\ ~<~ »~.f i-< -», - __.-1:_.¢<.\.,,,~.-¢-.~.- `c _, _.if -77,... v~v-rv~vw-- -V iW atarrh ltqweakexis the delicate lung ti ` .the <1isaSQ¥°.,°f» breaks down the 'general h causes headache and dizzi- ‘ ness, impairs the taste' Smell ‘ind ' nm-tag, and meets me vhiee. i=g§<>=.<1-11ii_§f_=f§fi>¢_._§§i=f=f~._v_>_- _ . Being I 00n8tit\ltlOU8l di.§3&SQ_ re* ‘ .5y$?:.g_§fEl_m¥_h-6 malt, Th¢ msny beautiful garments* __ _ _ __ _ ._» ___ “__ _ .. __ -sm" = °°“¢““°°“ “='"°“°'- ;;°;,°,';',‘;‘,<;°°;‘,§';,'j‘1“,;;‘,:," ;f,f,“‘-:,‘2;_’,‘; 2:3 Have °P¢-“til e less Sf°¢k°f Ms" 'S and . " L' '8fm°h°f'i°°° fi i. i ' d e 1th,lar off' ‘ ` -. - 00d 3 Jar-Yapanua ,,,, ,,,,,, ,,.,,,,,,,,,,, ,game ,.,,,.,,,,,,§__,g,_:_, __f_'_~_D_i_i_:‘___c;___=_\°r;_i ;>___g_»__1_1_\_s:_i_ri;__i:_n__ __i_r_r:k§i___:= f_>____g_ e ring the greatest values ever offered in Charlotte \ v _?‘B,g,|1i¢;|ly and permanently cures cc- ' tank the nose, throat, stomach, l bowels, and more delicate organs. Read the testimonials. No substitute for Hood’s acts like I Hood's. Be sure to get Ho0d’s- si or yn; troubled with catarrh 20 years. Seoing statements of cures by Hood’s S31* -. ggpunig resolved to try it. Four bottles »eutirely cured me." Winuax Snnnaiim, '.1030 6th St.. Milwaukee, Wis. I-lood'o Sarsapariiia promises to dura and hoops the promise- I-#---*_--- ~---<--K--i~_ t OUR COLD CREAM TOILET SOAP Is the greatest seller not only in this city but all over Canada. Its a soap and at a price we sell it very cheap. Does not injure the skin like some other makes of cheap Toilet Soaps. Price 6 Cakes for loc. J. G. .lAl`l!ESON,f DRUGGIST, 4 The Medical Hall. ‘ _-. -1;- fa, _f_.. -»_- .T YOPYNGHT ~¢ [ \ 9 A SORRY SIGHT Amauks li ren when sent home after he has hkeu it to ire wrong laundry. lt you want your white aud cr-iurefi shirts, your collars sud culls ind all oihei laundry work to be sent home in theipink of condition with the Enestcolor and Ellis( iiiiish that it is possible to achieve, bring it to the STAR STEAM LAUNDRY .And he linppy. i A. F. WEBSTER. hone |51, ‘ Kent Street. I-I _ e.=i _ r ---W-' i BALTIMORE l .iiriiii ioois ...fnaianna-nov Y fr. frown liificii Vittorio YNY. ._ Ollliilllll lllllil 7; ii . 1 ihamares of the Baiamare Cai- ' it-ge of Dental Surgery. 1 'S.#»‘\'EYOURiEE'll’i \ Unlli qmfe recently whenever a ,; peiiam had the tootha:-»e_ his friends _~_' i aiu: and on miuiediateiy gave higu 1» ‘ the sz-.fc i,if'vi_:e_ “Go and have it ~_- pimcrif' We extract teeth _when 1, . m¢¢‘eei..1|y iiv the most painless meth:-ri ,et discovered and replace .. l ` them with a plate or with crown and image wife. nur OUR i>9.iNcI- ._ PAL }¢li.~`.ii~.iF,SS IS SAVLNG AND " FIL-LIN() TL‘.F.'\`H - If ouhnvea cleft palate give 'gs a We can 'refer you 'o cases ::i 4'; this pi-c»v¢ur_.-, tli=t we have tr-:ated ,._ wins wt-uderiul succea. 'il' Moderate Charges. ;, Satisfactory Work. 2» Pez m.1r.e:it Branch at Meats se. ' S ll. lllill il llllll ` 1 rf, ____'_~__ on _ Y ,_ , l - No'1_:__-_ICE (ln and after the 6th Sept. next we, the undersigned Banksiu Charlottetown will on Saturdays closcourdoorsfor bus- :inessat twelve dfeloek _ Onotherweekdayswewillclose =asusuaiat3p.m. ` ` Baxxo¢NovaScoua', _ ~ do , '_ .- Inpitns Consumption _ ssues, trammelied a d ..:.i.:.-..‘=.1f.:.~..‘-»:i.°°'°-ii” Reliable, Nowoh time .e iudisaiie-use ummm and recognized therefore as Peopleb Published at its oihces, _ North aide Poet omce, at the Rowing ble in advancee- 5 -' ‘ where subscription! mly Ulm. 11"" ' cd,o.dvertising, job work and otheer businsa trnanctads- ¢lnmerside.Ro§ra & Rogers' store-J. B. C. Biker, anager. , Llberton, Alberton Post OEce-Herbert Clark. Agent. Sourls Bait. ’1;ei:phcne Oiice-P. G. Seaman gen . B. KCCREADY . P. HOOD, _ I E' Emo; l IBu.sineno_Mnnager. - H mill iiiii TUESDAY. OCTOBER 14, 1902. f ‘ THE COAL STRIKE. Last Friday was the fifth monthly biri h- day of the ccal strike, as it began on May 10. No one expected it to last so long, and few Elled up their cellars while hard coal was to be had at normal prices, saysI,‘tbe _ Witness. Now. after five months, when when_the United States anthxaclte is not to be obtained here at any price, we are ‘ . oontenttouse soft ccal and wood and pay pretty de as ly for their., too. The wild otfers of the_ past week or two have ccased, however. Senator Forizet’s loan of O ahundred thousand dollars will enable the poor to get their wood at cost in och.) _ Dunlap, Cooke di Co., the en _, tru-riers. are nicely -settled lil; Messrs. premises, 50 Charlotte or tggiidilygugpggd' fnr* 2..;} - - ` - :_ gf. .lf-1'. .` ,if1"\T . f,l"5§}'_.-l’i- .thereon be called' by no more ,\_i>~ V f - _~ . ' . . _ -. propriate name. present a moot _i_i_ivliJlil__ J B » » - -S .- oppearancetothe purchaser of dna fllrft 0 U _ » _ _ The place is rmodal of nea.`t_-_ " 7;* f ff , and good taste in point of strong” - - .E e The premises are brilliantly lighted with numerous incandescent lights, which at night present a charming ef- feet. Dunlap, Cooke& Co. conie to St. J chu' with an enviable reputation as producers of high-class fur garments, and althouilll this is their first season to locate per- inanantlyln St. John, the firm is very well known here, having been in the city on diiierent occassions at the provin- lcialexhihitionr, where their exhibits have always been of the very highest order of merit. Besides the estahiishmenis at Amhirst and St. John, the firm has branch houses in Moncton, Charlottetown and Halifax, and consequently their provincial busi- ness is drawn from the chief centres in the eastern provinces, besides a substan- tial followingfrom the west. A branch ,of the business was located in Vancoaivi r, B.. C., for about eight years, and there are few better known drips in the mi r - time provinces. Dunlap, Cooke & Co’s 1abel~cna,ga.i'ment means reliai-iliiy to the purchaser of fiueffurs.-St. John Sun. SCHOOL CLOSED- ` Scnnnncuor, N. Y., Oct. 10.-The of rich design ` I toniers than it did in the spring. P u four thousand pupils in the public schools o f this city were sent home to-day by. M°i1Ul`¢i11-flfld me D°U1il1i0l1C°31 C°U\Pi_1l\Y_. their respective teachers because of the is charging no more for its coal to its cus- O coal supply giving out. There are eleven schools affected, and the pupils will not e able to resume their studies untiia. 3 on the ground ot "desc:-tion. . There will be importations of Welsh and Scotch coal until the close of navigation,so _ that, takmg it altogether, the situation is* not nearly so unpromis-ing as it threaten- " ed to be only a little while ago. The United States politicians have been doing their best to arrange an underst-andingl between :lie operators and the Miners’ 1 Union dui-ing the' past few days, so as to remove what is. in their eyes, a. threat- ened danger in the party elections, but neither the operators nor the miners have so far hudgei from /their old positions. _ The operators hold that the whole of the 1 present. trouble is due to their previous 1 suirende r, or compromise, at ten ptr cent advance under political pressure. The miners, for their part, only feel the stronger the more the politicans exhibit their anxiety. President Roosevelt, after the failure of the conference he had called appealed to Mr. Mitchell to persuade the _ men to resume work, pending the report of a commission to be appointed by the execuiive bead of the Government. Mr. Mitchell declined to accept this way of closing the disastrous industrial warp because the coal operators refused to ac- cept the decision of such a tribunal. and ‘ batause there seemed to be no law by which the finding of the proposed tribunal could be enforced. The operators claim, _ as they have always claimed, that they ` have the right to run their own business, and t.hat_thc dictation of the union `has a‘.i-early become intolerable. They also contend that ilthey were` properly pra- tected tlie mines would be well supplied wizhwcrkers and that the coal faminel would soon therefore come to an end. On the other hand, Mr. Mitchell claims that ikilled miners will not work under the wages and present conditions in the antbraciie dlslz ct and that iiine_,_ will prove that. His hope is that if, 'after the protection the opfratcrs are getting now, 1 coat is not soon mined in some abundance, I the public will get tired of the starving out process, and clamor for a settlement either privately or by arbitra' ion. In the ` case the union would decidedly win the victory, and freedom of contract between l_ employer and employed would cease to l ~exist in the United States anthracite, mining world. ----_*___ Tni: following announcement among the church notices iu an contemporary gave rise to trouble in the ininister_’s_ family; “Miss B--wiiising, “o'1‘ii»\t1f‘ Had an Angel's Wings That I might Rise ‘L_ and Fly,” accompanied by the minister. all APPLY FOR DIVORCE. ` Or'rawa,0ctober 10.-Mrs.Hsrry Teffney " Mooi~e,nee Jennie Davispn will apply next session _for a bill ot divorce fromlier hus- n ,Harry Teffney Moore,of Bridgewater ,asrnua can nn cnitnn., avegeta- e _ - -- . . .. -- -.-., Anasazi. a;_1w quantity of soft coal ordered by the Board of Education is received. There is a car- load of soft coal now on the way to this city audit may reach-here some time next' week.f§IIt will not last long. however, and the authorities fear they will have to shut the doors ot the schools indeilnitely. LONGSHOREM EN UNEASY. HA1irii.roi~r, Ont., 9.--The coal dealers received another shock to-day when the ‘Longshcremen’s Association made a de- mand for an increase of five cents per ton for loading coal from-vessels, the increase to date from Oct. 1. The present rate ia, seventeen cents for hard and twenty cents for soft coal per ton, with an iidditicnal three cents for ride hatch vessels.: The vessel owners claim to have an agreement with the longshoremen for the season and will kick against the demand. ENGAGEO. Marriage is very largely an acdident. In few cases do men or women set up a standard of manly or womanly excellence _ and choose by it. In most cases people become engaged as the result of _pro- pinquity rather than because of any eep rooted preference. ,___ And so it oftenf happens that the wi e enters upon the obligations of y maternity just as . thoughtlessly as t she entered on the marriage relation, because no one has warned e her of the dangers she faces. ' Thousands of women become invalids for 'lack of knowledge of themselves. It is to this of wonieliirgfat Dr. Pierce’s. Favorite Prescription., comes as a` _priceless boon, because it cures woman y ills. 1 “Favorite "Prescription" establishes regularity, dries weakening drains, heals inflammation and ulceration and cures *bmale weakness. Itmakes weak women trong, sick women well. “Alter my nrst child was born," writes Mrs. gordan Stout, of Fawcettgfip. Frederick'Co., Vl- my health was veryapoor fora long time. and last winter I was so d with pain down in back I could hardly move without great suferiiig ‘ p a o is asant Pellets! which I_used as directed. In four days I was greatly relieved, and now, alter using t. e l medicine three months I seem to be entirely well. I can_'t see why it is that there are so . many suffering women when there is such an easy way to be cured. I know your medicines are the best in the world.” _ Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets the fa- vorite family laxative. One ‘Pellet ‘ a laxative, two ‘ Pellets *‘a cathartic dose. - » vissiijiiiiu A schooner of from__.8o to f15o tons," with large hatches or bow port, to . carry square and round from, Souris to Amherst, Islands. _Freight paid. M. mea- BROS Ci==_f1°f=t¢f°iwn~ sr. ~ I _.f..cUns_.ir-:, s¢srt~.,_ Oct ro-cod 45- 1- `.""‘l°-~»a» ' ' iu_& For "4 - -'fill _ ` My husband got me a bottle of Dr. Pierce’s Fa; vorite Prescn tion nd a vial f h` ‘Pie f 1 .. ,- . in all grades. ` ,O O . town When you want Underciothing remember we can save- you from I-O I0 l5_D¢I° Celli on your purchase. '__ J. B.'lVlacDONALll & Co., Leaders in _Low Prices. Stai,~__. . ,Tii¢o2ii0vt'c 5 ~a large stock-- iiiilllliili oifcicd to the by .o _ _ , ' ' i ' _ . .HAI-IFAX. g ` 845.5% _ ` ff 1 sl . lil. lil F _sq _l y mi” of un. rainy mi mi, excepted) as follovnz- f' Onand after ' Idfh, ¢‘1'aimi0utvn'uL Read Down. iiiiatioas. No. No. No. _ Ng, 2| 5 I 1. ¢, 509 3-43 8-4° ‘lo i 621 4-24 ooo N 6-sf 4.31 9-I9 B 7.30 <18 o.1o Rm 5-2° 5-25 325 lv. Cirtmmar are -5° - Lu u Q Y 2?” i O O I Ao vlllletllil-June ,'22 ‘£22 22?, .5""“"“l“ ”"° - - - v into No. No. _ ltsik' leo, 3 II _' :.` . 4 nu. A.u. . I0. x5_ _N_0_,_x3 Ll. LI. 3.9 6 c as i 532 5-ss. 8-19. 5-32 3.4¢ 6-55 rm Sis V Sigf.. ?1§-‘-,"5g'? iii mi. mr. a.u. nu, 1 ax 1.1 34) as ‘di iv 1.5¢ lf 7-# T ,,?_,{‘ 9.40K. -South. lv. ,aaa LU 5 ax N0. I9 NQQI1. . Ng! 1] Pun- Auf: lm fax. ll. Smit! 455 7-55 ITJIIIIC. lr 135 LQ 5-37 8-43 Qrdigan 6.; no! _ 9.00 9.oo l.rGeor¢etown lv 6.3; 11.4 Y P»K_. AJC. L_' pl -39!! _ C.'1`mrernelv ,Jul 'trains are nn by Atlantic Standard Tile. G. A. siuitr, supefm’ sms. _ lug: g mu. - £40 iv mnerald June ar hm _ D. EOTTIRGXR. G¢n.Hnl.G0vt.lyl. Moncton, N I. -`§.~If;.f.-,€_ , ;.lF;:l1,':.>."f.:. . fi i ~|UiiIQiJE , WEDDING ciris I ° cutglassillait In 8iiei’li|tgailv_ei_' vsly room, dressing .- ~ , _ rf. iff J' a.’.S...