131 l ,. , ...Q -we-‘_§’~_y»_ __ ,,,_ _ r -as g -‘S 1*-._'~ " =/"= ' ' _-'_"‘_°"~ EXHIBITION n___W EEK cosrorr Edirrnr co. H. Price Webber, Man. . T U E S D A Y, Coming-Sept. 23rd. “THE lilllllill Pl£lUliH” Tickets- 3 5 and 2 5c. Plans at the usual places, Mon- day moruing xo a. rn. ° Sept ro rd 1- I 5 _.__ .. V __ THE Home or THE culnnun _ CHARLO'l"l`E'1`O\VN, P. E. I. Y S __ North Side Queen Square. f f ` ‘ IIUR IIDLLIII Dh.mondRlngistl\¢ bd mm in sn B=¢*¢¢==¢°* Ring ever offered. Dil.- monds are personalh’ selected by us ff0m Amsterdam cutters, U5 arepertectgems. YOUWUI findthisfinzillua-audio - our catalogue, ©0117 °f ` whkh will be lent YW free. _ Business Office Telephone l33c _ 0EceHours8am to6p m F|F'rY» _ ' Jf Plnoon,-Busugr. Residence Telephone, X336 -_;.l_.l Editorial and News Telephone l33 I. E. B. MCCREA DY, Edit lr Sl » r r _VV PATON 8. co. Residence Trier l'r 1 ora. ~ A V r _ --1 r . _ ,¢ ~ Sma`l Fur Neckwear at all prices.-IAVS. - rr rorlrr rulrnrrr 'ul I l/Ve show a superb collection of new `~ E€0h OMIC AND INDUSTRIAL - Fa war, SEPTEMBER 19, woe. __ lérgckwearin Sable Skin-*IAS PATUNE » ` r . V ° Cur line of Sabl N k‘B ' ' t Pnocmass or me csurunv e ec Oas is “beat I __ .' ‘ ' ".1 2 -r - _ ,l class Dress Making, I-‘URS at.1es_S'V _than SALE PRICES. Men’s Fur Coats and Ladiesli 4 `5 Sacques at selling prices.--]AS. PATON & Co, We oiier special inducements to earl ' bu`er‘ .A ' JAVs.11>A'roN & co. Y y .S Sam lest and Prices sent,anywhere on request. V IAS. PAT ON & CO. _ Nobody in tl1e city will have line Neckwear like' yours, if l you buy early from us. _Special inducements given' early buyéf5__.§ JAS. PATON 8.: CO. ' ' V iv » _ \-Ve offer and sell reliable Furs only.-JAS, PATQN _& CC_ Omce Hours xz noon to 6p.m.; 8 to xi Pm. ` A Fllrs' Boas’ be the :most I ~ - ° gy ble in Price and Qualit i -- AS P _ _ _ __ V L _ . a' V A y- _I . 3 Agreat them The Economic and .In- ." & ` ° 5.5... 11'; '° r *S61-"*°’f.iT=~er°~# ~ T L"-1 L _.5 .1 -' ' ' Tomnw and Philadelphia. The author e, U 3 _ dustrislProgressof the Century. is ex- = 9 WE CARRY AT ALL TIMES A LARGE `S1"0C-K _ _ if chumfls Fill' ‘JH ' ‘ " f haustlvely discussed in Vo1umeXV of the Nineteenth Century Series published by ` . the Linsoott Publishing.C~>mpaoy of Lou- is FurBcas ‘ Fur Rib f nv cn..-»\¢ -nn_ ` in this lot; bargains trade if you saw them. ll. B. llllllllll ll G0.. 3-15 dwom t W ` Summe Rocky Steamer “ELFIN” 'sv The Rea easel wnglusir aoqled), as fol have Charlotte ` At 7.oo a. m. " 8.3o ‘ K4 A( “ :Loo “ " :.00 p. m. .. $00 ._ ll sm ll “ 6.00 “ AtV9.oo a. na. " 12.45 p. in. (6 ‘Am 1. :: sm ‘- 4 0: “ Plblic Works Iny3rst, moz. I V white German Tliere are some es- tliat would catch your peciall y good bargains ll Rocky Point, daily (Sundays lows: town. enamel e war r Time Table, 1 ' _Point Ferry lli¢"r1rill_ply between Prince Leave Rocky Pt. At 1.30 a. rn. c¢ °‘o, ar " xo.oo “ “ 12 noon “ 2.30 ::. rn. “ 3.30 p. m. ll sm ~ at ll IG SUNDA YS At xo n. m. " 1.15 p.m. ll al ll ll It Sm Gt ' Department, Charlottetown Zlarkt e taylor; me Agents for 05' vw runs! _ and manufactured wares were required to] a forrign were that is totally Viprohilzi ed. I Slilh. Premier Typarrrilers. QUALITY -‘ as mince wrumr sr. ' `St.J ,N.B. _ ., ._ Mags 0 Machimss Repafed HlS is.the one thing we aim H. do Beltlens Gibblns, M. A. `F. R. Gus.. Oxford Prizeman in Economics. and tte volume cf over 500 pages is full of infor- mation intended to impart to the general 'reader as well as thesl udent some definite dcstry and commerce during the nine- teenth century. I ` Within the century, as is well known, there was ac industrfal revolution of ur.- precedenterl magnitude in production, I Alrwright, Crompton and Cartwright changed all this. Water power came extensively into use, and the first textile factories were on tha.. account built be-I side the streams. The invention of James W'att caused stea.m‘ power to be brought in and new and large factories, were built near the collieries. The con- sumption of coal was enormously in- creased by its use in driving tactories, in propelling railway cars and steam- boats and in smelling iron Ore, for which wood had 'belnrc been used. As a result of industrial activi‘y commerce'sprear`. its wingsto carry the products to the ends of the earth and bring back raw! materials for manufacture; r.ilways} and canals were Vbuiit to facilitate internal trade and ever more iron, steel and coal supply the wants of the worli. (The changing commercial policies of the nations, the growth of the New commerc'al_ and economic subjects. The idea of the progress and conditions of in- mannfactnres and commerce. At its' beginning there was an entire absence cf fact-cries. Spiui ing and weaving were" done at home by hand power in a priml-i tive fashion.The inventions of Hsrzresvesfjl writer of a number of books on industrial ' _-- _.._"`.."`“i_.v" _ lr ._~. _-_ ._-~ .-.__.l.- -F .__ ':-E. illicit mais rn his pester. so »macb`~ror ,_ ° ~ ~s| yrur prohibition; . In theljyslume before us the agricultura manufacturing and commercial progres- ' and polit-y of Great Britain, France, Ger- many, Austria, Russia, Italy, Holland Belgium, and the United States are cact- treated in detai'. It is apslling to reai oi I the condition of the workers in England a century aizo. the long hours of toil, thf scant waxes, the childrenset at work ever when but live or ei: years of age and compelled to toil early and late. In_t.h. _making of bricks and tiles, we are tolz Ethat work from nve in the morning t ll seven in the evening vias con srqsrsa moderate, and this mr' -eh 1‘-' of ‘ but four years of`_ag_e, 0ynef_`in.st,ance`_i» given of a young’ woman of twenty-four rWorld and its eifect upon production., commerce and lndustry, the repeal of the corn lanws, the adoption of free trade in Briain and the prodigious impetus and expansion which it gave to her commerce, are sketched in successive chapters.. We learn how old a theory that of protection was, how frequently it was carried to the extent of abmlute prohibition, I and how par# ation of certain articles were set at ` naught by the smugglers. Thus thel England but the foreign silk=. 'still came in and Joseph Home on one occasion displayed a brurlana silk handkerchief in -.`~Ie.°rlv ev-ry one of _vnu has a. similar _ -`__3- f - _~~_->;- years of sgeV_whp genex-al_1y;»made two thousaud tiles a day, being helped by two- little girls‘who-carried; clay for 'her and tacked nie _ci1'esV.V 'ruse two rims' _gms dairy mired up from the clay ` pics gi _total of ten tons' of clay; stalking ~Wltbf them from a depth ofthirty feet"'to t‘he` surface and then two hundred and ten feet to the place where the woman was at work. - . - _ the prohihitory laws in regard gg we im? r _In straW-p‘aitiug_ cbil»_firen_. wg;-g g8n___ erally put to work from ‘their fourth year' and eveurearlier; In the najl tra-ie, _'nails' importation of silk was prohibited`inll’iei7".‘i°‘;I1-milffie by h"“d.fib°7°l ;*"‘dIT3m’= ‘wc-rkedhfrom their tenth year and were' .only/accounted skilled when 'each could* make a thdusand nails ia' day. Yet they the House of Commons dur`ng one of hls"*lh°d W make twelve hundred a dw" bi’ tlhghls of oratory, exclairning: “ilere is _tmle they °‘_’"m ‘am We wretched Pit' tance of tive pence three fsrthings a. day. Every nail bad__t1 receive twelve skil- fully dircted blows and the hammer - \ ..... T g Mxhfnes of an QUALITY we C manufacture with c misuse m~na¢i»n»y 1.sr6_i'.». » \r';': . 1-w. ._ .» -.4 H ; _ _ in the makin of our ‘ ~ _ . ' c I _ . a of the leaf _and our knowledge what the consumer demands ables us to produce. CABLE TWIST TUBACCU wen 1:.;- ulmost eaolusivelyou diseased meat, oc-_p gi.i'm.s;..-' fish. -and is: ¢`eath!.Great~ns-hadpheenthe re steam`1_and _maehlaery, an equally great lmposubismm cpm me discuss the volume. aeueuymnpn ‘ 'rim rep. ot 'six and in some ,_ eases First=cIass DI y Goods Store. '?"_‘!.' THREE oooh ACTIVE Hg ms -To solicit business for _ -- ` ~ an » ‘ _.Th 1dir_iie1s.f _ i r - _ Very-liberal-conttaj¢t§1=__f¢Lbefg 5- ;i\r1lVlr the right nie... ‘ ~ l. _~- p f. ,, _ V V - N - ' f ,»-11 5.. 3.- _ '_ E _ ' ._ . _ ._ __ _ ; I mlb f* _ . I , A _` _ _ ,` _ ' _.~ ,N ‘i `f_- *l 5 5 '_ I _ 3 .' .' 1 ; i ‘ r i 'I ° J ' _ 1>-Rov1Nc1ALivMANAGER,-fi .ee , we _. _ ., . .. ’ ,..v_ “we s ri With g00diFURS, Tailor-made Suits, 1adies’“poats ' H Raglans, Ready-made Clothing, Millinery and"-iiist ‘- 7 ¢ .. ' :.Zf 1 ._ r r' , .rw fl ,i is J' _ L Purrlmesfsets. - Fu' mm’ il'.§~c“;°""°“°S’ SP" Tfimmivss _ 1 _-V-..er_-prix. ' i is ‘_ I I _ .‘ V an cnARLoT'rETowN _ .. _V ~ -5 ‘ a L-_ 5. A V.,', ;_ \.~ ~ ,A 4,.-.. ._»._ .f,= ~ f g ='_ _ . ' '.1 _ _How loaf? r Ill01‘Q_ -om ~w.,~»|. .nn e¢.~_ ' - - _- , -V ,V _ _ ` , -1, I. ._ .1 _- ls. . r r .,._ _/ V A- . . _‘_ . ‘ 3 Lv ‘ -'T 9 _-N-VJ'_# ,- ' , m ` ' *-rr- -- ‘ weigbedvonei and a quarter pounds._Af." fi * . r I this work children wrought for -fourteen V. ~ V_ WM _A _ hoursa day, while clad in ragrwith 'I ‘ n ‘ never enough to eat. One writer tells tha ¢pm~eni»i°¢e_in the nail trade, _fed » ..._ Uellvlc s. _ _ .uek¢S____v._- i loav_cs~of _sweeter that keeps moist long- ._ ,_,_ \ ;r 3 j..-:.k;'f,,_.".._. _.1 _ _ ~_"' J /» 3' :.1 ` ij", ..- .: ». in K I ~ -, _