THE GUARDIAN CHARLOTTETOWNH NOVEMBER 16 1898. l . n _-___ -- - --'°~’_*"”‘ 4 1 _ ¥l##'f§####%§K@ §We’re it mud! of our trimmed Hat work Emo the l0\\¢=~i1; piiced lia.`t passes under the eye Of 8 U11 perfect le ore l*‘*‘ "` the s 0 _ e dt n mean by this, that our l.-50 # hat, has so much stvle as 0111' $0.00 Hat. We do mean however, that *our $1.50 Hat has $1-00 Worth *Of style, even as our $5,hah»h”~S '$5 worth of style. Xoui too *will be roud of our trimmed P * Hat work, when you have 3% “selected yours for thc coming % * 568.8011. _ $ gi. Perkins 8:. Cu.. il ‘lf'l=#¥§§f=i¥£t##### E Why shouldnt we be Pjeudaé in _ A ,L ii* *linery artist` and _must n to E . .I .I lf 5 ` # _ g h n W in ot l _ & § - _ is - ii? *att THE IILL|llEllY L Elll EHS. if FF' giiuiniis M is certainly' cured bv the use of EGYPTIAN RHEUMATIC 0lL. Price 25c per bottle- May 25 cod lyr F 'run roam, I stood upon the ocean’s sandy beach. And wilh a reed I wrote upon the Sand these words: °‘Agnes, I love thee." But the winds came and the waves Rolled mountains high, And blotted out the fair impression. _ Qrllel waves l treacherous sand l fragile reed! No longer will I trust thee, But from the highest mountain peak 1’ll pluck the tallest pine, And, dipped in the crater ot Vesuvius, . With it I’ll write Upon the high and burnished heavens These tender words: -'Tho standard set by Bruce Stewart Gt Co For their business relations with the public is a high one. . Good examples ot this are to be found in the class of work they turn out,’ and I would like to see any doggoned waves wash that out. ‘ these conditions are enforced b that British subjects might desire to set on foot. Even the building of a railway, chartered by the Island legislature to a port on the French Shore was vetoed by the British government lest it might incommode the French fishing rights ! A glance at the map shows a sit- uation that is far from assuring in view of the strained relations at _pre- sent existing between Britain and France. With the French Shore goes the fact that .France owns the ests on this British territory, while ,Z British subjects are not permitted to “incommode” them in any way. And » Y British warships. That part of the " colony is shut up against settlement and business enterprises of any sort_ Miquelon Islands, lying near Ulm lui lolmli time of _ ' shores of the Gulf of St., Lawrel_106‘ _ 'W B’ B Y B are lined with a French-speaking “'EDNESDAY‘ NOVEMBER’ 16’ IM’ population, peacable and _ loyal no _ ._ _. _ ~ , ` gdoubt, but with an community ot race, THE FRENCH SHORE- ` language and religion that tend to i F h I _'_ E _ N ` create a strong bond def Sympathy be; The reno s Ore ques ion in ew- tween the enplg an t ef peop 6 0 foundland, which izperpetuallnlgt crop-2 Fmm,n_ ind ,hero is the island -Soi pin., up as one of e unsett mat-_ Anticosti an me month of the i 5, ters? between Britain and France, is Lawrence river, larger than Prmge attracting attention again Just now. Edward Island’ now owned entirely There are some Newfoundland peoplei - iz n of Franco _ _ _ _by a cit e - ~ who would quite willing S66 fthe two lt is these conditions that make the nations involved in war in order that French Shore question of very' vim] the Bmhlh Sword 'Highs cut this got” interest at the present time, and have dian knot. It is indeed a sorry led to the nneonlnoion than 51,6 Gulf #angle By the treaty of Utrecht it of SD Lawrence m- ht, booomo the _ . _ _ ig _ “'”~§ Semed mf” the Soverelgnty of theatre of very great activity in the l ithe island of Newfoundland should be event of War with F,.nnne_ The im- vested in Great Britain, but that pression grows boon in Enghnd and 3% .ihfife Should be reserved to France Canada that France has too many lhhe “Shi for French fishermen to pointsofvautageinand round the Gulf, # take and dry their codfish “long la and that the last vestige of French & certain portion of the shore. It was rights and claims Shook] bo removed ,clear enough from the text of the wholly from North Amo,-io," It is _'treaty that only codiish were at first tolerably certain that in the ovens of iintended, but the wording of the war between one two oounu-ies we ltreaty was vague. The extent. of shall have’ when in is over, either T co-.ist along which the special privil- less or more ofttpirennh sho,-o" in and _ Y 6393 “"8 ‘° “ke 858°” was ver? Mound the Gulf-and we shall conii-0 in rates for money orders For sm d f I' .1 High=Clas 'for large amounts decreased as below ___ _ _ ` 1_1- passed wliicli committed Gieat Britain hhhe" Wajs ?'PPa"e'3t in this ‘mme of to keep the British and i\ewfound- hh* Domlmou’ land fishermen off the portion of the ' ’ '_"`° ' . coast in question. This piece of un- The_reP0m‘?i_ me at Dawson Cxtfy’ fgr ggle by gl] Digg gist 0 pardonable stupiditv has been in- _by whxch hah the town wa'S.ies.nmy;d sistecl upon by the French govern- mils? cause lgrealh ha;,?§tl::_1F ilsn nz; ment as an admission by Britain that mm_mgkf:a'pHa' 'l e t ` _“ld in is beyond a nominal soveieignty she on lu t ‘at “Ort mm Couu ry '_ had nofliinff further so do with the [0 he famed that much Suffering may 5 so-called French Shore. As a matter result' ___ of fact French fishermen do about as -f’ - °beral conference to they please along more than one third The great Ifl »0f the coaStline° of N “ which the Patriot refers was held at e ioundland; ` _ _ . 'they catch and cure all kinds of fish,, _omawa ln 1595, and 1105 111 _Qllebelc including lobsters ;they catch salmon ‘m 1873 as, Stated by that Journa ` in weirs set acrossthe mouths of rivers The date gwen ls presumably the re- ( and they cut wood at will in the for- Salt of 8' typogmphlcal error' Constipation Uausatullyhaltthosloknssslnthsworld. I! nhlnothoilgostodfoodtoolonginthobowela and produces blllonanoaa, to:-pid liver, ind# oods pdhghdtaouooated tongue, sick healnishe, tn- ‘ if umm, sm. main nm | S lroeonstipatloii andalliu lolultgellilyand thoroughly. l§e.Alldru|lllll. Pf°llr°4D70.{L HoodlCo.,IowelI,lsll. !h.°o11rmswrax»withaood'slai-swarm The Hocke We are Y ot fraid of our prices on furniture being beaten or even equalled . quality considered. You know halfthe secret of business is to buy well. We do better than that. we make well--make for less then we can buy- you reap the benefit. Season United kingdoms Norway and Swe- den are apparently increasing rather than diminishing. The latest develop- ment is a resolve of the Norwegia parliament to haves. separ'ate Hag for Norway. There can be little strength in a union where the ties are being cutaway _one by one as is the case between the twin kingdoms. 1-H-_i It hes been asserted and again cor- trudicted thatrthe port of St. Pierr Miquelon, has heed strongly fortized by France. By treaty between France there. The' same treaty provid during the Crimean war when the insisted upon by Britain, and it _ . a ‘gfehfi Wing mo” “ha” ‘me "hh _ 0 dongly hopg ig will be leg; ` Tamounts the rate has been raised an the circuit of the island. Beginning ,at Cape Ray on the southwest, the - h t. on orders payable in the Dominion o *French Shore, so-called, extends WBSt0PU h°WSP“P°_"° “fe 5 °:d‘“§ Canada; . _ ' H ~ a round by the north to Cape St J ohii lustlly about good .imesén 3; nz” New O, on the northeast shore of Newfound hH_t f'h° 518113 0 _Pf0_5P°" Y _ ' ,fotos ra and. quite equally _ distributed. ` In _ t_l\f We have ,aid that by ,ho treaty of, far west there is great mining activity Utrecht it was only intended that the Whilfi Manitoba and tha 09ntl`9'l Pro' French should have such access to the Vihces have had g°°d °"°P9 and é`°°d Shore as would enable them to ooo- prices. The great railways, o C. P. R. cessfnuy prosecute the ood fishery in and Grand Trunk, are crowded lwit-h the tnnritorinl Waters of tho island traffic and compelled to add large y' to _'and to dry their fish on -the shore. their Wlhhg Swck- EXPOFW “nd fm' But- the French fishermen claimed _,P01193 “FQ Very hlfge “I]‘3dt,°lh°ref§’I‘1iet'§‘é 4 the equal right to catch all kinds _ of .revellllij IS h‘>'-’h11h8- “ W the fish and after a time began to assert Glfsh neither the _farm crops nor ‘B an exclusive right of fi~hing and oc- Yield of tha fisheries havf’ b99n_ up hh() cupation along the shore in question. to the avemgei eSPec‘9‘uY In t 13 _The matter would now be in better Island' of °°u"E‘f’ W? ale glad to “shape were it not that subsequently read of the P'°3Pe“tY "1 the Ceuta; tothe treaty in the days of King 8"-ld far WeS°_°f Canada’ ?“t’hWef°“ d George III an act of parliament was meh. that allme more 0 ° 9' 80°, Q ¢?‘f<>|¢ oi SGS , and up to $8 5.00 "‘ 10 00' .6 5* 5 ‘- _ 10.00 ~ 20.00 10-- 10 ~ » 20.00 ~ 30.00 is-~~' 20 ‘- $0.00 ~ 4.0 00 15 ~ 20 ~ _ 40 00 ~ 50.00 20 -- so ~ ¢',50.00 ~ 60.00 24 ~ so 60.00 ~ 70.00 Qs ~ 40 -1 70.00 »- ‘s0.00 32 -~ 40 ~ 80.00 -- 90.00 36 ~- 50 ‘- : 90.00 »~ 100.00 .los 50 ~ - :----Q-____ _ ~ 15 lw. The chronic troubles between "the _ . ' n_ es ; and Britain the former was forbidden to fortify St. Pierre or to keep more than 50 soldiers there. It is now said there is a garrison of 1,000 men that there should always be a British consul resident at, the port-. N o British i consul is now permitted in St. Pierre, These conditions come of the fact that two countries wrre allies against Rus ed - sia the terms of the treaty were` not H _ be ._ . AND THE i LARGEST src came little better than a __ dead lette . ll Changes have recent] ‘ been made `Millii1ery leading Fur Store-“MY STURE §Hnl Naler #aaaaaaaasaasaiatea These shc uld be called We are splendid line -those makes which have _-one should .ie in every~ h0\l8B; . ° * v%;gBvery_ione _guaranteed ii%0A.W.Reildinl, Phm. B # _Central Drugstore, ‘_ Sunnyside. - will soon be on. We are ready for it with the largest and best stock of Hockey Boots ever r shown by us Me Cl 1 “ Chocolate “ “ ‘ “ _ tc The prices are cut to the lowest. ` _ _ _- ns’ Black Hockey Boot with .Strap 1.-98 ° no strap . 2.38 “ with strap ' 2. 48 “‘ no heel _ 2.-45 at Neitvinsaial 0 0 Slater Hockey Boot Black “. cs ~ ¢¢ 1* _ T ‘ »_ B9yS’.B1i~°kH°.<=k§y Boots sizes ltd [1-55 main t on it " ,I , Women’s*ooeiate Hoeksynw af.; __ ' “ ~'an 4 ~ Ankle Su rters if gi tnomimisiin. 1 .,-»»/ .” ' V -.», v , if V _ » 1,, » "Ja :"1 I‘;r__.t'_‘i‘: ' I :YZ S Eb’ Gardeners; _ .., » Q- , »»-.~._ ~ ~ W ~ TJ* 3, ~ =____,' I ,~ ».~ if -. -. Slllsiitdié Bottles; its comfort bot- gig _ tles. _ # h ' % - s owing a ii? *Hs proved re- # 'iable with us # raises 3 _ _ `Weare.sell-*_ ' 0 B ` __ _ ing them at#»f i' .* "°" B' ' "5 closest figures, 75c` and up- ' ‘ ` B’ B " inn* ‘n n,” ni* *,,,,,lNew_ Clrothi' for ‘Fall Suitings. Overcoatings and Trouse - ishings always on hand. 0 _ ` JOHN NlcLE‘ You 0an’lfllalte y V I 'fri _ _ _ __ _ . . - _ _ ._ n.. ~ A I , n n _ ,,_ _< J ._ ,,__.-..........-.. _ . r“,_VY_ W _“__ ____ _ A .-.N . -_=..»~l. ,__f~..: ._ _; ._-3.-~.-.rf-_=s:.~.;;i§f»= -s_.--_-~<-an LW.. .....s_._.,..=_,-.___ -1 ~'.~.-f.=;x,i,...._...-V .._....<.f.;,». e - =r.1.»,¢i»-.wsu=am»=~». ~ . . . ' - ‘ ’ »i>¢..r._~.. .....a._`.._..._....._,,_,__.....__` -- ». ._ __ . - i ‘.. .1-. -» :.~ .5 ;_. -_-> ». , Q . yi. ». lil <0»fsa< s~ A 5541 gn ohhh as 'Z ,` l and under s sis 2 as The exquisite Millinery cr 4 as 2 Al our store every day are fashio adapted to the wearcr’s individ perts. -Our prices are very m at present some _neat and attra English, Parisian and New 0| 4 Hats and Bonnets at ‘prices whi ‘duct-ment. _ ' _ - - ‘ Childl‘el'1’S H J. H. BELL keeps anything and Becomlpg Hiats‘ ,Thats the _5 everything to make or_ mend :L boot. t0 pI‘OVlfl8 &pfJPOpl'l&b8 H9RdW€a How well we have succeeded ca' to our Millinery department. Flourning M ts or Bennetts made at short keep a number of mourning H stock for immediate delivery. r.Pinl