THE DAILY EXAMINER ° - THE DAILY EXAMINER FEBRUARY 24, L896 LIBERAL FINANCIERING wrovince Of Ontar re sual feature There is the i ‘ ‘ varia > leti t which a perations of al! Liberal ar’ i ‘ » deficit . 7 au But the 4 Ma and |} pire points out that to boring N 1p to this apparer tly reasonable Asis 43 been necessary to sell anuities ‘ eans to worto add to the s ‘ i by th process , $171,52 The amount by N i s worse t toa 4 ast year Bote I s 3 { * Taxes and ex s have gone ipa The gove me of Untario a few vears ago appropriated the licensé fees w rmerly went the unic palities and obtained $290,000 last year , s source alone This amount was supplemente i by means of heavy “succes- sion duties” which realized, last year, $295,000 The cause of these added taxes is readily oe years, we are ‘cost of “civil government, or the the management of the departments, has ped up from $184,000 in 1885 to $244, 090 in 1895 This is an addition of $60,000 Legislation has been raised from $12 ® to $150,0€0, an increase of $25,- H00 The administration of justice has risen from $354,000 to $153,000, an in- crease of $90,000. Education has gone 3,000 to $693,000, an addition up from $53 up from $ ¢ $160,000. The maintenance of public jwstitutions, which cost $613,000 ia 1885, now costs $799,000, a leap of $186,000.” In the old days, subsequent te Coufedera mservatives were in tion, when the C office at Toronto, the «¢ xpenditures of the Province were about $2,000,000. Now they are nearly $4,000,000. Ontario is like every other Province under grit rule—it is financially going to the bad. Now the question is, if deficits, increas- taxation, increasing ing debt, increasing expenditures are the results of Liberal Government in the Provinces, how can reasonable men hope or expect that Lib- ¢ral Government for the Dominion at large would result in economy, reduced taxation and surpluses ? —__—- 2 + e+ = —__ —__-- —___—— NOTES AND COMMENTS. —Life is rich in what it gives, and not in what it gets. —The most unhappy husband has been located in Pasadena, Cal. Heis so hen pecked that his wife will not permit him to get a divorce. — We are told that all the indictments against Erastus Wyman in the courts have been dismissed; but we are not told why Erastus pow now spells it with a “y.” —The College Observer: Every stu- dent 1s alive to the baneful effects of strong drink, and sbould hail with de- light the better enjorcement of temperance laws. —The Patriot has lately had some very sensational stories about the Government. But as they were not accompanied by the necessary affidavits we may conclude that they were fictitious. existing —Mailand Empire: Mr. Laurier has missed a grand opportunity. He should have attended the viceregal ball and 1e presented the Dake of Wellington lurking within the lines of Torres Vedras. —Word comes from Mentreal :hat the report that Dominion Government contemplated buying 12,000,000 acres of land from the Canadian Pacific, is referred tothus by the Vice-President of the Company: “We bave never dis- cussed, spoken or thought of any such scheme.” —St.Joha San: The appropriation of three millions to arm the Canadian militia is an object lesson to our fellow subjects ta Great Britain as well as to our foreign neighbors. It shows that wein Canada do not propose to play the role of help'ess hostages. Sir Richard Cartwright will perhaps observe that hostages are usually deprived of their arms. —From the report that the C. P. R. had offered to sel] the Government 12, 600,000 aeres of land the Guardian has reached mclusion that the offer is to he accepted, and that Sir Charles Tupper 1@ at the bottom of it. The Guardian is Just a little “too previous;” for papers re- ceived on Saturday night bring the news that the report is not true. Mail and Empire: Tarte pledges a Liberal majority of twenty from Quebec in the Dominion The Brantford Exoositor adds, “and he will be able to deliver the goods.” This is a curious parallel tothe case of Mercier. Mercier pledged a Liberal m-jority of twenty-five The pledge was accepted, the mouey stol- en, and a majority, though not quite so large as expected, was secured. —It appears that Mr. D’Alton McUarthy ditfers scmewhat from the Lords of the Privy Council. They say that the min- ority in Manitoba hive “a grievance” which the law requires to be remedied, Mr. McCarthy says tl at “ no abuses” hare been proven to exist in the present school of Manitoba. It is, perhaps, un fortunate thatthe Lords of the Privy Council speak with authority and Mr. Me- Carthy does not the back the ci elections, system ~The report that travellers in England for German lager beer firms, sav their orders have fallen off 75 per cent. since iimperor William sent his famous mes- Sage to President Kruger, the orders now go:ng to English brewers, is being widely published in tne United States papers, and is like] The British market has great attraction for the Amer icans as well as for the Germans, and they wou’t lose it for a trifle. : iy lo Inake for peace. —In the House of Commons a few davs ago, Hon. David Mills. Canada’s foremost authoriiy On international law, made an important announcement: “I would like to call the attention of the Government,” be said, “t> h- fact that I have discovered inthe parliamentary library here severa] cld maps, some French and some Dutch, which gives the boundaries of the French and Dutch possessions in South America. and according to which the boundary line drawn is at least as extensive as the claim of the British Government.” —The “hel}- inspired hypocrite” puzzle is being solved. Jt appears from the Hali- fax Herald that during the Cape Breton election a barrister in North Sydney, a Liberal, and an old friend of Bishop Cam- eron, wrote the bishop, asking his views on the Manitoba school question. Bishop Cameron responded in a privat: letter. The l-tter was yerrymandered and then published in Halifax, whence the garbled version was telegraphed to the Toronto Globe, by which paper it was presente! as 1“mandement” read from the alar to} irive the Roman Catholics into the Tory | camp, whether they wanted to go or bot. | —The Independent : A man who died receutly left nearly all his money, about $25,000, to be expended on a monument to himself. All manner of amused and unfavorable comment has been made upon a will so out of harmony with the spir.t of the age. It has become an axiom that no man of means should live for himself. or use his wealth for self-aggrandizement. When a Stewart or a Gould dies without having distributed any appreciable part of his accumutations for the benefit of hu manity, and simply hands them down to his legal heirs, his life is considered barren one. With unusual opportunities to serve his fellowmen, he has slighted them all and lived practically for himself. World: The opponents of talk very glibly of the great principles involved. The great prin- ciple involved is simply the right of the Roman Catholics of Manitoba to spend their own money in accordance with the dictates of their own consciences—a_rig!t thev bargained for i were solemuly —Chatbam the remedial bil and guaranteed befure Manitoba entered the They don’t ask for a cent of Pro- union. testant money, but merely for their own movey. Why not let them have what be- longs tothem? Why should we hump our backs, like cats in the presence of a strange dog, at a bill which provides that the school taxes which are taken from Catholics shall be returned to them for the support of their own schools? —Mr. Edison’s half-humorous suggestion that the labor of the next generation will consist of pressing a button calls to mind the immense advance in chemical appli- ances witnessed in the past eighty years. One of the most noticeable characteristics of human progress is its extreme inequal- ity. One century, even three or four cen- turies, advances the race not a whit, then a single decade produces implements and industries which alter the entire mode of living. The nineteenth century is pre- eminently the age of mechanism. The great principles of steam and electrica) power have been formulated and applied throughout the civilized world. Lately they have been ploughing by electricity in Saxony, setting up dynamos to de farm work in France and Moravia and generally substituting mechanism for hand labor. That this is being done in Wurope is worthy of note, for bone and sinew are cheap there, and as steps toward the pres- sing the button” ideal these developments are Of great interest. —Mr. Pacaud has gone on his marrow bones to the Bishop of Chicoutimi and admitted that what L’Electeur said con- cerning him was “false and scandalous.” The man who thus admits his guilt is a bosom friend of Mr. Laurier and editor of his caief organ in Quebec. —New Glasgow Enterprise: Sir Richard Cartwright, the grit leader at Ottawa, is on. record as follows. Nova Scotia—*The dry nurse and wet nurse of the worst brood of political Lood- lers in Canada.” The Maritime Provinces—*The streds and patches of the Dominion.” Manitoba—*The sink-hole of corruption for the Dominion. Scotchmen of Canada—“ People showing the predatory instincts of their race. Suck isthe type of men to whom the grita would hand over this fair yourg na- tion, bought with the toil and sweat and blood of our forefathers. Shame on the man, no matter what his politics may be; who wont resent these slanders on our fair province. Nova Scotia has the cre- dit of producing as able and pure-min:led and energetic statesmen as the world ever saw. —The large committee appointed by the annual conference of the Wesleyan Metho- dist Church of England to report concern- ing legal difficulties which stand in the way of extending the term of ministerial appointments, recently instructed a strong sub committee to act under the following instructions : “This Committee Leing of opinion that there is no generally satisfactory met’ od of extenidng the term of ministerial ap pointments without an appeal to Parlia- men’, appoints the foliowing sub-com mittee to prepare, first, a statement of facts and reasons in favor of such an ap- peal to Parliament, together with any other information which they may think fit; and, secondly, a statement of the con- ditions and safeguards under which legal relief from the rigid operation of the 11th c'au‘e of the Deed Poll might be rendered cafe and desirable.” The resolution, which was offered by the Rev. Hugh Price Hughes, was strongly oppo eed, but was finally carried by a vote of twenty to ten. It is the first step to- ward such legal changes in the deed of trust as will enable the denomination, if it sees fit, to modify its itinerant system. —Asa matter of fact, there have been under the Conservative Government many and large reductions of taxations, and they have been on articles of the widest con- sumption. Mr. Foster enumeratei some of them in the course of the last Budget speech. They, with the amount of taxa- tion which they represent, have been as follows : Tea, duty sholished ............. $13,454,009 Coffee, duty bolished......... 677,000 Tin, duty abolished ............. 1,188,000 Bill Stam ps RE io iiter 2,418,000 Newspaper postage abolished. 949,009 Anthracite coal,duty abolished 6,044,000 Sugar, duty reduced......... .+ 19,850,000 Window glass and molasses, duty reduced............ 520,000 Genersl reduction at time of OPTS PRTC saiceicee «sc nsene - 1,500,000 The total of these is nearly $47,000,000. The reductions were not all made at once. As the revenue grew more rapidly than the expenditure, remissions of customs taxation were made from time to time. The total is seen.” It is said, of course, that the reductions have been more than made up for by the original National Pol- icy imp>sitions. How much there is each man can calculate for himself. He will be a heavy consumer of imported mer- chandise whose share of customs taxation wou'd exceed the reduction implied by the complete removal of the duty on tea and coffee, and coal and tinware, and the r-ductions on sugar and window glass and molasses. The existing tariff makes free, or next to free, the great staples of dom- estic consumption. Ail Tooth-brushes, | Mirrors and Combs, twenty per cent. discount at Dodd’s Medical Hall. All goods remaining from our big white goods sale to be cleared out at 25 per cent. dis- count. See our advertise- ment.—Moore & McLeod. - NOTES LATEST NEWS Bill Nye, the humorist, whose illness was reported a few days ago, is dead. Madame Albani’s hand has been photo- graphed by cathode photography at King } ston, Ont, It is rumored at Hay ana that Gomez bas been wounded and Maceo killed. But neither rumor has been confirmed. It is said that the rumor that the Brit- ish Government is arranging for the pur- chase of Delagoa Bay, is without founda- tion. The National Armenian relief committee New York, bas vent $25,000 by cable to Miss Ciara Barton at Constantinople, and will send forward other sums immediately. Adam Turner, an undertaker, recently stood asa Parliamentary candidate for North Belfast, Ireland. He offered to “bury free” every maa whe would vote for bim. He was defeated. Manitoba Liberal papers are now pub- lishing “‘the official text” of Bishop Cam e1on’s Cape Breton election pastoral. As there was no pastoral, this “official text” must be the work of some kind of an in- 4 Fr d fabricator. A special despatch from Shanghai say- that advices from Corea announce thata Russian force supported the King of Corea in killing the Corean Ministers, and that the new Cabinet of Corea are puppets in t® pay of Russia. While a cage containing eight men was descending a coal pit at Legh, Lanca shire, Eng., on Thursday morning, the catches failed to werk and the cage crashed to the bottom of the pit. All the men io the cage were killed. Nothing is positively known as to what caused the dynamite explosion at Johaunes- burg. The latest estimate places the number killed at over a hundred. Many persous are missing. There is scracely a doubt that they were blown to pieces. Advices from Constantinople state that the Sultan has instructed Kostaki Pasha, Turkish ambassador in London, to invite England to regulate the situation in Egypt with suzerain power on the basis of guarantees being given for the communi- cations between India and England. William Belyea, of Carleton, N. B., was found dead in bed on Thureday morning. He had been melancholy, and had been watched by a young man who slept with him, lest he should commit suicide. But it seems that he had procured chloral and took a quantity sutlicient to cause death Pugilists can’t be so good outside of the ring. Recently Corbett was licked by a Philadelphia fireman, Jim Hall was beaten in a etreet scrap, George Lavigne attempt- to “de” @ newspaper man and was “done up brown” himself, Griffo was badly beaten inan impromptu fight with his manager, The war in Cuba is hurting a number of people up in Maine. Because of much of the sugar crop in the island being burn- ed, and little or no sugar being made this season, the bottom has dropped clean out of the hog-head-hoop business, which is usnally a flourishing industry in mapy Maine towns. 5 Charles Quimby and his wife, of Sand- wich, N. H., aged respectively 92 and 91 years, died within a few hours of each other last week. They bad been married seventy years, and their seven children, the youngest being about 50 years old, are all living. There bas not been a death in the immediate family of the aged couple in sixty-one years. There is an interesting instance of the result of Chrietian Endeavor work in the fact that when the society was organized in 1892 in Lamar, Col., only four persons would take the pledge. Since that time, however, the society has increased, and has supplied the only religious services in tle place, except the Sunday school, and from it a church has now grown. The German Socialists are now attack - ing the right of the Kaiser to absolute control of the discipline of the army. The Kaiser, it seems, can order the execution of a soldier without responsibility or trial. He is not likely to do this, but it would be better if he had not the power. Some of the much commented on growth of Ger- man Socialism seems to be due toa con- templation of things that should not be. Chicago was visited by the most singular meteorological phenomena recently that has ever come under the observation of the local weather observers. Black snow, yellow s2xow and brown snow f:lI in blind- ing clouds over the entire city, and re- ports from suburban towns brought the news that the vari-colored storm was not an exclusive Chicago produetion. Tele- graphic advices indicate that a storm pre- vailed throughout the entire State. An estate tbat was worth $20,000 when it got into the law courts 25 years ago was settled last week in Los Angeles, Cal. The estate wae left by Encarnacion Buelna in 1870. There was nobedy to claim the 42 cents that remained when the public ad- ministrator offered it in the superior ceurt last week, and the judge made an order directing that it be paid into the county treasury. W. Redmond, M. P, spoke at the meet- ing of the National League in Dublin re- cently. He said he thought that the gov- ernment would do someth ng for Ireland on the land question, and they had prom- ised to improve the industries of the conn- try. In doing these things the Parnellite party should help them, and they could do that without abating one jot of their de- mand for home rule. An elderly widower of Thurles, Ire., married a young girl, and after the cere-- mony entertained some friends at a bridal feast . While the feast was in progress, a number of young men attacked the house and broke the door, windows and furni- ture. The bride is said to have been ill- used, and received a black eye, and finally had to fly to a neighboring house for re- fuge. Having evicted the bridal party the raiders sat down and enjoyed the wedding breakfast. No reason is given for the con- duct of the attacking party. Mr. Chamberlain, the British Colonial Secretary, is a very able man; but he has been very sharply rebuked by an equally able man, President Kruger, of the Trans— vaal Republic, who tells him that he must not meddle with the internal affairs of that Republic. He had suggested reforms that were necessary to satisfy the desires of the Uitlandere; but President Kruger thinks that that is a matter for home consider. ation, and that Mr. Chamberlain ought to mind his own business. Perhaps he ought, but if those refurms re not granted there will not be any President Kruger very Jong. Mr. Chamberlain’s diplomacy has been characterized by unusual frankness and strength. Ax O_p Anp Wet Trizp Remepr Mre. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth nig, with perfect enccess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and 1s the beat remedy for a, Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold ists iu ever of the world. Twenty live cents mg mi Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’e Soothing Syrup, and take no ther kind.—m. w. f. wkly—l y ee neeceessseanee THE CATHOLIC CHURCH AND DtI- VORCE, Sr. Pavut, Minn., Feb, 20.—To a repre sentative of the Associated Press, to-day, Archbishop Ireland said : The report which comes from Halifax that Pope Leo XILL. has granted a full, or an avinculo, divorce on the ground of infidel- ity on the part of the woman. is clearly a misinterpretation of the facts in the case. It is certain no divorce has been granted on the ground of infidelity. The positive, inflexible teachings of the Catholic Church is that a valid marriage contract, duly consummated, cannot be annulled or made void by any authority ig state or church, death alone terminating its obligatiens. Where the marriage was from the begin ning null and invalid through: some) nat- ural or canonical impediment, or . never duly cousummated, declarations of nu)- lity or dipensations may be, and often are, obtained from ecclesiastical courts. Noth- ing beyond this ever occurred, or can oc- cur, in the Catholic Church. ~_<- — Your Tuovents.—As if aman were author of his own thoughts any more than of his own existence. A man can but -o live with the life given him, that this or that kind of thoughts shall call on bim and to this or that kind he shall not be at a me.—Gecr_e Macdonald. ‘Ss i a) = a (Tasteless—Effectual.) BILIOUS and NERVOUS DISORDERS. Such as Sick Headache, Wind and Pain in the Stomach, Giddiness, Fullness, Swelling after Meals, Dizziness, Drowsiness, Chills, Flush. ings of Heat, Loss of Appetite, Shortness of Breath, Costiveness, Scurvy, Blotches on the Skin, Disturbed Sleep, Frightful Dreams, All Nervous and Trembling Sensations, and fr- regularitics Incidenta! to Ladies. Covered with a Tasteless and Soluble Coating. Whelesale Agts. Evans & Sons, Ld, Montreal. isgists. OO20004504 00014005 4O6564608 or sale by ail « u ar eenae Tuesday Night. A CORKER AT THE RINK. PROGRAMME : Hockey Match. (Victorias of Crapaud and the Abeg- weits of this City), One Mile Race, open to P. E. Island. First, $8.60; second, $4.00. Three Mile Race, open to P. E. Island. First, $10.00 ; second, $5.06. One Mile (Amateur) for the Champion- ship of P. E. Island and a Gald Medal. Challenge Race—Beer and Chappelle. Pe sure and attend. The test time ever seen at a Rink in this city. Galbraith’s Band in attendance, Admission, 25 cents. J. B. DAWSON. GEO. J. ROGERS, feb22 Managers. : | ; Write Us, 5 Wire Us, Telephone Us, Or Trade MW7ith Us. The you'll find up to Central the scratch in r-w~rrrrrerwrfeerregreveewerrerfe weet?" wyevvVvvVvVVvVvVYVYeYeeeeevevwvrvwewevvwvGCT? Drug _sprice, quality and Store despatch. A. W. REDDIN, Phm. B, SUNNYSIDE. ooerccoocece: CONCERT UNDER THE AUSPICES OF The Baptist Young People’s Union THE PHILHARMONIG HALL JN. r ; »~ i Taesday Evening, 25th inst. PEOQGRAMME : ranar i, 1 Piano Solo—“ Come Back to Erin ”’...... hbde Ceoscetauknne dh s4neeaee Miss M Bremner 2 Reading—* The Famine” (from Hia- SOA 4. kx cin wttinls eosivnteginas Miss Howard BPE MOOD, « 0. 00s a cntecvcdanea Miss Anderson 4 Reading. .........ceccesveees Rev C W Corey & Violin Solo............... Prof Vinnicombe @ Veen? Bole. 6... 6.05... ... Miss Nicholson 7 Reading—"* The Giadiators”’..Miss Rattray 8 Vocal Solo...............Mr Frank Trainor PART II. 9 Fiamo MONO e iss socks sige cts < .».-Miss McLean 10 Reading—“*The Tenor ”’.........ccsscccee epecesedeseoeeccdinedl Miss Josie Stentiford ll Vocal Solo—* Dreaming as She Sleeps” bdievsecsebave Mise Marion McKay osaue Miss Flo McKenzie ‘ oa ar aMr F H Heartz 14 Cornet Solo. ........ 2.6% Mr Mejor be AS ae 15 Vocal Solo........ ‘alvin os, sive Ml enoit- 16 Male Quartette. .. .cicaks 0. obs oon cvece pa odee Messrs Bruce, Lewis, Cooke and Whear. **God Save the Queen ”’...... ogee oc egon tl. cate Pes Admission, 20 cents Concert commences at8o’clock, Doors open at7 30. feb20 Don’t Buy Moccasins until you see the Bar- gains we are offering. Men’s Moccasins, 80c. a pair. ae. © Zhe; She. - ™ ‘6 ‘““ Lace, $l ‘é . _ & Lined, $1.15 “Lace, 50c. a pair. R. K. JOST; Stamper’s Corner. Boys’ febl5 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1896. TELEGRAPHIC, Specra, Desratones to THE Examiner THE MANITOBA QUESTION McCarthy and Joe ‘Martin at Toronto, fushting Against the Jadgment of the Privy Council, Toronro, Feb. 24. No coercion was the topic which gath- ered several thousand people in Massey Music Hall on Saturday night, when the Remedial Bill was discussed. Dalton Mc- Carthy moved a resolution to the effect that no abuses had been proven to exist in the present school system of Manitoba, and that the people of Canada should be given a chance to pronounce their opinions upon it. Joe Martin, of Winnipeg, seconded the motion’ He said he was prepared to leave the grit party if it should at any time deal unjustly with Manitoba. He said he was afraid the Remedial Bill would - pase, be- cause many members would vote for it who had pledged themselves to vote against it, He stated most emphatically that Mr. Laurier would oppose the bill in its second reading in the House of Commons, and finished with the declaration that he was in favor of a commission of investigation, Rich, But Not Happy. Toronvo, Feb. 24. James Scott, aged 70, one ot the city’s leading retail dry geods merchants, com- mitted suicide by jumping from the bridge over the Rosedale ravine, 120 feet high. He was worth $100,000. General Booth Retires. New York, Feb. 24. The resignation of Commandant and Mrs. Booth from the Salvation Army bas been handed in. Another Fatal Fire. Bavtimore, Feb, 24. The residence 480 North Charles St. was destroyed by fire yesterday. Hight lives were lost, =" Death of a Contractor. Hauirax, Feb. 24. Jacob Bowser, a well-known contractor of this city, is dead. ‘Carter's “Tested” Seeds. You can buy Seeds at. almost any price, BUT— they are not CARTER’S| We seek the trade of , merchants, farmers and gar- | deners who appreciate the | value of First Class Seeds. | and supply (wholesale and retail) the high quality of jgoods which has built up | ‘for us the largest seed _ ‘trade in the Maritime Provinces. | | Qur prices are fair—as_ ‘low as you can buy good seeds for—higher than you | | should pay for poor. | Itis 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. _ Itis our business to sell the best seeds that grow. | | This has been our business ‘during the past sixteen |years. We can safely claim | that we know seeds. - We are now registering | applications for our Mus.) trated Seed Catalogue for 1896—ready in February.) Free to all. Address 1 CKO. CARTER & 60,, . SEEDSMEN, | Charlottetown, P. E. Island.| ba | +) | | j ALL DRUG CISTS. Soaps, Combs, etc., at For Pure Drugs and Chemi- eremeegpeemnae the same price. cals or your Doctor’s Prescriptions don’t pass REDDIN BROS OPPOSITE POST OFFICE. febl7 You'd Better Hurry Up. SIX DAYS’ SALE, 50 Dozen LADIES’ from 5 cents, All WHITE GOODS at Clearance Prices, UNDERVESTS 20 Cases American and Montreal stu‘ at Georgetown via Stanley. Will counter the above goods this week. Six Counters fall of Bargains for Six Days at the One Price Store. JAS. PALIN & CO, n ~ CARRYING FIRE INSURANCE ‘The Charlettetowa Steam Nav. Co., Lid. Annual “Meeting, The Annual Meeting of the above Com | pany will be held at their office, corner of | Great George and Lower Water Streets, Charlottetown. on WEDNESDAY, the fourth day of March, 1896, at the hour of eleven o’clock, a. m. is like putting $1,000 of another man’s money inio the bank to your credit fox a contingency. Failing to carry it is like staking your whole business on an un- certain game. E. R. BROW, By order, F, W. HALES, 2 ] > ie : Insurance Agent. febl S—tl dte Secretary, Office, Brow n’s Block News for your feet! WE DON’T KEEP IT, WE WON’T KEEP IT, WE CAN’T KEEP IT, WE SELL IT! Watson’s Balsamic Syrnp, The best Cough Mixture sold—25 WATSON'S DRUG STORE. “Charlottetown, February 24. 1895. UNGAR DYE Foot Comfort awaits you at our Store. Shoes that will make peace with your feet the first time you wear them—_ THE FAMOUS SLATER SHOES Never saw shoes that fitted our ideas of style and price and construction so well as these do. We are sure that they’ll fit your feet and your pocket as nicely as they do our judgment of shee 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 hand- 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. | Cut ‘Fate Fries we are giving on all FRut GOOL'3, OVERSHOES and MOCCASINS the next two weeks. Do you want anything in this liane ? Now is your wme to buy a lot of LADIES’ FE BUTTON BOOTS, regular price $1.35, now 50 cents a pair. Our prices will please you. Call and see. A. E. McEACHEN, THE SHOE MAN. for cents per bottle. teb20 ST. JOHN, N. B. Suits, Coats, Vests, Pants, Sacques, Dresses, Skirts, Waists, Gloves, Feathers, Cur- tans, Table Cloths, or anything that you want to get dyed. TURNER’S CLOTH STORE, Masonic Temple Building, Grafton Street and have them Dyed, them to W. © , Charlottetown, Just send Prcssed and returned in two weeks. W. C. TURNER, Agent, MONCTON WOOLEN MILLS, Moncton, N. B. © enn UNGAR DYE WORKS, st. John, N. B. Pratts Astral _Berosene Oil. A few days ago we received a quantity of the above Oil from New York, and afte giving it a thorough good trial we have no hesitation in recommending it to our cus tomers and friends. until the last drop 1s ASTRAL OIL from It does not smoke the chimney, and will burn bright and clear out of the lamp. If you want the best satisfaction buy PRATTS BEER & GOFF. Extra Value in Absolutely free dressing, and ready for use. Ask to see them, . White Cotton from35-36 Inches wide. per 7C. yard. ASK TO SEE IT. Absolutely . Pure, per 10c. 3 ASK TO SEE IT. Stanley Brothers Stanley Brothers Stanley Brothers Stanley Brothcre Absolutely Pure Lawn Finish. per Ilc. yard. ASK TO SEE IT. These Goods are Extra Value. sk to See Them.