K Peas If it's Newson’s Its Good Sese4q S¥565% wie F MEISE TE | mo) J : i> SEP LCST TENE EATS = wi > Qa Pee SYA SLT oN. THE ars per Year Shop Worn ee 0c the Pair AL Gate po 4 aq, This is True Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may RLOTTETOWN Pp: E. ISLAND #SATURDAY nr ciammmennenineiiagiiill a pec a ILY EXAMINER ee - speak free.” —Evnripipes MARCH 25, 4899 er, Single Copies two Cents NO 72 ~ Fifty Pairs ww Gloves They’re not badly shop-worn. But they are’nt in perfect condition. Some of them show a little rub or soil here and there, Some of’em tan, some greys, some blaeks. Some are buttoned, have a spring clasp. some lacing, some Some of them were 75c, some we're $140—most of them rangel between the two prices. To-night 50 cents a pair Moores M Sad What We Advertise We Have, an 2 % ¥ V ‘ i | Why Not Be Comfortable When you can buy a n‘ce easy chair a pr.ce Wer Styles cf —ugine ormis Chairs st received in a variety of covers—on sm all ND 7S Font oy y i s % sas “av “s vhich e have marked very luw prices—Ca‘l and s 4 . zs em rs aie Z , ro » mm. JOHN Ni WSON SF aie eS OF Mh OF BW, 0M ee FG Mh Fe Ne be EO NL Ae WY SG ORS BG ie Sas eB Tie NY Ts Das SS sacs SR — —- ell i a 11. W Hyndman General Agent Standard Life Assurance Company. Established 1825 Assets The poii ARD., 1s th the market = -- = $42,000,009 _issued by the STAN D- est and most liberal on For rates etc, consult. ARTHUR G. PEAKE JCHN C. HYNDMAN Special Agents | ISLAND AGENCY (Juee) St., Charlettetewn C ard of ‘Thanks Having entered on our twenty-fifth year as Druggiets and Dispensing Chemists, and as our business has steadily increased durisg that time, we feel our efforts te warrant your confidence have been ap. preciated, and beg most respectfully to re- turn you our sincere thanks for your liberal patronage. |} It bas been our motto during the past + \wenty-five years to handle only the BEST goods in our line, aad sell the same at reasonable prices. We are now better than ever prepars ed to do this. BRING YOUR PRESCRIPTION TO US AND SAYE 25 PER CENT. All prescriptione are prepared persons ally or by our Mr. McKinnon, whois a graduate of the National Institute of Phar~ macy, Chicago, and a member of the Nova Scotia Pharmaceutical Society Our : Special : Remedies are giving every satisfaction; we are con~ stantly receiving testimonials in their favor. Soliciting a continuance of your patron Your obedient servant. age. GEORGE E, HUGHES Thepeopi-s» ruggiet; d&w Apotees Hal { THE PARLIAMENT OF CANADA Nicholas Flood Davin Heard From. THE GOVERNMENT FALSE TO ITS PRINCIPLES Corruption in Quebec --Richardson, of Lisgar, Thrown Down. [SpectaLto tHe Examixer] Orrawa, March 25.—A _ five hour speech on the address was delivered by N F. Davin. He charged the Governmeat with be- ing false to its pledges. “Where,” he asked “is the Liberal party today? Its leaders are in power, but the party is in opposition,—for its principles have been betrayed. Wanting sincerity and wanting insight they have touched , nothing that they have not deformed. Rufus Pepe eaid that he saw signs of a: general election in the threat of the gerry- u ander bill. He warned the Government that the Conservatives would not leave t' e House of Commons until they sould go to the pol!s on even terms. The acts of the Government would be closely observed and iuvestigated if it took all summer. Canada, he declared, is at present sufferiag from a rule of corruption such as has never before been known. The powers of the Liberal party had been used in Quebec to crush out prohibi- tion. More than forty thousand votes had been cast in Quebec against prohibition after the polls had been closed. Mr. Richardson, M. P. for Liegar, has been thrown down bv the Liberals. They did not invite him to the caucus of the westerners and substituted Bostock as the western liberal whip. This, it is said, has been done at Sifton’s diztation, his ani. mosity againgt Richardson being very etrong. se —— McCoy Gets Decision. [Spectat To Toe Examiner.] San Francisco, March 25.—McCoy got a decision over Choysnskiin a 25 round fight last night. Carters’ for Wall Paper + 12a. oe =r ee -~ ld ge adds to its value, if all the minor details are attended to in the finishing touches, Hxamine Work The most critical person must admit that we put our exper- ience in our work, Every de- tail is finished just as it should be. We are here to stay—we've made a rame for BEST WORK and we will keep it. Plans and specifications of all kinds of buildings always on hand for approval. Let us figure fer you. WM. W. HARPER Manufacturing C niractor, Fitzroy Street....s+eee TARIFF TINKEERING. Liberal Promises in Opposition not Kept. Hore George E. Foster iv the course of bis speech on the address said : “The next thing, he says they did was toreform the tariffand to reform it to the great ealisfaction of the peopleof this country, @ great majority at jeast. Bat is he explicit enough when he thought the only daty he had coasistent with his pro- mises was to retorm the tariffin ihe way in which he has doneit. Of late it has beew customary for someof the Ministers and some of the party press to take the bold ground thatthe Government have carried Out in ite entirety their whole pledge tothe people with reference to the tariff and fiscal policy. Mr. Siften aud opportuuity of reading the opinions of a | few ot them fiom the report of the Domi- niou Liberal convention, out of an authori- tative publication. What was the opinion | of Sir Oliver Mowat? He was brought in asthe good man with Sir Henri Joly de Lotbiniere to seize on the other more wicked members of the Government end make a fairly reputable administration if they came into power. Sir Oliver Mowat said: “After the next general election, I hope it may thoronghly understood by the whole country that it wae at the Liberal conven'ion, beld at Oitawain June, 1893, that protection and bad government and consequent political unrest amongst our people received their deathblow.” In the very beart of that great convention of Liberals, whea the opinion of that convention was known and canyass sed and when its pronouncements were decided upon, the Premier declared Mr. Mulock have taken that ground in speeches which they have made very late ly. They have declared openly te the people that the Govermment have formed everything which they led the electors of the couniry before 1896 to be- lieve that they would perform. PUBLIC FAITH BETRAYED. Sir, ihis is aquestion which cannot be jeft just in that conditione It isa matter which invelves the good faith of public | mep. It is a matter which involves truth ani honesty in high places. It is a matter which involves the demoralization or the ennobling of the public life of Canada,and I ‘ lay it to the charge of my right hon, friend and the gentlemen who sit with him, that they bave been guilty in this respect of set- ting into operation in this country a malign influence from the very highest poiats cf politics which is eating down into the honest and straightforward principle in all ranks ot society. With what holy horror he would draw his skirt» away from amen who would beso buse and dishonest as ‘co take a couple of dollars for bis voile. My hon’ friend to belive him, even though he associated wth the Merciers aod with the Pacauds, would draw away in holy horror from a man who would be so abandoned politically as to take a two dollar bill out of his pocket and offer it to a poor man for hie vote. But he sits in his high position and holds hie head aloft and looke as innocent as a cherub when he has, a+prime minister now, and as the leader formerly of @ party that went from ove end of this country to the other saying: “Gentlemen, the Government of the present day bases its tariff policy upon the principle of protection which ia a robbery aud afraud. Put them out and put us in, and we will base our tariff upen a policy which has every vestige of protec~ tion taken out of it”— And when the honest eleciorate of this country took him at his word and elected him and his fellow nmem-~ bers and they became a Government, they utterly repudiated that policy and snapped their fiugers in the face of the honest elec~ tors who believed them then, but who will not believe them afterwards, Sir, the crime of corruption by the dollar bill is a veniel and unmentiona} le thing in comparison with the crime of corruption of public men who will make such pledges as that, and will utterly flout and scorn them after getting into office. My hon. friend poses as a man who would not. What did he say? What hesaid was he would to God that he might never get power by meaus such as he referred to in the case of members on that side of the House. He has posed in that light of purity for a great many years What lower depth of degradation can a public man sink to than to make his solemn and honorable prom- ises to the people at large in their confi* dence and get their votes and then ensp his fingers in their face and refuse to carry out those pledges? . Would to God. he said, that he might never have power if be had to get it by dishonorable means. He sits there to-day and his followers sit with him, because they got volea, got money, got in- flaence in a dishonoratle way and used it to their own profit aud theirown advan~ tage. MR, SIETON AYSWEKED. They have fulfilled ell their promires, said Mr, Sifton. They bave not fulfilled their promiscs at all on the tariff question, and they will not deceive the people by getting up with brazen faces and decl sring sgainst the fall ligbt of the people’s knows ledge, that they bave kept promises which they have notkept. What were the pledges made by them—the pledges of their con- yentions, the p edges of their leaders? I am going to give you some of them. But first Jet me have # word with my hon. friend, Mr. Sizton, who is uothing, if not subtle and somewhat ingenious. He has cogitated in the course of ihe interm be- tween last session and this on the question of getting out of pledges, aud in the end he hit upon a very ingenious method. He said to himself, in the silent watches of the night : Laurier isnot my leader. He and those men whosit around him, their pledges count for nothing. Bake is my leader, aud I go back to 1887 and 1891 and I find what Blake was going todo andl fiod tha: we have done just exactly what Blake was going to do. Therefore, we have fuifilled al) our pledges. That is ingenious, but it ie harély arguable, and I do not tain« it will hold bef re the intelli- penee Ofthe racks “© *: * * -* * LIBERAL PLEDGES IN OPPOSITION. It must be forgotten that there were other leaders besides, and I shall take the r-: that this convention, when it resulted in ‘ultimate success at the polle was to du what? strike a death blow at the principle and practice of protection ‘Well, what did the present rrime Minister at that , convention ? He declared this : Mr. Chair~ man and gentlemen, 1 submit ‘o your judgement that the servile copy of the American system which has been brought amongst us by the leaders of the Conserva~ tive party is, like ite prototype, a fraud and a robbery. I call upon you one and all to pronounce at omce, altoge:her, your verdict andemphatic support to the pro- position that we shal never rest until we have wiped away from amongst us the system of f-audand robbery uader which Canadians suffer.” On another page of that publication he followed that out. He said that he objected to the Government and to their policy. “They want to reform the tariff and st li retain the position of pro~ teetion. I submit to you that not a cent should be extracted from the pockets of the people, except every cent goes ioto the treasury of the people, and notinto the pockets of avybodyelse. I submitto you that n> duties shou'd be levied for pro- tection, but levied altogether and only for the purpose of filling the treasury to the limite required. I submit to you that every cent that is levied should be levied upor the luxaries of the people. I sub- mit to you, therefore, that under the system which is maintained by the Government, they are levying tribute on the people, not for the legitimate expenses of the people, but for @ private and privileged clase, which should be condemoed without qualifisa- tion. Let it be well understood that from this moment we have a distinct issue with the party in power. Their ida is protec- tion ; ours is free trade. Their imm -diate object is protection; ours a tariff revenue only. Upon this issue we intend to appeal, and I ask you never to desist until we achieve victory, until we have freed the country from the incubus which bas been weighing it down for fifteen long years.” ldo not want to multiply instances of that kind of assertion. Stronger, ivfinite- ly stronger than that, were the etatements made by the then leader of the Opposition from one end tothe other. No one wiio has heard bim epeak, no one who has read the proceedings of that convention, no one who has followed the discut- sions _ before 1896 had any other than the s rongest and most ficm idea that what he pledged him self to do 1a the way of tariff reform was to eliminate the principle of protection and base his tariff upon the exact opposite, (Continued on page 8.) on the different platfurms of this country? OVAL ABSOLUTELY PURE Makes the food more delicious and wholesome ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. ACME MINES LITE we MILITIA a MEDICAL CORPS An Organization to be Formed. SxeciaL Tro the Examiwer Orrawa, March 25.—It ie contemplated to create an army medical department from the existing regimental medical men with a view to forming organizations which shall meet the ease. The following voluntary committee will be formed for Halifax:—Lieut, Col. Irving D. 0. C; President; SurgeonsLieut. Cel, Tebis; Surgeon Major, Donald A. Camp bell, 63rd Halifax R fles; Surgeon Major M Curry, 66th P. Q. Fuseleers. OTTAWA NOTES. A Uouse Adjournment—A Hansard Appointment. (Sreerat To Tak Examiner. } Orrawa, March 25.—Vacancy in the Hansard staff has been filled by the appointment of G.orge Simpson, the Ottawa correspondent of the Globe. Laurier has given notice of motion that when the House adjourns next Thursday it will etand adjourned until the following Tuesday. ANGLO RUSSIAN RELATIONS. Satisfactory Agreement in China Assured. (Sreciat ro rhe Examiver.]} Lonpen, March 2& .—It is serni officially announced that Anglo Russian negotiations in regard to China have assumed practics| shape and that on an early date a satisfi ¢- tory agreement may said to be assured. A Gloucester Schooner Doubt. [SpectaL to THE EXAMINER. J Bosrox, Maes., March 25.—The Glou- cester schooner A.M _ Bruvham, which left home nine weeke ago on a handlining trip, has not yet been heard from. She carried a crew of twelve. ' Minister Drops Dead. [Spreran To Tae Exam wer.) Sr. Jouy, N. B, March 25.—Rev. Mr. Morgan, Baptiet Minister of Oak Bay, Charlo:te County, N. B., dropped dead yesterday. — Saree eee oe © DAKING PowDER = * it You e Suffer k rom Impaired digestion, weakness, chills—consequent on the an- aemic condition of your blood Try vur DIGESTIVE TONIC It enriches the blood, strengthens the nerves Helps the digestion, Price 50c per bottle A. W. REDDIN, Pha. B Central Drug Siore Sunnyside. pe EEF e SSS Y FEREEEE Eye FREE PARAS ASA AS A AAA APR AA ‘CARTERS’ Tested Seeds Have you got a copy of our Seed Catologue for 1899 ? it tells how to get and grow our & eds. We are very busy TESTING PACKETING and SHIPPING SEEDS, but are not too busy to show you through our seed department which is now on firat floor n the New Annex in rear of our BOOKSTORE CARTERS’ SEEDS GROW, CARTERS’ SEEDS ARE DEST. Geo. Garter & Go. SEEDSMEN M \ i Se ad ARON EE GR RE Be saat aOR: FOS gga A iS SE ame