ye ee aaa = on nee s = ~ r on % Sr Tr <r ¥ Y ‘ a > o - f : THE DAILY ZXAMINER. THURSDAY, MARCH 380 1898. semen ee ) r wep a a 2 - ‘Y re, ag Net . . . row money at a less rate than that, and so | expenditure of the Province under Confed | : A i i { b . < ° . _—_— SS NNER ee ae ed ] H E DAILY BAAMLNEA rovinel P i$ a ure we passed a bil! providing for the issuing of | eration at $206,000 a year, and the wo = : : ; . — *1 $185 000 worth of debentures—about | at $218,900 —lewing a h+lancesa ™ + fj ; MARCH 30. 1893 c ae $14,000 more than the amount of the debt. | the Province of $12.000! ©) | A 9 E ae We told the people what we wanted the | later, when the Davies Gover oe Bo ame { : | wt H f A bl eXtra amount for, and showed how it was] in : power, what did they do ? ' a The Budget Specch Ouse 0 ssem ys that by issuing the debentures at 4 per|This is the way they k-pt wi hn To our Lady Customers and cthers who have patronized us in the past for ——— cent. we were saving them 2 per cent,|the amoun's estimated by Mr. Davies: CHILDREN 8 CLOTHING, we respectfully intimate that we Lave received our ficst\ Ir was a ha part ol “ . | This was the only way they saw out of the | The average expenditure in the two years, : shipment in Children’s Wear for Spring, consisting of dark patterns in Tweed Suits. Be Peters to ron the Budget Speeet SUMMARY OF PROCEEDINGS. difficulty, and it is for doing this that we] 187775 was $332.887.72 ; and the _uitable for spring weer. Our Summer Suits, in light and dark shadca, will be along! — was being c/n are charged with piling up @ permanent | averags expenditure from 1879 to 1890, later. Kine ly cail and see the sbove goods. We have on hand a lot of odd Jackets, last night. Pa sibulae ; 7 —_—_—_—_—— debt. We also made ; —— _ aor ~ 01. om average yearly § rire jend Pan's that we will se!l at a very low price. : centrated ij his gerrymander ana 5 a on in the Lind Office policy. e| therefore, during the tweive years © i ictal taal dicfranchixement ovtre 4 diversi Weonespay, March 29. decid-d to do as well as we could by fieilinap Meloed Administrations woeO0S S50 BOYS AND GIRLS ! - Guess the date of th» coin deposited with the Editor of the! Suen of odeuven @ee nace In the afternoon, the act inc peer. the people and offer them an porrnenagage reat aan wate pt, ae cone IPatrint. Is le wat 198 years «3d. Wo will sive adap tenn tone Wdlahem tn tndee nel He ae . - : e Nes th Hali Co was rea a wT 4 Oo 4 's. : : ag 7 : i : 2 Cu . o ; i orrect : sary. So we ve had The Budge rn — c meioas sail with Mr. 4 Ad Hee ba Barve we ‘received ry coaee ee > nme pha caked te tab tnod uate e py le iy ata tema eeaaie roa will ~~ ‘ os _ r $97 5 ! ; 2 v the aver hs - ? . , - . Bat Tne Badg will not greatly help| a gers in the chair. Bill reported agreed | 79 000 against $24,000 the year before. a ee ao hooey 935 98 ! The ‘ind a Coupon inside of our advertisement, marked Answ:rs to Gueas.. You ean gue ‘ him. It does not contaim anything tha to. ee i» 1891 we closed eur 788 accuunts, and iD | pitoig Government is rapidly getting up te « often as you desire, bur a sepsrate Coupon must be sent ia with each separate guess. a will add to his popularity. We have n The bill incorporating the wala Oust | 1892 wereceived $48,983, and closed out) ¢h. standard of the Davies Administration. ‘Rates te govern competitions -ame as last. All letters must be addressed to ** Jamer > j za oe an al ae Diirying Compary waa re ad a secon 342 accounts. We also improved an the] nen the Leader talks about the enormous |Paton & Co., Charlottetown,” ard marked **Guess.” Ali anawers must be in by April S doubt tha - 7 appreciation | nw committee for tbe purpose of ae ®F | policy of oar predecassora in the matter of | rate of ioterest paid by the late government. 25 h, 1893. The success of our last Competition wes wenderful, far surpassing our, te fact which induced him t mike a labore ing certain am -ndments inade thereto by wharves, and in the management of the] Rut what are thefacts? The interest acconnt | ‘xpectations, ee. and unfair attack upon the Sullivan Fergu he Legislative Council. The amen iments R giatry office. We also effected a saving | f--m 1880 to 1899 (ten years) totalled 3 og (= aoe ' nnemeeien ! on , lw oried agreed to. f $2000 in the administration of justice | 183 12, an average forthe ten years ot 3,718 - a son McLeod Governm n's Mr. Poters | ow “— unk Rive nti ' i i i Pet Gov- We eee a Foe cer ncorporcing the Dank River| Jobe” Bor thereat year the. estates [yh te fteent pa by te Peers or DATE OF COIN an adept at crawing hereing SFO" To oe.e Factory wes read a second time in| ...pendi-ure is $283 455. Theestimateforeduca- | ernment last year alone was $6 64971! This e . ao the track His was the same :! somunttee with Mr. Robertson in the aaa is becoming one of our greatest burdens, is truly ora oh lene a — oh :, oe ee i tion! Nearly $3 f y interes SE tng oft-told story—-with variations. With f ch sir, and reported agreed to. — ot aod he theanghs the os ime e of Rag ge wee pa ion < se 3, «som a ~ me lished Committee on the bill disfranchising] very Inrge He a!so hoped to be able to give : : ® i «ee men eee hf, Dominion officials was resumed every part of the Province a road machine, |the previous Governments. Now i Toe pleader, Mr. Peters suppressed and kept Mr. McKay said he did not think the | snd three new mechines were to be bought: | us take a iook at the estimates for 1891 92 : we ssmnletely outof sieht three of the most aes , ‘the past few years has | [he estimate of $18 000 for a new ste:mer] and see how they came out. The estimat- N j an, ey Oe : sts >the ee on cote . nefited by having | #8 timely, as the steamer was very neces. | cd expenditure tor that year was $270 905, AME. eee eee eee e eee ens iy, rtant act i espect to th ove eu ons : ; ’ i { i mead ae 4 ; ; +9 che Loca! Parliament not of the same “Th A for the he expected to b and the sotust aro ag nc BIBS 65.5 03s rnonedineeeneseeeses tied Government'sregord, viz: ssiniant snipe - the Deslain e revenue or year he exp e 486 41--only $35 55 oor ee-cmremr BB area eaeeene renee ss sta Ree 1. That they reduced the expenditure by | P 5 The Selliven Guvernment |* "°°"? estimated ! The estimated expendi: ure for _— dines dita * ‘ait many t! f dollars a year - ie aoa our claims upon the subsi iv from Dominion............ $133,590 | 1892 was $268 744, and the setual expendi- eS wan sou . wie ” , " 5bO pe ’ , L ’ WWecce er eeseseesseeeresees 30,000 ” ¢ S 4 -_ I Si , - i. # e 2 That they left the balance at O tawa} Dominion Government and vbiained a re Pre ’ — recat toe "L100 — he yyy re pop agen — ‘ J A. WM. Hi Ss PAS l 'C) IN &T ¢ IC). é a , a. i abl vate of over $100,000, thereby saving the Lctie aot oe : ee ha in favor of the Province considerably larger 8 , ih Prothonotary......-ccces need Gaehon / ar the will doubtless be in -_— Paar ana ? on ; Runs : a Pruvinee from direct taxation. They were] poring |... oc cccnccnccceccce 6 000 | * a ee In 1891 the d+ firi oe than it was when they entered offive very energecic in pressing our claims, #Md | [jocnses..........sececececeeeceees 909 | 2 *tmular peition. In 36 © Oo Grit 29. : 3. That neither of these fests has been] heir eff.ris were attended with success, DOGO 5, vc kadse0 tol ound 1,500 -” te a as . ook oa accomplished by any other Provincial Gov- | 4g was already known to every person | County Couris....cceeeceecenen cere 2,000 ale 4 tae 7 pa age mee $245. — ve — ; a : a 4 ‘ a (hey also procured the winter steamer | Private Bills........ ss ca Rachlin 119 | 25¥, aa e actual rev ae =e ‘ 4 he eroment in Camas, Stanl+y, which bas done excellent service. | Prince of Wales College.........-.. 200 | 652 28--a shortage of $17,62772 The a ss It is not neceksary to follow Mr. Peters ra naht of these facts he could not set | Reg'stry «fi xe.......000 Saye et 5.000 | estimated revenue from the Land Office in = ae y through ell the intric.ctes of his argument. | |, acts the argament of the Leader of} | Vines and Penalties..,.. Ccvdvev ties 350 | 1892 was $60 009, and the actual revenne ae ye ees ot THROMB ss. 6. % fb Neb ad eed aene Flee 100} was $43,891 86 —a shortage of $16,108 15. Ess E . will readily admis that the late | che Goveroment, that the two Governments] * ; w ie ce a pre inning hould besepsrate. He had no evidence | U%U4! revenue......---+..+0+00e 6/0 | This year the Laader of the Government ~ Government made es me mistakes; and) % oe ta — io present Government ————— J again estimstes the ‘revenue from ‘ ee $254,359 | this source at $60,000, but even his own > yet everyone is fuly ce ivinced —notwith- avanding what Mr. Peters can s»y—tha: the late Government were, altogether, good Government for this Province, carry ing out as well as they could the wishes of its people and fairly representing their in- terests. Itis true that the late Govern- ment over-estimated their ability to mak: revenue and expenditure meet. Bat in view of the fact, pointed out by Mr were making any move in the matter of pressing our claims. Then he tock up the cliim of the Leaderof the Goveramec hat the Dominwwn cfticials should not b allowed to vote because they were not al owed t» vote as their coasciences dictated Chere was not the slightest evidence of the ruth of the assertion that any unde ip- flasnce was ever brought to bear upon the tivials to prevent them from voting as they desired. Hw thought it unfair that these ( fiiciais were to be deprived of their The policy of the Government in the futur= would be the same as it had-been in the pis’. If it heesme necessary to take practical steps in order to make revenue and expenditure meet he for one wouldn't be afraid to take them. MR: BENTLEY'S REPLY. Mc. Bentley followed in reply. He said we had liss'ened toa long speech from the Leader of the Goverament, in which he iad tried to present the case for the Gov- sroamant in as good a light as possible. It politics! friends ridicule the idea of his getting that sum. Now let us take a look at the financisl position of the Province. Let ua see what the present debt is. The balance against the Province on Dec. 3is', i 1892, as reported by the Provinc:al Audit- or, is $48,074.93 Add to ths sum the debentures seid during the year amount- ing to $168,400, dnd © we have a total of no IJeas than $206,474 93 Add to this amount one quarter’s salaries} Charlottetown, March 21, 1893. get clear of at once. at the prices we are now offering. J. M. McLEOD & CO, 4 S, That’s what we're doing this week. to the bottom notch on the gooils danigad by snoke, which we must Remember, these gools caanot be boaght later Prices are shaved clear down | % 2 feat a. “a am Govern. | is the business of the Jawyer to make his| due teachers Dee Sist, 1892 (say) $28.000, Se - mets * Bantieg, thet Hie Be. Dans — ye — a ne ee aioe ation to | case look as well as possibls, and the Lead | the amount carried over from 1892 (ssy) | preve-the condition of things here; but the | mere ¥. wrong io his: estimste of the amoun = = an uofair advantage When the Dom | er had made the most of the time at his | $26,000, and one quarter's salary due the | new steamer might easily lave been wb-! iF of Provincial expenditure by abous $100 ree Franchise was changed, the Domwion lisposal, But were all his statements true ?] teachers to 3ist March, 1893 (+a;) $26.-| tained last year. But what about) FIRE ACCIDENT j 000 a year, that Mr. L H. Dovies was stil] » ii ment permitted her young men to [t is ur business tv look into the matter] 000, and we hive a total of $286 474 93 | the bridge we heard sv = much | . . ag further from the mark, and chat Mr. Peters) continue in the p ssesmion of theit votes. snd see if the statemenis he mikes are Deduct from this sum thy three tenths’ | about ¢ Surely they were not going, ' A special clause was enacted on their be all right; to look into the speeches made by | subsidy from the Dominion, $49,882 76 and|to gve both the bridge and the new | —_— «deg himself-——with the experience of twenty years to teach him— vas astray in his esti mate for last year to the extent of $35,000, surely they ‘may be excused if they mi- julged their resvurces 4 vi failed in their laudable attemp s to effi:ient!y maiatain all the public services without imcurring any deficits. But Mr. Peters has not. apparently gain- ed wisdom by their experience. Though entir ly destiute of their virtues and their sympathy with the people, he is imitating their mistakes In tw» succeeding years, he has piled up deficits, and propuses again to have another deficit. His estimates of this year «re, in our opinion, further from the mark than those of Jast year. Oa the ote hand the cost of elections halt, becsuse it was held tht @ man once « voter was always avoter. Buta party i power in this Province —-in p:wer a8 a re sult of a politic | siuffl »—hsve determined to take away the franchise mghts of Domin ion officials. The outrage will rebound upon those who have cummitted it. Hon. Mr Gordon said, though unwell, he must, in justice to his constituents, raise his voice against the iniquitous measure betore the House. It was proposed to iske away the electoral righs of a portion f the Province. There is no good or sut tisient cause for this—only a suspicion on the part of the Government that a m-j ority of the class to be disfranchised is aya:nst them. Surely hon. members opposite have not studied the baarings of this question, or have forgotten the suffsrings of those who in thie Province struggled in behali of electoral feeegom. Three members ot this House were imprisoned during the him in the pa t and see if he has kept the oromises he made. List year, said Mr. Bentley, the Loader of the Government n his budget sp2ech told us that when he eatme into power he found « debt of $L71,- 931. which he engaged to wipe out. But was there a debt of $171,931 on the 4th April, 1891, as stated by the Laader of the Government? There was not. The re- port of Messrs Chalmers and Davison did not show that there was a debt of $171,931. sithough the Leader said it did. It showed that the liabilities of the Province on that date were $171,931, and not that the debt amounted to thar -um, Everyone koows tht there is a great differ2nce between the debt and the liabil ity of the Province Their report shows that the actnal debt of the Province at that rime was only $102,900 Nuw how did the Government go abont prying «ff the debt ? By creating another and a permanent debt, hy selling debentures amounting to $158,- we show thatthe actual debr of the Pro |steamer! The estimate «f $60,000 vince on Ist April, 1893, is $240.53217 |from the Land Office was only put [ft in the foregoing estimate ws have done|in to raise the estimate of revenue! the Government any injustice it is their) and make it come up as nearly as possible own fault. We have repsatedly asked for|to the estimated experditure. N» person a statement of all amounts due in 1892 and| believed for a moment that avy such carried over into 1893, but it has uot been | amount would be received trom that source brought down yet. Now let us take al ok/|this year. There were scme other | at the manner in which the Public Works items in the estimates that might be| Department has been conducted. Let us referred to did time permit, but as the hour | see what permanent works hare been | Was getting late he would reserve any :emai ks | established and take alook at the cypital | be might have to muke on them for a furase| account. We look in vain fir auy per-|C°ssion. Before closing, Mr Bentley p int- manent improvements that have been made. ptosh she absurdity of the Leader's cloims for We find that the whole capital ‘account of pe * he ‘ae wi h pre sslog cur claims | the department is composed of some re- | —— Py, pee Gevernment He showed ‘ aN how the late Government, as a result of th i- pairs to wharves, bridges, school houses, | successful presentation of our claims, « buaired Government House, ete. Ife(Mr Bentley) large sums at different times, apd contrasted was not aware that one new wharf had heen | their conduct with that of the present admi.- built during the past year. (The Com-| istration, who were, so far as he could teil missioner of Public Works here interrupted | quietly resting on their oars and not moving Mr. Bentley and said there was a new wharf | ia the matter at all. We had other claims built but he declined to say where). The |2pon the Dominion that should be pressed, | Sea E. R. BROW ABOUT THAT INSURANOK. OFFICE—Brown's Block, Charlottetown. Fire an ee d M INSURANCE. —— — — * : < and all the usferseen expenditures are not . : : a a é lh tik pa atin: aa ie ah deeded c ae “et a — ‘eee 400! How in the name of common sense | total expenditure for Prince County, Mr. | and no time should be lost aboot doing it. provides 1@ other hanc duel. he labors o vle ~wld they pay a debt of $171 931 with | Boutley went onto explain, was $91. Waa! , Hon. Mr. McLean moved the adjournment ——~(0) ——— peasy ; ti ’ ‘ ‘ y ie - ‘ ; ‘ : | of the debate a: all like!y that $60,000 will be obtained should not so soon be fogotten $158,000 and have a surplus? The Loader | this fora new wharf? The repairs to the ie e debate. from the Land Uffice;- seeing that the | Te0ores ot the Province for sixty years may {the Government also promised to take | buildings on the Stock Farm, amounting to | Mr. Shaw and others then repeated several WESTERN MANCHESTER WESTERN questions, and the correspondence in conrec- be searched in vain for legislation such as held : Aes [ ‘ tite le vee ‘Haat year were 7 s _| bh Li of the Lind Office and make it yield a | $96,428, were also charged tu. capital it : Ing ; ce : . a ‘on : a : . , : a vinee He mares by a ean large reveue for many years to come. Lest} account. Under the heading of bridges we Lee aang ene wpe he Demtaie Gov: Fire Thsurance Co. Fire Urance Co. : Marine Insurane only $43,000, re ce of tne Government ths year—the p us look at the facts. The balinea dune the]also fiad $24,243.47 charged to capital| House adjourned. will, we venture to say, be largely increased oe ee - — a -_ Lind Office on the 3ist December, 1890, aecount. Some of the items were as low of Toronto, Ont, Otic Company. asaresult of this your's operations—the z . tyrant, though it is af ¥'%,S41L.889 67; new »ccounts opened in | 4s $60. Were these for new bridges? Sh d more ao as the elections are in full view {] CVVORDMMRG Wee N Tethat alenost al | 1891, $6431; interest on balance | The idea of charging repsirs to. b-idges to er W00 Cemetery Company. the Largest and Strongest | Manchester England —_-- We shall not see the public accounts of the remem Ebay ae ne ee ine oo see 8 ar 93; new er capital agcount, After this it would not i ’ ° ; ‘ all not ae e acco 20 tyrants, ' ' opened in 1892, $'.742 72; interest on balance | ba surprising if repsirs te roads were charg- | - ae anadian Company dvin ; year until after the elections, kf Me. pelled the Israclites to mikelaua Dee, 31, 1892, $16,244 93a total of | eq. o ‘Sahel ee He thea nCecnctary Cee ne Thi ee Eiht, Shorwend paey bs The Populsr Eoglieh S'erling and Den bricks without straw, to Henry the Eighth. | ¢461 686 30. The balance due the Land Office, ‘Hall on W&DNE-DAY, the Sth day of April business in Canada pr Peters should gain the election, then there will be taxation. In avy case he will not care much forthe pecp'e. He imposed a debenture debt, and rifled the Land Office, and changed the constitution of the country, and gerrymandered King’s County and disfranchised the Dominion: fh sials —all without the slightest reference tothe people; and he will not, we may reasonably argue, consult the wishes of the people in respect to either the sixe or form of the tax which will be requited. We have to congratulite Mr. Bontley upon the excellence of his first speech in reply to the budget. It was clear, trench- and and cofvincing—worthy of the high position to which he hes recently been call- ed. Mr. Bentley possesses th’s advantage over his redoubtable opponent: he is in close touch with the people. As it is well known that he is serapalouly careful in respect tc his statements, the telling poin's which he made must powerfully ¢ff»ct pub- lic «pinion throughout the country, A condensed report of his speech is published elsewhere in Tue EXaMINex The Officials Petition. Ws: learn that 4 number of the men about to be despoiled of their personal right to franchise have j ined in a petition to the Legislature. They declare their surprise and alarn resulting from the fact that the disfranchising measure has again been in. troduced, and they submit that os citizens liable to be tsxed they should have a voice in the making of laws affec'ing their dear- est interests. I[t is staced that the petition is being generally signed —though a few persons who do not resent being called ** sheep” and ‘slaves,” and being treated as such by the Peters Government, together with afew who prefer to bear the outrage in dignified silence, have declined to siga. --—_ 9° © eo ——— naman Saplio, ammonia, whiting, washing | sods, silver polish, B bbit''s d«moud and reenbank potash at Boer & G fs ’ , mar 30 3i. were fair men to look at. The acts of the Leader of the Government are evidently cyrannical ; and his persistency in respec: to them recalls the following lines from **Timan the Tartar” :— ‘The trampled worm will turn, they say ; what stuif! That only means [ haven’t trampled him enough.” The policy of the Leader of the Govern- ment is well described in the words of Macbeth :— ** for mine own good All canses shall give away ; I am in blood, Step: in so far, that, should I wade no more, Returning were #s tedivus as go o'er, Strange vhings I have in head, that will to haod Which must be acted ere they may be scanned, 7: > > > * * « > We are yet but young in deeds,” Incidentally Mr. Gordon said that the Leader of the Government had ridiculed and misrepresented Goorgetown—and ignored his own friends there, having referred to the L beral-Conservative vote as the whole vote vf the constituency, and he conclud:d by declaring that Dominion effi- cials are gen'l-+mea whom the G verament are going to place upon the same political p! ne as paupers. Mr. Arsenault, Mr. Matheson, Mr. Rogers and other speakers followed, and progress was rerorted. House took recess alter the Premier had begun his Budget Speech. THE BUDGET. After recess, Hon. Mr. Peters resumed the debate on ths motion to go into sup- ply. He reviewed at great length the fin- ancial records of the late adminis‘ rations, and labored hard to take from them the credit of successfully pressing our claims uponthe authorities at Octawa. He charg- ed the late Government with continuing the Tax Act until 1832, in the face of their promise to repeal it, and said they had ne- elected and starved the public works of the Peovince. He referred als» to the rep rt of Messrs, Chalmers and Davisen, and cl.imed that their report showed the debt of the Province when his G vernment came into power to ba $171,931. The present Government thought « change shou'd be be made, and that this debt should be wiped out ; that revenue and. expendi'ure should be made to meet. The late gov ernments were paying 6 per cent. interest to the banks. We thought we could bor- s3 revorted by the Commission eron D c. 31, 1892, was $324,889 67; the amount reduced by eoli-ctions and discounts, $136,786.61. The 96h collected in the two years, 189192, was $116,7702%; and the Ivss by discounts and otherwise was $20, 016.33! The amount actualy sunk in dise counts and collections in 189/-92 wos $136, 786.68. ‘The amoun* which should bo used as urdinary revenue was $33 64191 The »mouunt of capital used in 1891-92 was $103,144 70. The Leader also promised that he would abate the exodus, But the ouly effort he put forth io this direction was the establishment of bun socials in nis own district! Again he promia- ed that the Scott Act would be carefally en- forced, But the Public Accounts do not show that a single Scott Act tine has bean gollected during the past year! The Governmeat also made great promises as to what they would do for agri culture. They promised to asaisé in the est«tlishmout of dairying association, ard ro p ovide a travelling dairy. Neither of these promises had been fulfilled. The steck on the Stock Farm is, ou the whols, inferior to what it was when the late Gov- eroment left office. There are fewer p gs and horses, and the cattle are not 80 good Again, the leader promised to make revenue and expenditure almost meet. The result was 4 deficit list year of $37,000! He wis «stray in his estimates to the tune of $35,- 000! Then, again, he also p:omised to put another steamer on the Southport ferry, but did not do so. Now, however, tha> there is an election coming on we are hear- ing about it again, Why was not this steamer provided last year when she might easily have been procured, and put on the roure. So mach for the promises made by the Loader last year. He did not keep his premises then, and we have little faith in his keeping those he makes this year. The Leader ytells us also that the late G »vernment kept the Tax Act in force until 1882, after they had promised to repeal it. This statement was net correct. The Tax Act was repealed in 1841! The Act was continued in force until the enormous deficit left by th» Davies Guvernment was paiicff In 1873, at the time the terms of Confederation were under discussion, Mr. L. H. Divies prepared a statement to the etfect that under Confederation the expendi ture of this Province would not he over $206,900 a year, and the revenue $222 000 —leaving a surplus in favor of the Province of $16 900! Aoother statement prepared about the syme time by Mr. Laird, who is given so much credit to-night, eatimates the went on to point out the manner in which contracts had been let and carried out, instancing several cases where contracts had been let for certain sums, and before the work was completed they cost hundreds of dollars more than the amount of the con- tract. The oppostion had asked the Commissioner of Public Works for infor- mation concerning many of these contracts, but it had not been brought down. Until such time as this information was forth coming, we would have to hold the head of the department responsible for the peculiar trensactions of the past year. Now let us take a look at some of the items in the estimates for this year. Tae sum set down for the administration of justice is $14 587, something less than last year. If anything can be saved in this department, well and good. But we should not economise in the wrong place He noticed that the salaries of the Keepers of jthe Jails im King’s County and Prince County were ‘o be again reduced. The estimate for edu- extion was $114,400. Theré™Was nod saving there. The eaiary of the Chief Superinten dent of Eaucation was to be $1.200 this year. Last year they reduced his galary to $1,000, contrary to the wishes of the Oppo- sition, and this year he was pleased ta see that they were going to put it back to is former figure. The salary of the Clerk to the Superintendent was also reduced last year, and he was sorry to see that there was no provision for an inerease in his case. This was fuot right. Mr. McNeill is a mst efficient officer, and his salary should have been put back to its original figure as well as the salary of the superin- tendent. He thought that the esiimate for the Public Lids offices should inc!ude half ths salary of the commissioner, which it did not. ‘There waa nething in the es- rtumates fur Government House this year, although last year the Government could not do too much in that direction. Were they trying tu frecze out the Goverrer? The estimste for ferries this year was $15(0 less than their actual cost last year. The estimstes for roads and bridges were also insutlicient. A very peculiar estimate was that of $1000 for Paris green. What were the Goverument going tu d» with it? They were disfranchising the young men and the Dominion «fficials and perhxps the Pari green was to kill off the renminder of the Conservatives; or perhaps its object was to secure votes Then there was the $18,000 for a new steamer for ths Southport ferry. | It was time something were done to im- | Directors and the transaction of other importaat next, at 3 o’clurk, p. m, for the election of businuss. By order HENRY SMITH, Secretary Sherwood Cemetery Co, Cheriottetown, March 30, 1893— th set mon ; OFFICE FURNITURE For Sale by Auction. T SALES ROOM, oa SATU , i aba ns TURDAY, Apr’! Jat, 4 Office | es <s, 4 Office Chai 2 f ps Reser tr . Ta Presa, i Lone e. io Stove aad Pi leor Uueloth and o: her ar icles ro, ae Also, at 2 u'clock, lot of Household Farpiture. R. BEAIRS[LO, mch30 Auc.iopeer HO™ formerly occapied by John Gorman. part of Shop form «rly vecupiei by L. W Harris suitable for an office. Poxssssionatonce A's * Shop with Warehvuse and Vel.a-. coraer Ff: Zroy and Hilisborough Streets, Pessedsion! May, R. K, ile aah K,. | RACE, PREWIER, No. 1138 FOR SALE. HE valuable Stallion (Yorkshire Bay Coachi T Horse) PKEMIKH, No 118%, will be 8a " Public Auction ia fromtof the Market Hone, ‘harlottevown, on SATURDAY, the first day of Aprii next, 1893 at the hour of tweive o'clock, bvon, _ Premier is now rising 10 years old, isa rich bay in color, stande 1 hanus bigh, and weixhs nearly 1300 lbs. ile was shown «ix times in Englana, and g#ined five firec prizes and one second. Premier is descended from the best Cosching bl od iu Kugland, and hi-a@vility to travewit his Qual-ties w his offspring is witnessed by the vrig-8 -on ty his colteatthe Provincial Kxhivi- tion whenever they have been shown. Private offers will ve considered before day of - For further apply to the under- CHARLES A. MITCHELL, Owner, Charlottetown, March 10, 1893—wky OR SALE- Set Chambe-:’ Ercyclopedis i ten volumes, bound in calf. Ae at thi; tice mouse whuiw—A mimi w d0 general housew a mc up Capital, $1,000,000, QU HE INSURANCE COMPANY — Is the Queen of Fire Companies. ork. WV Apaly iy Mobi eva aa “* DESBRISAY & STEWA: Company, established 1824, Capital, $7,500,090. All Losses Settled Promptly. SHOP AND OFFIC TO Lim} AMMO N IAS ON QUE<N STREET. : Charlcttetuwn. Low Rates. Prompt jond the Agency here without reference to HORACE HASZARD, — General Agent for P. E. Islard, Cameron Block, Charlottetown, Ma-c Coutains a Good Proportion of Aimmonia, which makes it | TdE EASIEST SOAP TO WORK WITH. it is a Pure Laundry Soap at a Moderate Price. —_———_(x)- ——-—— ASK YOUR GROCER TO GET YOU AMMONIA SOAP. mch25 — dy a ee RT, AGENTS FOR P.E.L Bx ‘WANTED-—Intelligent, capable boy OFFICE—N ee icaen the Gaee-bhadiier E—Next to Bank of Nova Scot ag. Ap le J. Zi Settl la,