acca cance lll, Sia se alate canes. THE sqgaL AND OTHER ITEMS. Beer Bros. tor Dress Goods, - - ExcrverRs will meet for drill to-night al = aclock For Dri No. | Company, G. A ; ‘ to-night 8 o'cloc! i meet | i * ‘ Ae v ne Syrauens Comine.—The Halifax and the Fasinet ¥ iue at Charlottetown gevenine this li Grove Founp.—Some gentleman left a glove at this office and can have same on pplication ap) - _ - wretrr Rre.—Mr. E W. Taylor rday some stalk: of winter slucked yest 7” rye measuring sixteen jucaes in length. - ~~ Foor Crt Mr. Allan MeDonald bad pis foot badly cul + th an adze lost Satur day afte on wie W rk ng on u e addi tok to kceen’s wharf, Summ ie Caxce On accou Vibes § Sir Charies r pper, the meet advertis el by Hos | bid Ferguso Oo be Deid gt Lat 14 on evening r 3 lay the pb of May, iast., is cancelied Privatr.—T he person wh by mistake wok the ta t from the house lae y i Haviland, after the sal eccut red Dy M183 » the Ltth ins Ww conte a favor | nan . ~_ BD ¢ returpicg the sa R. Beairsto, auction eer, Grafton sul AGraxp Ri si is in preparation for pest Thursday evening, in the new St James” Ha An excellent programme will be perf rmed by some of the advan eed paptl= from Mr. Earle’s Music Studio. Full particulsrs later coneadiiiibien A Presressive Prorvte.—The ling $10,900 for the com- sole On EXpea Ss pletion of the se Woodstock last Luesday and an overw! eimning nditure the negative. wer System was taker resu ted for were Cc i the ex~ ast ib major.ty Only eight vetes Deary or Mas. Wittis.—The last iseue xf the Pictou Advocate contains a lengthy obituary of Mre, James Willis, mother of the Messr?. W ecuducted & piano lis who pasiness in Charlottetown a few rears ago We regret that pressure upon our space wil not permit a reproduction of the Jergthy no: ce hiss Yore Horses Snivrep.—Mr. A. A. Le fargey sb pped on Tuesday morning ter ine driving horses for the West Indies, which were purchased within a radius of fen miles fr Summerside. They were pat on board the Northumberland and go tr by rail to Halifax and steamer to the south —Summerside Fariner. iasiaiinibiaiiiie Oreasa Hovse.—Plans of the Opera Hous: will be exposed to-morrow (Fri- day) morning at 10 o’clock. Orchestra- reste at «=Dodd’s Medical Hali, tal gony at Ranvkin’s Drugstore. Persons holding coupons can secure their tickets foreither night at these places. Those got having coupons can get the tickets direct. -~ Potice Cocrt—This forenoon Heory Griffin, chargel with a infraction of the Canada Temperance Act, was fised $50 snd $4.75 costs or two m¢ nthe’ im izonment. The summons against Thos. larke, charging a third infraction of the fame Act, was dismissed Allan Ma don- gid, Jeremiah Maher, Francis Gormley and Angus McRae, the four boys charged with breaking and entering the store of McMillan & Hornsby and stealing there- from, were sent up fortrial in the Supreme Vonrt. t} t urst punniene A Worp ro Bieycrisrs —His Worship Mayor Dawson has sent a copy of the fol- lowing letter tothe President of the Bi- eycle Club: — Sir,—The Mayor, in consequence of the bicycle accidents of a day or two ago, de- sires to call your attention and through you the Club, to the desirability of bicycle riders having a bell attached thereto, and sounding the tame at street crossings and when passing pedestrians or vehicles. The Clut. by carrying out this suggestion, will (protably) relieve the City Council from the necessity of passing a by-law Te-aling thereto. OE aa Governors Howiay ar Ticyisn.— Yes- terday Governor Howlan visited Tignish for the first time since since he was ap- pointed to his present position, and although he came by the evening train and word of his coming was ouly received gt neon, mauy of his friends from 1 siles astound were at the station to welcome him. He was presented with an address ca the arrival of the train, to which he suitably replied. Flags were fiving trom the various buildings in his honor, and ns sent forth their greeting amidst the eheers of the crowd, az he entered the arviace in waiting. While at Tigaish His Howor was the guest of Dr. Murphy. een ans Ccr His TxHeosy Acatry.—This after- poon Jolin Jackson, cooper, occupies @ cot at the Prince Edward Island Hospita!, in consequence of his having again attempted to end his days by cutting hie throat, It seems that Jackson, who has been in the Lunatic Asylum fer the past two months, was discharged yesterday, and shortly before noon to-day be was found lying near a shed in the rearof the Franklin House, bleeding profusely. His relatives @nd the authorities were promptly noti fied, and Jackson was removed to the Hos pital. An examination showed that Jack- son had cut his throat in two placet, and had severed several small arteries. At the time of writing it is not known whether be will recover or not. This ie the third time Jackson has attempted to end his existence in thie way. again quite ill, and has been corfined to graduate who has ever won it twice. were registered : R. R. Goulding, Lond. n; Ches E. Huestia, St. John, N.B.; Crrran, St. Jobn; G. firet prize of examiners. settings for Monday and Tuesday nights’ direct the stage proceedings on each night and calcium light effects on both nights celebrated work in the ministry, baving teen admit- ted a member of the British conference ip charge was Pownal, P. E. Island, then on the Charlottetown circuit, and he was the gratulations. DAILY EXAMINER ——— Oe. PROWSE BROS HATS | ». ARE THE BEST. | Just opened, two cases ladies’ sailor | hats, all the very latest styles’ See our! assortment.— Prowse Bros, Do you like the latest and best in hard soft hats, ifso drop dowa and eee our ew styles, Noextra charge for larger sizes.—Prowse Bros. rhousands ef little suits selling like hot cake; don’t go all around town louking for children’s suits, come direct to Prowse} Bros, the Wonderful Cheap Men We have a lot white and colored Blouses to fit b ysfrom 4 to 8 years of age, from | 50c up.— Prowse Bros. Gentlemen, see our new ties, they are | the nicest selection for neckwear ever im- ported by us.—Prowse Bros. r 4 Stearns is PERSONAL. Best. a _— Messrs. E. L.. Bardett, Dundas, and J M. Egan, Mount Stewart, are among the rivals at the Queen Hotel. Mr. E. F. Bertram, of St. John, iz here | interests of McAlpine & Co., the known directory publishers. | well le is at the Queen. Mr. Philip Egan crossed in the Nerth- umberland this morning en route to his former home, West Quincy, Mass., where he will reside in future. His comrades wish him every success. We are sorry to learn that Mr. ownsend, of Traveller's Colin Rest, has been he house He is able to go hewever.—Pioneer. Word comes from Scotland that Dr. Clarence Webster, a Shedias boy, has for the second time won the Royal College of Physicians (Edinburgh) prize for original investigation, Dr. Webster the first for a number of weeks past. outside the door new, is At the Hotel Davies this forenoon there A J. Riehibueto; A.S. Kohlies, ft. fr. A. Corsman, Halifax; J. E-ving, Richard H, Willams, Ha!if A. Freez, St. John. Willam Henry Pope Clement, B. A LL. B, barrister, Toronto, has obtained in the Canadian History com Mr. Clement is a relative of the ute Hen. J. C. Pape and of the late Juige Pope. Dr. Anderson, of the Prince of Wales College, was a member of the board L uis: “s ’ : petilion. Mr. E. P. Scott, stage manager of the Halifax Amateur Dramatic Co., arrive this evening with the scenery and stage plays. With our Mr. Whitlock he wil Mr. New, stage electrician of the Academy f Music, Ha'ifax, accompanies the troupe here, and wil] have charge uf the electri Rev. John Prince, of Moncton, yesterday the 50th anniversary of bis the eummer of 1846. Mr. Prince’s first first Method st minister at that place. He has since been stationed at different points in P. E. Island, Newfoundland, New Brunawick and Nova Scotia. Tue Exam INER has much pleasure in extending con- SSSUFVSsssesaesse#¢_evess cas .. a or any other day in the RIDAY week can be caught if you use our FISHING TACKLE. See our large § | assortment and take ad- vantage of our low prices. JOHNSON & JOHNSON, Charlottetown and Souris pcan at Sees Blest | Be the bride Whose wedding presents ve ; | : \ | ot | | corner | office. i come from our store, for | then there can be no doubt about the quality. Oar stock is varied to suit svery requirement, for use, adornment. | ceps umbug or no Humbug en Barnum sai j . 4 i ive i as , : ae eee: — the people likes to be fooled, he did not live in Charlottetown or he never would have made such a statement, and he wouid have found out— ike o petitors by bitter exrerience—that no amount of fooling with large flaring advertisements, offering one line of goods for half what they cost, and charging double price for another, would soon win the confidence of the people away from our wonderful cheap departments. me at THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1896. Notwithstanding the hard times and low prices, our trade is increasing every month and every year. Square honest goods at square honest prices is what the people want, and that is what they get in oar store. CARPETS, CLTHING & HATS are our three great lines. REETING AT MORELL, The Liberal Conservatives of King’s County opened the campa‘gn at Morell last evening by a rousing and enthusiastic meeting, which was adlressed by A. C. Macdonald, E-q., and Hon. Senator Fer- } guson. Mr. Macdonald pointed to the claims the Government had on the farmers of Canada for the manner in which they developed the cheese and dairy industries | and decreased the taxation. Senator Fe:gusou made atelling speech which was rece ved?with round after round ofapplause, He pointed to the manly and straightforward position of the Govern ment on the trade, Manitoba school aud branch railway questions as compared with the vacillating position of the Oppos ion. Parties who were present at the Liberal meeting of last week estimate that there were four times as many at the Conserv- ative meeting of last night. The ,tide of public opinion appears to be _ setting strongly in favor of the Liberal-Conserv- ative candidate, Mr. Macdonald, who will carry the riding by a large majority. A WARNING IN THE PAST, To prove that we were being slowly but surely swamped by our jug-handled fiscal arrangements with the United Mates prior to 1878, it is only necessary to state that our purchases of manufac tured goods from that country had risen from $47,000,006 to $51,000,000 in the amé period, and that we had imported from them in one year nearly $18,000,000 f agricultural produce, which, on account f its cbeapnesa, simply displaced so uch of the products of our own Cana- ian farms. While trade with the United States was ‘xpanding so enormously, that with the nother country was contracting. In 1875 ur total imports from Great Britaia mounted to $68,492,000, while in 1878 hey had decreased to $37,131,000, a hrinkage of $31,061,000. In consequence of the unsatisfactory mndition of our manufacturing indus- ries the imports of raw materials de- reased, scores of factories were idle, or ir running only on short time; and thou ands of our most skilled arusans were forced to emigrate to the United States n search of the employment they were unable to obtain in Canada. Among our merchants a similar state f affairs obtained. The business failures threnghout the Dominion, which in L874 were $66 in number and $7,996,765 in ‘mount, gradually rose under the master- y inertia of Sir Richard Cartwright, antil in 1879 (for the eftect of which year his policy was undoubtedly responsible), they numbered 1,902 and aggregated the eno. mous sum of $29,347,937. As if to accentuate the folly of refusing to alter our tarift so as meet the exigen- cies of the times and protect our own people from the unfair competition of foreigner’, our national expenditure in- creased from $19,174,647 in 1873 to $24,- {55,381 in 1879, while each succeeding year seemed to show a larger deficit than its predecessor. Wouid not history repeat itself were the Liberals again to accede te power? Do not the utterances of Messrs. Laurier, Cartwright, et al. show that they have the same visionary ideas on tariff mutters, which if put in force would again rain this country ? + Ele + ee Mr. S. A. MaeDonatp, who dubs him- self “The Leading Fashionable Tailor,” will move to-morrow into his new store, | recently vacated by M.S. & J. Goodstein. | This store is conveniently located, being only a few doors above the Apothecaries Hall. It has been thoroughly renovated, and now presents a clean, neat and invit- ing appearacce. The interior has been | painted white, and the front a handsome wine color by Mr. A. L. Howatt. Mr. C. P. Welsh was engaged yesterday in putting in the electric light. Messrs. Mark Wright & Co. have made a cutting table, which will extend 12 feet from the rear the interior. In the northeast of the building 18 a enug The second flat will be used as the tailoring department. The arrangement of the whole building is such as to afford every facility for conducting @ flourishing business. lai Neila Paste Tus 1s Yorr Hat.— An Amer- ean paper says: Do you know that in rid- ing a bicycle you develop the following muscles: Vastus externus, pectoral biceps, tiraus anticis, deltoid dovsal, tri- lumbar do sal, supinator biceps, femoralls abductor, teno achilles? If you | cut this out and paste itin your hat, you wi!] know just what you are doing, aud will | appreciate the cause when that tired feel- for comfort, or | MARK WRIGHT & C0., LID, We broke all previous records at our handkerchief sale lat Saturday. The Charlottetown public know our advertise- 0 We fulfil our promises to the letter. ments to be reliable. We Purpose Making a Great Display of i SATURDAY MORNING. ....ALL THE NOVELTIES, .... ALL THE STAPLES, .... ALL THE BARGAINS, ....ALL THE SAMPLES, ....ALL THE SNAPS. ALL WILL BE SHOWN. ite Wear is large, too large we would ray, but that we know hundre's of garmeuts will be sold on Saturday at the prices we are able to offer by our large purchases. Our stock of Wh We quote no prices for this sale, No one can aff will offer in Ladies’ andChildren’s wear. handkerchief fale. BEER BROS. i a ‘* wd to miss the sensational snaps we 2 EEER. BROS. we simply promise, as we did in our el nieitl ing comes On. i iia Oxp St. Duxsran’s.—The old cathedral building was to-day inspected by Mr. Pa‘q ‘ette, chief foreman for the contract er:, and pronounced safe. Tue Provincial W. C. T. U. convention | wili meet in the Baptist Church, iu this | 32n/ inst. ety,on Thursday and Friday, 21st and A cordial welcome is extended to visitors. 1&3 C. C.C.—Members will please remem- ber the adjourned cricket meeting at the | park to-morrow evening. ccielaicimnae S. 0. E. B. S. — Regular meeting of R. R. Degree, Lodge Eton, to- night. Lui tiation and other important business. A | full attendance requested. If you would always be healthy, keep | your blood pure with Hood s,Sarsapril/a, | & JOHNS *N the One True Blood Purifier. = mee FISHING TACKLE—JOHNSON SHIP NEWS. Port of Charlottetewn. ENTERED. May 19 —Welcome, Smith, Richibucto; Laura C, McAulay, Northport; R W Smith, Forrest, Sydney; Ada Louise, Em- | bree, Magdalen Islands; Azof, Sundley, River Jobn. ; May 20—General Middleton, Godin, Campbellton, N. B. CLEARED. May 19—Welcome, Smith, Richibucto; Laura C, McAulay, Northport; James Semple, Robert :, Pictou; Leonora, Jimmo, Chatham. Mav 20—Louisburg, Forrest, Sydney; Maud Carter, Webber, New Richmond; Azof, Sundley, Dalhousie; Samuel Drake, Olsen, Pictov; Restive, Cain, do. New maple syrup, 20 cents a bottle, at Beer & Goff’s. 2i—may2l Shoe Dressing. —Two cases Gilt Edg» Diamond, and Boulevard, Boston Sho: Drsssing just received at J. B. Mecdonald Co's. ‘te ie eietact to initiate Saas PEOwysEe EE Orme tes NEWS NOTES. Mh Disastrous forest fires are raging in dif- ferent parts of the New England States. _ It is ramored in Suakim that the Khal- ifs is dead, but no confirmation of the re- port can be obtained. Tue despatch of Indian troops to garri sou Suakim has given great eatisfactien and confidence to the natives, London has gone into the renovating busine:s in earnest. The city is spending $2,500,000 in cleaning and rebuilding cne sium, There are active preparations for the coronation ceremonies in Moscow and the Czar and Czarina arrived in thai ancient city on Monday Jast. The Anglo-Egyptian expedition up the Nile is proceeding without the shghbtest hitch, and the dervishes appear to be tem- porarily demoralized. The Duke and Duchess of York, from Copenhagen, and the Princess of Wales and her daughters, from the south of Europe, have returoed to London. According to London pares, over $4,- 000,000 is paid for advertisements in the metropolitan journals every year. This is e juivalent to between $4 and $5 per cap= ita of the population. It p: ys. The steamer Lake Superior, from Lit~ erpool, which passed Father Point on Tuesday mornisg inwards, reports a great many icebergs between the eastern edge of the Banks and Cape St. Mary. Some of the Belgian coa] mines are wen! derfully deep. Ina pit at Flenu coal is now being “got” 3,700 feet below the sur- face. In another pit, at Montigny-sur- Sambrd, a coal seam is worked 3,000 feet deep. The loss of stock in New Scuth Wales by the recent drought is estimated at 10,- 000,000 sheep, valued at 4s. each; 303,000 cattle, valued at 40s; and 20,000 horses, valued at 603.; amounting in the aggre- gate toa total value of £2,606,000. [he interesting news comes from Europe that some time since a party of antiquar- jans, in digging over the ruins of the ancient city of Ephesus, in Asia Minor, came across the house ia which the Bless- ed Virgin Mary lived after she left Jera- salem, and before she weat to Mount Sion, where she died. France s Schlatter, the healer, has been heard from again, this time at a ranch sixty miles seuth of Lordeburg, near the M-xicin Hine. A brother of J. Sloat Fas- sett, of New York, reports his crippled leg as having been healed by Schlatter, who passed his hand over the afflicted limb. The Arctic exp’orer, Lieut. Robert Peary, is going north again this summer, and a steamer is now being arranged at St. John’s for that purpose. The object of the expedition is believed to be to secure for the Philadelphia Academy of Science the 40 ton meteorite near Cape York, which Lieut. Peary discovered last year. Notwithstanding reports from Caracas to the contrary, it can be stated that the celebrated Uruan incident has not yet bean closed, and that no indemnity has yet been paid by Venezuela to Great Britain. No- gotiations are proceeding, however, through the German minister at the Ven- ezuela capital, but so far it has not been possible to arrange the terms of the in- demnity. After a period of more than 400 years the Copt-Catholic Church is again under the rule of the Pope. A few moaths ago Leo XIII. restored the Patriarchate for the Copts in Alexandria, naming Bishop Cyrilluas Makarius as Apostolic Vicar. The latter has now named a Copt Bishop for Upper and Lower Egypt. Of the Copts existing to-day only about 20,000 are Ro- man Catholics, The Italian Government is advised by Jeneral Baldissera that the Italians who were taken prisoners by the Abyssinians in the province of Tigre have been surren- dered by their captors and that General Ba'diesera now considers the campaign ended. Adigrat has been disarmed ard abandoned and the troops which occupicd that place will return to a position behi:d the frontier of Erythrea. The Supreme Court at Washington on Monday sustained the constitutionality of the law of Louisiana requiring railways of the state to provide separate cars for white and colored passengers. The judg- ment of the Supreme Court of the state upholding the law was affirmed. Mr. Justice Harlan vigorously dissented, say- ing no power in the land hal a right to regulate the enjoyment of civil rights upon the basis of race. A meeting of the Peace Society was held on Thursday evening in Loudon, fur the promotion of a plan of arbitration of d fferences between the United States and Great Britain. A letter was read from the United States ambassador Mr Bavard, declining an invitation to attend,on the ground that, although he sympathised with the movement, it was not bis pro- vince to actively assist it until the voice of both nations had decla:el in its favor. Dr. Edwin A, Down, of the Yale medi- cal school, in avery carefully prepared article abourding 1m statistics 10 sustain his position, combats the popuiar impres- sion that in-anity is increasing. He says that the increase in twenty years, shown by the official records, is comparatively trifling, and is more than accounted for by the change in conditions, which has resulted in sending to insane asylums many persons who were previously kept in almshouses or in private families, and not reckoned in making up the record of the insane. ‘TWAS A DEADLY TORNADO. Late advices show that the deadly tor- nado which swept through north-eastern Kansas and a portion of south-eastern Nebraska on Sunday afternoon and night caused at least eighteen deaths end the injury of ascore ef persons and incal- culable damage. Many who escaped in- stant death are maimed for life, and in numerous instances the injuries are ex- pected to result fatally. The storm cov- ered a large scope of country. Chaos pre- vails throughcut the st icken districts, and in the confusion it 1s even yet Impos- sible to obtain a complete Jist of the dead and injured atthe various places. The properiy losses caunot be estimated with any degree of accuracy. There is no doubt, however, that the storm is the most appalling disaster that has been i- flicted upon northeastern Kansas for years, At Frankfort sixty buildings were destroyed, and 200 people rendered home- less. FISHING RODS — ENGLISH — HALF-PA&ICcE, AT DODD's may 9col Carter's for Wall Paps VERY INTERESTING FIGURES! { The savings of our people have greatly increased since 1878. The deposits in our chartered banks in 1878 were $76,856,253, and in January, 1896, they had increased | to $190,493,856. | The great increase in the amount of life insurance in force is also an indication of i thrift. In 1878 the total amount of life | insurance was $84,751,937, while in 1895 | it bad increased to the enormous sum of | $319,781,939. | The capital invested in industrial estab \lishments iu 1881 was $164,957,423; in 1891, $354,620,756. The number of em- ployes also increased proportionately, ‘while the wages paid out nearly doubled, ‘ being in 1891 $100,663,650. The total value of output of our indus- trial establishments in 1891 was $476,258,- 886. There were then 776 establishments, whose output was over $106,000 annually. Omitting establishments whose annual out- put was under $2,000, the output of all others was $444,003,694 in 1891; while by far the greatest increase between 1881 and 1891 was by establishments whose output was valued at over $50,000 annually. Our fereign trade forms but a small proportion of our commerce. The best customers for both farmer and manutact- urer are the Canadian people themselves, who consume by far the greater portion of all the country produces. Notwithstandinz our great interprovincial trade and the large quantity of goods we manufacture, which replaces the foreign product, our imports have increased from $93,081,787 in 1873 to $123,474,940 in 1894, and our exports have increased from $79,323,667 to $117,524,949 in the same period. In making these comparisons we must not lose sight of the fact of the great depre- ciation in values of al! commodities within the periods named, eo thatall these figures @ :lating to 1894 would -really be greatly iacreased if values were equal to those in effect in 1878. A matter in this counection which wil] be of interest to us is the fact that, according to recent reports, our ex- ports for the first quarter of this year to Great Britain increased uinsty per cent. The tonnage of sea-going and iualand vessels arriving at and departing from Canadian ports, exclusive of coasting ves—- sels, has increased in round numbers from twelve millions of tons in 1878 io twenty millions of tons in 1894. But the greateat indication of the importance of our inter- provincial trade is found in the traffic of our railways. In 1878 our railways car- ried nearly eight million tons of freight, aod earned $20,500,000. In 1894 the ton- nage was three times greater, and the earnings nearly $50,000,000, while the working expenses, number of passengers carried, and miles of road in operation more than doubl-d in the same period. The increase in cur postal facilities also emphasizes the importance of the increase in our commerce since 1873. In that year the jetters and postal cards mailed were 50,445,000 pieces, while in 1894 the number had increas.d to 132,097,260 pieces. F.re ineurance in fore? in 1878 was $409.99,701, and in 1894 $836,067,202. lo the latter amount should be added the insurance carried by masy large Couc ris in mutual companies which make no re- turn to the Government. In 1881 we imported and maunfactured $401,287,672 worth of iwoerchandizs, and in 1891 $589,544,010 worth, showing an increased consumption in 1891 over 1881 of $188,256,338. In 189 our own maou- factured products, which we consumed, exceeded our imports in the proportion of four to one. It will be seen by these figures whether the protective principle Las occasioned great public and private injury, etc., all of which evila must continue to grow in in- tensity as long as the present taritf system remains in force. The policy which has brought about the beneficial results which have been indicated is to be changed we are told to free trade or a revenue tariff, or com- mercial union, as the case may be, but neither of these policies can be brought about without great disaster to the coun- try. BORN At St. Eleanore, on the 20h inst,, to Mr. | and Mra. F. W. Cannon, a son. At Kensington, on the 2!st imst., the w.fe o° M. F. Schurman, of a daughter. —Brooklyn Times: The Liberal poli- ticians and newspayers have no a*pira- tions in the direction of closer union with Great Britain. They want to tie up Can- ada’s destinies with tnose of the United States. They would fir-t make the two countries one commercially, and then it would not be many years before they would become one politically. —S li's Your Mistake if you buy a diamond ring or anything in the jewelry line with- out first inspecting my immense aud truly magnificent stock The newest styles for you to select from. You cannot fail to find something to suit. Diamonds, Fmeralds, Rubies, Opals, SILVERWARE FINE JEWELRY W. W. WELLNER. pes If you buy it of Wellner, it’s stylish. Charlottetown, May 2@, 1896. “All Work and no Play, Makes Jack a dull Boy.” WE SELL THE NEW GimviE OF “ARCADA” PRICE $1.25 THE BEsT all round game out. Can be played on any flat piece of ground, or in win- ter time in the house. Come and see it. Footballs Base Bails Base Bats Cricket Bats Rubber Bal's Tennis Balls Tennis Racquets Hammoeks from 75 cents to $5.00 each. Develine Whistles, 10 cts. each, Children’s Garden Tools, 25. to 75c. per set. Croquet Sets, from $1.00 a set, up. Buckets, Shovels, for the little ones. et¢.. Haszard & Moore Heedg uaiters for Sporting Goods. We Have Just Received : :: Another lot of Ladies’ Fine Shoes for summer wear. Also a full line of Misses and Children’s Boots and Tie Shoes. W, H, STEWART & C0. FRIDAY our many custemers. have so much to say about. Ch’town, May 21, 1890. London House Building. aand OF MAY We wii] be ready for business in our new store, which has been fited up in first-class style, placing us in a position to attend to the fancy of When you call ask us to ehow you our $18.25 Worsted Suits which we S.A. McDONALD, Leading Fashionable Tailor, Queen Street. A few doors east from our old etand. TO-NIGHT ! Shirts, Ties. Hosiery, Underclothing, T. J. HARRIS, LONDON HOUS! Buttoned a eS ED Pa a THE WONDERFUL CHEAP MEN .. THE.. DRESS OCCASION is the time when you need someting a litt! nicer than “your best dress.” We have been exceedingly fortunate in our spring styles in dress goods; as a proof they are selling faster than usual, Hundreds of ladies are buying biack goods at the People’s Store. New Serges & Cashmeres Just in DONT FAIL TO SEE OUR SOc. BLACK CASHMERE It’s a marvel at the price. W.A. WEEES & CO. Au NEW HAT. Do You want One? We have them in all sizes, shades and shapes, at very low prices. DD. A. BRUCE, Canada’s Famous Tailoring Establishmer* BLACK OR TAN. Charlottetown, May 16, 1893. $2.75 Laced Boots for Men, in Tan or Black—stvlish, serviceable and quick sellers, W. H. SPEWART & C6. LONDON HOUSE BUILDING. % To good quality tweed, this let we will close out at cost. IT WILL PAY YOU Buy Clothing and Hats of Us. A lot of 75 boys suits from 5 to 10 years of age, of extra There is nothing wrong about these suits, but are sample lot, and we can afford to close them cut cheap—lvok at them. go for 35c. each. 98e. 50 boys felt hats for 35c., worths 50c to 75c, the lot will Barguins in new fclothing. Our pants for beats them all. J. 6. MACDONALD & CO. Charlottetown, May 18, 1896—dy Sarnge equisites Lawn Mowers, 12x14 & 16 in. Hnterprise Meat Choppers. Ice Cream Freezers, Gem & White Mountain. Gem Wire Netting. Spring Door Hinges. Clothes Wringers. Simon W. Crabbe Stoves & Hardware. WALKEs’s (ORNEK... cMIPIRE BLEND TEA Is the Tex that brings trade and pleases customers, two best. Every pound satisfactory, but remember that there are or three kinds of Empire Blend. Be suse and get the Forj'sale wholesale or retail by ¥. J MORRIS. ' ; +e eet ; 5 . Si _) Sais “ghee oth ta mF .o “ aos +EP art TES is Fi 8 ye ee Pets wh ‘a? ie ‘ ar he ef €t@ ne ‘?" FP i} eS ee" ie ‘i - * ee ?. heh ~ can “fa? $4 is “a? % : ipt * 27a Hs leet > ti; ¢ - t Lag. 9% ep get tee ~~ %: Oe | me > ore, s #2 BP: ae ES yi is 6 Beg Me aw ft aS Anbm aE team igel MO io Pas PaaS IRN ? « = ax we 22% ce meant ot eeetanaie” RM ina ts gulitigags sien Bing rt - *t-. o~ Rei eres - le mms: age BEB ci "a ar saat ee # “gm + oa se naan sama 9, ta’ i os, eaters Cas et" * at iy t * ae pe - ‘