ee eee ee . Ey ee re nt tig: SS oe TE Er Peet , ‘ ; + 4 ® z ; ? t 4 i ; a r , if 2 bi a ef 4 ped. Sou It Pay te Buy at rkins \< RIBBONS: New Fancy Sik 298 Patterns in all the Latest Novelties , New Roma Silks New Pin Striped Silks date i ¢ L887 . « - $35,657,680 ISS 5 Sear nae SEI cs cxcnvesenanedbdliw kc cs es ee Us 4 6g enscenucteliegchis yc nue 1 189] 36 345 568 1892 ee rr | 1893 tedssdcedinad. 16 Oe [St4 is ie bee 5 «ids pac en ee PURGE suse icucndepeadsibeaies 1 aan wy 36.949 142 Total in ten years..........+.4 $367 877.723 Or an average expenditure throuvhout the Strined *s Checked Silks New Black Satin New Fency Tartan Silks. New Shot / New Black Moire Velours New Black Broche Silks New Art Silks. New Sheph« rd Merveilleux | Checked rmeur Silks GOODS PRESS Hard Wear in Dress Goods Dress Goods should be of such | good quality they wear—that’s not al the patterisand designs should | be neat. We arefproud of mii stozk of Dress Goods and shall be pleased to show you the lat est styles and mater - that le ts " hs ar di | ise | swill stand thoug Box Clotlis in different shades at 1%c per yard All wool Black Serge, 40 in. wide, ind Navy Blue, only 25¢ per yard About 50 suitable for ments, in shades. F Perkins & ( SUNNYSIDE. PE SS cloth Costuines, tailor made gar- all the newest THE DAILY BXAMINER DECEMBER | 6, ae =? A FEW FIGURES. Tue fact that Mr. Bell and his friends have brought the Minister of Finance into the ficld indicates a very real fear that the Liberal candidate may not lead the poll io East Prince. Mr. Bell’s friends affect great contempt for “the boy.”’ But their tinkling champion, evident!y—in their opinion—needs the aesistanee of a strong does not season of East Prince Mr. Field- ing will, without doubt, be met by the question, how is it that after spending twenty years in denouncing “Tory ex travagance,” the Liberals are spending more money than the Tories, and public taxation and debt are all increasing in this rtime?” In the last ten years , the Liberal Conservative The Finance Minister come over here at this the year to stump forthe fun of the thing. voice, “ growit of their regime Guvernment expended out of the Consoli- ten years of $36,787,772 per year. Now turn to the Libere] expenditures. Tue Literal; ending expended in the er . . £38 349 760 | SEOs scence yoemettiae » 38.699, 823 1899 (e- stimated) dh dincup mended 40,987,812 Total in three years.......... $118,037 395 or a yearly average of $39,345,798—an increase of nearly two and a half millions upon Consolidated Fund alone. Then take the During the Capital expenditures - last Parliament controlled by the Conservatives, these were as follows :— 1892.... + 82,164,456 1893... i re ae . 3.862 969 1895... 3.030 490 L896. . . 3,781,311 Under the Liberal regime the capital expenditures are as follows: ae , $3,523,160 ee ees 5 542 838 1899 (estimated)... .. 6,983,135 Mr. Fielding may well be asked to ex plain the great increases shown in view of distinct and repeated pledgee, of which the following is a sample: Sir Loris Davies— WHICH WE PLEDGE OURSELVES, that LARGE AND IMPORTANT REDUCTIONS Gan he without interfering with the efficient ad-* ministration of affaira, T “T gay Sin Bictsrnd Gatrwrkicatr— a disgrace and es to the Goverament th at bas been entrusted with oar affairs that they come down to ask for an expen diture of $53,000,000 a year for Fedeval purposes. Yet the Finance Minister comes to East r oO attempt to make the electors tee | lieve that a’ Federal Expenditure of all but | $48,000,000 a year is oli right and econ- omieal ! We fee] sure that the electors will not be: ect by cock and buil stories abont the Klondike and the extension of the Intercolonial railway. ql he Liberals pledged themselves also to This they might in view of increased uce taxation. wi 1 do j which duty was paid in the past two years, very imports on The taxes paid by Canadians amounted to 1894 5 co SOOB. 2. so coceee 25,446,192 De DBeacakes * uiehsgadlasnenen Aa ae RTs 5 bse iaebadaliand eave 28,649,004 ae made 29,602,799 years | } } “We are ready to} go to the country with that statement, IN, very . | party were used to prevent-the free €xpres™ le in ft ve mace io the ex pendi' ure of the O¢ yn! ry a tir a of the poy pul lar wi i}. it is } . | Liberal | Bell. | | are being | pledges made to the people by the Reform coward’s dodye. ters prohibition actually cast will be disregard- red, ag it was intended to disregard it from ‘friends can get rid or THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER 6, 1698 | That the Liberals, last year, took from the people, in taxee, $4,156,607 more than the Conservatives took in 1895- is to say Lastly,as to the public debt. Notwith- standiog the bounding revenues enjoyed by the Liberals, they have, also, broken thei pledge not to add to the public debt of the country. Io 1887, the addition to the n2t debt was $5,041,163, and in 1898 $2,794 580 ur in two years close upon $6,000,000, More than this, in the month of July last —the first month of the current financia! year— there was added to the public debt $4,069,- 414.49. The Finance Minister may attempt ‘to explain away these damning figures— copied from the Canada Gazette. The N. P tariff still in force, and heavy imports by our merchants have given him a large revenue this year, and there are large bal- ances at the banks jast now which go ty reduce the net debt at this moment. Bu, the amounts we have named have gone to swellthe debt; and atthe end of the year, when all the expenditures have been ac- counted for, it w.1l be found that they will stand as a permanent addition to the bure den of the tax payers of the country. — Thus with added expenditures, added taxation and added debi instead of reduced ; expenditures, reduced taxation and reduced debt, as promised by Sir Louis Davies and other gentlemen now in the Goverument, Mr. Fielding appearsto ask the electors of East Prince to jastify the conduct of th® admini ane by Will they do it? ee — THE PLEBISCITE PLEA. electing Mr. Tue Temperance electors of East Prince the Libera! account of prohibition and Now, why they should vote against him asked to vote for candidate on the plebiscite. this is a principal reason Everyone knows, now, that the plebiscite was hur bug, pure and simple—all but the cost, which was about a quarter of a mil lion of dollars of the public money. This i8 at Once so true and so damaging to th® Government that Liberal papers in the other provincesare striving to relieve the Government of responsibility forit. Thus the Free Press of Ottawasays : not the work of the however, carried out the “The plebiscite v. Government. It, convention, which was alone responsible for the scheme.” Commenting upon this declaration The Montrea! Gazette remarks that “ip is easy, to understand a Liberal newspaper’s desir, to repudiate the plebiscite. It was the grossest humbug ever perpetrated on an oft-humbugged people. It was ap unsanc, tified attempt by ths Goverament to shirk ite responsibility of dealing with a public issue, an attempt without precedent in British constitutional history. It was a [t was aud was meant to Tie eftoris of Laurier’s minis~ organization of the Laurier be a fraud. and the The majority for The ; l¢bisc those who think prohibition he first. te was more than an outrage Ou practicable; it was an outrage on the com- mon sense of the peopl>, a quarter of a illion of pakir But dislike it as they may, there ig no way in which the whose mousey was wasted in ig it. Government and its its respovsibility io the matter. The record is on public view.> The remarks of the Gazette are absolutely true. The Government and the Govern- ment only, are responsible for the plebiscite —and the plebiscite was a “fraud.” If Mr. than Bell did not care more for his party he does for temperence, he would have denounced the deception perpetrated by the Government in the name of prohi- bition. As temperance men and as tax payers, the electors of East Prince ought to condemn the Government’s conduct in respect to the plebiscite. The way to do so is to vote against Mr. Bell. AL UMPY when you bought it new. it. Home Make [AT TRESS is not very comfortable to sleep on, 18 it? are sleeping on old “lumpy mattresses” , just because they think they can’t afford a new one, new machinery, specially for remaking “old lumpy mattresses’ and when we have finished with it—well, we can guarantee that you'll find it just as soft and comfortable to sleep on as Come in and tell us about your mattress, and we'll tell you how much it will cost to remake ark Wright & Co., Ltd — ee ee ee oe > Plenty of people Our factory is fitted with NOTES AND COMMENTS. —Are our farmers growing richas a result of Liberal rule ? Look out for our farmers reply on election day. — Blair's way of taking the intercolonia! “out of politics” is to mske ita mere ac” cessory to bis political and buciness enter- prises. —Accordirg tothe official returns, the imports of iron from Great Britain in 1896 amunted to $1,158,699 and in 1895 to $652,125. The prefe.ential tariff is evident» ly not doing Great Britain any good in res« pect to iron. —Of seven constituencies, including Simcoe and Bagot-vacant by the death of the members, five are vacant. by the mem-~ bers being appointed to office. Mr Cam- eron, M. P., for West, Huron, was ap- pointed governor of the North West; Mr Lister, M. P. for West Lambton, was made a judge; Dr Quay, M. P., for Levis was given @ porition as quarantine officer; Mr Cocquette, M. P., for Montmagny was appointed to a judgeship, and Mr Yeo, M. P., for East Prince, wae moved into the Senate. ———a ESTEEMED EXCHANGES St John Sun: The government organs are still pointing outthat no one is making formal charges against the government officialson the Yukon. ‘That bardly seems necessary, since Mr Sifton is turning them out apparently for sufficient reason. Moacton Times: It is said that one of the arguments brought to bear upon Mr. Blair for giving the Moncton organ of gritism a larger share of the railway printing is that Editor Hawke is the only pos-itle Liberal candidate for the peat ciection in Wesmorilanc, and that be will religiously put by a share of the profits on printing jobs to be used in elevating the standard of political morality in this country. Cure a Cold in Gne Day Tuke Laxative Bromo Quinine Tabi ets All druggists refuna the money if it tailsto re, 62ec DR. CLIFT Diseases and Ch’town, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Call or send stamp for information. cures Chroni AMUSEMENTS. OPERA HOUSE TO-NIGHT Robinson Comic Opera Co. ie ides CRA DIAYOLO Taesday Evenin Said Pasha Wednesday Matinee Thursday Evening Gir Friday Evening Bohemian Girl Saturday Matinee La Mascotte Saturday Eve's Queen's Lace Hand- kerchief POPULAR PRICES: Special for the Operas $3.00 25, - 35, - 50:~ Cents, Seats now on sale at usual places. tickets week 8 Annual Meeting Merchants Bank of P. E. Island The Annual General Meeting,of the ehareboldera, of the Merchants’ Bank of P. E. Island, will be held at ‘ts Bankiog House, Great George Street, on Tuesday the 10th day of January, next, 1899, at the hour of 11 o’clock a, m. Proxies must be left with the Cashier at least one day previous to the meeting. J.M. DAVISON, 280 Cashier Dividend Notice Merchants Bank of P. E. Islang CHARLOTTETOWN, Dec. ist, 1898 Notice is hereby giveu, that a half-yearly | dividend, at the rate of 8 per cent. per annum on the capital stock of this bank, has been de- clared payable at ~ aes house, on and after J anuary 3rd, Transfer book will be closed from December , A. oe 3rd of Jauuary, 1899, ae on ™ J. WM: nay LARGE CROWDS Still Buying Daily at VWreeks & Ce Immense Closing Sale Lots of Goods —Lots of Goods—Between $25.000 and $30,000 worth yet to be sald We have stocks of goods yet to sell, Every day we are filling up the retail store — with goods from the wholesale department and selling everything at tremendous digs coupbts. 20 pe te 50p/e DISCOUNT off Everything Special Lines this week in Black Dress Goods—In addition to the 95 diges Se -ryes, Rupture a/| mints we are giving off Biack Cashmere, Merit noes, Fancies, Crepous and all Black goods in order to make aquick clearance in this department we will give an extra discount of 5 / making in ai] the enormous cash discounts of 30%. ALSO | LADIES JACKETS Special discounts this weék 25 pcand dnc oxtra ‘~e expect to make a complete clearance of these departments. FANCY LINENS AND WORKING SILKS | We have placed our whole stovk of fancy and stamped Linens on the centre counter” | for your inspection to be cleared at once. Doylies, Tray cloths, Sideboard covers Centres etc, etc. EVERYTHING 25 PC DISCOUNT Working Sillzs | Twisted Embroideries Filo Fioss Rope Silks Roman Floss 1 tg ' per dozen skeins Sicilian tassels etc. etc. All fancy Cards, fringes, 25 pcand 33 1-3 pc discount Dlivette | Wednesday Evening Chimes of Normandy | a ofle Gircfla| ¥ Closing Sale Daily FLETCHER’S PIANO —— WAREROOMS Opera House Building. W SWek Pia JUST ARRIVED Superb Tone— Elegant Cases— oa PIANOS TO RENT or sold on easy terms, C. Pope Fletcher ‘Ch’ town, Des 6th, 1398 /-_ <.