—ar er ¥ “ THE PAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 12, 1500. oe The Charlottetown Steam |THE DAILY EXAMINER Nav igation Gompany, Ltd. | mis issued every aficrmesn from the of- have made and upon the effort they have put forth to restore Govern- ment on honourable, and, indeed, | speeches, —the first, on the army estimates, having been _ delivered on the 2nd of March, and the last aoa publication, oa —eo on the 20th of October, 1899. In| British constitutional lines, the gen- zs ae uliding, corner of Queen anc ae > scribes the z y asi al result is deepl : STMRS. ‘NORTHUMBERLAND Richmond Streete; (upstairs). the first he describes the army as a| eral result is deeply to be deplored Much as it is to be regretted, that the entire country has not rebuked the persistent and brazen breaches of faith, the failure to do so en courages politicians to be unfaith ful. It tells them that they can vio- machine, indicates its purpose, and then goes into details as to each branch of the service. In another speech (June 21) he explaines what | Imperial Defence means, and what ‘it requires. The third deals with scription FOUR DOLLARS A YEAR, toany address in Canada or the U.S, a POINT DU CHENE, [on arrivel of THE WEEKLY EXAMINER 50 trai mS for SUMMER- ce ; a. 11.50 train from St. John,] for U is issued every Friday morning. It AND ‘‘PRINCESS.”’’ Leaves as below every day, Sunday except: | Sub- | 4" nitientn, gillillinad * nress ir or ° ° ‘ i Z _ ° ae er ee — — “er | qnmtiion 6 centile summary of the the testing of the machine by the| late their pledged word with impun- o >t < a yn . on ai : - » e ° ; y . 1c - co - Oharlottetow MERSIDE. fon arrival of morn news of the week, and is the best ‘sudden outbreak of war a vear ago. | ity. A great misfortune is it that Fe ™m Si \ Charlottetown and all stations Certainly. the department found} while Ontario has declared that the ' Island sewspaper to seid to frends ing train froa of P. E. 1. R.| for POINT DU CHENE, connect- DULLAR 1 venee aye riage ‘itself face to face witha gigantic|extravagance and the _ boodling ; : om , > ! é y ‘ Q . . . . , o ing with afternovn train for ST. JOHN, BOS- dress in Canada or the U. S y 'task when it became apparent that| must stop, the rest of the coun- TON and MonTREAL. : : peng | were | the two states had engaged in a/try has condoned these _ evils. Connection at Moncton with train for Gan- struggle for life, trustine to the| That condornation threatens us t St. John with C. P. R. a BE - 7. ‘ i; eae Me SN ioe ak i ; 4 : ; mee | nature of the country, their know-| with an aggravation of the wrongs Ratenty te U.S. Se eS ee ae The sup=riority of th: jub printing | ledge of it, and their lone -enar-| and foreshadows improprieties | hn w th Steamers yf International and Dom turned o it at THE EXAMINER ‘ fee Cus < C » a C . v 1g pre Dal 4 : od ‘ } ] € ce i \tlantic S. S. Lines Tuesday and a is ackn »wledged byall. All classes | ation for the war, a olitically and | compared with which those of the ‘ fternoon for Boston direct due fo!low of work in book and job,from dainty 'morally, it was in England’s favor! past few years fade into insignifi- | i xy at noon, and on Monaay Wednesday booklets in the lates: style to ser- }that she was taken by surprise.|cance. A disaster to the Imperia]| ; riday a rings, with “teamers for East viceable bound books. ! Also all That did not, of course. excuse! cause is it that this country, at this ort LAK soston. kinds o nlay rintine >r. os: i . cr. . i « ° P Portla LA 1 Bost o = aad KIN of dis} ay printing, Commer those whose official raison d‘etre/| time, should be inthe hands of men n PICTOU about half past three o1 cial and legal blanks, etc etc , at 2 . . ; ee iia ti to (ie ee rrival of day trains from Halifax and Sydney ce ; was to make surprise impossible.| who are its enemies. The verdict is | I i le —— _——— ana oye TALeS dS p SInViV OW. > . eas : ae 2 s ae fs % t ile dl { H*RLOTTETOWN. ve \ddress all business communica- But the circumstances be my WwW hat tantamount to a re Jee tion of the From CHARLOTTETOWN for Pictou at | tions to thev were, anda vast army having | British preferencewhich would bring | S.20 a. m, connecting there with day trains for ; , to be sent to South Africa. fully the Empire into closer union, and | CAPE BRKTON HALIFAX. The Examiner Pub. Co. equipped with arms, tents, rations,| make it stronger and better as a/| : —_— “CON ERY ea etoaune fruc : s . : — i j . , Ne ~4- } ; N aerate Di ah ene seeeeet SOC | Chartodial wn, P. E. I. medicines, and all that such equipt-| power for good. Especially is it to| cv HALIFAX with C. A. and Plant Lin ment implies in men and material,! be regretted that the Government | i tk 4 Uf . .» ana iant An¢ somes : a St . : c 3 : “ : eed a : s ar ms < i ] for BOSTON. Passengers fron all places on SSF ROM SALISBURY TO what an enor mous demand Was | has be en successsul in arraying one P. E I. Railway east of CHARLOTTETOWN can LANSDOWNE made on the energies of the War) province against all Canada, The leave howre 24 hours later than if joining ‘ : Office! The transplanting of such| return of the Laurier Ministry to| : Plant Steamer in CH’TOWN and connec - 'a host, all equipped and provided, | power is a bad day’s work, not only | a with same Steamer in HALIFAX, 5 (Montreal Gazette.) such long distances was a work that! for what has been excused, or for | is for outsiders not easy to imagine. | what has been rejected, but in addi-| And yet from the start criticism by| tion, for what we may expect. All) experts and non-experts has never| earnest Canadians must mourn the | taken breath. Is it any wonder! result, and must hope that our| that Lord Salisbury looks at Lord | punishment will not be too severe. | Lansdowne’s merit from a dit-| ferent point of viewto that of the| ot multitude and its organs ? He has! seen the Secretary of War spend| THE LATE ELECTION: laborious days and anxious nights! for more than twelve months. Even | if we admit that his department| was at fault, surely there is no} Thr ugh Tic Canadian Pac Railways, and and connecting Canada. Steamers run kets to be had at erand Trunk | fic Intercolenial and P.E I on the Company’s Steamers lines in United States and The British press has been taking | advantage of the nomination of | Lore Lansdowne to the position of | Secretary of Foreign Affairs to re- new the charges of maladministra- tion which his conduct of the War} Office had provoked. Some critics! a affect to consider it incredible that | MALAAAssbe Asses bessbbsbassssses a a Lord Salisbury should be so deaf to} Hillsborough the demands of the nation as to: Rae ae LEY. an ¢ wr on Eastern Standard time. F. W. HALE%, Secretary Charlottetown, P. E. I. Juner8 d and w. - lace a colleague so distrusted by the people in a post so responsible. | There are two sides tothe question, | — CCNSERVATIVE — 1 Brockvi le. and two modesof reaching a judg- | others man in the Empire: that hap | Cardwell. ‘ teen ae a S : | borne such a burden of care for the! 7c all-St t ment regarding it. The popular and | tee sag a | UCornwa mont. Bridge natural judgment is based on the! Empire's sake. Nor - ——s a] Frontenac. There, you outside man, we're after you with the most comfort- ~ Based lier. Obes > ‘¢:c), | May Suppose, 4 Man who knows the; Grey, South. - | able coat you eversaw. It’s good soli ds atl anvas ' oe checks that prevented the British | Empire's real strength at this mo-| xrey, + oat » saw. its good solid goods, leather, canvas or cordy- Hamilton, (two seats.) Huron, South. Lambton, Hast. march to Bloemfonteinand Pretoria and the repression of the insurgent | Boers from being accomplished with- | roy outside, and lined with sheepskin. The warmest thing you ever had on you, and the price is only that of a good reefer—#7. Yon’d expect |it to be $12 by the look of it, but you are agreeably disappoin ted}, when ment more intimately than Lord'| Th New Bridge iscom- Lansdowne. Very painfully he has’ : in a reasonable time. What those) See Fogg pang nee ee Leeds-Grenville, North. | we say $7._,When you shiver, just think of the Kumfort Coats. ing andjs are the dry checks were; how far, by different | wot “indeed. thatle 5 m to t ‘. |: Se ee ae ae | strategy, they could have been}7,.” Pena = erucy; Middlesex, North. the Empire's military strength only | Ontario, North. a year ago. He has been a student | Ottawa (one seat.) streets and roads. Then avoided, whether they were due in part to the nature of the country KUMFORT you will? need some- and the tacticsof the enemy, and! = mes Pager Es ae ee _— | Peel. as how far, in that case, the War Of-'| bl 4 Ws ac rR ; "A 1 the | Prince Edward. thing nice in fovutwear. fice and its generals were relieved of | nee ee o <n os. €is the} Toronto, Centre. shee hl f arch et ;. | least faineant of hereditary legis-| T--onto. East | the blame for the delay, the mis-| lators. Knowing all this. Lord Sal | Satter ee See | chances, the excessive mortality and} .“, g Aa ety, | Victoria, South. isbury put in hima confidence that | he put in no other of his colleagues, | when he made up his mind, as the cable advises, to surrender to the younger statesman the position on which he sets the highest value. a <2 PRESS COMMENTS. Si nia | Waterloo, South. Wellington, Centre. Wellington, North. Chicoutimi Saguenay. Nicolet. King’s, N B. Sunbury-Queens. Halifax. Hants, N S. | Prince, East. | Macdonald, Man. | As:inibcia, East. | other accompaniments of the war, | We Have a fine Selection *eneed not discuss. Every <etail . -the arguments pro and con has Sell ing Very Low "en gone over again and again ad | , 7. H. BELLE | aduseam. It may be admitted that 7 J 2vTance as to the strength and! The Bargain Boot } 5 j ut eee: ier asit certainly was | 49t universal outside of the Boer! e most concerned, how-' seeming unhappily to be the! ‘ithe first place there was strange | iomcntof the f aon bm zi jiipmcnut ot the foe—an lvnorance Shoe Store. The Montreal Gazette remarks :— Zz ver. Looking at the results in all it , » } . wn ole - ve fe Ne o te ») ist atormed. The course of|aspects, it can be said, however. Saskatchewan. ---Total{32. A GHAN CE OF A | vents since the occupation of the|that while for the Conservative | ec oetinana Moer capitals ard even since the} party, and too, for the country, | LIBERAL GAINS. id of the war as a test of the capa-| there is much to regret, there is for | LIFETIME ». ar : a Se tha Ge it y the siates to hold their own the party little to be ashamed of. | Bothwell. 7 oc eS * . oe 1 faaitical resstance to the Em-;The Conservative policy was the} Bruce, North. aiaiie aii ! properties in P. E. I. pire’s might, discloses, as nothing! same from British Columbia to Nova | Glengarry. oe cae aiell vi Could do, the true!Scotia. Its leaders spoke the same}; Haldimand-Monck. . [his farm contains 130 acres of excellent) jj ficuliy of putting down such ad-| words in Quebec as in the other} London. land, 80 acr~s_c\:ared and in prime condi-| -arsarjes. The guerillas of Spain; provinces. The position it took was! Northumberland, West. tion. — rhere eee a ' owe bse Sof ‘uring the Napoleonic occupation | calculated to promote the great in-} Renfrew, South. =e ms ued aces Cale ret cae ca cil cept up for years just such a con- | terests of the country, and of the | Welland. e the shore, abundence of marsh mud, well| lict asis being now w aged, doing | Empire. It has suffered only a tem- | W ellington, South. wat red, two mills near the house, good’ lamage on every chance, coming to-} porary defeat, and that even isdue| Beauharnois. buildi:gs, basement stable, 6 miles from| gether again after defeat, and al-|in large part tothe fact that its! Champlain. town, one mileirom Pownal vilage, s bool! together evincing a vitality only opponents standin manyissues on} Montcalm. ae tthe farm, three charches within a radius | noccinle to desperate enemies simi-|its platform. It wilt lock to the} Montreal,---St. Anne’s. o' 172 miles, — ei ig tna aan larly situated. Entrenched in their| past without more regret than is} Pontiac. Se ae gees ian aes as | familiar fastnesses a mere handful | justly caused by overthrow in a; Stanstead. | racplerries, stre sindnelie etc. For location) is @ match for an army. That fhe| fight for a good cause. It willlook; Terrebonne. an! beauty of scenery this property is unsur-| Govern:nent, as a belligerent power,|to the future with the confidence! Three Rivers-St. Maurice. ' passed by any on the Isiand. It is a daisy | knew less of the nature of Boer war- | that its vindication will come sooner,| Gloucester. N B. ofa olace, fut there is not a daisy on it.| fare, was less prepared for it and} perhaps, than many imagine. * * *| Kent, N B. On‘y reason for selling—going into. business) ~o.med less "aware of the sort of | The Little Englanders will rejoice| Restigouche, N B. ; Sion ee Tae faa: serene troops most{needed to meet it than | over the result in Canada. ' They | Westmorland. Terms on applic tion to my solicitor, A. A, | ought to have been the case, canno: | looked to a Liberal victory in this York, N B. ea Mc' ean, Barrister, Charlottetown, or te | be denied. Blunders of prevision | country as a blow at Mr. Chamber- | Annapolis, N §. 1¢ OWNCT, | were followed by costly mistakes in } lain, the greatest statesman who; Cape Breton (two seats.) 2 ee A. A. MOORE. | execution. Even toa late stage in}has hada hand in directing the| Pictou. n5—d25kw lthe war miscalculation, heedless- | affairs of Britain’s colonial Empire. | Richmond, N S.---Total 27. We ARE AUTHORIZED MontrReEAL Srar: Yesterday's election was a surprise. There will be various theories explaining the result. None of them are likely to have all the truth. That the French- Canadian Conservatives in Parlia- ment are all but obliterated is re- ness, a defective intelligence system caused surprises always deplorable, |sometimes inexcuseable. Even the | success gained by Lord Roberts and his subordinates was gained at a dreadful price, while Sir Redvers | Buller, through a series of miscom- well made and wil! wear Only 65c per pair. Solid leather outside, solid wool inside, splendidly. Just what yeu want for driving. Kumfort Gloves, Kumfort guaranteed Gloves and Mitts. Every thing with the Kumfort brand on them is made for cold, cold weather. LIFE is made up of a little rain, a little sun, a little grief, a little awe an aias! , sses | < on national grounds, but | yn fot 2g we Cael oi sae es putations, sustained grave losses} grettable on natic : | sud a Saket canal one. oan aed ie wor oh KK uestorsceee ro refund the money when | long before victory crowned his|it should not provoke ill-feeling in | rings ~ Ke + Shoe ao — © asap ch ' it , a j : ~ ° = is | i ° J ST > 18 > - rc . REMICK’S ‘plans. In fine, more than a year|the other provinces. The French-| 2 ae ECZEMA CURE Fails to cure any case of FE r no matter of hom long For sale only at MACDONALD’S OT Mics i 4-< ~~ DRUGSTORE. 4zczeMa | Canadians in Quebec, Ontario, Nova | i Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Ed- | ‘ward Island, Manitoba and the. North-West voted largely for a Pre- | even next Christmas. mier of their own nationality as the | Ali this the public sees and feels. | first consideration. The appeal to, | Indeed, when Christmas comes, it|them wasclever. Mr. Tarte knows will recall many sad vacancies in|how to win elections. While Sir thousands of homes of the great,| Wilfrid Laurier is to be congratu- | ind the humble, all ever the Em-| lated upon his personal success and But, while the ‘‘ man on the; upon having election managers who after the war began, the conflict is still being waged, and what some ‘enthusiasts hoped might be over 'last Christmas may not be over ' i i i j T *< pire i i Nothing on Earth will do | it like Sheridan’s Powder. Thousands of successful Poultry-Keepers all over the country owe no emall portion of their success to the practice of mixing with the mash food given to their coma A every day, a small quantity of SHERIDAN’s CONDITION POWDER. It has been used and indorsed by Pou’try-Raisers over thirty years,and for all kinds of poultry. If you can’t get the Powder send to us. One | Nicht Bell Nurses’ Regsiter, | Street’ is hard on the War Office,|know the French-Canadian people) pack, 25cts.; ve, $1. Large two-lb. can, $1.20. 4N 19 i. 4 ses Ss J : ied e : j i e . rl me ; ans,exp. paid, ¢5. § ) ” he is wild over the men it brought!and the winning methods, much| paper free. “1.5. JOHNSON & OO! Boston, Maz, McEACHEN & McCABE, Rurristers-at-Law Cc Sydney Lors aND H ovght and sol orrowed at sh uire. ete, arlotte Street, McDonald’s oa. USES in and about Syd ey —— i, and moneys invested or | MISSION, : wt notice, as clients may re-| Company brought out, in pamphlet d&w ' together. Lord Lansdowne, as the! sympathy will be felt for the Con head of that office has been severely | servative leaders, and many good criticized. Now and then h> has said} supporters who went down in the) ,a word on his own behalf, but for/ fight. The campaign was charact- Block, | the most part it is his deputy in the | erized by good humour, and the re-| Commons, Mr. Wyndham, who has | sult is likely to be accepted without defended the administration in the| rancour. public ear. Recently, by his per-| The Mail and Empire says: While the Outlook Publishing | Ontario and the West are to be con- gratulated upon the stand they! form, several of Mr. Wyndham’s| have taken, upon the protest they ; ' —‘‘Our Boys Under Fire or New! Brunswick and Prince Edward Is- | lend volunteer in South Africa,’’ by | Miss Annie Elizabeth Mellish. This | book of 122 pages, 42 illustrations | tells of the varied career of Our} Boys during their year on active ser- | vice. For sale in all the boo'xstores. | Price 50 cents. : PROWSE BROS. ADVERTISERS OF FACTS O59 eGo on Go een eis es eG > St