed in the districts where they are located, and the har- vestc-rs are notified ofthe number that imuy men have gone out who are u0l» looking for employment on the farms' but are seeking places as clerks. Not afew complaints have come- from these persons.” v "\_ SI. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL IN DANGER. Loxnorr, Aug. 20.-A good deal of ex- citement has been caused during the last week by the report getting abroad that St. Pu.ul’s Cathedral is in danger from excavations for the new underground railway. There is a generally accepted belief that the cathedral’s foundations rest on concrete. This is not the case. The cathedral rests upon natural clay, which needs moisture to preserve its tenacity and firmness. There is no doubt that modern disturbances in the soil have ten- ded to drain away the desirable damp- ness. _ the building which give the greatest cause for alarm are the stately built front., where the walls, with the to and bells, are particularly massive ani the south transept, where the condition of one window is certainly such as to give cause for anxiety. Some idea of the incessant renovation the building requires may be guessed from the fact that the ordinary staff of masons for the cathedral number forty. They are selected for their skill and are constantly employed in the everyday re- quirements of the building. 7.- -.- ».--<1-». :-2#----1.-..-_ i est At the present moment the portions of W WSIS HOW Il FEELS T0 BE SIX MILES IN THE AIR. A London Daily Mail correspondence dated Berlin, Aug. 2, says: The. balloon trip of Drs. Berson and Suering, briefly referred to on Thursday, Aug. 1, consti- autics. After ascending from the Meteor ological Institute on Thursday the balloon reached a record height of 3-1,400 feet (over six and a halt miles). At aheight eight hundred feet short this Dr. Berson and his companions be- came unconscious and remained in this state three-quarters of an hour while the balloon Scared many feet higher :through dense masses of cloud. The last figures recorded bythe instruments showed 34- 400 feet, but the daring aeronauts must have gone considerably higher while un- conscious. of arailway engine was audable up tutes, it now appears, a record in aeron- and at 30,000 the aeronauts had to resort of ter was somewhere near zero. Thermap- Drs. Berson and Suering relate that were overcome by the cold and had only at a height of 3 250 feet the cries of geese sufficient strength left to pull the valve and cattle were still heard, and the sound , with their teeth and cause the oalloon to to descend. 20,000 feet. After that perfect quiet reigned. Freezing point was reached ata height of 12,500 feet; at 20,001), furs were put on; to inhalation. _ The newly invented "thermophor” pro vided an excellent expedier.t`_for keep- ing the blood warm when the thermome- hor iz. the shape of plateshad been put into their boots and pockets by thaeron- ants. The [balloon descended at Kottbus, eight hours after its departure for Berlin. l\Iessrs Glaisher and Coxwell in Septem- ber, 1683, attained a supposed height of 36,000 to 3’7,0t0 feet, but the Hgures were not exactly noted, as both aeronauts Cl-IICAG O MARKETS. following are the closing rates: August. Wheat 701-; Corn 55;; Oats Pork $14.30. Sept. Wheat 70?; Corn 561; Oats, Pork $14.30. Pork --. ‘ _---¢-- the best. 7 Chicago, August 22.-(SD€Ci8~1-l- The ,berry Cordial, cures all Summer Com- __ ---0-1 Dec. Wheat, 12 Corn 585 Oats, --- Shoe Store Sunnyside. EVERY BOTTLE OF KENDRICKS down town.-Jas.Paton&Co.-li Liniment is the same, you can depend .1 upon the quam .5 at an times, always SemD1@Sh°e=-Hne200dS at very low l _ ‘ » - “ 'YT _ L Lf -f e-'/,M1 `.€,4 "-I/»» ...C50 :.1 @@ unburn oughened Skin. When you need a nice heal- August 22 ing, soothing mixture one that 110 `-@ will mike the skin like velvet and allay all irritation, N ' Get British Almond ' Pink- Hundreds use it, hundreds c. Prepared, sold only by 1 A. w. anus, rim. B. , 43% L@ The Square Druggist I .1 Sunnyside. __’ ,I \¢ 44 i . ski. .. .- ' Waists that Paton 8; Co. have ou approval .J egg; gl I .wsu by if. rry it-P.i°e@ f 25 fat, _ .-._ _ _ ‘i ~~"'-2=,-;v\~_f-'ee €>"§' 7 Our market stalls have been open/ for ..._.§ business on Saturday from 9 a. rn. to i0 p. WHY EXPERIMENT w_hen you can getaremedy that has been tested for over twenty-five years Fuller’s Black- plaints in Children and Adults and may be had at all dealers, price 25 cents. Bargains in Sample Shoes at Moran’s Those pretty sample Silk Waists will be returned to the maker the end of week, so please leave your measure to-day when- prices at W.Moran’s, Sunnyside. Have you fseen the 100 different Silk made to measure and made to flt.-li Men’s Felt Hats 33 to 50 per cent discoun t J. B. Mc-Donald Sc Co’s removalsale 20 4i d 81 Silk Shirt, Waists selling freely at Paton & Co.’s.-li -Tremendous bargains in Boots & Shoes, ready-made clothing, Under Clothing, I Shirts, Collars, Ties, at the removal sale. 25 to 50 per cent discount.-J. B. Mac- Donald & Co’s. 20 41 d & w li. Nothing ever shown so high f.-'ass in Silk Waists as Paton8c Co. are showing. -li. ANOTHER day gone and you have not fleft your measure for that Silk Waist# 8 . up'e;`l€ava the City end of week- call 1 in and mem.-Jas. Paton’s. A scotch person once appraided the blacksmith o the village for not paying his church rate. “But never go 'io kirk,” said the blacksmith, “thet’s you fault,” . said the minister: “The kirk is always open.” A few days later the blacksmith ' sent a bill to the minister for shoeing his horse. The minister indignantlv protested ` that his horse had no. been shed. “Thet’s your fault,” said the smith the forge is always open.” t v Sugar We are now sellingthe be for I I of lsopie ‘ '7 p *ii f BEW ARE OF IMITATIONS his Me- 5 ceni,§,_§per lb Also Sugoi# to cents per lb up. :L_ evening. The moral of this is quite plain. I' not pay to keep the market open in "Chat- m., previous to that from 4 in the after- , noon to 10, now as the forenoen trade has not been up to our pgpectaticn, and as we do not feel warren in resorting to the parsons rule of trade or for that matter 1 the blacksmith-so after mature delibera- m tion |we have concluded notto open our _ market stallls on Saturday until 6 in the _Itmaypayto keeptbeki kai ays o ii and also a blacksmith forlge bit it discs lottetown all thetime.-J. J. Gay 8: Son. Wed, Fri, & Sat. FILJCK Yesterday we opened our first consignment of New Fall Jackets We ask the Ladies to visit. our Mintle Department and see some of the swell fst Jackets ever shown in Charlottetown FALL DRESS B0 New homespuns in different shades of Browns and Greys, Black Cheviot and Broad Cloth in Black and different shades of Blue SHAWLS Another lot of English and Canadian Shawls opened yesterday F Perkins 8: unimcr Suits Leave your Orders Summer Suits John McLeod & C HICKEY 85 NICHOLSUN TOBACCO MANUFACTURERS Black Twist Bright Twist I- Pearl Smoking Ruby Chewing I S Fine Cut Mixtures l 2 and l lb tins Aug 16 diy and w I yr Iuunsls and llheis Who Appreciate Higiilf.-has I Will find our establishment the right place to their orders Garments made by us are noted for their ease, and good finish Our stock is replete with fashionable ens Brituh and (anarlian manufacture We are agents for the celebrated OXFORD -nd have now over 100 PATTERNS in stock. REK Merchant Tailor, Moms Block Op Post Oilice ,._..___.._.. Tho World’s Ublllpllleo _-n l‘€