nl = ~ — + AAbbbhaee ¥ ’ od ple t , x th ; tile) fe Steed and tee. = ve-oped into the | occupy. st 1 and Oa J A 5 - aody rile eatalésdial who has | ‘ itive, friend or THR DAILY EXAMINHR CHARLOTTETOWN, SEPTEMBER 29, {899 7+ 4S yee OLA SABABABSA A 444ABAAAAAAADAAAAA AA (lateake ‘THE DAILY EXAMINER | rhey ada; ted to carry ( ¢oealculable 4 save been ¢ lable benefit. yas cold stora, have lo #i depots, they bave cars ‘e one for the United States ? to put on board | What | vroducts from the local to toe o ; the | of the} a € . eo. CS INDISPUTABLE FACTS OF DIRECT INTER TT we ~~ me “ar wz aw PP 2 LST TO MEN WHO WANT TO BEIN TOUCH WITH THE SPIRIT OF THE TIMES 4 : SEPTEMVEER 29, 1899. the central depot. | ; ship » 1 I y 0D, w ea and from the sta . : . aah P Fi 1, a, to the tim » . articles are pro bites! , ' TXT . ) inetitaty > NOVA SCOTIA EXHIBITION : articles are delivered . ions | id ’ > : Dp leame kird in Enogiand -UCKe articiea are | e SIR CHARLES TUPE ER ame ai . ms ' rom anything like rotected and pr : sei eebene > i P : a er { done not only epeniinchemiains eatio Wiat ha miy | “ * > ; 14 i for the United Stat , ‘Flea, who hay he woy, rainy, muddy ae iat oe be tnificent co ‘ c a oo | gone away ahead by the ma S* cent met f =, Be ' 1sagres able, W edresday iast has lav 4} ey h ve 7 ucie s Oniv 1 tbe » Ships ; un Goad & . the most successful day of the | but alc C arranger I say , : tte ‘ ,¢] j 1 onVve ae 1D R Y R , r; and the great attraction was Sir | that po Su 1S Ie Dour ntitled . ol : Bie tad P r e i ( ernment aid, government enterpr, %@ &na > > Lbupper, the veteran, and (ae the , , han f1 cal ,r ibe : a | ,| government sup} rt than furnishing Une ; P V t prove 1) highly popular Leader of creat agricultural Ip lustries Of thlea untry , ' ry, : mT — ‘ar wis } oe 1 mo dmirahle : > a -~ 4 P ° pp 81tion, [The overcrowded cars | with the be 20d mOst AdIbirablie soearns D. STEWART 3 oa | oe paitinten thie aid paces dae > adiog to the exhibition grounds, the | of utilizing th . ‘Ulase system, ; \KER) | cheersand longecontinued applause with | . es ived } : practical question. which he was received when he arrived What | aan tka for Australia with £7 nay TOM Dp 3 : ‘ lat bas it Gone for Ausirala With I ,- BAKES BSST BREAD | and when he rose to speak, showed ina 000 miles of seato encounter, where they TUITT TCC TCT TTT ee manner that cou 1 not be mistaken that have to ruo through an equatorial i a el . . ‘ } 9 ry" . > : ‘ le ‘ sae PUNT ETT TTT, ee | Sir Charles is firmly entrenched in the | climate? They have been able tp Cap =m | maes of the | ture a market for all the butter they are j Ss . hearts and the minds of he | ' amnounug vas DOrn an S mentions po rigQvui¢g Ne 24 much towards the organization ,one s. i é ethie » itish na- | ani prosperity of this great Briti | ti ] Vv of the I snalit North. pulrite His speech to the C i) whe bee ww —— Re s/ J u ie was plain aod practical, and h*- / . ‘ + ‘ . . ; al 1 = nize SANDERSON & | OC | Jear and penetrating, reach? eyery | vulce, I , ++ . 12 ; “ cause they can always deps nd on , | part ef toe grand Slanu upon which the it 7 th ir 2re f rit S ] ] e and rré ] p ople were ass mbled. After g ving his | ' " 1 tL s,: , ; ‘ is... | impressions of the exhibitiono, and con- We take great care in the selection | !™P- ieee ae ; } ] ~Cad with ¢ racting it with the exhibitions of otter! or stock. and are sati*hfed with a | trastibe Ost | days, Sir Charles said : -- I T ‘ — Try usw rf A o my iient it is greatly te pd ' your next order, J, 18 my Jadgivent it is greatly. te — us ¥ s UF next order [deplored that my friend the president | stipulates that no political question trtet | distant from England than Halifax and 800 from Cape Breton. That the Dominion of Canada should he dependant upon a for- eign country for the transmission of a!] its mail matter that it wishes to reach its correspondents in England in the shortest time is a bumiliating position which I trust, at no distant day, will be remedied aod changed. But there is another feature conne:ted with the Fast Atlantic Service ; perhaps more important than the carriage of pas- sengers and mail. We know that oature has placed us here in the fore front of this continent; we know that with steamers of the same capacity running between New York and Europe and England, we could deliver the mail in the city of New York twenty-four hours earlier from the city of Halifax than they could by going direct to Europe from New York. But there is another, a more important featare of that Fast Atlantic Service, and that ia that part ofthe contract with those who, if it had been carried out, if they had not been ob- structed, would have had that fast service runniog to Halifax in wioter and Quebec in summer, a year ago on the first day of last May. (Cheers.) Part of that contract— and there were men of enormous capital and able to do anything they contracted ZL ~ ' S and erson & Co ' be touched upon. I say that Heélilics, | | properly viewed and properi} Fega:ded, | he Grocers | not from 4 partizan poiat ef ¥itw, but as a| VICTORIA ROW | means of promoting the progress aad pros- — | perity of acountry aod a people, is, with | A4AGOS4ECSEDOSNBAESS®* | the sole exception of that of the church, é ’ the very h os ee ol ecg A pees : ' thai can obtain the consideration of either ¢ Hiverybody ee : Q I want to avail myself, on this occasion, I ] b of tbe opportunity of enlisting the public 5 . 10U d e a ‘ mind, so of one patty or another, bat the . | public sentiment of the country, in what ¢ Subse riber— $ I consider fraught with the most vital im- | portance to the progress and pros- ¢ the Montreal Daily Star, @ | perity of Canada, and I may & i Cictinid Mie Mt . € | say especially of this province of ¢ Ce "a pet totes @ | NovaScotia;I refer tothe Fast Atlantic @ Peper, When they can get 16 @ § jservice. I say no man can regard the $ hole year for $£00," If you $ present state of things,—no intelligent p are not a subscriber, now is the man, whatever his politics—can regard @ time. @ {the present condition of things with any a R. L. COTTON é aie other than great _bumilation. ¢ AGENT @ hen he considers that here in the city of a P O. Box 84 * Halitax, and still more, in the Island of D Mikibee Cape Breton, if you want a letter to reach 3 x ' your correspondent in Great Britain, or in eee ~ === Reeeoe eon wa | tie continent of Europe, in the shortest . ae ae ———————=| possible time, you have to send it to the CRD ZD city of New York, which is 600 miles more * PAR . a) © R = st 4x oval Oak. 2S 2 © 7 No Soap in the world is so -cheap, No soap in the world is -— Jasting. sO Save the wrappers. Send for premium list. J. D. LAPTHORN & CO’Y! CH’TOWN SOAP WORKS for—obliged them to furnish what- ever cold storage the gov- ernment required, and cold The Best—aar storage of the highest and best and most modern description, and by which you would place in the fittest condition, witb the shortest possible time, the products of able to manufacture in the (nited F* . -* | : . = lom. Com pare itwith the n*% ~ I draw attep+. bo” sition you “00 £0 this as one of the things, wheth | ; er Lit .ral or Consery- opponent of the present ee , one and all, can join in en- forclog 2 . : . : os vo the government the vital im~ po” ance of the greatagricultural industry of this country not being in the dependent position in which we are in regard to mail and passenger Commuaication, and urge roveroment | them to adopt that system which will give the best and most satisfactory results in regard to cold storage. (Applause.) Compare this great exhibition today with that of 1854, 45 yearsago only. Had any man ventured to tell the commission 45 years ago that to-lay you would have the prodacks of the creat Northwest of Canada @nd Manitoba placed before the exhibitors of Halifax in three days time, they would have laughed you to scorn, and very naturally so. The result of tne con- federation of British North America has been to make Canada a nation. (Applause.) There is no part of this great confederation that has—not looming 1n the distance but right upon its threshold—more evidence of unbounded prosperity than the province of Nova Scotia. I have referred to the Fast Atlantic Service, but I bave not told you what I am able to tell you, that her majesty’s government were 60 impressed with ihe importance of drawing this great Dominion of Canada nearer to the mother country by every mesns in their power; that her mejesty’s government egreed to give $375,~ 000 per annum, for ten years to establish the fast service to Halifax in the winter and Quebec in the summer. I want to show you that not only have we attained the position of a nation—a fact suffiziently important to attrect the aid, co-operation and pride of the mother country—but they stand ready toaid us in advancing these great works of progress. I need not tell those who will look at the statistics in regard to coa! exports for Nova Scotia, of the progress we have made, When I remind you that in 1878 all the coal sales in the prevince of Nova Scotia amounted to 693,000 tons and that the sales in 1898 had risen to 2,135,397 tone, I need make vo other remark on the strides of progress Nova Scotia has taken, And when I tell you, when I poiat to these figuree, that they are insignificant compared to the figures that wil] result in a few years more, when under the policy adopted last seesion of extending the bounty on iron, six millions of dollars are being to day expended io the province of Nova Scotia to build up a great ircn in- dustry, an industry not only important to the Island of Cape Breton but to the iron industry of the world. Io my judgment, within five years, probably in a little over three years, you will find the whole cur- rent ofthe iron traffic changed ; you will find, instead of Nova Scotia and Canada being dependent upon the iron industry of the United Kingdom, the iron masters of England jwill be sending to Nova Scotia to import p‘g iron and to supply the neces- sities of that market. The moment pig iron can be exported profitably to England, it will follow, in my judgment, as day follows night, that the adoption of iron and stee] ship building 1n the province of Nova Scotia will result. I may not live to see it, but my younger friend here, (Mr. Longley), will live to see the day when Nova Scotia will become as famous for the construction of iron and steel ships as she was in the olden daye for wooden ships. When I tell you, ladies and gentlemen, that Great Britain, that great country of the agricultural industry, ov the tables of | Great Britain, this would in my opinion, @iauees Job Printin Every description of com- mercial work, office sta- tionery, receipt and order books, shipping tags, blank forms, tickets, fly- ers, and displav work of all kinds. For the best Job Printing try us. Our facilities are superior, — our prices right. THE EXAMINER PUB, CO’Y. WANTED- Conaperees cook in a family, where another servant is kept. ply to Miss Alley, Prince St. 228 Ee . Is afforded to and sleep on small Ap- tf ——— TO LET—A house containing five rooms, situatec ~n King Street, back of Merchant’s = no EE Island. Apply the office of ere en a a tlt LIGHT BRAMAS WANTED-~— <Any person MARK WRIc having Light Bramas for sale ma da purchaser ‘by addressing THE Ee anrms _—— Oftice. 227 ‘ iP «a which all of us are so proud and to which we owe our alleg*ance today (cheers) is Satisfying Satisfaction.... those who buy the Fiercules’3 eet _W TREPMATTRESSES Our stock of stuff mattresses —in mixed, a liwcol~-mo s ~-hair, ete., is a large one and the prices are jht as usu a HT AND CO Home Makers With this mighty fact be in selling the- — at comparatively little o The compelled to ?mport no less than a hun- dred milion ‘pounds sterling worth, much | more that that, of bread and meat for the consumption of her population, every year, you cao see what unbounded field there 18 for progreas avd prosperity for the whole of this great Dominion, so capable of furoishing that whica they will require. What do the statistics show? They show that 33 000,000 bushels of wheat, most of it high class No. 1, were raised this yearin the province of Manitoba. The grain crop was over 62,000,000 in that little province alone. One thing I may say, because it is not a question of partisan politics, the means by which this great Dominion and this the point nearest to the mother country, may capture aod take a prominent part io that great trade of supplying the mother country with the bread and meat it requires, is the adoption of the policy of preferential trade. When Hon. Joseph Camberlain pointed out to a body of electors, whom he was addressing in Great Britain, the fact that Canada, Australasia and South Africa, 11,000,000 of people, consumed more of the products of Britijh industry than France, Germany and Russia, with 220,- J 000,000 of people, there 1s a fact that shows that the best means of producing the unity of the empire, the best means of achiev- extent, that great market, is to be found in that policy of preferential trade, which will give to the colonies of the mother country, a position higher and better than that which is given to foreign countries. If you look at Canada, take its area, its cosst, its fisheries, its soil—I have shown what the eoil of Manitoba can do, you known what can be done in apple culture, and in dairying in the province of Nora Scutia—take the forests, the minerals, and you bave a country which cannot be beaten on the surface of the civilized globe. You will agree with us that volume I lever that rules the mercantile world to-day. can, in any way possible, give you the many advantagos that accure tw \y province of Nova Scotia, standing here at - ing, capturing and occupying to a great ] 3 the powerful ck fore you it is not consistent to believe that a small sto ; MA a ln ee “SHOREY” Brand Clothing We are now handling the largest volum4 -f biisiness in the history of our career; rno increase iu expense. The jarger the volume the smaller the comparative expense; consequently this method reduces the cost of our product to a minimum, and places us in the powerful and enviable position of Dictators of the Lowest pyices for the Highest Standard Ready-to-Wear Clothing PATTON & CO Largest and Best Tailored, Popular Priced Perfect Fitting Clothing MY => “ ~ 7 SY i- CRS Yee SM, Mee eS tee Millinery — Opening ANNOUNCEMENT Monday Evening Next OCTOBER 2nd 1899, FROM 8 P M TO 10 P M This will be our third fall MILLINERY OPENING, and we are endeavoring to make it such as will excell any prev: ious efforts. We are the MILLINERY LEADERS and we are bound to keep up the good reputation we have gained and held so lon Rogers and Rogers large graphophone which was operated in Summerside on Friday night last to the delight of an im —e (Prolonged cheers.) The men of the north, as everybody knows, and histcry proves, are the men who govern the world, in competition with those of warmer climates. Canada pro~ duces—and in no part of Canada does that hold more true than in Nora Scotia~-as brave men and as fair women as carn be found the world over. I do not intend to detain you by giving you the facts and statistics that have established the progress that Canada is making ; it has reached a point when it is (Continued on page 5.) CHURCH EDGEHILL, os: Windsor N. 8. The Bishop of Nova Scotia, (Chairman Board of Trustees Miss Lefroy of Cheltenham Ladies’ Coileg England, Principal with Nine Resident Experienced Governesses. Housekeeper Matron a trained Nurse, fae Preparation for the Udiversities. Michaelmas Term begins Sept 13th 1899 For Calendar and Blank form of. Applicat- ons or aim'ssi onap ly to DR HIND Secre, M W 8Stf Str. CAMPANA The Str. Campana will re- turn from Pictou to Charlotte- town, on Saturday, 30th inst, and will leave for Montreal early on Monday morning, instead of Monday evening as heretofore. CARVELL BROS., mence audience, will be operated during the evening at our Millinery Opening at our store. POSITIVELY NO GOODS SOLD ON THAT NIGHT F. PERKINS & C0. —CH’TOW N— 46 dete 3: . Se POR aes Saat i asas : verybody $/Go Bare Footed. : : INS = No Never needs reading matter and sta- BOSOSHOS “904 S Gv OO 0026008 tionery. We carry a large i? . a assortment of both. When in When yos can buy on peed of anything io this line oe © . : e call at 145 Queen S’., where nice otrap Slippers and Lac Shoes; also Children’s Button- el and Laced Boots for WANTED~ Traveller or Broker for Mon- eal Wholesale Wine and Spirit House, to mvass Lower Provinces, must have exper- nee and be well recommended by the trade = e< 7s oe 29804 0000 02096600 Bookseller & Stationer 145 Queen Street. Opp. Prowse Bros...... CHAS. J. MITCHELL, J.H BELL'S See window for next. two Sept 27— Agents you can procure goods at the erally, Address ‘‘Broker” care A McKi O Kin days.. right prices. — A T — Oe., Montreal, iy