Scalchi tw s a3 o wigs = The world’s famous con- = _ tralto who ap ypeared at 3 on by = Her Majesty gs Theatre, = — ; —_ = Montreal on Thursday — > night last—used the = = g = Beintgman & C0 3 iL = = . -~ : ee Piano = <¥ ~S In preference to any 4 : 3 oiune : s In the choice ofa piano Madam Scalchi, but £ follows Madame Albani, <= ; <B Pau Plaucon, Watkin = Mills, ard many other cele rated artists who have visited Canada There is only one great Heintzman Piano and we are agents for it— Call and inspect thee at our warerooms. = Miller Bros. Queen Street. rVPETTIDDRT eDreERORRCDrHDEORDED OnpHerHDpEND Connolly’s Building. saadbddded: wbbbbdaddadddddddtadd si - & Me AAAAMMAAAAAbAAbAde abd bab nc edd 444 a! te “Ae 2 2 Lines of iv cPhersons © hoes. Tes We want todraw your Ee -} ittention to— bE fase Ej $2.35 - Ladies Fine Dongola Es b$ = Oxford Self-tip — the + newest shape—‘Sensible, ‘3 heel as nice an Oxferd FE as a jady could wish for. $3.25 Ladies Fine Dongela Buttoned Boots— turn sule— extra well finished —comfortable shape— Lots of style—Lots of wear, . 1. K. JOST. te er’s Corner. a ' y 7 il st UNEXPECTED HAPPENS F Ch’town was OTTAWA lay you wouid been sorry you were not cover x ° lll eve Avs tay ee ee = ee oe E F re Ta a: 2 tw aa pana PE PE Ts have ered for a large amount. | ‘ave good companies and ca uote you low rates. i. H. BEER eerie —_—_— Businecs Stand and Farm For Sale, ee Ite subscriber offers for sale a business stand adjoining Pisquid Station. The house is two stories containing a large shop and yms, frost proof cellar and barn, with re of land and one of the best orchards fen ro« one ac of ail kinds of imported fruit trees in the country, a very large quantity of currants, goose erties and a!! kinds of small fruit. The farm, bout one quarter mile from the business lot, co taining fifty acres of land, thirty acres clear with good lumber and water, and three acres of splendid marsh. Convenient to churches, schools, mills, steamboat shipping, marshmud and musslemud, will be sold at a Darga iy If not previeusly disposed of, the above Friday « y will be sold by Public Auction en Friday the 11th day of May, at 2 o’clock | m. the premises. Por 1 tiation e title, apply to Mr. A. A McLean, Charlotte own. ' MARY MILLER. Pisquid Station wy 2ins dy lin. elit eSBeeeee “4628 @ 'S* AT é MASON’S STORE e ¢ You can get the latest Canadian ¢ and American newepapers received ®& by mail each night. ( + Drop in if you want a paperor * magazine or book tor-ad. Fruit, ¢ Confectionery, Tobacco, Cigere etc, y 6 when you’re passing this way. fR. af Mason } Sere Been <« 2K Bo a | ince, afraid to bring on an election. | from THE DAILY BKAMINBR, GHARLOTTRTOWN, APREL 30, rg00 ‘|THE DAILY EXAMINER 1900 | | APRIL 30, | OTTAWA AND HULL. White there may be aci«crepancy in the | estimates of the losses by the fire which a few days ago swept over Hul! aod Oitawa t is beyoud a doubt that the cor fisgration wae a mostdisastrous one. Much valu able property has ben distroyed and hundreds of peop'e are homeless and desti tute. The need of relief ia very urgent and it is pleasing to hear that a good ree | pense is being mede to the appeal for help [n Ottawa the relief movement began ear- ly, Sir Charles Tupper being the first may W hile burning he sent one bundred dollars to the beard from. the fire was yet office of The Citizen newspaper for the benefit of the sufferers, LIBERAL CONSERVA- TIVE PROSPECTS Tue Liberal-Covservative party throughout Canada is very much alive to- day. fact and are, like the Liberals in this prov- But the handwriting is cn the wall, and when The Liberal Leaders recognize this the election is held the Liberals will get their quietas. Quebec, which the Liberale fondly hoped would stand by them, is falls ing into line with the other. provincas, and when the time be with sound, A good idea of the feeling iu that province may be obtained by reading the report of the recent meeting of the Sir John A. Macdonald Club in Montreal, at which Mr, D. A. McCaskill, a leading business man of that city, was elected president. Here is an extract from the report of the meei~ ing including a summary comes will heard no uncertain of President | McCaskill’s epeech : “He (Mr. McCaskill) was not only bopetul of victory, but he was abso- } the people being English, were only too | P. E ISLANDES IN BLOEMFONTEIN | (Continued from rst Page.) Food stuft is very dear, for you must re- member this was the Free State head-~ | quarters and as no provisions came into the place for about five months aod the | Boers getting all they could you can imagine how hort the stures would be. Prices ran about like this: bread Ils, to ls. 6d. per loaf ; golden syrup 2s. 6d. per | | | tin ; preserve 2 to 3s. ee lin and very | scaroe at that; butter 2e, 6d. to. $s. per Ib ; condensed milk 28.; meals 3 to bu. 4 liquor 10s. per bottle ; Basses ale 53. per bottle; cigars 6d. to ls. 6d.; tobacco} none~ except Boer tobacco; sugar 24. ; i tea 58.; coffee samme, and 80 on, After we were here a day the Army | Service Corps took over all the bake shops and flour and are now making bread for the treops. The citizens have to get an) order from the military authorities for } flourand bread. We are not allowed into | the town until] afier 2 o’elock and then | only five percent of the regiment at ons time and we have te have passes; Jist here I must tell youa trick five of the | Island boys played. All day it had been | raining and we were wet totheskin. Jusi at dark a certain persoo, whom you know well, suggested that as al! the blankets | were wet, and we too, and as there were | three inches of mud all over our camp | grounds, that we steal dowa and get into a | certain bouse, the people of which we! hadonly just got acquainted with and | there spend the nigat in comfort. They | gotto the house and told the plan, and} glad to let them have a epare room. There they spent the whole night ia their wet | clothes, writing letters and emoking for | they were too wet to lie down, They had | atime fooling the picquets to get to town, | and had to do what was against con- | ecience—tell a few fibs, but they did the | trick and arrived im camp in_ the morning al] U. K., no one being any the, wiser. [gota pass the second day andj started to do the town, and, as in every | Other part of the world, the first man | whom I got iato conversation with was a Canadian, from Ontario, who had been i here eome 12 or 13 yeare. His name is} Mr. Peterson, and | tell you he showed | me all that wasto be seen in the town, | The first place we went to was the Church of Eogland Cathedral, and it is one of the finest little churches you would want te see, beautifully fioished inside, something like St. Paui’s at home, with a beautiful whive marble floor, beautiful pipe organo, lutely certain that Sir Charles Tupper would sweep the country, and he be- lieved that in this great triumph the | Sir John A. Macdonald Club would} play an’ important part. In his busi. | ness be had met fair-minded men from every province of the Confederation, | and they ali told ministration’s pending doom. Old poli- teians aod men of wide experi-~ ence, declared that at the next! election Ontario will send sixty sup- porters of Sir Charles Tupper to the ~ sere of Commoner, while west of Lake Superior the liberals ovly dare claim'one lone supporter, Mr. McCaskill did Dot | believe that even this cold comfort would | be voucheafed to them when the ballots came to be counted. He was confident that the three maritime provinces w ould fall eplendidly into line, and that Quebec | sbould at a very conservative estimate re- turn 25 con:ersatiye members. “These statements were all applauded by the members of the clut,ind the cheers were increased when the president-elect proclaimed the men now in power a party of obstruction and «destruction while he said that the Coneervatives were the pro- gressive and constructive party. As a Nova Scotian, he could not but refer with pride .to euch great men as Sir John Thompson, and Sir Charles Tupper, whom his native province bad given to Canadian pubiic life and he had no_hesi- tation in saying that the present revered leader of the Liberal-Conservative party was one of the greatest statesmen the British Empire had produced.” This view is certainly most encourag~ ing. But it is believed that the turnover in Quebec will be much greater than in- dicated by Mr, McCaskill. There, as well as elsewhere, the? Liberal following bas largely decreased, _— - - To be able t> read aloud well is to be re- garded as an accomplishment. Minard’s Litiment Relieves Neuralgia, In every woman’s heart is implauted the love of home. Saas Bicycle Re Caieful and prompt serviee i — | glass wincowe. | you have ever seen Vernon River Church the story of the a | red brick but some kind of white etone. | vert «chool in connection with it. The mej- Bicycle Livery 20 new up totdate Bicycles f> walnut and mabegany seats aod stained There is aiso @ Convent In copnection with it and about six nune, Next we visited the Romau Catholic | Church, it is also a fine building, and if you’ve seen one like this, only it is not of There is al-o a convent and puns and acon- ority of the church goers here are Evglign churck people. We also visited ceveral Otber fine churches, you may call them Free State Churches if you like. Altogetber there are about 12 or 14 churches in the town and seyeral fiue schoois—pearly every denomination has achurch ofits Own, and tois surprised me more than anything for we were led to believe there were not many church people out here; but I doubt if you would find any city in Canada where you see as many churches for the population We cext vie:ted what you might call a nice little museum. I spent-a whole heur ia this building and only wished ! could epend a day, for to me it was really inter esting. Alitheanimals of South Africa and other parts of the world were gathered together, also hundreds of birds and and insects and lots of other curiosities that I will perhaps never seeagain. They tell me it bas taken yeare to get them togetber ard that the most of them were bought by Paul Kruger some years ago in Europe. They even had al! the old P. E. Ieland stau:ps and coins, and several other relics from our Island heme. They have a collection of wnedals and I saw even the North West medal among them, so you see tney havea fairly good collegtion of everything. Even our maple leaf now adorns their tables, Next we went to a restaurant and had a luach. The girl who waited on us, when we sat down, started a@ music box playing, and you could not guess the tune it played, viz, “The Red, White and Blue.” We looked at her in surprise and she eaid to me, “Three weeks ago we dared not play that.” After we had satisfied the cravings of the inner man we started for the Parlia- ment Buildings, and there a pleasant sight met myeyes. The Free Staters were piling in and banding up their arms, and (Continued on 5'h page.) r hire byjtbe hour or day, pairs n this department. fe , "arses ta ae span sca eacamarass a cape eee NK GORE Ke BOK OS aie NSS) Bie br aS < = correct. gig and be in it ? 5 JAS. PATON & Co. WEARING. Paton’s Smart Stylish Spring Coats. Paton’s Swell Tailor-made Suits. Paton's Silk Blouses forevening wear. Paton’s New Spring Waists. Paton’s Tailor-made Walking Skirts. Paton’s up-to-date Millinery. Paton’s New French Sailors. Paton’s New American and English Sailors. Paton’s New Summer Cotton Wash Goods Paton’s New Summer Crash Goods. Paton’s New Crash Skirts. Paton’s New Underskirts. Paton’s New Spring Gloves. Paton’s New Swell Dress Costume. Paton’s New Pique Skirts, Paton’s New Duck Skirts. Paton’s New Metalic Skirts. Paton’s New Bicycle Skirts. Why ? Because the style and price is, Why not wear one of the above garments a WHAT WOMEN: 78 ——— ‘ARE -- i iS3)} a. WS ie aa x ee Re SS) GS} ox ID er en rn: eee SOMETHING To interest you ABOUT ENGRAVING. May be you have some = a odd pieces of silverware tv be engraved, CUOU*UAEWUOUEUSGEONONOEENTUEOEONEVTETONEVEDNNONELEINcatE Engraving not only beautifies the acticle, but is a protection in case of it? being lostor stolen. prettily engraved on one dozen Your initial forks or spoons for 35 cts. Special prices for quantities, oo ee P, i, Island Klectric an 39 lar 5 ve rge = vt ' Noticc is hereby given that the annual general meeting of the stock- holders of the abo~e company will be held at their office in Charlottetown, | on Wednesday, the ninth day of May MARK WRIGHT & C0., LTD Home fBiakers, next, A. D, 1900, at the hour of 12 e’clock noon. Dated this 26th day of April. 1900 JAMES WADDELL, Supt. and Treas. eod Re te ee ne IT PAYS: 10 BUY AT PERKINS, ete 8 Bu I Hr The fact} that this store shows a bigger and far super- ior stoek of Dies: (Goods than any other store in the city is the ehief reasen why you should come here te buy your Dress Goods. <A few prices: Fancy Dress Goods 16c¢ up. Black and Navy Serges 25c up Ripleys Serges 48c up. Black Poplins 50¢ up. Black Blister Cloth $1.20 up. PERKINS The Mil linery Leaders. ti ans hw + ’