ee ee ee ty fi > grit poten eee Sail A mai pg peta sas ter, ~ 1) . ‘te es ee ah LE =— ii a= et oy AB see —_ ees ge me cm Se — mt et ee ele ii PE agit oo alt ie ail il aia AAR tn ite ‘ at THB DAILY EXAMINER “APRUL 15, 1838 ———— THE STATES AND SPAIN. Ar the brink ef war, the United States and Spain have both paused. It is possible, though not probable, that the pluuge may pot, after all, be made. Spain may back down; or the States, seeing that they Lave much to lose and little to gain by war, may be induced to abate their demands in favour of peace. In the meantime, both nations are taking time to count the cost of the struggle that seems to be imminent, AN EXPERIMENTAL FARM os Previer Warsvrton is onthe right endeavouring to indnee the Government to establish an Farm in this agricultural track when Dominion Experimental Province. It’s our farmers can all very well to say that take advantage of the Nappan Farm. ar conditions as to suil, etc, are so aifferent to those of Nappan that the Nappan Farm is of little value to us. We believe that an arrangement could be made under which the Dominion Goverument might extend to us the adyantages of an experiments farm, adapted to our conditions and needs, with little if any additional expense to the country at large; and we shallgive Pre mier Warburion full credit if he make such an arrangement with his friends at Ottawa, — MR. POPE'S LECTURE. Tue poet Pope says that “the proper study of mankindis man.” Another Pope —our Pope—is evidently of this opinion. The lecture of last evening, delivered in St. Paul’s Schoolroom, proved that Mr. Percy Pope, of this city, bas made a very careful study of Man in his relationship to Things. Mr. Pope’s theory is that the uns derstandings and characters of men are determined by experiences, world, from the cradle to the av wellas vpon native powers of mind aud body. His lecture was very suggestive to parents and teschers,echool trustees and others, directly or indirectly engaged in the work of education. The high impor- tance of the child’s environments and the experiences to which he is subjected was ably eet forth. Every thoughtful person must have approved the high encomium passed upon the lecturer by Dr. Andereon when moving the vote of thanks. in this grave, —_——_——_---4 ~—p e @= 2 -—--—— THE BICYCLE. a a meme Ovr young men and maidens ought to remember that bicycling, like many other good things, oughtito be taken in mod-~ eration. Instances of the injurious or fatal results of the exuberance of bievcling are not infrequent. It was necessary to calla coroner at Long Island City the otuer day to ascertain the rr (neodore Goeb,a Theodore bad cause of the death of fifteen-year old school boy had a holiday from improved the opportunity acentury run. He was big and strong) ' and he make a school, to but the ride wae too much for him, and he died next day—*‘too movch bicycle riding” being the verdict. It was recorded inthe cable despatches a few days ago that among the conscripts in France who were Iately rejected as being unfit {to enter the army were eight renowned bicyclists—men who had coati- nestal as well as French reputations. Disease of the heart, brought on by hard riding, was the cause of their, uafitness. Therefore we say to young iadiess and gentlemen who enjoy the bicycle —be moderate, i le ANI mm NOTES AND COMMENTS. _— —The Senatorship bas been won. Now for the opening of East Prince. —After West Prince elect‘os—look out for the supplementary estimates. —Well, the electors of West Prince have not given the Government an excuse to go back on their promises, Honorable gentle: men, pay up. a> @4-O—erwas Mr. C. F. Fraser, superintendent, ac: companied by a number of pupile avd a full band from the School for the Blind, Halifax, will arrive on Monday evening and will give three free entertainments on Tuesday and Wednesday evening and Wed- nesday afternoon. As this is a charitable enterpriee it would be a graeeful act if all the pupile could be provided for at private houses, Any person who wi'l kindiy en~ tertain one or more pupils will please notify Mr. L. W. Watson betore Saturday evening, if possibl.. ee sia lalalaliii Entitled to two pairsof gloves for $1, between the hours of 9 to | o’clock, 7 dozen paire kid gloves from Harope, will be offered, sizes 6} 10 7. So e## to intro- duce the make,'we o ‘er 2 yaire for $1. The shade is dark tan. Get a pair.— Jas Paton & Co. We regret tolearn that Captain Balls, of West River, died this morning. | THE PAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN APRIL 15, 1898. BRITAIN'S LAST VICTORY. = —~-— ee ne nrcnenrenennnl _ lire ea (Continued from page | ) fray in Friday’s fight in the Soudan. They lost most officers and evidently most men, aod were thanked by the (Sirdar for their behavior. They may add Makheiba to names their colors carry, if there is room left where there is already biazoned Egmont op Zee, Egypt, Fuentes d’Qsor, Salamanca Pyrenees, WNiville, Nive, Toulouse. Peninsula, Waterloo, Alma, Sebas opol, Lucknow, Egypt, 1882, Tel E! Kebir, and the Nile, all v:cteries. When the pipes begin their “Gather, gather gather” before the‘advance of the Cameron men, it is bad for the foe. Captain Urqubart bad many personal friends in Montreal and other places in Canada, who knew him asa most kindly and courteous gentleman. They willl remember him hereafter also as a brave and good soldier true to his duty with his dying breath. Mr. Fond, in hia cabled letter to the Tribune, says: “The situation on the Nile bas been cleared by tbe brillant victory of Sirdar’s forces over tne dervishes, and Englishmen can keep the Easter feast both with the old leaven of patriotic pride and the new leaven of Imperial interests. The British soldiers and the Egyptian troops fought with almost equal steadiness and dash, and so well was the two hours’ battle planned that the defeatof the dervishes was the most decisive one in the whole history of desert campaigaing. The story is nct yet told in detail, but evidedtly this splendid, irresistible charge, directly in front of a strongly entrenched position, will rank amoug the most brilliant achievements of the British arma, The road to Khartoum bas been opened, ee TERM OF OFFICE EXTENDED. os Lord Aberdeen to Remain Another Year—Lord Seymour to Succeed General Montgomery-Moore. MonrreaL, April 15.—The Star’s Lon- jon correspondent cables: “I understand that Lord Aberdeen, according to latest ad- vice#, expects to remain in Caneda ti!] September, 1899, making six years’ term. The government, therefore, feel no need for hurrying on the question of his successor. “General Sir William Seymour, who succeeded General Montgomery-Mcore as officer commanding at Halifax, wil! leave for Canada at the end of May with Lady Seymour and suite. Major For- tescue will he his secretary and Captain Ferguson, aide~de-camp. General Sey- mour is a member of the Hertford family’ and is60 years of age. He served in the Coldstream Guards in the Crimea and Seudan, and bas also commanded the Southeastern district of England. His wife isa daughter of Baron Peurhy. The appointment is a further indication of Canada’s high standing, both politically and socially here,” + Rp ta nr [00 F.—Regular session of Wildey Lodge, No27 tonight. Initistory degree. Dritt.—No 3 Company, 82 Battalion, will meet for drill this evening at 8 o’clock at the drill shed. Show day today and tomor- row at Patom’s. ‘There is some talk of organizing an im~ posing demonstration in June in honor cf the twenty-fifth annivereary of the ceath of Sir G. E. Cartier, and to ask Sir J. A’ Chaplean to deliveran address. It is ura derstood that the remains of the late Ladv Cartier who died Jately at Cannes, will reach Montreal early in May and will be iaterred alongside those of her husband, > 0 ee. Show day today and tomor- row at Paton’s. ‘ Changeable Taffetas — 19 welcomed strangers arrived yesterday. They are Just the thing for waists of akirts, 65c a yard, the 90c grade.—Jes. Paton & Co. Perkins’ for millinery. Did you see our great millinery dispiay? If not, come.-Mcoore & McLeod. : New nobby American hats on dieplay to-day, Moore & McLeod. New shirt waists, new wrappers, new hats, new millinety opening every day at F. Perkins & Co. ’ — —— —————— — _ A TALE OF THE SEA, _ --- — SHIP MARLBOROUGH ABANDON- ED IN MID OCEAN. a ee The Captain and Eleven of the Crew Are Supposed to Have Been Lost. New York, April 12.—The North Ger- man Lioyd steamer Sxale, Captain Blanco, which arrived to day from Genoa, reports that on Sunday last she picked up a life | boat containing two men of the crew of the ship Mariborough of Windsor, N.8., who probably are all that survive of the ship’s crew offonrtecn. Thetwo sailors were very much exhausted when rescued by the Saale. The Marlborough sailed from Si. John., N. B., March 16, for Sharpness, with a cargo of deals. There was experieaced a succession of heavy gales, chiefly trom the eastward, in which the ship Jabored heavily, causing her to leak badly. The storm continued without any cessation until April 4, when during the height of the gale the ship went 10, pieces. The crew attempted to launch the life boat, but it was dashed to pieces before it reached the water. There was one other toat. The men went to work making life rafts from the cargo of deais, and nine of them left the side cf the water-logged vessel. Captain Cochran and four men were the last to leave in the remaining boat. Shortly after abandoning the Marlborough tho:e it che boat lost sight of the remainder of the crew. The captain’s boat drifted away before the gale. In the hurry of abandoning the Malborough, but scant provisions could be placed inthe boat. The little crew suffered fearfully from thirst and later on trom hunger. On April 7, Capt. Cochran died from exhaustion and exposur®, and on Easter morniog, at daylight, another of the crew died. Thre was now left in the boat Chief Officer George V. Masters aed Seamen James Fannon. Both men were well nigh worn out from bunger and thiret. Their bost was in a badly damaged condition, having been stove in by sea and badly battered by the floatiog wreckage from their vessel. They had almost de- spaired of being rescued when Mate Masters eighted the smoke of a steamer to the westward. The Saale’s lookout had mean- while sighted the castaways aud the ship’s course was headed for the boat, which was reached just before 10 a. m. a Sr. James’ Caurcu.—The appraisers are at work asacssing the damage by fire sustained ty St. James’? Church. There are four appraisers, viz..C EL Jarvis, St John, and Charles McGregor, Joseph Grabbe, and Lemuel Philips, of Charlotte- town, Mernopistic.—The Sabbath Services in connection with the First Methodist Church will be beld in the schoolroom of the Church each Sabbath morning at ILI o’eleck and in the Opera House in the evening at 7 o’clock while the church is undergoing repa-re. Millinery —Have your hat or bonnt trimmed by Miss Muich, at F. Perkins & WHEELS. Our spring stock of boys’ and girls Carriages Express Wagons Wheelbarrows Go-Carts Rail Wagons and Tricyceles. is Dow open for inspection. Our prices are right. See these goods before you buy. HASHARD & OOH SlERNS is BEST Our 1898 “STERNS” will be here in a day er two. Yeu'll find them well worth waiting for, Prices—$40,00, 20,00, 75.00 each. Mark Wright & Co. Ltd HOME MAKERS. th, > Le. 2 Da, le fra, Ui tye P= e aan “" : | f nn pal) - FIRST SPRING =~ PENING ~~ COMMENCING ~~» FRIDAY, APRL 15th, 1899 immense Display of ~~" Trimmed Pattern Hats and Bonnets, and Up- to-date Novelties in every Department. The Trade Invited. Letter Orders Solicited, Comparison and Inspection Invited. MARRIED. At Wood Islands, atthe home of the bride, on March 29th, 1898, by the Rev AS Stewart, of Woodvil, Joseph W Bull of Little Sande, toJane A McMiilan, of Wood Islands. ne <2 ~ DIED. At Waltham Mass., on the Ilth inst. Anue Elizabeth, beloved wife of Robert Scott, formerly of Charlottetown, leaving a husband four sons and one daughter to mourn their loss. Mrs, Scott was a sister of Mrs. Malcolm McDonald, Georgetown. At Home Valley, on April 8th, Alex- ander McLeod, aged 77 years. At Belize, British Honduras, on March 28th, David W Aitken, M D, aged 49 years, * son of the late Theophilus Aitken of Lower Montague, P EI. Show day today and tomor- row at Paton’s,. GENTLEMEN IN NEED ofa nize pair of Choco late colored boots should not fail to see our $3.00 BOOT I» {Ip I Ih ih = AAAASALASLAAAA SAShS8 if You See Them ee 7 ai(l «fl att} «tll ti att] if <j Ride “the go lightly kind.’ Youare Sure te Like Them , » ” “PROGRESS ” Wheels mace by the same firm asthe “Imperial.” A good, strong and light running wheel. In style and fisieh uearly equal to the “Im. ¥ perial;” as good as most $60 wheels, better than any $40 wheel in Town, FRED. P. NEWSON, Agent 2 * VUFTTV TTT TTT VERT TCU NTTY The Art Piano OF CANADA. —— ee Known as such beeause of the matchless skill and sui No better boot to be had: for; passing taste evinced in their construction. Other the money than this, lines at much lower prices, R. K. JOST Stamper’s Corner. y po PRARECTION *est ev eee Would you know all the delight of silent gliding bicy- cle motion, then secure one of the 1898 Gleveiands or Gresccnis The acknowledged leaders Clevelands, $85, $65; $75. Crescents, $40, $50, $6. $5 off any wheel tor cash. Dodd & Rogers Endorsed by August Hyllested, the great Danish pianis and all the worlds greatest artists whenever they have visiié Canaca. The new agraffe in the Upright Piano has taken peopl by storm throughout the musical world. The Heintzman is the Piano. Tue Prince Epwarp Istanp Music Howse. Sole agents for P. ¥. Island. CONNOLLY BUILDING OO FOR HOUSE CLEANING Kalsomine in Various shades Alabastine in various shades: Paint Remover Varnish Wood Stains Floor Paint Sherwin William’s Liquid Paint Rose, Pink, Ultramarine Blue White Wask Brushes Gold Psint. SIMON V7 C | Walker s Corner STOVES & BARDWA ‘ | ae < See a ee a a ae i