: Iced ; Patties . ; Lemon ; . i ~ ‘ > ek E Cake F German Buns ¢ -<gee-10c per doz : YD. STEWART 4 ECLI BAKERY : _ BAKES BSST BREAD 2) MAC! FIC. LOW RATE AUTUMNAL EXCURSIONS FROM— CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I -- GN— "Oth, 30th 5 we Oct. 2nd & 3rd yt. i Sept. 28th omen A FP xue $ VIONTREAL ne'urning good to ‘eave Montreal acoi including Dect 16tb, 1899. On Sept. 28th, 29th and ! . ae rty..: 30.h, rates for Return Trip Tickets to RN, Ties cedecees'c 6s nv Gae.oe Toronto. Out., |} Detriot, Mich., >..........$23.30 Port Huron } N gsera Pails, Ont., . $24.65 0th to CHICAGY, ILL., and od m Ticats to all points w 2st of treal will be wood for return p&*sage ty ope days from date of eale. rates to other points call on any ticket n Maritime Provinces, or write. A. J. HEATH, Passr. Agent, CPR St. Johr ; N.B. YNDMAN, Agent C P R, irlottetown, PEI Uo Sept~ Teturo at $29 Cac Exeurs “4 .e ! ent Diet. JOHN O. ~ I clieting Chi: PLANT LINE EXCURSIONS Charlottetown “o Boston and Return— - $1.00 Commencing 15th Septem- ber good for 30 days. ver For further information ap- ply .o— 214 W. W. CLARKE, Agent O00¢ 900 OOe DS ~\’ 0000060000 NEW BOOKS ? Just received thie morning, : é Bertha M. Clay, George Sheldon and others. FASHION BOOKS for October até now in, Deline- ator, Designer Toilettee, Bons Ton, ete, CHAS. J. MITCHELL, Bookseller & Stationer 145 Queen Street. Opp. Prowse Bros...... large avsortment of Novels by ; CARD. W. F. B. CARVEDL, B, A, FUG FETT TTT CCT ee Tee THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTLETOWN, | ‘THE DAILY EXAMINER SEPTEMBER 18, 1899, rt WATTS HT WILT YA ROIWA aT : a ' ' SEO es ae Dp. ' etor cested 48 hours as the period within which ' e South African Republic’: reply was ex pected, the Transvaal representative re- | } p ed: “If your suggestion 18 serious, the reply will be ready i tes.” n forty-eight n This is interesting as showing the tone of | » |} fuer ij iurcea } | feeling among the Boers. . | A Mostreal gentleman lately re | from South Africa says: “This Trans. . ; | yaal matier has been a trouble from the; : g The Boers have worked] ? | beginnio | themselves and have beea worked up to th dea that they are an in lependent | | nation, and simply because the | word suzerainty 1s not printed | in alphabetical tiers in the con= | vention of 1884, they have had the audac- ity to imagine that the suzerainty was; given up. The mere fact that they are| not permitted to make treaties outside | ' | without the approval of the Imperial Gov- j ‘ ° . ‘ | ernment should show the utter abeurdity | of thei: contention. . is thought that whatever the nature | ) 13.50 for reund ti Ip tickets to | of President Krager’s reply, it is probable | that several more stazes of diplomatic processes will be gone through before! takes Nata’, President Kruger injtiative course, the and raids A correspondent remarks that concentra- tion of the British forces on the edge of | Natal isa wise precaution in anticipation of war, and is aleo a safeguard for the maintenance of peace. It secures to the English the possession of Rocky tunnel wherethe Boers could fight to the ‘beet advantage,and exposes the Transvaal to invasion in a quarter where their tactics would he least successful. The feeling of the British in South Atrita # indicated by a despatch to the Home Government from the British High Com- missioner, Sir Alfred Milner, dated Angast Jl, reporting: “I am receiving represen- tations usual from many quarters 2 .to rge the Imperial Government ment to terminate the suspense. British South Africa is prepared tor extreme mea- sures and is ready to suffer much more in order to see the vindication of British au» thority. It is the prolongation of the ne- gotiations, endless and indecisive, that is dreaded. I fear seriously that there will be a@ strong reaction of feeling against the policy of the Imperial Government if mat- teredrag. Please undertand that I invar- iably preach confidence and patience, and not without effect. But if I did not ins form yon of the increasing difficulty of do- inh this and of the unmistakable growth of uneasiness about the present situation and of the desire to see it terminated ut ane cost, i should be failing in my duty. Che enormous wealth of the Trans- vaal mines inay be understood from the following figures, showing the divi-- dends paid on the capital inveseted in 1898 : Mines. FG CA Ge ONO... ccticscctetcncais 10 May Coneolidated........... itter es 15 Windsor...... Gnenetted cheeesSeces cc 20 Ss 5s , pvacstunns ose 223 ~~. re oe 25 Glencairn...... Socccctotecsces coce §=6S Ns 4b 6 bubebiehen konk cOemmases . Oe RE oo eeaeeninhlecieds ponies 40 SINNED stiinew ‘comsenttstvccsdeccccee OD Boodeport United........-.......0. 40 Langlaagte Eetate........... 45 Angelo....... # 9.6 GnONNRES seveseses é 0 50 SE OUD cctetida os 4660 cbs ood 50 SE ki Wao Wieser mcvcanekesicg. Mae Village Main Reef............. - 60 Meyer and Charlton. ..... ..ss00s..... 60 Worcester........ ee ee Geldenbuis Deep... ... ..00...... 75 ( a eorresy yndent at th * Dai vy! e British diplomatic agent sug: | iq ‘ { e says that when Mr. Oonyngham | Durban Roodeport bnbsebbsaesenels eu eae PUMPER en. 000 ooo occas eveece 80 Bovanza. 100 te 100 TGR, . . . stendhs eo eeus Me bees 'OO — L OOee © EOOVOE uc cncckcdeicdeces | 125 | Geldenbuie Betate. . . . rosercecsesesse 1475 i. ) ima Crown Reef... woe 240 Ferreira. ... . 800 Jo aa by 1 The total amount paid in dividends 5 the gold producing mines was, in 1896 $7,450,000 ; in «618i, , $24 450,900. €15.500.0490 : iggs The figures are the London Stock Excharege of taken irom Year Book, aod the probability ine | festruction of a vast amount of this wealth in the event of war is what England hae to count upon. _ em . —-—_—. Tre United States have to thank a P. E. Irland boy for a sane policy of proce-| ire in the Philippines. Dr. Schurman points out tha: in the Philippines the United States Government has acgnired, but @ not a single colony or dependency, smal} empire, inhabited by men of different. anguages, religious and degrees of civiliza. | tion. Some are Christians, others! are Mahommedans, and oibers| again are heathen and uncivilized. | The United States are in honour bound to | bring these people under the better in| fluences of Ameriean civlization and free | President Schurman does not} conceal his opinion thet this will be a diffi - | dom. | cult undertaking, and will require del cate | ip tO} phere is defiqg ‘te war or peace, unless, of bandling. The solution of the problem | in the direction of island the measure of home rule for which it is fitted, under the guiding hand of a government at Manila This, it is hoped, will reeseure the natives, | whose experience of Spanish rule has? made them suspicious of external interfer- ence, and it will aleo enable the republic to approach the task of governing the islands with eomethiog like an appearance, of consistency. If a measenre of self- government is granted, and a larger one promiecd, the Americans will be able to! fairly claim thattheir mission is really not | ove of conquest but of liberation. We congratulate Dr. Schurman on bie plan of | campaign, and hope that Uncle Sam will | be able to cee his way clear to carry it | out. eeems to him to lie granting to each EE, CA eens ene? NOTES AND CUMMENTS. re | — Candidates for the Dominion elestion | in West Huron and North Ontario bhaye' been selected. } —Every time they talk about the) “growing time,” the Liberal organs throw a bequet at the N. P. But they really ought to second ihe Georgetown friend, who advises the Ministers to “Alter Their Course,” in regard to expenditures and other matters, —“*A Readr,” of the Patriot eays that} the Opposition has no policy. Io that} case they will not be open to the charge preferred against the Liberals who had a policy which they have failed to carry out. The Liberal policy is “to make ends meet,” and they have instead added up- wards of $800,000 to the public debt and | liabilities of the Province. — Under British rule, ects of lawless- ners, even when committed by white men, are not allowed to go unpunished. Ina remote corner of Nyassaland a trader named Liekl has been heavily fined and eent to prison for six months with bard labor for acts “of violence and cruelty to the ratives. This must impress both the natives and the traders with a wholesome respect for British juetice. Montreal Gazette: Conservative cardi~ dates are being selected for the general election to the House of Commons in several provinces, and signs of political activity are becoming evident. When M~. Tarte returns be will find the enemy’s skirmish line out. Toronto Globe: The wheat crop of the whole United States is caiculated at 535,- 150,000 bushels. The little Province of Manitoba alone produced 50,000,000: bushels. } Every But the cannot —It stands in a merits before ycu BARRISTER-AT-LAW Bank of Nova Scotia Building CHARLOTTETOWN, Telephoue No. 170 Money to Loan, y Success Has ltsImitators HERCULES stuff mattresses in a fine one. MARK WRIGHT AND CO Home Makers WIRE MATTRESS --cannot be imitated class by itseli—Look into its buy a mattress. Our line of ‘Stock of JAS. PATON &° ae A German Coats PATON & co's. Another case RECEIVED SATURDAY Small sizes in the majority--Fawns, Greys, Blues and leading shades—— 214 | | Other . ’ 4 { i POLICY FOR THE PHILIPPINES » “ GREY, German Coats, | English Coats DRAB, a — Canadian Coats, AND BLUE A lull range of sam- ple Book of the Beifeld SHORT COATS ‘Morris N E W J A KE cS Ja ckets.” NEW CAPES New York Styles. tee 7 4 ae TRIS Se Cre sie Phi Mie 2) wee Ded ty pe a iiey D hago aD PM te eee \ « ae AEA aA BO San £16 Le ahs ye Children’s ee ee ee. a Short Waisted - Ladies Will Find a Complete reefers and Ulsters — Generous*selection ane os oo Price Low Tweed, Serge, Jackets, and Meltons Sizes 36, 38, 40. 42, and Forty-four Children’s reefers en niente tents and suits, 2800802600008 040080 8 .<!-. . ee meee nnennnsenenetiuvn.&®& £6548046800806400402000080824 . SOSSRSSORROROORAMS . 2p + eh ] Co. “Z oi te Fo ane : “3 THE JACKET LEADERS.