Oe . « a Bd ; ARARARAAANS [sen you 4 gpecial | Price on jywomens d frown Shoes This week we have placed on , pai Women’s Nut Brow ’ irs j ae ater | $1.00 the pair. <aly made of soft leather, and wel] : ig q snap for those who buy 4 a Alley & Co : The Shoeist. — Vs Your Property i —_s against fire ° Js it prdent to risk loos- ing your whole life’s ac- eummlations for the sav- ing of a few dollars in premiums? Are you do- ing justice to yourself and family by risking it ? Insure in those good stock Co's, represented by E. R. BROW, Insurance Agent Charlottetown . SDI S4FSVSYHSE S288 {Theyre Too |i Mice - - - - That's what come of our custom- rs eay about our MINCE PIES 9 4 They want to buy too many of them for they have euch a temptiug; pleasing flavor, which belongs only {Tenoe Mince Meat Pies. Lemos & Mince Piee 10c ea h Cream Pies 12 & l5e eacn ; Cocosa ut Pies 15 & 20c each Titernoxe 98. D. STEWART é }) ECLIPSE BAKERY ] | KES BEST BREAD. ee =<. oe oo es 02324" 42 e842 «so = ice BUY A WATCH Buy a good one, it will serve you well—no matier who you are, or what your “ voeation—If vou want CORRECT TIME. I carry io stock, @& larze Silver and Sily eroid. W. W. WELLNER Jeweler. assortment of rood re- liable watches. I have sold watches for «a good many years I have agati:fiel a good manv customers with watches, aud I beleve I can sat- isfy you. : You had better step in and let mesbow you the variety of designs in Ladies’ aad Gentlemen’s Watches cased in Gold, PEVREYE PES ES PSE SE SE Ea eS SEPP SE ES PY FS, dvcuuvvudvweuveudrscdvcasdvves on = = P. E. Island: ILLUSTRATED —-— — 5 YOPY oe Oc A Cc J At all Booksellers and at this office. Mailed, post paid, on receipt of price. Address— ~~ mw wat = awekala INER PUB. CO. CHARLOTTETOWN. APPPPPAPAPAPSP2RAMPAPAAA), : AP ASAPAABRSASASAYZFARABAA? FARASRAD! + THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 4, 1898, The Girl With the Least Money is Apt to be the Most Extravagant. “[cisatruth,and a ead one, that the girl with the least money is apt to be the most extravagant,” writee Ruth Ashmore, of “The Care of a Girls Wardrobe,” in the May Ladies’ Howe Journal. “The very wealthy girl may not have to care for he: own wardrobe, yet ¢ach peice belonging to it is made to do full service, and ip many instances, if she has a wise mother the girl herself must superintend the work ofthe maid. Itis ssid of the daughters of Queen Victoria that each one of them was taught, pot only to sew well, but to mend and darn with great neatness, and to make over those gowns which were co pe - ed worth it. The girl whcse wardrobe is not large makes her first mistake in buying cheap material of a color that is the fancy ofthe moment. Instead, when cnly one new gown may be had dtring the seasou it should beofa fabric thar will staad wear, that will endure making over, aud of a color of which neitner the wearer or the looker-on will s00a grow weary. It is an extravegance to Lave a gown made in the extreme of the fashios, for the extreme soon goes out, and then you have a failure on your OWn hands.” —«> 0 «= Israel Tarte’s Fiscal Policy. ome We are paying $250,000 year as the subsidy to the C. P. R. short lise from Montreal through Maine toSi Jobn. In orderto circumvent that short line we are paving $760,000 a year forthe rental aod the operatiog of the Drammond from: Montresl to Levis and %t. Jobo. Mr. Tarte sad in his speech m Parlia- ment the other day: I have every confi- deacs that the Liberal party will celebrate its victory in the next general election on the Quebec bridge.” This bridge, tor which a subsidy of a million ie asked, is to connect Quebec and Levis, and is thus to give another through line from Montreal by way ot Levis to Halifax and St. Jobn, So that we pay $250,000 a year fora railway, and then pay $760,000 a year for @ second road 10 vompete with the railway for which we are paying $250,000; after domg which we are to give $1,000,000 to compete with the road whieh coste ue $:69,000 a year asa competitor to the road for which we are paying $250,000 a year. Aren’t we paying high for the eccentri- cities and the exigencies of Mr. Tarte? ~ Kail and Empire, eet Supreme Court. Turepay, May 2. The Easter term of the Supreme Court met at eleven o’clock this forenoon the three judges on the bench. Richard Doyle vs. Thomas Kickham. Georgetown last term when verdict was found for defendant. Mr. Matheson today m ved for rule misi for new trial. ee ay, ~ Ka Ny y ha oe «} £), © sige ec Ae “fe Wy <4 wv i oy WL, SW NES —— . SZ. @ a 7 i ne % NZ es N \A °° ¥ Sde At ASA ve + Tay “As ad’ =e sx: At Very Low “is Se ae al; "ae WS ue <% e Gs se te NEW TRIMMING Action for damage« for trespass, tried at j China, a gang ot more thau twenty rob- | DRUNKENNESS IS DECREASING. a ee Was Never a Time When the Exces- sive Use of Liquor Was so Infrequent. “The men and women interested in or- ganized temperance work in this eountry’ aie, onthe whole, very worthy people,” writes. Eiward W. Bok in the May Ladies’ kiome Journal, “They are sincere, euergetic and well~meaning. But some- timesthey lack that nicety and wisdom of judgment which is absolutely necessary in organized effortin order that the surest success may be won. They sometimes, unfortunately, allow their zeal to run away with them. This tendency wasrecent y shown inoneof their official statements which bewailed the start.i g growth of intemperance in America during the year 1897. Many good peopie,to whom the circular cootaining this statement is sent, will be prone to believe this assertion. They have notthe means at hand ty which to verify such a statement, aad will be made uncemforteble by it, whereas, io reality, exactly the oposite isthe truth. There has never beev atime in America when every indication pointed so strong y to a decrease of intemperance as the pres- ent. There has never been so little drinking as at present, and never such a strong tendency toward moder.toa_ in quarters where alcoholic indulgence i+ general. This is a fact impossible to cou-~ trovert, because the most careful fizures bear out this very hopetul! statement.” — The pain that sometimes strikes a men at the most inopportune moment is due tu indigestion. It may come in the midst of adinner and make the feast a mockery. It is a reminder that he may not eat whet he choores, nor when be chooses. He isa slave to the weakness of bis stomach. A man’s health and strength depend upon what be gets out of his food. This depends on his digestion. Remove the obstruction by taking Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pe'lete. They are a positive cure for constipation and its attendant ills—headaches, sour stomech, flatulence, dizziness, biliousnes+ aud “heartburn.” The “Pellets” are very gentle in their action, They simply assist nature. T y x./: a9 violent wrench to the system Lacy c2uee no pain, nor griping. Send 31 «9%«¢2a% sinaps to cover cost of mailing crly, aa] receive free a copy of Dr. Pierc «’s sialiical Adviser. Address, World’s DB ispeneary Medical Association, ‘Buffalo, N . A man’s remaios, wrapped in a costly shroud, and enclosed in three coffins, was unearthed at a depth of fourteen feet while excavatiog near the castle walle at Windsor. Theapot where the coffin war found is thought to have been beneath the cellar of an ancient ino. It ie thought by some to have been the body of King Ed- ward VI., whodied in 1533, in the s:x~ teenth year of his age, On March 3l, in ahamlet near Taipeh bers entered a house and murdered Yang Kin Shan, his wife, bis mother, childreo and servants, fifieen persous in all, VORVZBS 2S%s eSO SG THE LATEST NOVELTIES aN ress a Goods Very stylish effects in black ©repons and Brilliants, eXiz SSsooese BEER BROS —— eee LI ES eS ae A: Z — (S = Aaa z— LARS 4 Prices Caps, Carpets or Clothing. fit any size boy that goes. Columbias and Otners There are two kinds of Wheels, COLUMBIAS and all others. Columbias are in a class by themselves, Prices 44, 60, 85 and 140 dollars, ‘Ihe 60 dollar wheel is equal to the best high grade bi- cycle on the market of any other make. Each wheel guar- anteed by a company who do not know how to make slop goeds. ‘The purchaser of a bicycle from me will be taught to ride free. hk. M. VWOUNG, Agent for P. E.L. MONTREAL & QUEBEC neti SE Deis S the present season. e * ® ® & © es * ap * * * + SOURIS. ' The Steamship Campana will call at | Souris regularly once a fortnight during Sailing from Mon- trealon or about 25th April. Merchants ‘ordering gooda would do well to have ‘them come by this line. For rates of | freight or other particulars, enquire of MATTHEW & McLEAN Azents atSour 75 —10i FOR SALE That valuable 10 acre Jot situated op- eo*e the Quarrie, on Mt. Fd. Road. ly ‘o the office of oe ere on L. L. BEER. cF— | We den’t run the earth, but we do run the best Ready Made Clothing department in the city, aud you will find it impossible to find better goods or lower prices on Hits, You are dealing on easy street, if our store is the spot were you do your, trading; easy to get anything and everything in our line, much cheaper than elsewhere. PROWSE BROQ., _ SO eo | White Shirts. For the Lest value, for the best fitting, for the Jarzest variety, we cannot be touched 19 dozen fine fancy front shirts, worth $1.25, will be sole for toc. Ask to see cur $1 white shirt -—ft isa corker. The man who thinks he can do better in some other store is going to get left. We have loaded up with the largest pile of bar- gains ever shown under one roof in the city Carpets, Hats and Clothing, We show the profits so close on ehild. . ren’s suits, that it is useless for yon to buy and do better in any other store; the prices range from $1, 1.50, 2, and up, and we can Wouderful is the strides made in afew weeks with the Fit-Reform. Every person who has seen these goods is more than pleased, and more than one man has ex: pressed himselfin no uncertain tene that they would in future save their money and trade with us. PROWSE BROS, The Wonderfal Cheip Men. The Stylish Clothiers. Fes- what Madame Albani’s svecial accompanist has to c2V ulus tie = rie t 8 tn, Tue QuEEN’s. Tononvo, Feby. Zand, 1897) To Wuomw iT MAY CoNncERN: f In connection with my visit to Canada as Pianist to Medame Albani, I have had occasion to observe various makes of pianos, and have been much impressed with the auvances whic are being made in tne art of plano construc. tion in this young and flourishing country, One of the most yecent instruments to arrest my attention—and I might say, cne of the best—is the well known “Bell” Piano. its tone is admirable throughout, and the touch firm and 1espousive— just what we musicians like—in fact, an excellent piano _ every resvect. The new Orchestral Attachment (which understand can be obtained on “Bell” pianos only) is also an excellent feature, and one which will doubtless excite mided cst with all classes. Ido not hesitate to say that I conside ihe “Bell” piano a good, honest instrument, and so recome mend it to any intending purchaser. (Sgd.) ARMANDO SEPPILLI. { (Conductor, Royal Itstian Opera, Covent Garden,) ; Pianist to Madame Aibani, Canadisa tour, 1896-7, j For sale only at FLETCHER’S: , ” =” meg Piano Warerooms, Opera House Building, se T. 0. 2. Jeo, Agml at Gunmeraids,