ett: etiam THE DAILY EXAMINER. FEBRUARY 26, 1896 MUTUAL DEFENCE. since patural, e recent threatenings On the part of the ted States and Germany, and tn view ever tical situation in the East, that many persons in Great Britain and r great coronies are considering the ,estion how best to organize for mutua lef To be in a position to act to- gether with promptitude and effect in the face of anv enemy that may attack any part of the British Empire—that is what s desired by every British$ subject who is prudent and patriotic It has been well said by | rd Bacon that “ Walled towne, stored arsenals and armouries, goodly races o rse, chariots of war, elephants, ord nence, artillery, and t! like, all this 1s but a sheep a lion’s skin, except the breed and d epos tion of the people be stout and warlike.” Without martial spirit, organiza‘ion will be of little avail But given that essential quality, an organization, workable and adapted to the conditions, wil! lend confidence and strength to the Empire. The principle tpon which to organize for a echeme of mutual defence has been discussed by many writers in the Mother Country— not at ly by one whose letters have been pub lished in the Daily Graphic, of London, under the legend “One Queen, One Flag, One Fleet,” and « « Snlend Splena ver the {popular phrase, “Roughly speak- a s i Isolation the British race, so far as it is subject to Her Majesty, con- says this wriier, “° sists of three great divisions. There are 40,000,000 of us here at home; there are 19,000,000 of us in the self-governing Col onies, and there are acouple of million of us in the Colonies which are not self-gov- Outside of and gov | a erning and in India. erned by theee 52,000,000 of our kin are 350,000,000 of people who, al- ith and though not of our race, owe allegiance to the Queen as her subjects or feudatories. 402,000,000 whose welfare is b-und up with that of the Flag. one-third of the entire world, Thus there are in ali souls This is more than the than half the shipping and carrying trade population of More and probably quite half the wealth of the world belong to us and our fellow sub jects; yet, with certain comparatively trivial exceptions, the whole responsibility and expense of providing for the systemat- this upon and are borne inheritance fall the 40,000,000 United Kingdom. But with all this, there is no existing er ie defence of huge by people inhabiting the ganized measure for Imperial defence, and “‘ because of this we are in danger of wasting our strength wheresoever we are Nothing i-~ that, if we called upon to put it forth.’ more clear, he continues, than would favorably employ our strength and resources in war, we inust organize them least as regards the Colonies, we have never acted upon that principle. We have been content to drift, All the nations around us are organized as im peace: yet, at most economical The British Eoi- pire only remains a mase of crude, or half manufactured, material. vast machioes for the uti‘ization of exergy. Surely it would be a sorry compliment to the loyalty and generous promptings of the colonies, as called forth so markedly during the recent weeks of anxiety, if we did not at length do something to demonstrate not now merely that we do heartily appreciate the warmth of colonial feeling, but also that we are sincerely desirous, with a view to taking the fullest advantage of it in the future, of inviting colonial assistance towards the permanent organization, upon a system of Imperial needs, of the defen- sive furces of the outlying portions of the E.npire, and especially of the self-govern- portions. The that end would initiation of measures to be the fittest and most practical memorial of the inspiring out- burst which we have just witnessed, and the echoes of which will yet resound throughout the world for many a year. All men now know that Ours is no country bounded by the waves That lap her rocks and haunt her ocean coves; She reaches far and wide beneath the sea, Forall her children, ecaitered thoagh they be, Clasp bands unseen around the earth, and feel A common gladness in the common weal; And, where her ensign flashes in the sun, All British hearts are wont to beat as one. This is, without doubt, a true descrip The question is, fit them ? This suzygests the formation of aColonial Army tion of the conditions. will the scheme writer Corps twenty-five thousand strong, pre- pared to go anywhere, and do anything ! As to the means forraising and maintain- ing this force, it is pointed out that “all the self-governing colonies have been considerable borrowers in the past, and the total amount of their indebiedness, at the present time, is somewhere in the neighborhood of £470,000,000. The mean rate of interest which they are paying on this 1s apparently about 3} per cemt., and the annual interest paid, at that is, rough- ly, £16,450,900, © The United Kingdom can borrow upon easier terms than this, and no one can doubt that a loan guaran- teed by the United Kingdom be per cent., if Supposing, therefore, that would very eagerly taken up at 3 not even less. the United Kingdom were to say to the ylonies : On condition that this scheme of Imperial Defence, tat you wil! self-governing c you will join me, as suggested, in bear the consequent additional charges, and thot you will guaraatee me 3 per cent. on the amount of your debts, I will take over the whole of them. The result will be that instead of paying away $16,- 450,000 as interest, you will only have to pay £14,100,000, and that, consequently, without imposing any additional burdens on your tax payere, vou will have a sum THE DAILY EXAM a < aera mee | of £2,350,000 available for the Imperial ; even in time of peace. Stated more briefly, an advantageous conversion of the Colon- ot yects in juestions, jal debts would, as far as can be seen, solve the problem without pinching any Wejioubt the practicability of thls latter part of the In fact, the is one for the consideration body.” scheme. whole matter of experts in financial and army and naval affairs. W Lord Wolseiey, that * Splendid Isolation ” ered every difficulty, though, contrary e fear, with has not consid to Lord Wolseley, we incline to the opinion is quite possible to o>tain in the INER — that it) lonies a considerable force for Population has in service, Coo creased and conditions have changed since Lord Wolseley lived in the colonies. setae NOTES ANO COMMENTS. —Now that the new spring goods are arriving, it is more than ever neccssary that the Stanley should be kept running; and, with our correspondent and the bus iness men of the town, we hope that less than ten days will be fourd necessary for the cleaning of the Stauley’s boilers. —L’Electeur demands to know if the Roman Catholic Bishops approve of the clause of the Manitoba Remedial Bill which give Roman Catholics the right, if they choose, to pay their taxes and send their children to the Public Schools. This, it is pointed out, is contrary to the doctrine of the syllabus, which forbids Catholics to approve or support a system of education outside the authority of the Church. The Montreal Gazette remarks that the infer- ence is that, if L’Electeur’s political friends have their way, the Roman Catholics would get much more than the Conserva- tive Government is risking its lifeto give them. Where are the Liberals at in this school ngatter, any way ? —Monetary Times: Canadian dry gocds buyers are returning from English mar- kete, having completed their purchases of woolen fabrics for the fall trade of 1896. The trade placed large orders for heavy woolens in Leeds, at prices little in excess of last year’s values,@in spite of smart ad- vances in the price of raw material, the goods having been made before the rise in the wool market. Worsted coatings were bought at advances on last year’s prices, the price list of manufacturers having slowly advanced for some time past. The factories are very busy working on wor- steds, and the outlook is for continued strength Tweeds and serges in English markets are dearer than in December last, while the demand throughout has eon- tinued very satisfactory. —President Schurman, of Cornell, has left Ithaca for the South, where at Jack- sonville, Florida, he is to deliver the prin- cipal address at the annual meeting of the department of Superintendents of the Na- tional Educational Association. Presid- ent Schurman will thus haye delivered three imporcant addresses thie winter. The first, which is being published by Scribners’, was on Huxley. The second, delivered op Founders’ Day at Cornell, was the one on the Venezuelan question, which has met with such wide newspaper comment, the one spropos of which the teview of R-views remarks : “Perhaps no man in the country bas expressed him- self ina more statesmanlike fashion in support of the American view of the issues invelved than President Schurman, of Cornell.” The third,to be delivered at Jacksonville Feb, 18. is on “The Vocation of the Teacher.” —France and England having setzled a boundary dispute in Siam, are negotiating for the surrender by France of her rights in Newfoundland. The two facts show a coming together of the two nations for practical purposes. German pretentions in the Transvaal, still per-isted in, may create the opportunity for which France has long been waiting. Ii French claims in Newfoundland are to be surrendered, the compensation found eleewhere will complete another internatienal trans- action. What makes, favs the Monetary Times, the sur- render possible is that French interests in Newfoundland bave not, on the whole, been increasing, but the fishery has s@ de- creased as to be only a shadow of what it once was. The French claims once ex- tinguished, a serious bar to the union of Newfoundland with Canada would be re- moved. Newfoundland would be in a better position to negotiate, and Canada would appreciate the fact that the acquisi- tion, when made, would Le free from the burthen ef French claims. > THE OUTLOOK ON TH ISLAND. Mr. James Paton, of James Paton & Co., dry goods merchants, Charl ottetown, P.E.1., passed through Montreal the other day on his way to the Old Country to buy for his firm there. This is Mr. Paton’s seventy-sixth trip across the pond in the interest of the dry goods firm he now rep- resenta. Mr. Paton remarked to a Dry Goods Review representative that where he hai come from he had had no winter to speak of, consequently the dry goods business had suffered considerably, especially in heavy goods. He also remarked that the farmers had plenty of produce in hand, and if the spring opened out wel! and there was a good market for hat produce Mr. Paton had no doubt but what that would retrieve the loss sustained during the winter.—The Dry Goods Re- view, Feb. 1896. PERSONAL. Messr2. S. A. McLeod of Moore & Mc- Leod, and G.F. Beer, of Beer Bros., arrived at Liverpool yesterday. The arrivals at the Queen Hotel thie forenoon included : William *Minte, Sum- merside; John McEachern, Cherry Valley; James St. C. Moore, Eldon. Attorsey-General Peters arrived home from the Ottawa Supreme Court via Cape Traverse yesterday afternoon. Mr. Stew- art, we understand, will not return before the 10th of March. The St. Jobn City, of the F urness Line, sailel from Halifax yesterday evening. H. James Palmer, Esq., Stipendiary Magis- trate for Queen’s County, and Mr. Cloud Hill were passengers, en route to England. The latest arrivals at the Hotel Davies include D. P. Macuutt, Malpeque; C. R. Rogers, George Tweedy, Chas. S. Wood- man, Alberton; H. W. Higgineon, Mor- treal; H. Byrant, V. F. Farrel), Halifax. A number of the Catholic clergy are in town on diocesan business. There was a meeting at the palace yesterday which the Bishop and Revs. Dr, Doyle, RB. B. Mc- Donald, Dr. Walker and Father Burke attended. Mr. Jozeph A. Hughes, of Hunter River, is visiting friends in Irishtown, where he intends spending the summer. We learn that Mr. Hughes is about to take a step in the right direction by purchasing a beau- tifal farm in the vicinity of Irishtown. We wish him success, American Hate—Opened today, a large lot of American felt hats, the latest styles, —John McLeod & Co. ee LATEST NEWS NOTES. Sir Jobn Millais has been elected Pre- sident of the Royal Academy. A bill to provide for the marking of cheese has been introduced in Parliament by Mr. Foster. Some person has sent the Campbellton, N. B., Enterprise a bogus birth-notice. The editor is on the warpath. The deposits in the Post Office Savings Bank of Canada during the month of January were $802,343, and the withdraw- als $608,409. The Queen has sent a despatch to Pres- ident Kruger, expressing her sympathy for the victims of the explosion of dynamite at Johannesburg. Senator Boulton has addressed an open letter to Sir William Dawson oa the Mani- toba school question, criticising the latter’s letters to Sir Charles Tupper on that sub ject. Word comes from Rome that reinforce- wents consisting of 16 battalions of in- fantry and 4 batteries of artillery are to be sent to the Italian army operating against the Abyssinians, It is said that 5006 Russian troops have gathered on the Corean frontier and naval preparations on the part of the Russiao government continue. A number of steam ers have been charted. The Sporting Life says that Frank Slavin has challenged Fitzsimmons for £1,000 a side, the fight to come off in Eng land, or he will bet the £1,000 that he can stop him in aix rounds. Admiral McClintock, who between 1848 and 1857 was connected with four Arctic expedition in search of Sir John Franklin’s remains, does not believe that Dr. Nansen has discovered the North Pole. Twenty cars of Manitoba wheat were des- patched west on Friday via the C. P. R for Vancover, where it will be transferred to steamer and taken to Australia. Australia is pow a market for Manitoba cereals. It is reported that Sir Philip Currie, the present British ambassador at Constanti- nople will succeed the Marquis of Duffer- in, the present British ambassabor at Paris, upon the latter’s impending retire ment. Morin, of St. Thomas, Montmagny Coun- ty, Que. who killed Roy ina drunken brawl five years ago, and after seeing the scaffold erected and the coffin and hang man on hand, was reprieved, has been liberated. The Italian consul at Zeitoun has written to Constantinople describing the wretched condition of the people of Zeitoun. Many are naked and _ starvation is staring hundreds in the face. ‘There is much sickness. Gen. Sir Fred Middleton has been ap- pointed keeper of the royal insignia, Tow- er of London, by Her Majesty. Salary £400 a year with residence in the tower. Sir Fred succeeded the late Sir Michaei Biddulph. One Cuban plantation by virtue of a guacd of 3,000 troops has been able to defy the insurgent proclamation, 80 far as to grind 16,000 bags of sugar. Cuban sugar should be sugar this year. It costs money. In his Winnipeg interview Sir Donald Smith reminded the people of Manitoba that such agitations as that over the schools were always injurious to a country looking for population. “Comeup and see if we will persecute you” is not the kind of invitation that appeals to pioneers. It is reported tnateight toten Cuban sympathizers imprisoned in Cabanas and Moroo castles are murdered every night by order of Gen. Weyler. The revolutionary committee in Havana has issued a mani- festo stating that if this bloody work is continued, it will blow up the city with dynamite. Fitzsimmons has little to say regarding his plans for the future. He says be will completely ignore Corbett’s challenge. Fitzsimmons insists upon it that Corbett must whip Maher or Choyinski before he gets into the ring with him. The battle of months between these worthies will probably be continued indefinitely. The estimates of the Toronto expendi- ture for 1896-97 total $3,147,308. The Treasurer calculates that the receipts will be only $3,121,971. There is also an ex- penditure of $336,000 provided for ou capital account. The year 1896, therefore, promises to see the seventeenth deficit in revenue, as compared with expenditure, set down in the record of the Mowat Govern- ment. Mrs. Valentine Furtz, of South Danville N. Y.,who up to Saturday had abstained from food for a period of 34 days, and has got along 80 far without co!Japse, is trying to outdo all records in the fasting line. For the first two weeks of her self-inflicted task, her neighbors endeavored to dissuade her from her attempt, but pow they are urging her to break all world’s recards, She is very weak and confined to her bed. The Imperial Government has declined to come tothe aid of the Nova Scotia Government, in connection with its scheme for abolishing the Province’s Legislative Council. In the same manner, the Colon- ial Secretary refused to interfere with the Shortis sentence. The home authorities plainly mean that, with the advantages of self-government, Canada shall take the disadvantages also. It is time our public men apreciated the fact. The statement that Great Britain and the United States will arbitrate the Ven- ezuela boundary dispute without regard to Venezuela, is to be taken with an allow- ance. Suchacourse would pat Venez- uela in a more contemptible position than if Great Britain simply asserted its strength and tcok the country it liked. Any power may have to give way to eup- erior force; it is only a despicable one that can be ignored in a quarrel itself raises. Ia arecent speech Mr. John Morley said that “the British people might con- gratulate themselves when difficult mo- mets arose that they had # press, Eng- ligh and Scottish, which was not bullied by military men in jaskboote, which did not subsist upon odious blackmail, and which was not ready to sacrifice its soul almost to sensation.” The German, French and American press respectively are pretty accurately characterized in the above sentence. A man named George Smith was arrest- ed at Des Moines, lowa, on Saturday for holding checks for two trunks shipped from Council Bluffs the previous day con- taining one body each, that ofa man and woman. The trunks had attention called to them, by blood dripping from o-e in the Rock Island baggage room. On Saturday morning a hackman took the trunks to the Drake Mciical school, where the bod- ies from graves robbed at Des Moines re- cently were found and was arrested while uploading them. Exposure to cold, damp winds, may re- sult in pneumonia noless the system is kept invigorated with Hood’s Sa:saparilla. For eight days more cash buyers have a splendid chance at our store. 25 per cent discount on stock remaining from or goods sale. See ad.—Moore & Mc- ec]. ° ANCE, The meeting ot the King’s County Tem perance Alliance at Georgetown yesterday opened with the President, Rev. W. A. Mason, in the chair. After some routine business the election of officers for the en- suing year took place. The following were elected : Rev. W. Lawson—President. Rev. Father Phalen—Ilst Vice—Presid- ent. Rev. J. G. Cameron—2nd ent. Wm. McLeod—3rd Vice-President. J.M. Martin—Secretary. Rev. W. H. Spencer—Treaaurer. Rev. Messrs, Lawson and Phalen were appointed a committee to wait upon the Attorney-General and the Stipendiary in reference to the enforcement of the C. T. Act; said committee reported that their conference with these gentlemen resulted in their promising to aid the temperance cause by seeing that the persons guilty of a second offence of the C, 1’. A. should be dealt with accordingly. It was moved, seconded and anani- mously adopted that a committee be ap- pointed to confer with Stipendiary Magis- traie Blanchard,. requesting that all fines be hereafter paid to the Prosecutor. Rev. Father Phalen and A. C. Stewart were appointed to carry this resolution iu- to effect. The resolution moved by W. H. Beers secoaded by Rev. Father Phalen and adopted was to the following effect : Whereas, It has come to the knowledge of this Alliance that certain prisoners have been released from King’s County jail by the Department of Justice, who were serving a sentence for a breach of the C. T. A. Therefore Resolved, That it is the Opivion of this Alliance that the releasing of prisoners in-carcerated for a breach of the C. T. A., is greatly deprecated by the friends of temperance aad'ts detrimental to the enforcement of the law. This resolution was unanimously adopt- ed, after which a vote ofthanks was ten- dered to the President and Secretary, “and was by them suitably acknowledged. The place of next meeting was decided to be at Souris. Vice-Presid- J. M. Martin, Sec’y. “ee Hockey In Halifax. Hairax, Feb. 26. The hockey mach yesterday morning between the picked team representing all Halifax and the St John A. A. team was played in the Exhibition rink, resulting in a victory for the Halifaxieam. Score, 3 to 0. : -——— =o — — greene / “WORTH A GUINEA ABOX.” LIN DR PARA LAS ees eas aaa > « CURE . Disordered Liver, etc. $ They Act Like Magic on the Vital Organs, Regulating the Secretions, restoring long lest Compiexion, bringing back the Keen Edge of Appetite. and arousing with the$ ROSEBUD CF HEALTH the whole physical ¢ energy of the human frame. These Facts are admitted by thousands, in all classes of Society. Largest Sale in the World. Covered with a Tasteless & Soluble Coating. » Wholesale Agts. Evans & Sons, Ld, Montreal, or sale by ail drufgists. FOR—— Citizens’ Band ——]N —— HILLSBOROUGH RINK, — () N—— Friday Evening, Feb. 28th, For the purpose of procuring New Uniforms. ADMISSION —Skaters, 20 cents. Pre- menade, 10 cents. feb26 Pink Pills, At REDDIN’S. Pink Pills, At REDDIN’S. Pink Pills, At REDDIN’S. Hood's Sarsaparilla, Hood’s Sarsaparilla, Hood's Sarsaparilla. REDDIN BROS OPPOSITE POST OFFICE. feb25 You Can Catch Your Own Sleigh with any kind ofa but if you.,wish tom train on the P. By [Sland » Railway you mun alee a correct timer. a Our Special Railroad watch for men is correct—inexpen- sive—but has all the essen- tials, Solid Gold, $50; Solid Silver, $12 to $25. E.W. TAYLOR CAMERON BLOCK. toh, e a feb26 vB) EARNEST MEN AND WANT ED WOMEN to circulate “The Sword of Isiam or Seffering Ar- menis,” a thrilling book. Graphic cc- count of the Eastern Question, the Turk, Armenian and Mohammedanism with its horrible massacres. Numerous startling illustrations taken on the spot. 448 pages, only $1.90. Send 60 cts. for canvassing book. Agents make $15 to $50 weekly. Brapiey-Garretson Co., Ltd., Toronto, Ont. ly d&w— feb26 a a ————$—— WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY a = 26, 1896. a TELEGRAPHIC, SreeciaL Despatones ro THE Examiner NOTES FROM THE CAPITAL, The Parliament of Canada. Dominion Artillery As sociation. Orrawa, Feb. 26. In the House of Commons this after- noon the Budget debate was resumed by Mr. Smith, of South Ontario. He was followed by Mr. Dawson, of Addington. The Senate resumed last night, Senator Ferguson acting as Leader in Premier Bowell’s absence. Av uninteresting gathering tuok place in the Privy Council chamber this morn- ing, when Sir McKenzie Bowell and Sir Charles Tupper met a number of Conser vative members who were supposed to be doubtful supporters of the Remdial Bill. The re.ult of the conference, it is said, is a much better feeling in Govern. ment circles. Some members declared that they would vote against the Bill, but the number will not be as great as was supposed.*A repertwas current last-night that Mr. Laurier has offered to allow the eetimates for three months to _ pass en bloc so that the public services of the country will not be at a standstill untill such time as parliament could vote the necessary supplies. The annual meeting of the Dominion Artillery Associaton was held to-day. Colonel Prior was re-elected president. The Governor-General, minis- ter Desjardines and General Gascoigne, were present and made addresses __referr- ing to the proposed re-armament of the Militia, but not outlining a scheme. The Salvation Army. New York, Feb. 26. Commissioner Eva Booth, who is now in command of the American division of the Salvation Army, yesterday made a ful! statement ef her intenied action. She said that the trouble between Ballington Booth and the international headquérters grew out of a letter which Ballington Booth wrote on Jnuary 3lst in reply to his recall from the American command. Until the commande:-zommiesioner, M:s. Booth Tecker arrives commissioner Eva Booth will devote al! her efforts to keeping matters quiet. The General’s reply to his son’s charges is expected on Saturday's steamer and there will be then a further hearing. The Manitoba Qagstion. Wiyyirec, Feb, 26, There is every reason to believe that Premier Greenway and perhaps Attorney- General Sifton will go to Ottawa shortly to consult with the Dominion aurborities in regard to the school question. It is be- lieved that the Premier gave Sir Donald Smith a promise that he would goto the capital and hold a cenference with the Dominion Ministers. Railway Officials Pay. Moxcron, N. B., Feb. 26. Train despatchers, station agents and operators have been notified that their re- reqnest for an increase of wages has been agreed to. The increase, which is equal to about] $75 a year per man, is valuable as an indication that the business of the road is improving. “Involuntary Manslaughter.” Wasuixsron, Feb. 26. Miss Elizabeth Flagler, daughter of General Flagler, Chief of Ordnance, U.8.A., who last spring shot a colored boy named Green, was arraigned in court to-day. She pleaded “involuntary man- slaughter,” and was sented to three hours in jail and to pay a fine of $300. Carter's “Tested” Seeds. You can buy Seeds at, almost any price, BUT—) they are not CARTER’S| SEEDS. We seek the trade of merchants, farmers and gar- | deners who appreciate the | value of First Class Seeds, | and supply (wholesale and || retail) ths high quality of | goods which has built up| for us the largest seed_ trade in the Maritime. Provinces. } Our prices are fair—as_ low as you can buy good > seeds for—higher than you | should pay for poor. It is not their cost, num- | ber, how they are put up, | or how advertised, that’ makes good seeds—it’s what | the seeds themselves are. “Our best customers are | | those who know us best. : | tis our business to sell) the best seeds that grow. | | This has been our business | | during the past sixteen | | years. We can safely claim | od = | | | that we know seeds. ' Weare now registering applications for our Mlus-' trated Seed Catalogue for /1896—ready in February. | Free to all. Address GLO. CARTER & 60,,, | SEEDSMEN, Charlottetown, P. B. Island. | i ee —_——___—- * CARRYING FIRE INSURANCE Office, Brown’s Block } your QUR BUYING POWER | oo The Big Store! We have opened 20 Cases NEW AMERICAN GOODS, and have arranged a price on alot of New Stockings, Cor- sets, Cottons, Ducks Underwear, and Quilts that will astonish you for lowness. JAS. PATON & CO, “Feme | Quo'h the Raven Ever More Simaly This and Nothing More There’s no box of Bron- chial Luzenges gotten up that will give more relief than those we eel] at 10 cents, even if you paid g dollar a box for them. A. W. REDDIN, Phu. B,. CENTRAL DRUG STORE, SUNNYSIDE. is like putting $1,000 of another man’s money into the bank to your credit for a contingency. Failing to carry it is like staking ! your whole business on an un- certain game. E. R. BROW, Tasurance Agent. feet! Foot Comfort awaits you at our Store. Shoes that will make peace with your feet the first time you wear them— THE FAMOUS SLATEP SHOES. Never saw shoes that fitted our ideas of style and price and construction so well as these do. We are sure that they’li fit your feet and your pocket as nicely as they do our judgment of shoe values. They are made in twelve shapes and many widths, by the Famous Good- year Welt Process (Slater method). which is an exact copy of the band- made (without its faults of irregularity) at half the price. Made too from best American Wax Calfskin in black. Every pair of the genuine is stamped on the sole—‘The Slater Shoe”—$3.00, $4.00, $5.00 per pair. J. M. McLEOD & CO. acoenseieeaasonnne WE DON’T KEEP IT, WE WON’T KEEP IT, | WE CAN’T KEEP IT, WE SELL IT! | ae aan Watson’s Balsamic Syrnp, The best Cough Mixture sold—25 cents per bottle. Charlottetown, February UNGA: Suits, Coats, Vests, Pants, Sacques, Dresses, Skirts, tans, Table Cloths, or anything that you want to get dyed. TURNER’S CLOTH STORE, Masonic Temple Building, Grafton Street ani — Leap Year Proposal. If you will marry your feet ® pair of our $3.00 Genuine Calt- skin, Solid Sole, Lace or Com not act mean throw off 5@ price—make them and guarantee preuy close to 366 days of catisfaction. Now don’t you think you’d better embrace the opportunity at onee eent- on the $2.50 Yours for Shoes at Low Prices. A, E. McEACHEN, THE SHOE MAN. DYE WORKS, ST. JOHN, N. B. Waists, WATSON’S DRUG STORE. 24, 1896. feb26 Gloves, Feathers, Cuar- Just send them to W. © , Charlottetown, and have them Dyed, Prcssed and returned in two weeks. W. C. TURNER, Agent, MONCTON WOOLEN HELLS, WMon:ton, N. B. UNGAR DYE WORKS, st John, 4%. b&b. FLOUR, CORNMEAL AND BRAN, BEER & GOFF have a fairly large stock of FLOUR on hand, which they bought some time ago, and CORNMEAL is are now oilering at prices below the actual cash value. very Jow this year, and we expect to sell a lot of it for Stock Feeding this spring. We have also several tons of good Wheat Bran on hand, which we are offering very low for cash. BEER & GOFF. LAST WEEK we offered a lurge line at the unpre- MEN'S NIG These are all sold. READ ON! For the Benefit of those who had not the opportunity of securing any of the first lot offered, w:| have made special low prices on two other | IBARGAIN lines. . | STANLEY BROTHERS | cedentedly low price of 65 cents om | STANLEY BROTHERS. HT SHIRTS AGAIN. NO. I. Heavy Plain Cotton, made extra long) and full, regular price 95c., now offered at 70 cents each. STANLEY BROTHERS. | ——— -—-— — BARGAIN NO. 2. Heavy, Plain Night Shirt, cotton, long and full, trimmed collar, front a1 never before sold for less than $1.15. offer them for 85 cents each. STANLEY BROTHERS. made ext id cuffs; Ve now ib titre - *