-0-D-D2S , is. y ¢ ANTI KS F. Ta ai DODDS ~ PU em —- KIDS & WS thes n . | ¥ : t n~ fe o % SCSUSUCRRERE Cee Reece sass eeeasen Oe <i, Be Speterserrerrrsessrereccr DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS, the only positive, never-failing cure, on earth, for all Kidney diseases, Take No Other. Get the Genuine. Refuse Imitations. There's Only One Dodd's. \ By-Law for Levying and Specify- ing the Rate of Assessment on Real Estate and Personal Pro- perty and Poll in the City cf Charlottetown for a Waterworks Fund, under Statute 50th Vic- toria, Chapter 8. Be it enacted by the City Counc!! of the City of Charlotietown as follows:— Ist, The rate of Assessment on Real Estate wa Waterworks Fund under said Statute we the year commencing the first day of Jan- ary, A D 1859. and ending the thirty-first day «¢€ December, A. D. 1899, is hereby specified and xed at the rateot one-eighth of one «ent on every dollar Of the value of Real Es- ute #8 assessed by the Assessors of the said ity of Charlotieftown in the general Assess- rent Book and Valuation Roll of all Real Es- ite and Personal Property liable to taxation » said City, and a'l persons liable to pay Poll ax therein made and duly returned by them oo Uaet wenty ir! day of March, A. D. 1599. 2nd. The rate of Assessment on Personal Property for such Water Works Fund for the year commencing the first day of January AD 1899, and ending the thirty-first day of December, A. D., 1899, is hereby specified and tized at tr e rate of one-eighth ef one per cent omevery dollar of the value of Persona: Proper- ¥y as assessed by the Assessors of the said City a the said General Assessment Book and Va- wation Roll, made and duly returned by them us aforesaid. ard. The amount of Poll Tax to be paid by ‘very parcee returned by the said Assessors u said General Assessment Book and Valu- ution Roll as liable thereto for such Water works Fund under said Statute, for the year «mimencing the first day of January, A. D. 89, and ending the 3!st day ef December,A D i899, is hereby specified and fixed atthe sum af Ten Cents (10c) on the pollof every person «) assessed and returned as aforesaid. JAME3 WARBURTON, Mayor of the City of Ch’town H. M. DAVISON, City Clerk. A By-law for allowing a Rate of Discount on the Assessments on Real Estate and Personal Proper- ty ia the City of Charlottetown for general civic purposes for the current year ending the thirty- first day of December A. D, 1899. Be it enacted by the City Council of the City of Charlottetown as follows:— ist. A discount at the rate of Twe and One- half Per Cent shall be allowed to all taxpayers who shall, en or before the Fifteenth day of July next, A D 1899, pay to the City Clerk, at his office, the taxes severally due by them for the current year on Real Estate and Personal Property for civic purposes. JAMES WARBURTON, Mayor ofthe City of Ch’town H. M. DAVISON, City Clerk. i-ly2w 4 By-law for levying and specify- ing the rate of assessment on Real Estate and Personal Proper- ty in the City of Charlottetown for general Civic purposes under Statute 51 Victoria, Chapter 12. Be it enacted by the City Council of the City of Charlottetown as follows:— ist. The rate of assessment on Real Estate for general Civie purposes under said Statute, for the year commencing the first day of Jan- sary, A 1) 1899, and ending the thirty-first day of December, A D 1809, is nereby specified and ixed at the rate of one per centon every dol- lar of the value of Real Estate, as assessed by the Assessors of the said City of (harlotte- town in the Genera! Assessment Book and Valuation Roll of all Real Estate and Person- i Preperty liable to taxation in said City, and of all persons liable to pay Poll Tax therein, mace and duly returned by them on the twenty-third day of March, A D 1899 2nd. The rate of assessment on Personal Property tor such general Civie purposes, for Lhe year commencing the first day of January. AD 1899, and ending the thirty-first day of December, A Ll i8t9, is here by specified and fixed at the rate of seven-eizhths o! one per eent on every dollar of the value of Personal Property as assessed by the Assessors of the said City in the said General Assessment Book and Valuation Roll, made and duly them as aforesaid J MES WARBURTON, Mayor of the City of Ch’town H. M. DAVISON, CityClerk. returned by s"—dy 2w Spring. ‘lhe time for Your clock or cleaning, tu good time. Let us have them and we will put them in good running order. Per- sonal atiention given to watchwork. G. H. TAYLORS SUNNYSIDE general cleaning. watch may need insure their keeping ee th a. SER or 1 BRITISH CAPITAL THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 13, 1889 GOING TO EGYPT. Lord Cromer Reports Another Pros- perous Year. April 10.—Lord Cromer, th Minister, in his annual report on he ances and conditions of Egypt and the Soudav, says that Egypt has had nother year of prosperity, the surplus for 208 amounting to £484,000 Egyptian remarks upon the growing disposition to invest British capital in the country I'he deficit in the’finances of the Soudan is piace d at £200,000 Egyptian. Dealing with the development of the Soudan, Lord Cromer refers to the covo- tract for the Atbara bridge, the placing o! which with an American firm caused much comment. He says that an English firm offered to deliver the bridge in #1x months and a half at a cost of £10,490, while the American firm undertook to deliver it 'D 42 days ata cost of £6,500. The latter (ffer was therefore accepted. Lord Crom~ er adds ;— “The time of delivery was an even more important consideration than the price. I have no doubt these facts will admit of some explanation wherewith J am unacquainted. They appear however to merit the attention of bridge builders in Great Britain. Lord Cromer says he Lopes that the railway will reach Khartoum at the end of 1899, and be extended to Abu Haraz in 1906. Thence it will be constructed even~ tually to Gedaref, Kassala, and the Red Sea, but the route has not yet been decided upon. British } ‘ | in A COSTLY BARGAIN. “Yes,” said Mrs. Jacqueth, a» lawyer’s wife, of the town of Rockdale, “I got that rocking-chair you are sitting on from a departmental store for $3.98. Don’t you think it was a bargain?” ‘*No, I really don’t” friend, Mrs. Stapleton, the doc~ tor’s wife. “If you only knew bow much it really didcost you woulda’t think se either.” “ Why, whatever do yeu mean? That was ail | really paid tor it, except 40 cents express charges.” “ But that was notall it cost you, my dear Mrs. Jacqueth.” “ Why, I can show you the bill, Mrs. Stapletun, if you doubt it.” ‘Let me explain, my dear. You know Mr. Dougless, the furniture aud carpet man, on Mainstreet? Well, be happened to be in the express office and saw this chair with your name attached, along with the name of the people yeu got it from. You are probably net aware that Mr. Douglass bought the Chisholm property ? Up to the day he saw this chair in the ex- prese office, your husband bad always done his Jegal business. He at once went off to Mr. Marshall, the other lawyer, and engaged him to search the titles and draw out the papers ir ce nection with the transfer of the prop~ erty. The doctor told me that Douglas- gave Marshall a cheque for $35 for his work, You know that Mr. Marshall’s motto is “that it is only just right and proper to spend his money among the peor ple where he makes his living,’’ so you see my dear, this cost you realy about $25, allewing for Mr, Marshall’s time doing the werk.” When Jacqueth came home that evening to dinner, his wife told him about the mean way he had been treated by Douglass. Mr. Jacqueth was a level~headcd fellow apd saw through the whole thing at once. Saidhe; “Why a lot of people wart to rush offand spend their money away from home I cannot tel!. Do you know. that blessed chair of yours has cost over $25 slready, and how much more it will cost when it gets abroad that 1 am sending away money to bay a lot,of truampery we don’t want, I cannot tell. From this out, spend yoor money where | have to make my living.” : The $3.98 rocker was the last impertae tion into the Jacqueth houshold—Hard- ware and Metal. said her RICH STRIKES ON THE YUKON. $1,800 Joarse Gold Reported Taken Out by Six Men in Six Days. Ortawa, April 10 —Mr John J. Healy president of the North American Trading and Transportation Compargy, who is here has lately received lettere telling of a rich strike onthe Yukon Mr. He. ly Brefuses totel] the location. Six meu, be says, took out $1,800 in coars golt in aix days. Mr. Healey states that his friend sayethe district will be one of the most valuable in the North. A ivices from other ; oinis, be says, also Since that many new gold cre-ks will be opened and that they are expecied to prove very rich. in ~-_s Dear Sirs,—I have been a great suffer- er trom rbeumatism, and lately have been vanfined tomy bed. Seeing your MIN- ARD’S LINIMENT advertsiemeot, I tried ic and got immediate relief: Lascribe my restoration to health to the wonderful power of your medicine. Lewis S, Burier. Burin, Nfid, THE NOTION IS ABSURD. Proposal to Exchange West Indies for Philippines Laughed at. Lonpon, April 10.--The Globe refers to the absurd notion of the | | | American >| papers that Kngland might exchange ber | possessions in the West Indies for the Philippines. The paper says that such an | exchange for England would amount to giving the desirable fer the undesirable, Ihe British West Indies, it asserts, have not the slightest wish to change their sovereignty. ‘Lhe petitions which the colonists there have sent to the British Government have references only to the securing of tres concessions from, Eng- land. The Globe adduces as an argument tor Boyvland’s rerentios of the West Indies the expected opening of the Nicaraguan canal, ——— + Ei A ——— TO CREATE MANY CARDINALS. Pope Will Do S0 onthe Occasion of His Jubilee, Loxpon, Satarday, April, 10.— The Rome correspondent of the Daily Chronicle says: “The Pope isextremely anxious to stop the rumor that his health is failing, and is resolved to appear im the thanksgiv- ing service in St Peter’s cathedral on the 16th. He adds, further, that he will bold aconsistory next month, when he would announce that on the occasion of his jubi-~ lee nex tyear he will create a dozen cards inals. RSTEEMED EXCHANGES. Montreal Gazette: The iniquity of those who prolong parliamentary debates is being duly denounced inthe Libera] press. There is « change in the writers’ sentiments since 1896,when Sir Wilfrid Laurier and his colleagues were neldto be exhibiting the highest form of statesmanshipwhen they kept the House of Commons sitting, night and day, for week after week, while they strove by long speeches to prevent the passage of a bill to restore to the Roman Catholics of Manitoba their separate schools. Mailand Empire: Mr. Sifton seems te have entered the Lot:rior Department thinking thathe bad acquired the gold mining regions of Canada,and that he was entitled to cp ‘rate them for bis friends On thie basisthe creeks were divided up amoug the faithful, the placer mines were allotted ia part to the political officials, aod the quartz mining franchise was designated for the railway contractors. NEWS NOTES. The United Statesis ascertaining that war ivan expensive juxury. The cost of the little unpleasantness with Spsiv up to the end of March is placed at $232,000,000. The excess war expenditure over the ordins ary peace footing last month wae $11,000,- 000, which does not include the $3,000,009 granted to Gomez’s soldiers, and the re- ceipts from the interna] revenue laws just about coverthat amount on an sverage for the year, The coionial expenses for the succeeding months is estimated at $12,000,060. The old man who looks out at the world with clear and healthy eyes cannot help feeling great gratification atthe tbougbt that his children haveinherited from him vo weakness nor tendency to disease. The healthy cold man is the man who has throughout his life kept his digestion good and hie blooa pure. Not one ina thousand doe: tt. Germs go through the healthy bodv without effect. Let them once find lodgement or let them find a weak spot, they will develop by the million and the bloed will be ful! of them. {nstead of giving strength to the tissues, it will force upon them inputritious mat- ter, and the man wil) lose flesh and the more susceptible heis to disease. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is the only medicine that absolutely and infalli- bly cures all blood diseases, and almost all diseases are blool. diseases. It isn’t medicine for some One particular so-called disease. Itis a medicine forthe whole body. It forcesout all the germs of dis- ease, und replaces impurities with ri¢h, red blood. Have Just Completed My Wew Oyster Place. Call and eve the brilliant display of beautiful oysters on and off the shell. Our Oyster king is standing in the window. See him, and then you will eat 'ysters. John P. Joy, VICTORIA OAFE Great. George Street ....... JAMES KELLY Wholesale Commissior]Dealer in all kinds of FRESH FISH. Ells and Smelts, Specialties, NO. 8 LONG' WHaRF Corse BOSTON MASS SOLICITEL Write for stencils and particulars. ‘A TERRIBLE PLIGHT, Mr. Thomas Harrison, of 8t. Mary’s N B,, Tells His Story. Could not Help—-Dodd’s Kidney Pille Brought a Hnge Stone from his Bladder. Fredericton, N B., April 13.—That great Dodid’s Kdney P1 . Endless Chain of proof passes through the beautiful vil- lage of St Mary’s, a -uburb of this city. The St Mary’s “link” is Mr Thomas Harrisoo, who owes his life to those mod- ern giacts, Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Mr Harrisoa’s story is one of deep human interest. Ii teaches a lesson to all who read it—alesson that, if it be taken to beart—will be the means of preventing untold suffering and wil] save many a precious life, Briefly told, the parative is as foliows . “For twelve months Mr Harrison hai been annoyed by severe pains ‘tn the “small of bis back.” Gradually a feeling of heavy dullness stole over him, becom- ing greater as the pains in his back grew more severe. Finally he was obliged to consult a physician. The doctor gave him medicine, which he used faithfully. It did him no good however, His con- dition grew rapidly worse, and he began te urinate blood. At this juncture a friend urged him to take Dodd’s Kidney Pills. “If there’s any cure for you, they’l] effect it. I know it for they saved mv life,”’ he said. Mr Harrison did try Dodd’s Kidney Pills, And asto tieir effect he says: “When I had used one box a large stone passed from my bladder, Then I knew what relief meant. Two more boxes cured me completely.” Reader, have you ever felt as my Har- rison did ? If you have, be sure you have stone in the bladder. It kills if pot cured. Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the only positive unfailing cure known. Use them aud you'll soon be well again. The Empress Dowager has issued an elict declaring that the teaching of Christiasity is permitted in China, = 7 Catarrhal Deafness. The last stage development of Nasal Ca. tarrh. Japanese Catarrh Cure gocs away past the points where even specialists on the disease have been able to reach. It's a pene- trating, soothing, healing and a compound, allaying the inflammation an healing without leaving the slightest bad after-results, The only guaranteed Catarrh cure. 50c at ail drug Ly Sold by Geo, E. Hughes, DOMINION OF CANADA. Province of Prince Edward Island In the Surrogate Court In re Estate James Laird, late of New Glas- gow, in Queen’s County, in the said Prov- ince, merchant, deceased Intestate. I the undersigned, Jane Laiid, Administra- trix of the estate and effects of the said James Laird, will on Thursday, the fvurth day of May, next, A D, 1899, at the hour of eleven oclock forenoon, uader and by viriueof a license granted me by the Surrogate of the said Island, sei] by public auction, at the dwelling house,at New Glasgow, occupied by the said James Laird, at the time or his decease, the following pieces and parcels of laud, that is to say:— (A) Ali thattraet, piece or parcei of Jand, ‘ituate and being in. Township number 23, in Queen’s Ceunty. bounded as tollows, tnal 18 Ww say, Commencing at a stake fixedon the bunkso: the Clyde river, at a reserved line of road, at the northern boundry of Abrabam Van Suskirks, (now James Eull- man) laud; t enee runuiug south eighty-six de, rees, thirty mimatesr; West 24 chain; thence north 45 cegreés: west 61 Cuaius; Lhenee norte east - return to the piace of 20mmence- ment. thence along the shores of the Ciyde to Bob W inter’s Creck, aud by the south western side of the creek to a post fired nearly oppo- site to aspriag issuing trom the foot of the north-eastern bank of the creek; thence bya line running nerth west, uuty it intersects the above mentioned nor: h east line, contain- ing one hundrechacres, a little More or less, together with the dwelling house, shop and mills situate thereon. (B) All that vract of land situate on the peach of Rustico, on Township number 24 commencing at a stake set in the west side of Water Terrace, and in the noth east angie oi Fishing Station number one, in possession of R B Morrison, and running thence by tne magnetic meridian of the year 1764: sout’.60 degrees west 200 feet to the shore vi the Bay of Rustico aforesaid thence norih wardly a distance equal to 50 feat at right angles thence north 60 degrees east to said terrace and thence southwardly along the same to the place of commencement together with the fishing station thereon. the usdersigned will a.so at the same time abd p.ace sel by public auction the saw-maills velon,:nyg to the said James Laird and the jand connecied therewith which the siid James Laird heid under lease. the uadersigned will also on Friday the fitih day of Mey next at the hour of twelve v’clock noon in front of the Court House in Charlelietown sell by public auction under and by virtue of the said liceuse the following pieces of land. Ail those pilots or parcels of land, situate and being in the common of Chariottetown, and being parts of common Lot pumber twenty, of the common Lots of Charlctte- town, bounded and described as foliows. Plot No. lj—commencing on the west side of tae Maipeque Road at the southern poundry of Lot No. 18, thence runn- ing south aleng said road 45 feet or until it meets a Dew road or street running at right angles irom said Malpeque Road, westerly; theace along the north side of said new road or Street 80 leet, to plot No 16, thence at right @ogies northerly 45 feet, or to the south bouadaryijof Plot No. 18, and thence along said south boundary eastwardly 80 teet to the place of commencement, Plot No 7—Cummencing on the south side 0 ftaid new i:0ad or street and in the western bouuaary line of plot No. 6. sold by the Char- lottetown Woolen Factory Company to Albert Warren thence running westwardly along the south side of ssid new street. er road 42 feet or to the east beundary of plot No. 8. sold to John H, Gates, thence running southerly at right augles to said new street or road from the Said two plo. of a uniform width of 42 feet for the distance of 90 feet. Dated this 30\h day of March, A D, 1899. JANE LalIRD, Admibpistratrix W,S STEWART, Proctor dg awn& wkt ie In the Grip of a Strange Disease— Doctor | See Me Se Se NEN he SYM SM Sp | S% "fore a ‘fie fe oO é vgs night elghe 3 2% \ i Nitti Maitiaa rh Tit -tih ete ST Pants for big men, pants for small men, pants for oun men, pants fur boys, pants for 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00, up to SiN { THE BEST AND CHEAPEST PANTS _ IN TOWN Tinney all Read Ads They all wear our Hats and they nearly all weart Clothing, and those who don’t are making a mistake, for show the best goods made and ask a very small advance ¢ cost for same. —PROWSE BROS. White Wnlaundered Shirts, 25c, 35c, 50¢ and ie White Laundered Shirts, 50¢, 75c, $1.00 and $1.25. Cole Shirts any price in all the Jatest ana best makes, Collare# Cuffs at prices that cannot be beaten. —PROWSE PROS, PROWSE - BROS, The Wonde rfulCheap Men. fiebiaeiteaaee