in : ; ? eee mn 4 aT) - 4 j : ir \ THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, 24, 1898 THE DAILY EXAMINER JUNE 24, tex MAKE THE TOWN ATTRACTIVE ! Tne prosperity of Charlottetown depends chiefly upon the extent of ite trade with the neighbouring country. No one will dispute this proposition. Consequently it is worth whi.e te make Charlottetown attractive to our farmers, to place facilities for trade with them in their way and to remove every obstacle to trade with therm: To this end our merchants and the citi- zens of Charlottetown, generelly, should labor and should exert their influence, the more 80 a8 competition on the part of country stores is increasing. The construction of a bridge over the Hillsborough River is, therefore, to be earnestly striven for by citizene as well as by the people of the country who find it advantageous to come here to sell or to buy; and we hope that the opportun~ ity to promote this important work atfor~ ded by the approaching wisit of Sir Louis Davies will be utilized. The people of Charlottetown ought to show, by word and act, that they are not satisfied with diliy~ dallying aed procrastioation in this re- gard, but are fully alive to the impor- tance of prompt and decisive action. Sir Louis has promised the bridge, as weil as the Southern railway. Doubtless, he has dong, and will continue to do, what he can in fulfilment of his promise; but it is by thie time evidertto ‘all that his hands need strengthening and his knees stiffening. Then we may, ourselves, do something tuwards attracting the custom of the coun try, aud removing obstacles in the way of country, people. We give credit to the City Council for the repairs they are making on St Peter's Koai, and we hope that this and all others roads leading to the city and within the city limits will be put in the best possible condition. Some- thing might also be done towards thie re- moval of obstacles to free exchange be~ tween the people of the country and the people of the city, as for instance the aboli, tion of all taxes placed upon farmers doing basiness iu this City. We question the moral right of the city to impose any such taxes. The Legislature gave the City Council a right to impose taxes upon members of the City corporation, for certain purpose, Is the City Council, then, justified in imposing ‘axes upon persous who ere not members of the cor- poration ghd ndt, in any sense, residents of Charlottétown? Wetrownot. We have, perhaps, in strict law, the power to do so: our moral right to do so is far from clear to the just reasover. But if this point be quest.cnable, there is nc question whatever as to the jnexpediency of taxing outsiders wto come into towa to deal with us. Take» for instance, the meat tax which has created intense dissatisfaction in the country districte surrounding Charlotte- town as well as among the smal! dealers in the city. We recently heard a well~to~do farmer, who sells and buys hundreds of dollars worth among our merchants every year, declare that he would in future deal wholly withthe local country store of his district unless this tax, by which he is prevented from selling a few carcass~ es of mutton in his own way, be remov-~ ed. For the sake of afew dollars paid into the City treasury and a scarcely perceptible increase of sales on the part of the few city meat dealers who do a large busness, we displease and annoy numbers of customers who sell not only meat but quantities o other products, to the profit of city dealers doing an export business and who buy all that they need over the counters of our drygoods hardware merchants, our grocers and tradespeople generally, thus making up the major part of the yearly profits and means of livelihood for most of our citizens. This is not good business. The meat tax, and all such taxes, tend to place the city store at a disadvantage as compared with the coun- try store, and todivert trade from the city to the country, These taxes ought,therefore, to be quietly removed at the first oppor- tunity, even thorgh a fraction of a frac~ tion more taxes may, as a result, have to be paid by citizens into the city exchequer. If we could, moreover, establish a few manufactories of such things as the coun- try needs—of auch things as those for which we anaually hundreds of thousands of doi’ars, into Ontario—the aad send city would be distinctly benefitted and the! value of property in the city improvec. Besides the farmers, who are our chief customers, we have minor #ources of prosperity in those persons having incomes who come, from time to time, to live here; and, also, in the casul visitor. For these persons the city ought to be made attrac - tive, aud we ought, individually and cols lectively, as Citizens, to spare no reason~ able effort tothatend. This duty to our city has been recognized in the decision to proceed with sewerage, and in our Queen va is - We lyre * Square avardens and the atteution recéntly i piltoonr public squares and park. retoher te bas mat ve tak em the | thou Of w ficot-clace butel. Whiie we have iu the “ Dayies ” andthe ** Queen” hoetel- ries that ure creditable to the city and af- ‘ford ample accommodation for the ordin- ary run of passenger traffic, we are stil) without accommodation for more than a very limited numberof summer touriste> and we have no special attractions whet” ever for those of the wealthier class of tourists who distribute the larger amounts of money as they come and go. The value of property in Charlottetown j@ now on the down grade. This has been made evident by the recent sales held, and attempted. If the owners of prcperty in the ‘city do not bestir themselves, they will, ere long, find themselves even poorer than they are. +e — ——-_——_—_-- NOTES AND COMMENTS. _— ——— —On the 21st inet., inthe Nova Scotia Methodist Conference, held at Truro, the following resolution was carried : — That this conference memorialize the general conference to chavge the wording of the apostles creed as contained io the catechism either so as to make it agree with the creed ae published in thediscip~ line on page 237, by strikicg out the words, “He descended into hell,” or by so chang - ing the words that they wiil express what is now generally believed. — PERSONAL. Zev. M.J. McMillan is reported easier but weaker to-day. H. J. Cundall, Esq., left this morning for Halifax, to attend the diocesan Sy ued. Key. Mr. Sutherland paseed a fair night, aod his Symptomsare graiually improving Mre. R. A. Murdock and her sister, Miss Allan, of Chatham, N. B., are vieit- i g the Misses Murphy, Upper Kent street: Rev Mr Spurr, of Pownul, was yesterday presented with a handsome set harnese, by some of his friends in Eldon and Belfast. Mr. Thorpe, of Mr. Cottio’s engineering stall, arrived from Boswn last evening. The engineers begau work on the sewerage survey yesterday, é Karl of Mansfield is the only member who has satin the Hou-e of Lords since the beginnfog.of the first parliament of Willidm IV. He is vow 91 years of age. Rev. J. Simpson, M. A , left this morn- ing for Halifax to attend the Synod of the Church of England. While in Halifax be will be the guest of Rev. E. P. Crawford. Mr D.A. McKinnon, of the Apothecaries Hall, is receivirg congratulations upon passing the final exom.auon prescribed by the Pharmaceatical Society ot Nova Scotia, We note that Miss Mary S:ewart is th? winner of the Secoud Book prize at Edge- hill. Miss Stewart is if we mistake pot a daughter of the late R. B. Stewart, Esq., of Strath Gartney. a : _ A GLOBE REPRESENTATIVE Cured of Lumbago by Dodd's Kidney Pills, after His Doct r Failed Toronto, June 20—(Special ) If there is a good thing in creauon, @ newspaper man will find it out. The truth of this is shown by the case of Mr John H Paruham, w pressman On the Globe staff. Mr Paroham has, for months, suffered from lumbag®, aggravated by the nature of his work in the pressroom He consulted an eminent local physician, but no benefis resulted from his crea'ment. On the advice of a friend be tried Dodd’s Kidney Pills, with the result that he was completely cured. This case is one more proof of the fact | hat for Lumbago and every other kidney omplaint there is only one cure and tha | Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Summer Home Requirements. If you are going to your summer home or to the country for the holidays, don’t | forget to take asupply of Abbey’s Effer- vescent Salt with you, unless you are | sure there is a druggist where you are going. The daily use of Abbey's Efterves- cent Salt keeps you in good health. It 18 unequalled as a eummer beverage, cool. ing the blood and invigorating the system. 60 cents a Jarge bottle. Tria] size 25 cents. | Sold by al! druggists. Beds. “Deay me! | market iz no excuse, as you can have them Diamond What are jou readin ’bout? “Di’mond beds in Africa, replied he: husband” It does beat all, how much luxry thes: people manage ter crowd intera lifetime, Fut I don’t envy ‘em, not a bit, and don’t ask for no greater comfort in the way o’ sleeping than on the mattress I bought from Mark W right & Co., th: furniture fellows, last spricg Try our felt Mattresses —— ark Wright & Co., Lt MY BIRTHDAY. Kocther etone is ndiled Poe ine carn uf wy years, And the pile i= beld together By my varied hopes and fears,— Held together by the sobbings And the smiles of many days ; By the censures of my tailurer, ‘By the honeyed words of praise. Yeare consumed and warted On the world’s most @-eting things, On the phantome ever fiving On their never-tiring wings ; On the airy forma that hover Just before my eager eyes, But always further from me Than the distance to the skies, Never a gisvee at the beautifal In earth, aod *ky, and air; Ne ver & thoug!t that reaches up To the heavens 80 bright and fair ; Never a noble feeling «irs As f walk c’er the flowery sod, Never a pulee of the beating heart Goes out to the living God. But when the cairn of life is raised And never a stone to lay, And the builder rests from the work begun At the dawn of che natal day, { then will humbly ask, oh God ! In sob, and tear, and moan, That Tho wilt bless inv whole life through And praise each single stone. —James Byrne, in the Ottawa Free Press. <a -- WHAT IS THE A.O.F? The question hasoften been asked of late: “tow many orders of Foresters ure there? In the Dominion of Canada there are four order’s, viz:—The A. O. F. (Ancient) established in IS7L. The I. O. F. (Lndependen') established 1884. ‘Lhe C.O F. (Canadian) established 1879. The C. O. F. (Catholic) established 1883. The three fatter conduct an insurance busiagess as their leading sad compulsory feature, with sick benefits as a secondary f-ature. Tae A. QO. F. condvctsits sick beuetits as the main featur , with insnrance as of a secondary nature; of Ja@ k mever, prov sop bas beeu wade whereby a person cau O tuin insurance withorr tiking the sick berefit. The A. O. F. ie an old Evglish institutiva, exablithed in 1796, aad having branches throughout tne world, Previous o 1874, it w.« the only order cf Foresters iu ex stence. It has a membership in Canada of about 23,000 including adult males. juveniles and ladies. [i is well represented iu Nova Scotia and New B-un-wick. Whilst being kuown as the “poor man’s order,” it has in its ranks the best “blue blood” of England, first among whou stands Her Majesty Queen Victoria, holding a membership in Court, No 816(', London, (the only orler of its pature in which Her M>jesty nuids a mem~ bershi») also, H R. W.VPrincess «f Wale , H. K. H Piiscess Louis , Countess ot Aberdeen, and 33 other ®adies of rank. 159 Peers oftne Realm, Ll4 Barone s, ll Judzes. 76 Knights, 200 members ot the ,British and Coicnial Pariiament-, whilst the church is represeated by His Grace the Archbishop of York, L@ Bishops’ and 6 Deans, and bunireds of other emi- nent and distiugui-hed mer helo to swell the ranks aud make this grand old order, what England’s * grand old mau ” the Rr. Hon. W. KB. Gladstone declare d it to be :— * One of England’s strong:s bulwark-.” Working meu esquire into it, search tts record of over |00 years. We iuvite your closest investigation, ———— ya 4 LOCAL NOTICES. § cases of oil stoves per steamer Ha!ifex —verv cheap—S W Crabbe. The New York Sun saya of Miss Mari- etta LaDell: “Far superior to anything of the kind ever seen in this city, being refined, varied, brght and hnmorous.” Miss LaDel! appears in the Y MCA hall on Tuesday eveniog, July Sth, The green thingsin the way of veg- etables, and the ripe things in the way vo fruit, that are displayedin our store are very inviting, in fact hot icebergs would not attract more attention than our display | of fruit. Wegetafresh sup ly in everv ! week by the Boston boat.—Sanderson « } Co. Treat the minister, yes treat the min‘s- ter well. It is useless to set wine before a { Methodist clergyman, (he won’t have it) but they do like something fresh and green, such as epinach, greens, radish, lettuce, early turnips. Vo forget them at the any time at our Nursery Gardens, head of Prince St. 2i. ao eee = ———— a ee nel Asked Mrs Hayseed. Our nh +( Ubdl — OF—— HICel Clothing Our Carpets, Our Capes Hats and Caps. Qur Umbrellas Our Rainproofs. (heice collection of ladies linen neck wear see the new American tie with mlk ends. Kine line in childrens mus- lin hoods childrens dresses, skirts, jadi trimmed and Our stock of flowers, feath- laces, chiffons, for this season trade is the best largest and cheap- ers, lined hats es $2.00. ribbons, est in tewn. Ladies and Gent’s bathing suits, JAS. PATON & C0 bad FRO GET ladies $1.00 $1.50 ganges, y ICH QULCKLA. Write to-day toca free cony of our bog Book on Fatents. a 73 io é by ‘(iif Newfoundland. See er The most picturesque summer resortin America The Sportsman’s Paradise Every Riverand Lake along the line of Newfoundland Kailway abounds with Salmon & Trout The Shortest Sea Voyage. Quickest and safest route to any partis via the:---Royal Mail Steamer “BRUCE” f Classed A l at Lioyds. Leaves North Sydney every Tuesday and Friday evening,on arrival of the I. C.R. express. Returniog, leaves Placentia every Monday and. Thursday morning on on arrival of St. John’s express. f ARE: -Charlottetown to St. Jolin’s, N tid, first $19 95, second $10,30. Through uicketson sale at all stations onthe {.C. K. aud S. Nav. Co. ; Commencing about July Ist, [steamer will make three trips per week each way, between North Sydney and Port-aax- Basques, Nawtoundlaud, The sea trip «il] only be 6 hours, For all information apply to R.G.REID, dt. Jobn’s, Nfid or ARCHIBALD & CO., Agente, North Sydney, C.B. shal W Bearisto ———— * Je have extensite exnrertence in the intricare patent lawsof 50 forcigncountries, Send sketch. model oc aie for free advice, NR MARION & MA. ON, Experts, Temple Building, Montreal CURED : The Practical Plun:bars Are prepared to do all kinds of jobbiog, jand will be pleased to |} mateson all branches of the trade. furnish eeti~ | e If | y uare buildingit would be wellto get their prices. They are the pratcial plumbers | 144 2aw 4 wks INATN O neTepn erly £.ae ivvnil Ww vette. ——GRAND—san_ P OVINGIAL BXAIBITIgg —~AND. INDUSTRIAL FAIR —AT— In Premiums 216,000 $16,009 Ari, Science and Nature Their Varied Prodasts on one grande pance of grouni, " ALL COMPETITIONS open to MARI. TIME PROVINCES Manufactures to the World orsane Unrivalled Special Attractions 4 $6,'00 appropriated to this : Department Performance every afternoon and eve ing in front ofthe GRAND STAND, eclipsing anythinz yet attempted in the Maratime Provinces, Watch for Later Announoemant é Four (4) tays Exeiting Speed _ Competitions. oF PURSES an.oanting to $1,200.00 Excursion rates on all Railroads a Steamboat Lines, . a For Preosium List and further infor~ : mation, 4 ADDRESS; J. BE. WOOD, Mer, Gente City Hail, Halitex, NS — | Butter Tubs S000 3° . * * . Tucian make, nicely fini. shed,— Carvers Bros, -~CRECENTS’— ——Bicycle and Athletie—— SroRn Tse -——ON THE C. A, A A. GROUNDS—-— teed mw nn cc DOMINION DAY, JULY st. ——— PROGR AMME———_ — Gne Mile Novice err ney ine ae NMI con® _ AP OR BR IN ES A seme TI l+t Prize—Silver Cup, (G. H, Tayl.r) 2nd Prize—Bicycle Pants and Stockings, (Gordon & M: L -llav ) 3rd Prize 3 rd lst Pr'z>—Marble Clock (G F. Hutcheson) 2nd Prize—Dressing Case (A. W. Reddin) 3rd Prize—Caved Pipe (Watson’s Drug Store) Admission 25c, G. 0. McLEGD, President steceineintmenanammrenitantiatssin «staan Bicycle Boots, (Geff Bro-) 4th Prize—Bicycle Stockings, (W. A. Weeks & Co) 2-100 Yard Desh ( Handicap) Ist Prize ~ Marble Clo¢k, (Bruce Stewart & Co.) 2nd Prize—Silver Medal, (Art Saunders) Prize. Box Cigars; (Dudd’s Medical Hall) $—Qne Mile Bicyele (oys under 16) Ist Prize— Silver Meda! (A.N. Large) 2nd Prize—Silver Ink Stand, (E. W. Tayior) srd Prize--Sweater, S A McDonald) 4- Quarie: Mile Bicycle (Handicap) la Prize—Gold Medal, (Hewitt & Hyndman) 2nd Prize — Pair of Vim Tires, ( foronto Tire Co.) 3ra Prize—Pear! Opera Glassses, (Myers Bros) 260 Yards Flat Race (Handicap) Ist Prize—Silver Cup, (W W Wellner) 2nd Prize—Bronze Clock (Full Eletric Light Co) 3id Prize— Daily Examiner for ove year 6—Half Mile Mace (Handicap) Ist Prize—Gold Medal (Mark Wright & Co) 2ed Prize—Silver Medal (John McLeod & Cc) 3rd Prize—B cycle Boots (Alley & Co) i—@ne Mile Bicyele (2.50 Class) let Prize—Silver Cup (“Hot Quad”) 20d Prize—Silver Medal (Jos Merry) 3rd Prize—Bicyc'e Lamp (Miller Bros) S—Quarter Mite Run 9 -@ne Mile Beeycle (handicap) 2n oo. Cycling Club. Zod Prize~—Ca Ist Prize—Si!ver Cup (Dan McLeod) Prize~ Fur Reform Suit (Prowse Bros] 3rd Prize—Opera Glarses |W. F. Carter] 10—Half Mile Bicyele (Boys under 16) ist Prize—Silver Medal, [Geo Stanley] rd Receiver, [Moore & McLeod] 3rd Prize - Pearl Handled Pocket [Fennel & Chandler] {i Massey-Marris One Mile bicyele Ist Prize —Gold Medal, | Vassey~Harris Co 4 Sr. Joan) 2nd Prize—NSilver Cup, (Chariottetown Gas Co.) 3rd Prize—S‘iver Spoon, {D M. Robios»n] 12—Half Mite Kun (Handicop Ist Prize—Gill Headed Cane, Owen Trainor] 2nd Prize—NSilver Medal, [Reardon Bros. ] 3rd Prize—Cased Pipe, [Islsnder Publishing Co.] 13 -Two Mile Bicyele (Lap Race) | ist Prize—Gold Medal [Dodd Rogers] 2nd Prize— Silver Medal, (“Old Sport] 3rd Psize—Silver Movoted Cane (Johnson & Jonson! Time Pr°ze—Collar and Cuff Case (Hatzaid & Moore) f4- High Jump Ist Prize—Fishing Kod (Ge 2od Prize- Shaving Set (Carter’s Book Store} brc—Prize—Box Cigare, (Angus McDonald] {5—Three Wile Bicycle Team Race Prize—Silver Tr phy, value $60, presented by Crescent ; ES" This event is open to teams of turee from &ny club in the Maratime Provinces. : FE: Hughes} & 16—Five Mile Bieyel e [Handicap] I st Paize—Silver Cup, [“Banana” “Jude” ani “S:ring” 2vd Prize—Riv-vel- Sun. (J.T. McKenzie “rd Prize—Daily Guardiin for one year. ENTRIES close with Secretary Saturday night, June 23th. Low fares on all trains and steam boats. Fe2s, 50c for each event, Fcr train arrangemants see posters Sports Begin At1P. M. SHARP Grand Stand [0c W, !, HARVIE, Secretary WV L S $ 3 4 4 4 7 4 q : : 5