THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 9, 1900. e Charlottetown Steam Navigation Gompany, Ltd, Th for NEWFOUNDLAND At HALIFAX with C. A. and Plant Line for BOSTON, Passengers from all places on P. railway east of CHARLOTTETOWN can leave howe 24 hours later than if joining Plant Steamer in CH’TOWN and c with same Steamer in HALIFAX, Through Tickets to be had at Grand Trunk g Canadian Pacific Intercolenial and P EK I c ' Railways, aad on the Company’s Steamer: | and connecting lines in United States and Canada. Steamers run on Eastern Stahdard time. F. W. HALES, Secretary Charlottetown, P. E. I. Junet8 d and w. Hillsborough althalindlclinalin blll Th’ New Bridge is com- ing and{so are the dry streets and ruads, The. you will? need some- thing nice in footwea-. We Have a fine Selection Selling Very Lew J. H. BELL The Bargain Boot Shoe Store. phishrbbprb,pApbbrpbAhbbpbbbb bbb pbb bbb bid bette be be bebe be tbe de hy de te he in i aaaea . Attack wae ent isa time when war pictures arein greacer demand thanever. The conduct of the British soldierson the battlefield has won the plaudits of admiring nations. We have at great expense published ‘ourlarge, beautiful pictures, size 20x24. on heavy, superfine, calen- dered paper. A picture that will con- meni itself and senda thrill to the heart of every true Canasian is the ons called Attack of Royal Cana- dians at Paardeberg, there are liter- ally hundred: of figures on this pic- tute, the mountains or kopjes stretch- ing ont into the distance are swarming with men while here and there a prose trate figure sp aks only too weil of the Boerr.fiemen It was on this battie- field the gallant Major Arnold met death urfi venivgly. indeed itis only too true, that many of those gallant bearta that beat so high when the cheering thousands bade them God-speed as they sailed fram Can- adin’s shores now Le still forever ta lonely graves on the otrer side of th: world ander African stirs To every f~ecdian heart, to every Can- ndian home, the deeds of their brave suilumer Doys speak with an irresia - able thrill of atriotism and pride. Gordon ighlanders at the Batile of Belmont, Charging the Boer Guns at Elandslaagie, and the Charge of Gen. Frene t's Cavalry on the Retreating Gen. €ronje’s Army. These are ail stirr- ing p'cturesand cannot fail to @)7- mend the mselves to ary one who ~ill examine them. They are RED HOT SELLERS! agentscoin money. Big profits. Knormous success. One avyent sold Gin oneday. Sample and terms 25 ete. (Nene free); four 80 cts; $1.75 per doz: 25 for $3.25; 50 for $6.00; 100 for 11.00. Writetodav for a den and mae money. Home Novelty Ms. .., Boz 518 (Dept 256 B) Chi cago, L Wed er FRA R gon STMRS. “NORTHUMBERLAND” AND ‘PRINCESS.’ t s below every day, Sunday excep e«. From POoOIN CHENE fo arrivel of Br.50 train fi St. Tohr for SUMMER SLO, g wi xpress train for Charl wt qd Tigni ; From SUMMERSIDE. [on arrival of morn ing train fron C harlottet wn and all stations of P. 1 R.} for I I {ENE, connect ing with after n train for ST. JOHN, BO TON MONTREAL Co t at M Ww train for Oa ada a S > W . -: ae @ Railway lCanala, also at *t John with Ste ers of International and Dom- n \ S Lines Tuesday and 5a urday a for Boston direct due follow in a) and on Yonday Wednesdey and Friday mot ings, with Steamers for East port. Portland aad Boston. ~ From PICT«U about half past three on arrival of day trains from Halifax and Sydney fr CHARLOTTETOWN From CHARLOLTETOWN for Pictou at ~ $.30 a. m, connecting there with day trains for CAVE BRRTON HALIFAX. At NORT ? SYDNEY with steamer Bruce nnect THE DAILY EXAMINER is issued every afterneon from the of- the British income-taxpayer. fice of publication, London tlouse B ul! ing, corner ol (du eeu and federated Ouly on the basis oft 2 pro izing vapors. Kk chmond Streets, (upstairs). “ub eg sae" y IT R - i tective tariff. scription FOUR DOLLARS A | oy daaeice shake tatiana YEAR, toany address in Canala 1ese remarks dare notable, ut | or the U.S. | the electors have now endorsed | THE WEEKLY EXAMINER) Premier Laurier’s declaration that | . ' Canada does not want Mutual) is issued every Friday mornin». It : * : contains a complete summary of th referential Trade. news of the week, and is the best cc AR Island sewspaper to sead to friends | young nations coming to the aid of | we Mr. | manure, the whole heap being care- |Chamberlainis a practical man, and | fully covered over with a layer of ihe knows that the Kmpire can be | peat to prevent the escape of fertil- | |heap of mixed peat and dung be ight of fermenting barnyard | | By this method the entire mixture | is gradually brought into an equable | state of heat and fermentation. Or | the jiquid manure of the barnyard may be employed for the same pur- | pose in whole or in part. If the watered occasionally with the liquid manure, the fermentation will be } broad: Salieeriael « ONE NTHUSIASTIC CONVERTS | DOLE aEMEEE: GG aus “e% | more speedily effected and at a less| L \ tn, Cae ns i oa . aad- - expense of common barn yard dune. i aress \ anada ¢ S : ‘ i e ‘ ‘ - @* | rere are Thousands of Them) Or, instead of liquid manure, wood | . _ FIG le se 2a" ata z ao hee THE EXAMINER JOB PRINT Vho Believe as This Woman passe s, carbonate of potash or car: | The superiority of th b print Does 'bonate of soda may be used with | Cc au - ‘ me >» priating Ss . , F , turned oat at THE EX i WER office = |advantage. In short it is only | is acknowled zed by all. Al} classes VI cnowlton, of Butte, M 0.. necessary to mix halt dried peat | of work in book and job,from diuinty my nt Susiastic convert to the | with any substance which neutral- | booklets in the latest style to ser virtues of Stewart's Dyspepsia Tab- | izes its acid properties, thus acceler- | riceable b > ls | i c — | « : - . + > ; . > . 1 be ‘ = ‘ — oe. ; me ae | et sas acure ior ot St inate stomach ating its rapid Spo it aneous decom- otal anu’ taal Bee an ea 8 rouble. Sh: says: ‘Thad poor| position, when it will more or less | rates surprisingly low. ‘tivgestion nea rly al te (ee: It | speedily become infe:ted with the Ad iress all tions to The Examiner Pub. Co. Charlottetown, P. E. I. business communica- iow seems to me that for years | uever knew what it was to be hun- ary, to have a good natural appe- tite. | was troubled with gas in stom- ach causing pressure on the heart Nearly everything I ate soured on my stomach, sometimes I had cramps in the stomach which almost resembled spasm. Doctors told me I had catarrh of the stomach, but their medicines would not reach it and | would still be a sufferer had | not, in sheer des- The London Morning Leader, com-| peration decided to try Stuart's menting upon the fact that the new) Dyspepsia Tablets. | Iknew they were an advertised Commonwealth of Australia c ’ will) -emedy and didn't believe anything _adopt a policy of moderate protec-!]T read about themasI had no con- ‘tion, combined with an open door) fidence in advertised remedies, but for English imports, points out that | ™Y re living in nee wrote this state of things is sure to lead | eae Teblets - pth «hi peste to a demand for reciprocity. It! her little daughters of indigestion Says : and loss of flesh and appetite and J THE DAILY EXAMINER NOVEMBER 9, 1900. ~ PREFERE NTIAL TRADE. } | { with palpitation and short breath, A QGHANGE OF A | speedily be rendered capable of min- tendency to decay, and will then istering to the growth of cultivated plants.'’—Co-ogerative Farmer. oLIFETIME To secure one of the finest properties in P. E. I. This farm contains 130 acres of excellent land, 80 acres cl:ared and in prime condi- tion. There isa tine belt of hard and sof ie aan eM — §? GP BP E> ee C9 59 E> CG eho en ea oy ~ , aa ca wood (which is very viluable, now that coal is So high) oyster mud withina few rods of | theshore, abundsnce of marsh mud, well watered, two mills near the house, good buildings, basement stable, 6. miles from town, ene mile from Pownal ril age, school next the farm, three church:s within a radius | of 1% miles, cheese and butter factory in rear | of farm, a large and heavy bearing orchard of best varieties of apples and plumb trees, traspberries, strawberries, etc. For location and beauty of scenery this property is unsur- passed by any on the Island. It is a daisy ail LL) ‘ane on aia OC SN ye — making the demand ‘The whole Empire will soon be | hesitated no longer. which Sir) I bought a fifty cent box at my Charles Tupper and the Conserv: a drug store and took two of the large | and a from without. It is not a new idea. ves are already pressing at the| tablets after each meal and found | | present Canadian election. We shall them delightful to take being as} Terms on application to my solicitor, A. A. | @ asked to concede reciprocity---) Pleasant to the taste as i.e., free trade within the Empire | candy. L tariff against all imports) or might I felt any pain or uneasi-| Whenever during the day} ness in the stomach or about the) in 1896 Mr. Chamberlain embodied | heart I took one of the small tablets | n his idea of an Imperial zollverein. in a speech to the English Chambers f Commerce he roundly proposed to ' tax wheat and meal and sugar from | ‘broad in order to foster the impor- cation of these things from our own colonies. That scheme was by the apathy of Canada. seem only to likely to revive it.”’ This is the view of ubserver, so free from prejudite in an impartial) _ | Va., Says: ' killed | Events | aud in three weeks it seemed to me! as if | had never known what stom- | ach trouble was. ! I keep Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets | in the house and every member of | our famjly uses them occasionaliy | after a hearty meal or when any of| us have a pain or ache in the diges-| tive Organs.’ Mr. B. H. Davies of Hampton, | “TI doctored five years! ‘avor of preferential trade as to be 'for dyspepsia, but intwo months I) absolutely opposed to it. ‘r says in plain term; that the pro ect of an Imperial zollverein was) of the doctors treatment. ‘killed by the apathy of Canada.”’ The Lead- | got more benefit from Stuart’s| Dyspepsia Tablets than in five years | J Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets is the Add the’ words ‘‘as represented by safest as well as the simplest and Sir Wilfrid Laurier,’’ and the truth is complete. But the points out that the project is now | ach, most convenient remedy for any| Leader also! form of indigestion, catarrh of stom-4 billiousness, sour stomach, being revived, on the one side, by) bloating after meals, sympathetic . @ ° “ } aes 4 ae increased pressure from the colonies, | heart trouble. mn the other by increased interest Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets is not in Great Britain. It goes on to/4 cheap cathartic but an active di- Say s+ | gestive remedy containing the pep- ‘Weare much mistaken if Mr. | sin and distaste which every weak is ‘hamberlain this planin his mind. not still revolving stomach lacxs and they cure stom-| He told the! ach troubles because they digest the Mishmongers’ Corporation he had/| food eaten and give the weak, abused | . e , - “17 .. . 7 . + = S o> r , opened a new chapter in our history, | over-worked stomach a chance to and meant to head it. “The Unity | rest and recuperate. are | of the Empire. Nor ishe to be sat- Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets | isfied with a mere ideal ‘unity’|sold in every drug store in the! nce before in his career he has| United States, Canada and Great| lata ‘federation. shown that he sets very little store} indeed by a mere ‘union of hearts. He aims, as he stid on Wednesday, Now, federation means, in the Birmingham voca- bulary, a zollverein with takes on foodstuffs—a very nice thing fer the depressed export trade of the Midlands, for the Unionist landlorw’, and@an Exchequer with wars to| pay for. Fortunately, Mr. Chamber- erpool, while the Colonial.Secretary addressed his fellow Fishmongers. Sir Michael there said;—‘He did not believe in the idea of preferen- AUTHORIZED To ref ind the money when REMICK’S ECZEMA CURE Fails to cure any case of Eczema’ chimerical scheme. Australin wants no matter of hom ior~/her surplus revenue for old age or piles, Standiny. For sale only at MACGDONALD’S DRUGSTORE. N.vkt Pell, Nurses’ Regsiter.; war. Wedo not quite see these ' tial duties in favor of our colonies as | compared with foreign countries on the imypo-ts of tte United Kingdom. | Any such duties would be danger- /ous in the utmost degree to foreign ‘trade, which was essential to the | prosperity of this country.’ | ‘This is very comforting, but a minister who thinks otherwise hap- pens to be the strongest man in the 'Cabinet. The danger is very real. | For how else are we to federate ? In plaee of a tariff basis Sir Michael indeed suggested one of taxation. He would like to induce the colonies _to pay their share of our Imperial _expenditure—our wars, our Navy, 'and even perhaps our army. That ‘isan alluring, but, we fear, a wholly | pensions. Canada sinks her share of capital in opening up her undevel- oped provinces. South Africa for years to come will need all her re- sources to repair the havoc of this agent more widely distributed thaa 'the moss and black | swamps. | hood has more or less of these de- | sritain. TE SE —— PEAT OR MUCK. | There is perhaps no manurial | : mud of our | Nearly every neighbor- | A farmer who has had practical | experience in using this form of| fertilizer writes as follows : To suvils that are deficient in vege- | table matter, it is clear that a judi- cious admixture of peat must prove | advantageous, because it will supply | some, at least, of those substances | necessary to the production of a) higher degree of fertility; but peat, | on account of its acid and antisep- | tic character decays very slowly in| the air and hence itsapparent effect when mixed with the soil is very slight. It may gradually amelior- ate, especially if the soil! be calcareous, but it will not im-| mediately prepare the land for the) growth of any particularcrop. But if the obstacies to its further decom- position be removed-—that is, if by artificial means its decay be pro- moted, then its immediate and ap- parent effect upon the soil is in- creased, and it becomes an acknow- ledged fertilizing manure. Different methods have been successfully practised for bringing it into this more rapid decay or fermentation. The half dried peat may be mixed | of a place, fiut there is not a daisy on it. Only reason for selling—going into business in the Northwest with ny sons. Sold with or without crop, stock, and im>.ements caramel| A. Mclean, Barvistet, Charlottetown, or te | the owner, A. A. MOORE. n5— d25kw. November Now is the time To Plant... BULBS And Read the November Nagazines A full stock of each on hand. Haszard & Moore. Sunnyside. Big Boot Bargains lain. if he really revives his old | Posits and if our farmers only real- | scheme of A896. will. encounter | !Zed how they might add to the fer- | stout resistance among his col- tality of pe — ee oa : leagues. A ‘cross current’ carried | P8* O Peet? eae “3 mee For all. Every pair must be Sir Michael Hicks-Becch to Liv-| ore of it would be used. | sold. A rare opportunity to secure boots and shoes at Very Low Prices STORE NEXT§TO DRISCOLL & HORNSBY’S QUEEN STREET Opp. Prowse Bros, -. MUSIC.. Herbert A. Tanton —TFACHER OF— PIANO, ORGAN and VOICE CULTURE. Voice cult ure a specialty. Studio—Tanton’s New Building, George Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Great with one-fourth to one-half of its n7— To facts is the condition of most of our fur dealing friends in Char- (lottetown. One fur man says he is the only man in Charlottetown who (has enough money to buy a certain line of furs. Another man says he is | the only man in town who knows anything about furs. ‘‘They are both right, of course.’ Again they all agree on one point, that is that the | each sell more furs than anyone else, therefore buy more and sell cheaper. BUT THEY SUPPORT Their arguments with nothing but wind and gall, and cannot advance ONE FAGT By which independent men can judge who is right. been blowing much about our magnifi /are going te give you a few | ’ | __ Now, we have not ent stock of furs, buz just now we FAGTS Ist—Everybody snows that we have the largest store in the city and 'that we do the largest business. ; 2nd---We have a store in Syaney just as large as this one. 3ri---Our baver Cuys the furs for both stores. 4th---That the more furs we buy the cheaper we can buy them. dSth---That when we buy for two of the largest stores in the Maritime | Provinces we naturaily buy more than the one store man, especially when | h‘s store and business is smaller by a good deal than either of our stores or businesses. ; 6th---When buying so much the | bigger discou.ts than to the little fell does ‘‘feel as big as a balloon.’ 7th---He naturally shows us the very best values he has, so that he sel's us if possible. He naturally gives us the utmost satisfaction so as to assure our buy- ‘ing from him again. | Anyone can see that all these facts point to the one conclusion, that ‘is that we buy most furs, buy them cheaper and get a better choice than /any other fur dealers in Charlottetown. ~ cu 3a: s« manufacturers naturally give us w, even though the little fellow } + i - We Buy More Furs Than any Other Man on P. E. I. We Buy them Gheaper We Sell them Cheaper We Guarantee Every Fur We'll Give the Money Back Every time if you Want it We can buy any Fur garment in the known world today, provided al: ways that we want it. If it’s not good enough for our customers we @ |not want it. Now, when any Zur dealer tells you that he buys more furs than WE do, if you are a big man just teil him what you think of him, but if yee happen to be a small man, then ‘tis better to leave him in his ignorance and conceit. | YOURS FOR FURS PROWSE BROS. ADVERTISERS OF FACTS cb ehs cia epee ese ea epee HF |