~~ * ~ onreae ee ~—pep os ah f f ‘ f re THE DAILY EXAMINER ° : { SS — THE DAILY BXAMINER. PAST ANO PRESENT. Aw old gentleman with a quick eye and a good memory has written an open letter Much of what he says is applicable as well to the people of Canada. to electors in the States. We quote: “ Talk about the rich getting richer and the poor poorer! If you are standing with asiranger on the street to-day, and the daughter of a millionaire and the daughter of @ carpenter, a teamster or a hod-carrier pass by,and you ask the Stranger to guess which One is the daughter of the milliouaire, the odds are even that he will poiat to the daughter of the hod- carrier. Ia al] probability sbe is as well drexsed and as wel! educated as the other. It is ali bosh to talk about the times getting harder for the poor man than they u-ed to be. We are ai! getting more extravae and reckless. We want to get @peod and make a show with a vergeance: an? that the people c @ great deai uw . of the necessaries; comforts atid the luxuries of life for their Money now than they could when he wae a boy, he says: “To show that the times are not harder with the laborer or the farmer than they were fifty or sixty years ago, let me quote a few prices. A suit of men’s clothes that you get now for $15 or $20 would then ave cost you $40. The common woolen bucket that you buy for 25 cents then co-t youadollar. Any kind of tinware then cost from three to four times as much as it does now. Guns, shot, lead, rope, every- thing that was made abroad or imported, cost from two to four times what they do now. Common brown sugar was worth from 12 to 18 cents a pound, tea twice whet it is now, and coffee so dear that I have many atime browned barley or wheat an! mixed it, two thirds barley or wheat and one third coffee. Tea, coffee and sugar were then considered luxuries, now they a-e considered necessaries. Nails, I re- member, were ten cents a pound, You eculd not get any kind of calico for less than l4centsayard. These are only a few samples. The same fall in prices wil! hold true of everything the people have to buy except farm products. Now for those So 0 a most ofthe people then ad to raise to get money to pay for the high priced articles I have nam-d. I have raised many # ton of tobaczo and sold it for $2.50 per hundred weight for the very best, the p-orer quality bringing only 75 cents. I bave seen corn that would yield fifty bushels to the acre se!! in the field for $1.37} cents per acre at administrator’s sale. Pigs and shoats four months old sold at the same time for 37} cents a dozen. I have seen sold at the country hotel many a dozen chickens at 37} cents. I have sold turkeys, grown, fat and dressed at 20 cents each and took my pay in dry goods at more than double the present prices. How is it now? I have paid 25 cents per peuod for turkey in this town. I have seen many a nice cow and calf sold both for $6. I have sold, after driving them four miles, 23 hogs, averaging 250 pounds neat meat, for $71, and everything else in roportion. Servant girls in those days ired out for 50 cents a week and board, and they not ouly did the cooking but also the washing and ironing. I have known men take contracts to clear up heavy tim- bered land at $5 per acre, ready for the low. and there would be from ten to fifteen arge trees to the acre, any one of which could not be got out of the wav at the pre- sent time for less than $5. The advance in wealth and comfort has, the old gentleman contends, been participated in by wage earners as well as by others. He says :— “ You can see this if you compare tie wages an! prices of to-day with those of fifty vears ago. You could hire a good common laborer then for 15 to 20 cents a day. I have known good farm hands to hire by the year for $60 and board. At that time every parent had to pay for his children’s schooling, and you could hire a teacher—the best they had then—for $15 ® month and board b m around among his patrons. Now, any kind of a teacher get< $50 to $60, and avy kind of a hired band $15 and board. That isall right. I like tosee the laborer get good pay, and I don’t believe there is any man living who has more sympathy for the poor laboring man than I; for no man ever started ia life poorer than I did. I began without adime in my pocket. My first job was harvestng aod tbhrshing out grain with horses for 20 cents a day and boarded myself, except that wy employer gave mea lunch. There was no farm ma- chinery then and grain had to be trampled out with horses. How is it now? The harvest hand gets from $1.50 to $2.50 per day, and owing to the rapid work of the reaping and = thresh- ing machines the farmer gets more out of it than be did then. Both the farmer and his hands educate their children, if they have any, atthe public expense. The older ones are tent to a public high school and if Johhsy’s parents want a lawyer in the family, there is a Hastings Law School that don’t cost him a cent. Al! is support- ed by the taxpayer, the much abused owner of property, and it is all free to Johony even if his father don’t pay a cent of the taxes for its support, That is all right and 1 like to see it. What I don’t like is to hear Johnny’s father complain- ing about the rich people robbing the 2" The old geatleman’s reraarks may well! be taken to heart by grumbiers in Canada. NOTES AND COMMENTS. —The temperance people are pleased with the able and fearleas manner in which the City Marshal examines Scott Act witnesses. —Sir William Vernon Harcourt has written to the Liberal sgent in Monmouth§ shire that, desp'te the reporte to the con- trary recently circulated, he has never for @ moment entertained the idea of aban- doning his seatin Parliament for West Monmouthshire, or in any way adding to the present difficulties of the Liberals. —Lord Rosebery said at Edinburgh : “I myself am not one of those who see anything but good in fair and rea onable newspaper criticism. Newspaper criticiam when it is fair and moderate and reason- able (hear, hear), braces and stimulates the man whom it criticizes (cheers), and when it is unfair and immoderate and un- reasonable it provokes a reaction in favor efthe man whom it purposes to destroy. (Cheers). Rosebery is right. —Montreal Star: The ability to lay ,3V uO «6B have that ability, the thought itself alone will tell, Under present conditions, however, it is well for both the auditor and the speaker to beware of mere ea ness. Matter and not manner should be constantly kept before the eyes of each as the one thing needful. — Mail and Empire; The business Ad- winistration chauged the grain standardsjin the middle of the season and disturbed the entire wheat business. A protest from Winnipeg has compelled the responsible Minister to withdraw his unfortunate order. When the Government took office it found that there were veterinary in- spectors at the various ports. These by a freak of partisanship it dismissed. Now there are consignments of sheep awaiting exportation tothe United States, and they cannot be carried across the border with- out a certificate from a veterinarv ingpec- tor, and there is no inspector - necessary document. 7 business is therefore ~ are suffering in ¢ oy to ha~ of snd vat nina is +79UI09 In amuyp ee? ow oyTsoum mee yauasod 3xoU ayy 3V q ut uMOP zUSHe rMAOZ OT pa % { ano #8 oFT- : . SUM TOUTS view thadsyore 5 ra a gua es 7 sion of intrigu. ea!" any ° ew Keep England isolated alla paso her into some rash revolution, the better to expose her to a coalition of enemies. But Lord Salis- bury has not been caught by that chaff; he remains working in with the other central powers, while never sacrificing one jot of his country’s independence or liberty of action. By a good understand- ing With Russia the two great powers Can rule the world in peace, because their in- terests command that Britain can well give her consent to the occupation of Con- stantinople by Russia in exchange for the whole Nile valley and a free highway _be- tween the Black Sea and the Mediter ranean; while France, instead of fiddling the score of “evacuation of Egypt.” ought to resin her bow and atick to scraping “Partant pour la Syrie,” as a compen- sation. lia eeteape NEWS NOTES Heavy snowstorms are reported in the North of England end Scotland. Leopold Meyer, representing a Belgian eyndicate of capitalists, is at Ottawa to in- vest in British Columbia mines, King Humbert has given $20,000 to the people of Rome, as an observance of the occasion of the marriage of the Prince of Naples and Princess Helene of Monte- negro. (ne dollar and one cent per bushel was paid for wheat at Qu’Appelle on Wednes- day last. This isa record-breaker, and was the result of millers’ competition for wheat, which they must get at any cost. Mr, Edward A. Bok, editor and part owner of the Philadelphia Ladies’ Home Journal, and Miss Mary Louise Curtis. daughter of Mr. Cyrus Curtis, proprietor of the publication, were married on Thurs- day last. A. W. Embury, @ prominent farmer of Grenfell, Man., was cleaning a gun on Friday, when it accidentally discharged. Mand Gowdie, the adopted daughter of Embury, was instantly killed, the bullet entering her forehead. Li Hung Chang has reached home again after bis travels. He has _ probably learned a great deal, both in Eurove and on this side of the Atlantic, but whether he will be able toturn his knowledge to practical accoant in China is very doubt- ful. Princeton University afew days ago conferred the degree of Doctor of Laws on Messrs. Goldwin Smith, James Loudon, of Toronto; William Peterson, of McGill, Montreal; and the degree of Doctor of Divinity upon the Rev. Principal Caven, of Knox College, Toronto. Over two hundred candidates have pre~ sented themselves for a vacaut rectorship at Wooton-under Edge, England, the salary of which ie less than $1,000. The parist.- oners have had the right tochoose their own rector since the time of Charles II. , There has been a yenuine carnival of crime in and about New York recently. Within a few miles of the city and in the city itself over 20 burglars have been shot and killed within a short time, but the industry still continues to flourish. The Chicago Inter-Ocean declares to ita readers that a vote for Bryan is a vote for Canada ; a vote for McKinlay is a vote for Michigan. If there are many United States electors who can believe this, it is easy to understand why some Republicans are afraid of Mr. Bryan being elected. The popular igsorance must be extensive. 4 rear-end collision between two mill- tary trains has occurred at the station at Guines, Havana, as 4 result of which the last car of the forward train was emashed and four soldiera killed, 29 wounded and one major and eight officers also wounded. The engineer and fireman of the latter train bave been arrested, onthe ground that they did not obey a signal to stop. Amongst the loot taken from the Der- vishes at the recent capture of Dongola by the Anglo-Egyptian force under Sir Her hert Kitchener were a few coats of mail and helmets whichevidently date from the days of the Crusaders. A sword was found with an inscription in old French. Another bears the motto, “ Honi soit qui mal y pense.” There was also a rifle of immense calibre, firing a one-pound ball and requiring two men to hold it. The 23rd of November is to be a grard day at Blenheim, and the young Duchess of Marlborough is then and there to make her real and grand entree into British society. The Princess of Waites and Princess Victoria will accompany the Prince on his visit to Blenheim, and it is possible that Prince and Princess Charles of Denmark will also be included in the Royal party. The Prince and Princess will arrive at Blenheim on the evening of Monday, the 23rd, and on Friday the 26th they are to proceed on a visit to the Queen. The house party at Blenbeiim will include the Duke and Duchess of Abercorn, the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire, the Duke and Duchess of Buccleuch, the Dowager Ducness of Marlborough, Lord and Lady Lansdowne, Lerd and Lady Londonderry, Lady Biandford and her daughter, Lord and Lady Pembroke, Lord Durham, Lord and Lady Wimborne, Lord and Lady George Hamilton, Lord and Lady Georgiana Curzon and Sir George and Lady Julia Wombwell. The county ball at Blenheim will be given on the 26th. The impurities in the blood which cause scrofulous eruptions are thoroughly eradicated by Heod’s Sarsaparilla. Try it. Oh. how cheap ! Those fine bea- one’s ye poe before the public is not in itself a bad thing. It is, in fact, a very desirabie thing; and when the majority WHEN BUYIMG A jacket there are five things which you must consider Stanley Brothers. ver Overcoats only $1650 and $15.50 at § A, McDonald’s, LETTERS 10 THE RDITOR. THE PROVINCIAL SITUATION. Letter From Mr. W. 8, Stewart, Q. C. Sir,—The scheme of administration which I have proposed will no doubt meet with some opposition. Teachers would prefer to receive their whole pay from the government, Still it can make little dif- ference who pays them as long as they are paid, There will, I believe, be few if any school districts that will not readily meet their obligations. The trustees throughout the Island have already bad experienc? '5 levying and collecting school rates, and the new plan would only slightly add to the amount of tue tax required. Itis not necessary that I should dispute the con- ‘tion that if our Province had ample wes it would be better that the gov- +t should bear the whole cost of son out of the general revenue. The of the Province are, however, not “Gt is incumbent pon us to make wands on the treasury conform to mount of our income; that is, we must cut the garment to suitthecloth. In our circumstances I am convinced that it is not the business of the Province to furnish all the higher education that its youth may find useful. The State does not usually supply a professional education, and why should it be obliged to teach the higher branches that a portion of the people may receive culture aad polish? The Province should at its own expense supply the fun- damental branches of education, such as reading, writing, arithmetic, geography, English, grammar and a knowledge of our country’s history acd the should be done fur the reason that there is no greater danger or peril to a@ community than general ignorance. But beyond supplying education for its own defence, the province should not go— not at least until our finances Improve. Anything further required should be sup- plied by the city, district, or individual par- ent. Our province is simply too poor to afford to pay for the teaching of the higher brauches, or what has been ealled the luxuries of education. The $83 grant, then, from the government to each school or department will represent what the province will pay for the groundwork of education and this amount should be suf- ficient for the purpose. We must consider that although the price of all kinds of focd products and goods has greatly depreciated money alone has appreciated. The pu:chas- ing power of money is now 50 per cent greater thanin 1877 when the province paid for the entire cost of education with $65,00C, and can any one deny that $45,- 000 to-day will go as far in supplying the necessaries and comforts of life as §6©$65,000 in 1877. In makiog a $65,000 grant at that time we believed we were doing bandsomely for elucation although the income from the Land Office was very large and there was no provincial debt. If we pay $45,000 now with its greatly increased purchasing power, to the ordinsry teachers, can it with reason be said, that in view of the condition of the province, we are not doing eaough? Tue poorer districts will not be able to complain that any injustice is being done them; for tle province will do for them exactly what it will do for the most wealthy and prosperous settlement, that is pay for the teaching of the fundamental branches. Ifa more prosperous district can afford to pay for the teaching of the ornamental branches, the poorer one has no just reason to complain apy more than the poor man may complain that his situ- ation im life prevents him from having all the luxuries of dress and food which his wealthy neighbor can afford to indulge in. It may be said, and the Patriot has already yoiced the sentimeut, that the proposed change will work to the injury cf the poor man. Let those who flippantly so assert, consider the matter a little. We pay now out of the local treasury about $122,000 a year for education,—a very large sum considering the limited dimensions of opr revenue. Will it he denied that a very large proportion ef this $122,000 goes to pay for the teaching of the higher oc more ornamental branches of education? And how much good does such ruch expenditure do for the poor man? Is it not a fact that the poorer farmer and working man are obliged, by the necessities of their circumstances, to take their children away from school at an early age to help work to keep the household together, while the well-to-do farmer and mechanic, not hampered by any such necessities, have facilities provided them at the public expense of giving their children an education in allthe higher branches ? Let those wbo are continually crying out in behalf of the poor man defend if they can the injustice of such a state of “airs, If the province supply all alike with ao education in the necessary branches . the poor man’s son or daughter need not suffer in the ace if they have ability and character. Some of our best men bave received less education than $83 a school can supply. The scheme I have proposed claims to be in the interest of the whole people, re- gardiessof class. It is suggested as a solution of an intolerable condition of affairs which is discouraging our people and bankrupting our Province. Let those who oppose it set to work and prove one more simple, more economical and more jnet, and they shall have my hearty sup- rt. Iam not irrevocably wedded to the one which I have endeavoreed to explain. In my humble opinion it is the best yet offered to the public, but when a better oae is brought forward I shal! uot be backward in its support. There is one thing clear enough : the minds of our peo- ple are made up that an end must be put to the system of making large yearly ad- ditions to the provincial debt. The present government seems to be wedded to this policy; at any rate it has not so far been able to find another. This matter of the public debt is of the most vital interest to the whole community. We shall be obliged to pay from this out $20,000 a year inter- est, so large has it become. Return the pre- sent government to power and at the end of its next term the debt will be so in- creased that $40,000 a year will scarcely suffice to pay the interest thereon. This is what will surely happen because the re- ceipts from the land office will for. the future be small iadeed compared to what they have been. For fourteen years a different system bas been talked of but never put in practice. When ehould the change be made, now or five years hence, or when the debt will amount to three or four million dollars? Then every dollar of the subsidy that we receive from the Dominion must go to pay for interest! What then about the other services, the provision for education, the roads, bridges, wharves and ferries, the administration of justice, in short the whole service of the Province? Where are we to find the money to pay for these? We cannot pick it up on the roads or meadows. It can only be obtained by taxing the people; and what taxes! Is it not the part of wisdom to give now while we are able, $45,000 a year to the teachers ratherthan wait for four years when we will only be able to give $25,000, or continue in our present course for eight years and not be able to give one dollar ? Loox back over the past eight years, if THEY ARE Quality, Style. Fit, Wrorkmanshlp, and Finish. STANLEY BROTHERS. you please, They soon passed by; but | they left in theirtrain a public debt of | half # million dollars. There are twenty | thousand reasons why the people shonid | insist On a changé being made now rather | than five yeara hence when thry will again consulted. There are not only direct evil re- sults of debt building, but indirect, Pile up the debt, increase the taxes,—the taxes must be paid. Whogoes to the | wall? ‘The poorer farmers, compelled to give largely of the results of their hafd work to the government, will not bé able to meet their other obligations, The mor’gages will be forclosed and the for- mer owners must depart the province to earn a living fer themselves and families. Who elee are injured? Vacant farms, land depreciation,—will not these directly effect the positioa of every property owner in the Province? No good can be ex- pected from the present government, The people have looked in vaia to it for relief. Will the opposition rise to the occasion? Some timid people allege that the govern~ ment should be opposed on its record and that it is not the duty of an Opposition te formulate a positive policy. So evidently thought the grit opposition in this’ Pro- vince from 1879 to 1890 with the result i that it was badly beaten in the four general elections that took place during that period, and co it would appear the leaders of the grit party in Canada Uyought from 1878 to 1896 with the result to them that the Canadian people at four conseou- tive general elections refused to have anything todo with a party that could-not agree on any principle of state policy and stick to it. These were not, however, the tactics ofthat great tact’cian Sir John McDonald who in 1876 lauoched bis National Policy b:fore the whole Can adian people~a policy for the, whole people which as it carried him (riumph- antly to power completely routed and defeated bis opponents. In such a critical time as this, the opposition cannot do better than fully and frankly make known to the people the course it means to. pur- sue when power is placed iv its hands. ! W.S. Srewarr. Charlottetown, Oct. 26th, 1896. MR, STE WART’S LETTER. Sir,—I am greatly interested in Mr. Stewart’s letters. They are just what the people want. We know that the Province is going on in a bad way. But we don’t know how we are to get it out of that way. Mr. Stewart proposes to strike off the taxes and a large part of the amount that now goea to pay the salaries of school. teachers. Well, that is clear. I never could understand why we should pay eo much to educate our boys and girls to’ ¢0 to the States. If they were taught fo stay at home and farm. I could see som § thing in it for the province. Still, I wiu not support Mr. Stewart’s pla until I cee whether or not someone else will propose romething better. Why don’t you explain your propositions, Mr. Editor, ? Brya = Woulk be pleased with our figaring. For every quarter dollar you invest with us for BRITISH COUGH COURE (the cough cure they are all talking about), vou have it redeemed every time. That is, 25c gets 25 doses and yalue for your money in each teaspoonful, with re lief thrown in, Prepared by i A. W. Reddin, Phm. B. Central Drug Store, © Sunnyside.” aC SSOSSOSHOE SE CHSOSSOCOOOCOSE YOU NEEDNT BE COLD. if you see that in all your coats and wraps there is a layerjof Fibre Chamois It keeps in alj your natural warmth and keeps ont every breath of wind andcold. Light and flexible always giving just the right stiffness to preserve the style. Only 25c a yard now. with’ the red star label on each yard. SCOSSSEOFOOOOCSSSSOHHSECS9OOOODSOOCE a = cag Pe eS SS - ae a — The S S. Coban, sailing from Montreal Saturday —s Oet.24th, will be due at CLarlottetown, Tuesday morning; Oct. 27th, and will sail for St. John’s,. Nfld, carrying horees, cattle fand sheep on deck and pro duce under deck, at lowest pos- sible rates For further particulars as to freight and passage, apply to e ' PEAKE BROS. & CO., Agents. Ch’town; Oct. 3, 1896. re: ONLY A NICKEL STOPS THAT TICKLE BALSAM OF FIR TABLETS 5 ets. a Box. Every known Cough Mixture in stock. REDDIN BROS, Opposite P. O Our Jackets Combine All These. They are the best in each price that can be had for the money. They are absolutely correct in style They are perfect in fit, finish and workmanship. | STANLEY BROS. | or Mackinlay 2 e 6 @ € : 6 e 2s e +t & + < & ‘ Go € oe ~ S 2 < ea © :. Black Diamond Line} TELEGRAPHIC. gout Desvaronee ro THe Examiner NOTES FROM THE CAPITAL. ‘Tmportant Changes to be Made. Orrawa, Oct. 27. A Grit paper here says that Hon. Mr. Blair isay appoint « Deputy Minister and y Spr purty two Cuief Kugineers, one for Rasiways apd one for Canals. This would be economy with a vengeance. Mr. Pottin- ger’s ame is mesnoned for Dep ty Min- ister, and Mr. K. Wragge, formeriy local maoeger of the Grand Truak at Toronto, as general manager of the Intercolonial. Sir Henri Joly has received the assent of his col’eagues to an important change in the Inland Revenue work io tha Mari- time Provinces. The two Inland Revenue divisions, one embracing Nova Scotia and P. E. Island and the other New Bruns- wick, are now consolidated inta one divi- sion, Mr. Burke, Inspector for New Brunswick, being placed in charge of the yhole territory, and Mr. Grant being itat}e Collector at Halifax. The Maritime Provistce list will be taken up in the Supreme Court next Monday. A LIBERAL = PROPOSITION. Want a Papal Delegate In Canada, Monrreat, Oct. 27. It is stated here that the French grits have represented to Abbe Proulx, now in Rome, the necessity of appointing a Papa! delegate to this country with the same powers as those of Monsignor Satolli. It is also stated that the French-Canadian prelates are quietly opposed to the coming of such a dignitary in their midst, GONE UP IN SMOKE. 250,000 Bushels of Grain. —_-— Cacao, Oct, 27. Two imn eaie grain elevators b-longing to the Chicago and Pacific Elevator Com- pany, filled with a quarter of a million bushels of grain, were burned yesterday. The property loss amounted to a million, Johnson’s Bak ny Pow der gives fullest satisfaciion 25c a pound, Johnson & —_ ‘ ‘ ‘ ( ‘ ( i ‘ ‘ é é : A GENTLEMAN $ From Montreal made this ’ complimentary remark in our store the other day: 5 “ You have the prettiest and beat stock of FANCY GOODS in the $ Maritime Provinces, and you have ° shown excellent taste in your selec- é tions.” @ So we have, that is what we are aiming at always. Our Magnificent Display JAPANESE CHINA WARIS eeeee AND eccere FANCY GOODS ¢ ; ¢ 5 4 r ¢ is away ahead of anything ever 9 seen here before. We cannot describe them here, but ask you $ to call and see the goods we & have just opened from ¢ ¢ é Japan, England, Germany, Austria and the United States Geo. Carter & Co Direct Importers of rancy Goods and Toys. Wredding Rin gs—_— «“ WELL, SAM, since the engagement ring wears so well these long eight years you bought from G. G. Jury, I accept your proposal if you promise to buy the Wedding Ring from him also. My friend Nell was married a few days ago, and you should see the beautiful ring she bas, and oh, so cheap. She says Mr. G. G. Jury has a fine assortment from 14k to 18k, ‘and he buys them from the largest estab- lishment in Canada, and they will last a j lifetime; and you know one wedding ring must do these bard times.” “Agreed, I will go and buy the . from G. G. JURY, Watchmaker an , Jeweler, Charlottetown.” ORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, OPPOSITE P. 0. sept23—dy & wky. OfOCSOOKHGOCHOEE ©806 0000649906068 0 000086069006 9050008 06060000 G000000 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1896. is practically over. pO games Paton iPTNES( ae IY PAVING —ae liable record and de the Jargest dry goods business in Cu’town. try to do more than we advertise. Old Shoppers and Young Shoppers will do well to inspect and compare our two l:rge bargain counters this week, aid save money. Compare well ur cnemy. With Modern Weapons aw P 1 < Live Shoppers are not caught any more. The age of the “Fakir” the **Misrepresented” Live shoppers place their orders with rejiable houses. We have a re. Why? Because we always Wight Dresses, Underwrear. Jerseys, eng Soas, Linders, Shirts and Hosa Claims. with goodfsecurity as well, is the chief characteristic of the insur- ance companies repiesented by E. R. BROW, or stitch, and these in turn raise p. on the foot. The soles of the Slater Sho of leather which projects beyond t the foot, leaviag 2 snooth and | retaining all the elasticity aud 5) # $3.00 per pal.’ book ‘‘ The Sick Sian of Leatherh 66 i, ‘L. o . ; at fie Glacer This is the Goodyear weli:d of hand these ‘‘best ia the Innd’’ shoes ave stamped on the soles at O:herz facts about fect you'll fiad in a little 5 Chazlottetourn. 3 AGENT SOOE SS 9 Se 6 www wr wow eS € é 8 2 rs 5 rene PE-ne ram € ‘ Sten FE Er Rireemecin sb « & , & Carer i ne é a i e \ a i s : ¢ s there, has everythinz to; vi:2 tl coufortit brings 3 How it gets there, ythiny ¢ . ° to the foot. Putting soles on thtir oper: is hardly arjtimel @ work, but it’s the big end of Shoe male There are three ways of Coing it— ~ the use cf pecs, Mackay stitching, and the Goodyear welt or i aid sca jivcess (Slater method). Pegged or Mackay stitched s‘iecs ate known from the other make by their putting welts oc: th - sole of the toot instead cf having them put on the sole cf t' : They do this, became the p:gs co. sti goclear throngh the sole, uader the foot, wherc i weight of the body, premiug upon the surrounding leather, raises bart }omps arowd every peg ust al callositics, and corny spots ‘-,:re sewn to the welt (or strip les of the shoe), away from oF the foot while of the sole leather. made method, and J» “itd Ask for a free copy from Shoe” Store 8800028988809 9 2 Ph EROTRO J. M. McLeod & Geo. JUST OPENED QUEEN STREET NEXT DOOR TO R. B. NORTON'S HUB RESTAURANT Oysters eerved in every style. Half- she!l a specialty. Meals at short notice. Best Imported & Domestic Cigars Positively no intoxicating drinks «!]- lowed on the premises, Open 9 a.m. toll p. m. Qld Sydney Mine Round Coal 475 TONS FRESH = MINED LANDING TO-MORROW SATURDAY, EX. §. §. ELLIOT Parties who have ordered will please be ready te receive. R. McMILLAN. P.S.—Hard and Soft Coal all sizes in store and arriving —R. McM. oct23—pat 3i EN the SPORTS! eenseee I have now in stock argest and best line of Breech & fMuzzie Loading Cuns Ever shown on P, E. Island, in 8, 10, 12, 14. 16, bore. Prices from $4.00 to $60.00; from which I give special Discounts = I have also a complete line of RIFLES both for long range and gallery shooting, which include the celebrated WincursterR REPEATER, just the thing for goose shooting. See the Duck and PLover Decoys at W. &. Dawson's TENDERS. ‘EALED TENDERS will be received at the office of the undersigned up to twelve o’clock, noon of FRIDAY, the 5/th instant, for the whole or a specified part of the assets ofthe estate of L. H. Nicboison, of Dundas, Merchant, assigned to me in trust for the benefit of hie creditors. A list of the said property isin the meantime open for inspec - tion at my office in Georgetown, =A deposit, in cash or certified cheque, of five per cent of smount tendered must accom- anv each tender, which wili be returned if mder not accepted. J. A. MATHIESON, Dated 2iet Oct,, 1896,—oct 24-41 pat ~ & Co'y. If Your Kyes Need medical treatment we won't sell you specta- cles simply to muke a sale. If youneed glasses only, we will tell you go, and provide the remedy. GH, TAYLOR z 5 Lu 5 Graduate Optician. North Side Queene Synare, Ch’tova, . OMBAS LECTURE. Rev. C. A. Campbell, D. D., of Halifax, will lecture IN ST. PATRICK'S HALL, CHARLOTTETOWN, Under the auspices of Branch No, 216, C. M. B. A, On Friday Evening, Oct. 86. Subject—-“The Catacombs of Rome,’ Admission 10 cents. Doors open at 7.30 ; lecture commences at 8 o'clock. BREAKPAS! GOODS. life,’ and you want variety even at the breakfast table. Instead of using oatmeal por- ridge day after day, try some of those new Breakfast Foods, such as: Pettijohn’s best Breakfast Hominy, S&hredded Wheat- Bisenits, Self Rising Buek- wheat, Dessiccated Lolled Wheat. For sale at BEER & GOFF FURNITURE For Sale by Auction. me I am instructed to sell by auction, at the Franklin House, on the coruer of Kent avd Great George Stree’ on THURSDAY, the 29th day of October, commencing at 11 o'clock, a.m, Lot of Furniture, com prising Parlor, Smoking Room, Dining Room, Hall, Bedroom and Kitchen Far niture, Terms cash. R. BEATRSTO, Auciioneer. oci24— SCHOOL BOOTS FOR BOYS & GIRLS 00D AND STRONG AND PRICES LOW W. H- Stewart & Co London House Building. —_— ped Vales a $2.50, $3.50, $4.50, $9.00, $6.90 & $7.30. aa aE ARAM TST IS RE CES ne oe STANLEY BROTHERS es