5 ; 4 THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MARCH 27, 1s#9 — ee eS ae J. J JOHNSTON Real Estate Agent Real Fatate boushtand so'd on Com missio Estate > Rented, M anaged. Honsea Reats§Collected. Stamper Block C :arlottetown, P.E. I. PROPERTY FORSALE A «a proof tave containing 9 rooms with frost- ellar, good stabl«; also a store suitable for dwelling house Above properties are situated on Bayfield “tree! in Charlottetwnh, Terms easy. A genuine Bargain J. J. TOHNSTON teal EstateAgent, Chariottetown FOR SALE.—A plot of land in- the west ern pertofghecity. Price $125.00 |J J John- ston, /ieil E-tate Agent FOR 3ALE.—Several Building Lvs in the virinit - of Ravfieid St, will be sold cheap. JJ Tohne' on, Real Estate Agent. Pownol Street, FOR SALE, —A house on near tie jail, containing ¥ rooms, Good yard andla~*e barn on premises, J J Johnston Real fF «tete Afient FOR SALE.—In Charlottetown Cemmon in the vicinity of Brighton, about 6} acres of land «il be soladcheap. JJ Johnston, Real Ks- tate Avent, FOR SALE—A house on Euston Street, in cicini of Gallows Hill. This house con- taine § rooms and kitchen, in god order, and is heated with hot air. Good stable and large gard in connection, will be sold cheap. Apply to J J Johnston, Real Estate Agent FOR 3ALZ.—A horse sitaated on the cor ner of Pleasant Street and St. Peter Road House contains 19 rooms has a gond cellar and stable on premises. The house Is built 8 years and is in excellent condition. Apply toJ J Johnston Real Estate Agent. FOR SALE—Three acres of 'tandin Char- lottetow 1, common, nar residence of Arthur Peters, “sq. will be sold cheap anton easy terms, J J Johnston, Stamper Block. FOR %4{LE—about four (4) acres of landin the (i! vy of Charlottetown, can be d' vided in- tote ety bailding lots, a genuine Bargain, 1 J Job aston, Stamper Block FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE—A double tenement house on ‘‘hestnut Street, now in course of erection. Will be compleied in one monttk Will be sold cheapor exchanged for property in nother partofthecity. J J Johnston, Real Estate Agent. FOR EXCHANGE.—A three tenement hous:s, situate on Euston Street, newly built, brings \n a large rent, will be exchanged for asnita>le place in an ther »~art ofthe city J J Joh nsion, Real Estate Agent. FOR 3ALE—A twvostory double tenem2n. bou‘e on Bishop Street,each tenement con- ainss x roonsand large yard. Apply ioJ J ohost on, stamper Block, Houses To L3t — ——— TO LET.—A houseon King Street. nn near Powoel St, <table and yard; $5.50 ne ermouth. J J Johnston, Kea] Estate Ageut TO LET.—House on King Street, con- B 'aining 7 rooms, rent $5.00 per month, J Johnston, Real Estate Agent. TO CET.—House on King Street, near Merchents Bank of P. K. Island, taining 6rooms rent $5.50 per month Jd Joonston. = TO LET,—A bew house on Brighton am ltoad. heared with hot water, vaths, electric Ught, ete. Will be rented toa 90d tenant reasonably, J J Johnston, Real tatate Agent. TO LET—Dwellipg bous:; and shop on lower Queen Street, house contains eight rooms. Large warehouse attached; everything in Qrstciuss condition. Rent $1700, rent of house «lone $100.00,, Aoply toJJ Johnston, Real F state Agent Ch’town, TO |.@f.--O1 the corner of Prince and Water Streets, a house containing 13 rooms. This p sce is convenient to railway and boats. Rent moderate. Apply toJ J Johnston, Real Katate Agent, J. 3, JOHNSTON, {eal Estate Agent, dtam per Blocg, Ch’town WOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given t)at an appli- cation will be made to the Legislature of the Province of Prince Elward Island, at ite next Session, for an act to vest in the City of Cuarlottetewn, the title to ail that tract, piece or paresl of land, situate lying and the City of Charlotte- town, being Town Lots num- bers Sixteen (16), Seveatees (17) Ninety Three (95), Ninety four, and part of Town Lot No, (18) 10 the 4th handred of Town Lots,in Charlottetown, being the property koown as the West Kent Street School land and premisee. Dated at Charlotietowno this 1s: day of March, 1899. eing 0 JAMES WARBURTON, Mayor of Charlottetown ,. DAVISON, City Clerk. 5l---dy 4w & R. Gaz. Canadian Tacific Railway. TRAVEL - IN - COMFORT BY — TQURIST SLEEPERS eavins Montreal every THURSDAY at li a. m. rthe PACI®FIS COAST, accommo- datieg scond c!ass tassengera for all potnta, in Canadian North W est, british Columbia, &* Berth Pates— Montreal to Winnipeg ; ievetvens aon Deeerncds ta CORON Fis Vv cisn ‘ivdeenaese 6 59 Montreal to Keveilsione............+ eccvcee 700 Momtr:al (0 V amOOQ VO. scceeccccccccccesee OO Dieetrull, te: eiceien...o ok ccc occas --- 800 For Pa sage Kates to ali points in Uanava, Wesrean Unirep Svares and to Japan, Cutns, ‘novia, Hawattan IsLanps, Avsti:aLisA aod Munina, aod aleo for de Aclupive advert stag oo scver and maps, write lo A. ll] NOTMAN, Ass. Genl. Paes, Agt., St, Jobe, N. B. A lemperance Man Voices the Indig- nation of the Temperance THE PLEBISCITE. } People. In the course Of his speech on the address Hon. Mr. Foster aid : The First Minister had touched the plebiscite. Characteristic again. T earry his own dealings on the plebiscite question he threw the blame on Sir Charie- Tupper because he ooly dropped a tea into the bosem of the prohibitioniets anc did not say he would do anything more. Ifthe hon. gentleman had dropped tear- of repentance for his long course of action on this and otner matters he wou! be nearer making bis peace with the pow- er above than he is at present, But, Says the hon. geotlemea, we have broken ow pledge. The prohibitioniste, be Pays, made 10 demznd. That will be new: to some of the gentlemen bebiad him, be cau-e his supporters wbo conducted the elections in 1896 and the campaigo be- fure went to the prohibitionists every where and said: “See what Laurier has pro- wiad you. Tbe Tories never promised you anything like that. Vote for Laurier and the Liberals. They will give you what you want.” The First Minister knows that he profited by such s'atemente and the gentlemen siting behind him know that they profited by them ; yet the Premier has the assurance to say here that be madeno pledge. It is a mere casuiat’s plea and nothing else. The whole thing was simply a device to catch votes. It was silly totbink that a great po itical party cou'd meet im coo- vention aod make public declara ons by which they pledged themselves to a certain line of action and then declared that those pledges were made only to the party Such covéuct showed a sublime disdain for the common intelligence of humanity. Who was it toat introduced that pro- hibition plaok in the Libera! pl.tform? It was the pres'nt Minister ef Agriculture. There was noimplication with regard to that resolution, nor was avy mention made at the convention when it was adopted tbat this plebiscite plank was simply given on an implied condition that at least one half of the toa! votre should be in favour of it before it would be enacted into law. AtStratford before an audience of 4900, on the 9.b of June, Mr. Laurier, that was, is thus reported to have spoken. “ Mr. Laurier’s attertion was given to proni- bition. He said : “Up to this moment the question of prohibitoo has aever been ap- proached by electors free from other cons sideration, Wedeem it wiser to separate it from all considerations and to test the public feelng on the matter. We shall do eo when we shall come into office, as | believe we shall. Then I am asked what is tobe done? The answer is plain. I aw by nature a democrat, I believe in democratic government 4nd above al! in a coositutione! goveroment and the only way to act under ja democratic and consti- ‘utronal government is that the ;eople must govern and their command must b> obeyed. As tbe people shall speak so shall the auty of the goverrment, if that government be in the haudsof the Liberal party.” This explanation of the Liberal polity on the prohibition question was apparently eatsisfactory trom the applau-e with which it was received, | upon A CRUEL HOAX. Thies plebiscite vote is 23 per cent., but oh the the cruelty of it, and the aomapli pess of it,and the lack of anything like public frankness of i', to bring the two sections of the people of thie country to- ge'berin a heated contest over a great prineiple and to keep eecret from them the uli:matum which he knew would dash down irreparab'y every hope they bad ot carryingtna'jwhich they believed to be good fur this coustry. You may be an anti- probibitionist and | may be a prohibvition- ist, asd we both way be bonert io our tm our beliefs. Neither of us would impugn the honeety of the other; neither of ne, f w bad a spark of weanliness within u- wovld think it was proper or manly to gain the alvantage by reiting conte: ~ tants to work under secret and implicd conditions which utieily handicapped one of them, and gave the victory withouta shadow uf doubt to the other. Such is unfair in the rales of the ring; euch i+ equally uvfair aod unmanly in public politics. But it is characteristic ot th hon gentlemen and it is characterist'c of his government. They seem to have lost avy teeling of bonest meu, that they are bound by their privileges and bouud to be frank aod man'y with the people, bound todo what they said they will do, when they were eeeking for power ard for place aniforposi.ion. Tue churches, and the unious, and (he earnest men and women ot thie country demand it, that this manly and track treatment should have been given to them; they deve not bad it, My own Opinion is that they will think about this matter, and think about it very seriously, and above all hold this on high: That the question at thie present rnoment is NOt as to what should constitute a re quisite m*jority, bat the question is as to the pelicy and the course which led men avd women on for years aod then pitted | them ‘nto @ coniert where one party was | haudicepped by @ secret implication and a | condiion which effectually put them out | of al possibility ot success. (Cheers.) | —~ —> 0 « —— Snow and Influenza. | ! ; ' | ’ ! Berits, March 22.—There hes been a recurrence Of snow storms accompanied hy severe cola, throughout Germany, and a great amount of damage has been done to vegetation. ‘The weather has eggravuted the influerzs epid mc. In Beilin alore yesterday morning only there were cver twobundrd deah trom influenza. The ecbools have been closed in East Pruseia this week owing to the spreading of me ; disease. POPE'S CRITICAL DATE. A Prophecy Which Implies: Ten Years More of Life. Rome, March 22.—The Pope apozars to have recovered from his serious indi«n03i tion which gave rise to the recent alsrm- ing reports, His Holivess bas never hal astrong constitution, About bis 20th year he believed that he was wasting with phthsis aod wrote an | quent piece of Latin on his approaching id, “* Why Flatter Thyself?” Pen years later, when he was apostolic leleyate at Benevento, he came near dying of a pernicious fever, It was thought that iewas loe'. He was saved by an act, hen thooght foolhardy of Dr. Volpie, phyeic au to the King of Naples, plung- bath of cold water at the moment of the most violent attack of the fever. Leo XIII, has not gooe out of the vast inclorure which surrounds the Vatican io twenty yeare, and yet as surpassed the years of life of Pius the IX , who alone of wll the popes had exceeded the years of Peter. In the eyes of superstitious Romans Leo XIII bas performed another miracle of loogevity. He has escaped acritical date, one determined by a cabalistic exlculation which set the end of bis life for the year 1892. Itis said all hs predecessors in this century—Pius IX _, Gregory XVL., Pius VIIT., Leo XIL, Pius Vil,—nave obeyed the law :f figures Leo XIIL., al- one has escaped it, and the same calcule~ tion, if it were exact in his case, would assign bim ten years more of existence, which would make the pontiff eurpass even the age of Doge Dindolo. ing him into a —— - HE’S A DESPERATE CHIEF _— Aguinalde Silencing Weak kneed Natives With Death Mania, March 22.—It is reported on good authority that Aguinaldo is tsking exireme measures to suppress signe cel- cu ated to cause a ce-sation of hot livs Twelve .ducre ts of the plan ofiv epe:!- ence, residents of Manila, have beeu con- demned to d ath becaure they wrote edviriog surrender, and a'l loyal Filipivos bave teen called ujooto perform the pationel service of despatching them. Oa Friday last General Lagirds visited Malolos fur the purpose of advising Aguinaido te quit. He argued with the insurg~aot leader and atiemp ed 'o convince him of the folly of his persistence io the face of overwhelmni:g odds. Aguinaido was farious at the advice and orderee Generel Legardato be exicuted immcdiatly, The unfortunate general was prompt y decapitated, Among the incidents of Sunday’s fizht- ing was the corines: exhibi ed ty acom paoy of ths Washington voluateers who crossed the river in @ native canoe unde- ah-avy fire—fifteen being iaken across on each trip of the emall boat—to at- a k the enemy’s trenches, The isabilie of the commissicnary train toke- pup withthe advance | dto considersble suffering, and many of the men were completely exhausted when they were recalled ad, fell ng from the ranke, were strurg slong for a distance of about six miles, numbers returning to camp in the artiil-ry ambulances, which weie alwaysclo-e up othe lanes. Che work of shese -mbulaoces was especially worthy of mention. —— > . 2 - ne - —— Rice Point Notes eee We are pleased to rote that Mv, Neil Me- E.cbern has resumed work after a -evere attack of lag rippe. Our echoo! is doing remarkably well] onder the careful mavagement of Miss Lowther We are sorry to hear thet one of our young ladies is going to leave here, intend- ing (0 take up her abode in the uear vc n- ity <f Souris, Mr.Charles McDongall, of this place, is at present visiting fri-nde in Argyie Shore. McEachern & McDougal!, two of our veteren fishermen, bave purchased a fine boat called the Maggie B, from Mr. D. McKinnon, Canoe Cove. Bitty raz Kip. March 23rd, 1899. ee cee ae enced cae an — How Japanese Catarrh Cure Cures Nasal Catarrh. Japanese Catarrh Cure is a penctrating, soothing, and healing pomade, which is ine serted up the nostrils by a small camel's hair pencil. The heat of the body melts this pomade and the patient breathes the soothing medica- tion through the nostrils, and the nasal chan- nelsopenup. The stuffed-up feeling in the head leaves, and the person can breathe natur- ally through the nose. The dull pains across the head cease. Continual use for a skort time soothes the mucous membrane until the sore- ness and inflammation are all gone. The bad odor of the breath passes away, and the lost senses of smell and hearing return; The drop- ping in the throat is permanently checked, and the nose does not stop up towards night. The discharge from the nose grows less and less, and finally stops altogether. It docs not drive the disease into the throat or lungs or into the ears, asso often is done by washes, douches and the temporary relief catarrh powders an snuffs which contain cocaine and other fatal alkaloids, which relieve at the time. but give rise to a false security. -}apanese Catarrn Cure is a thorough antiseptic, is cleansing and heal- in its action, aud soothes the minute ap- plied. Six boxes are absolutely guaranteed to eure any case of nasal catarrh, or money will be refunded. A free sample will be sent to any person suffering from this most dangerous dis- ease. Enolose scent stamp. Sold by all drug- —_ Scents. Six for , or by mail. ‘Ad. ress, The Griffiths & Macpherson Co., 121 Church Street, Toronto, (laa Soild bh: Geo, ©. Hughes. Emyvale Notes. {| ..~ The people of thie section “have finished bauling their coal avd rails. Hauling coal is a great fever ronnd Enyvale now, as wood is very scarce. One dollar per load was paid for the schol wood this year, but the worthy trusiees intend furnishiog the school next year with a coal stove. Our echool is doing well under the careful guidance of Mr. Patrick McCloe- key. Mr. Patrick Callaghan is home ona visit from Bostoc. Hehas completed a ruler for Emyvale School, which is made of seven differeat kinds of wood which he took wih h.m from Boston. Mc. B. Wyme & Sons, var tal «nt paiot- era, are now oainting asign for Mr. P. D. Hagan’a new store at Trvon., Mr. Thomas McClorkey, one of the most prosperous farmers of this district, has imported a pair of Piymoath Rock chickens frum the Experimental Farm, Oot. Mr. McUloskey intends fattening a large quantity of chickeas for the fattea ing stations. £ HAKESPEARE. Ger One.—The Prince Edward I-land Magazine is for sale throughout the Island at the following places. Price 5 cents : Georgetowo—Hon. D Gordon’. Sommerside—Small & Bearisto’s and D. K. Currie’s. 8 uris—D. Sutherland's, Mt. Stewart—Go-don Douglass’. Montague—F. S. Maedonald’s. Cardigan—L. H. Owen. Alberton—G. 8. Mutrart’s. Tignish—J. A. Brennan’. —_-— ‘hronice Disease wi Ruaptare Cured by Dr. Clift. Diploma reg- istered in U.S. and Canada, Send Stam; for information, or call at Truro, N. 8. office in Merckants’ Bank of Halifax Buildiag; Hours, 11 to 1; 4 to 8 to 9, daily—-except Wednesdar, he is » Revere Hotel in S*ictom, and on Friday at Windsor Hotel, in New Glasgow. The Prince Edward Island Magazine is for sale at all Bookstores and ath. H Mas. on’s news stand. Price5 cents When you are nervous and sleepless, take Hood’s Sarsapari‘la. It maker toe nerves strong aod gives refreshing sieep. When the new chicken fattening station is started there willbe a big demani for | Plymouth Rock chickens. It wil! pay you to raise them. Prepare your-elf oefore band by purchasiog a setting of first-class Plymouth Rock eggs for hatching from Alfred Riggs, Granville St, Citv. He wl! be ready in about a week to supply ) @ wiih eggs from the dnest jot of Piymous Rock fowls he has ever bred from. d&*” ay — JAMES KELLY Wholesale Commiesior Dealer in all kinds of FRESH FISG. Ells and Smelts, Specialties, NO. 8 LONG' WHARF OCoNSIGNMENTS SOLICITEL BOSTON MASS Write for «tencils and particulare. NOTICE . The annra! meeting of the Provincia Branch of ‘he «em nion Tamperasce Alliance of P E. Isla ad, will be he'dinthe Y. M C. A. Ha’! Uvarl ttetowr, on Thursday March 30th at 2 ne A full attendance of Temorrance weil ers is requested. as business of import- ance will be brought before the meeting, Watches Watches in Nickel] cases $300 to $10.00 » oo Silver in 790 » 30.00 " Gold n 10.00 » 190.00 Chains for Ladies $1.00 to $20.00 Ribbon Guards 2de Gera Rings 1.00 to 50.00 Cuff studs and tinks 20 to 10.00 Collar Studs 05to 200 Brooches 25 to 20.00 Spectacles 50 to 1000 Silverware nearly all kinds, in good quality plate. Also some in solid silver: BW. TAYLUR Victoria Jewelry Sto Twenty Dollars Reward Any person giving information leading 'o the apprehension of the party or parties who broke into my house on North River between the dates of the 23rd and the 29th inst, will receive the above reward. R.M. YOU? # are sho ving a magnificent assort ment of new Hats for spring summer. NEW C All sizes, all styles, all ; qualities. PROWSE 2 BROS. The Stylish Hatters dye oybye ordre ovbye onbre oxbyrs vuby b ondye «bye orbys orbys hype ol BREREREE ERPS