Wher th a Mole it may Q _- Vil © 92 THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER .7. 1900. a Mountain, uid to have at=' ito SE ee fained its Zenith. ne Our Clothing trade got to the mountain size. Why This Progress ? The facts are plain: A tallor-made Overcoat is offered you at $5 ess |than the cost of a coat made of the same cloth by & merchant tailor. And the fit is perfected without the trials of trying, fitting and | slashing, so customary with the tailors. Vake up, you men, and don't go along with your head down, see- ing thing that goes on " around you. Wake up to the'fact that you can buy just as good fitting Over coats:and Ulsters from us as you can have made, and you surely save $5. iymade goods are not made as they were twenty years ago tailors v’ thead, theydon’t. See? We Could Double our Trade in Two: Weeks if we Could only Wake Everybody up Enough to Come in Ulsters. the Loser and see our Overcoats and If you Sleep on you’re Industry has Developed Prowse Brothers. MEN’S CLOTHING DEPT. | The Largest on the Island. CHILDREN Th: Snr epee ree Te . ; i ‘'S COTHING DEPT. Largest in the I rovinces, Prowse Brothers. | Every time. | seeing our Clothing put on a boy. oe ‘ bright, ‘Now, we Guess that Boy of Yours Progress. —— A TTT ees Boys’ Clothing. We Know of Nothing on Earth that has Ad- vanced Faster than the Making of Boys’ Clothing. You may buy a suit from us o~ an Ulster, or third the price of custom wor«, and it Fits Better This isa fact which"no sane min an Overcoats for one- would contradict after We | Reefers. And listen, we’re selling this Boys’ Cl othing without profit. Wey wait till he’s a man for our profit. ; We're always on the alert; we ke ep abreast of the times and note all changes in styles. Our motto is up-to-date, and we've got everything new and breezy in the little boy’s way. 've three thousand Suits. We've tve hundred Ulsters and Wants Something. You’d Bet. ter get it Before Xmas; he’ll Like it Better. LADIES Don’t pass us when you want furs of any good kind. We're selling ours away below the regular price, and that was low enough. ———— THE D. \ILY] EX AMINER ——— (EMBER } 1908. _— ——__ A CENS! IS PROPH ECY millions for 1800. ten millions fo. 1825, twenty millions for 1850, forty for 1875, and eighty millions and the record of the nited States Ceusus. since its in- shows substan- es as follows: millions for 1906; U itial taking in 1790, Ho ig Ut faa tially thesé 1800. . 5,308,000 1825 (1820) . 9,633,000 Ls oy eee ‘3eee... :9870).... 38,658,000 81,000,000 cc A 1900 (with Canada)..... i** MARK ALL OF A CENTURY AGO. Edward Wieglesworth, ‘* Hollis | Professor of Divinity at Cambridge, ”’ in a little >] ores published in the portentous year © eat », must have had a correct idea of the prosperity of North America, during the cen- tury just closing, as he predicted that the population of the ‘British American Colonies ’’ in 1900 would be eighty millions,---says ‘‘ The Na- tiona! Masazine$’’ for December. Included in this estimate was Nova Scotia, mow in the Dominion of Canada, which with its last recorded census res of. 4- 860,000 added to i eventy- six millions of the United States, fulfills almost to tae letter the accuracy of the Wigglesworth erophecy. And this somewhat re- markable forecast was not based upon any species of guess work, but upon a well-defined and clearly constructed mathematical theory, which, reduced to plain words, can be described in the language fits author : The British famericans have dou- bied their numfiers in every period twenty-five ‘years from their first piantation.”’ Taking this statistical fact as a basis for ‘his calculation, the Har- vard divinity professor constructed a system of reckoning the increase of a country’s population which his- tory hasshown to be as correct as his method was simple. Assuming that the 1775 popula- tion was two and one-half millions Mr. Wigglesworth estimated five + c bes a Lhe Non-Irritating Cathartic Basy te take, eary to operutan yf » Hood’s Pills YOUR BAGGAGE.” ‘Mark au your baggage,’ that is the injunction of every man in any way connected with the bag- gage department of railroads. It means so little to the passenger and yet its fulfilment Jwould relieve much care on the part of the little army of men who toil hard trom one end of the day to the other, and in hundreds of instances assist very materially in facilitating mat- ters when it comes to making close connections, as is often the case in these days of raUroading. A man -who has made the hand- ing of baggage a study, said : towhy i is it so many people do not have some initial, name or other identifying mark put on their trunks and valises ? Simply because they have the greatest of faith in the railway baggage men. That is a compliment, but if they had any idea how greatly this would assist us in preventing baggage going astray they might all possibly be induced to have some mark on their baggage. ™ Telescopes, dress suit cases and trunks in these days nearly all looked alike to the baggage clerks and handlers, and, it may be said, also to the owners. Hundreds of instances could be cited of where two and often as many as five persons claimed the same piece of baggage before the checks were put on. This generally results in a search through the boxes, which isan an- noying proceedure to the men as well as to the passenger. My ad- vice is : Mark your baggage.”’ IN GERMANY. _—_-—-—- Berxin, Dec. 12.---The German government has not taken official notice of Gen. Chaffee’s Count Von Waldersee, complaining of thn removal of the astreanion! | letter to instruments from the wall of Pekin and the return of the letter to the American commander ‘‘on account of its tone.’’ Only afew of the print the incident in their The Vossische remarks: papers columus. ‘‘Whatever the cause, had in no case a right to commander-in-chief. Tageblatt observes: ‘‘We must, of course, reserve a definite judgement unfil reliable Germac ‘reports have been received. Whoever’ knows, however, of the generally acknow ledged diplomatic tact of Count Von Waldersee will nat doubt that he will not have employed sucha brusque procedure without the the strongest kind of drovcation. TT NO HOPE AT THE HAGUE. The Dutch Government Definitely Refuses to Arbitrate for Kruger. THE HagGur, Dec. 14.---The Dutch Government yesterday definitely re- fused to take the initiative in be- half of arbitration between the Transvaal and Great Britain. The decision of the Government was communicated in an inter- view between Mr. Kruger and Dr. Leyds and the Dutch Foreign Min- ister, and the Minister of Finance, N. C. Pierson. Mr. Kruger ex- plained that the object of his jour- ney was to disseminate the idea of arbitration, and the Dutch minis- ters replied that the role of the Netherlands mut be pcs ive. The initiative belong:d to the great powers, they added. When “they should have reached a decision the Dutch Government might see what it could do. Nothing on Earth will do it like Sheridan’s Powder. Thousands of successful Poultry-Keepers all ever the country owe nc small portion of their wupatne to the practice of mbiing with the mash ven to their poul goes ty of SHERIDAN’S — t has been used and re ie Wd pe feces ers over thirty years, and for af k poultry. Urageee” gt pp Mears omnes, Sos ano Sanspl best Poult m paper free. mPa SON & CO” Boston, ‘M Masa oy small Gen Chaffe | use such | rough language in a letter to the: ’’ The Berliner | er, sena 25 cents fora FOREST’ AND STREAM 4 weeks’ trial trip. The | sportsman’s | PAVORITE WEEKLY JOURNAL Alert! mee and fishing. = Per year $4. s With this mee spirited pic- meee tute (size 22x 28in.) $5.50. FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CQ, 346 Broadway, New York. @. A PRETTY Clock Makes a_ useful Christmas present as well as ornamental. We keep a nice assortment in Imitation Marb'e, Oak, Wa- nut, Brass, China and Nicke. Our Alarm Clocks are unsur- passed, as durable and reliable time keepers, can tell the time In Daylight or Dark without the aid of a light. Everyone tested and guar- anteed. W. N. TANTON Great George Street ThreeDoors from Grafton . TO LET. So eeeeeneeeeee ee That centrally situated one tenement house on Prince St., next to the late Thos. Alley’s, containing eight large rooms, with stable and coach house, at present occupied by Rey. H, B, Morris, whe is removing from the Island. Possession given the 23rd inst. Apply to THOMAS McQUAID,. di tf Lower Qucea Stree |MATTHEW & MCLEAN iii iia i If an angler or shoot- | | JUST OPENED... : A large shipment of Thos. Ellin & Co's, Needham Veall & Tylack’s and Jonathan Crooke’s celebrated Cutlery... In Tables, Pockets, Scissors, Razors, etc FENNELL & CHANDLER. } The undersigned offers for sale at a bargain the following : One 40-Horse Power Engine and Boiler. 14 Driving Pulleys with Shaft and Belting. One Rip Saw and bench with carriage. One 30 in. Saw. One 24 in. Planer—One set hoisting blocks, One Matching and Moulding Machiue, Fifty-one Moulding Knives, One Band Saw complete. One Buzz Planer. One Swing Saw complete. One Turning Lathe and Sheft—One Vice. Two Emery Wheels—One Jig Saw. Three Cireular Saws and tables. All in first-class order.