"w If " --»._.s--»~.....__ ._,.\._... ._ ._ . _:T . . . ..._ _.J ".....»-AL _ » \. ____,_,,‘___‘ggga_e_:~,,,,.,,,__,_....._..,_._,,.._-.... _ .__ .».. . A. __ __ __»-»» __ Au- - - ~ - ° . e ‘ = THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND,A`PRIL 26, 1901. _ __ - -- _ - ev _ -i '- wi _ ; _ r -1- - li ` "ir i BUPPAI_O’S GLASGOW’Ss BIG FAIR BIG PAIR Q How the Visitors Will be Housed and Fed DAILY CHRISTIAN WORK The Following has Been For- warded to the Guardian by an Island Lady. -_1__ Au evposition cencessionaire who wished. for purposes of hlsown, to secure “big a lisa as possible of persons willing gg take lodzers during the fair, published in one of the Buffalo papers an advertise. ment stating that he wanted 500 rooms to wwmmodate a party of 1000 visitors yhom he expected to bring here fr>m BOSton. The concessionaire’s boarding house list now can'-ains nearly 10.030 names. And he had to pay for only two insertions of his little ad. That shows the way Buffrlonianr are getting realy for the Pan-American. If outsiders are half as eager to see the fair as Butfalonions are to see visitors, it will bethe greatest exposition that ever was held on this continent. Buffalo has de- termined to be hospitable this summer, if it never was before, and Budalo thinks it has been hospitable enough before -to know how, at least. Everybodyjs house btohgopeutogueats. Some of themore *nu-:ms have inviwd their friends to mme and be lodged free. But the atti- _x aide et the majority is expressed by. the gmark of a shareholder with whom I was the other day. "This is the first of Travellers. MOST IMPORTANT FAIR IN A KINGDOM Dependencies. Its Purpose is to Present a Pull Illustration of the Products and Manufactures of the British Empire and Its May will see to the opening in Glasgow of an international exposition which will be the most representative and industrial- ly important fair ever held in the United Kingdom. Its purpose is to present full illustrations of the products and - manu- facturers of the British Empire, its depen- dencies, domrnions and colonies, and also the largest possible representation from other countries. Large pavillons are be- ing erected by the Russian and Japanese gavernment to exhibit the products of tnese countries on a unique scale. The Indian Empire will have asection in it- self, and practically every country in the world will be represented including Persia and Morocco, for whom character- istic buildings have been specially erected. The exposition will continue until November, and will not be opened by King Edward VII.,as was -at -lirst in- Connaught or the Duke of Fife. The site of the exhibition is the Kelvin- was held. The expoieion resulted in a profit of$@),G)0, which; was raised by ;su`bsoripti¢ms_to.$0E,0,0lJ0._ The whole sum manent art gallery and museum in tho, and the new exhibition is intended commemorate its completion as well as to _l i > _ `.,i._.,- "ho\ioyH§""'Dl`lh§1¥opTe '8r`e'Ta'da'y and demanded $5. That was for an lter. They did not get up this fair for prposes-of philauthropy_{.` They feel that icy have dnancei int#-'I‘heyroione“-\s\1.la~i` up-ated ge steak they gmc have bought the boids. -I It’s qdwigijnuuiclpal `qeculatioi’:"`in the entertainment line. “I hone," said one enthusiast, “that this hir will leave everybody in town at least Qlllll to th -. good; it ought to. Then we’ll liovem »ney tospend here another year, and you’ll see things keep booming right along." All may not be so sanguine, but iris hard to End a. Buffalo man who is not expecting to get something out of the ex- position, efen if its nothing more than a dividend on his stock. I've met only one such. And he facetiously proposed to get a concession to exhibit him-ieif on the midway as the greatest freak in Buffalo. He thought the visitors would be mighty glad to see a B-1t”f`:.|o in-in who was not trying to make money out of t-he fair. _ But let not the wary outsiders ju mp at the conclusion that Buffalo is planning to fleece them. That is not the idea. Buffalo believes it has provided an attraction that It will be worth everybody’s while to see. And Buffalo proposes to treatits greets so Well that they will be glad they came. The rate on which the average householder is calculating to make "some money” out of 1°flR€r8 is $1 per night. That will probab- ly include breakfast in most cases. Dia- llts and suppers will naturally be bought tithe restaurants on or near the grounds and will cost about 50 cents each for an or- dlllary plain eater. That will mean $1 a day for board and lodgings. Wnen oom- Dated with the cost of staying a't`rno$ va- cetionresorts, Buil’.tl_o thinks that 'rate Night to draw thc crowds. slieaking of hot le, any one who saw this town six months ago would be sur- ll'|Sed_at it to-day. Where then there "peuuly half a dozen that the ordinary - Iieitor heard of, the number now has Etched 187 with a capacity of almost 25,000. Some of these are specially built structures dwelling houses leased by enterprising( lnpanies, and will be run on the cottage nl There will be plenty of places, too; ' 'here the economical visitor can secure U>0d comfortable lodgings for much less ul!-n the standard rate of $2 for a night. These will be in the sections more remote from the exposition grounds, but there is °° Part of the city so remote that the ex- position cannot be reached in about half Ill hour's ride. One plan is to build a big “mp near the grounds where visitors will beaccommodated in tents at somewhat less than house rates. Landlords have provoked a big outcry mf raisinil rents. Houses that rented for 3?-1 have been raised to $50. Houses that nntefi f0!` have been raised to $100. But in most- cases where this has been' time it was not because the landlords gliected the rent, but because they want- ' DOSsession of the houses. A. Qsod many householders are renting their hllmes furnished for the summer to be “ed “S lflflging and boarding houses, and hive moved their families out of town. Thi? hope of making “some money” is “'°°‘|! being realized by some. One con- ?ion has begun to pay dividends son. Bates & flu.. Toronto. - 6-- _` ¢-‘ hldles a room renting bureau, and , \ ! _ I <, .r ` ' \ p thebest 'e no e T' . . is -5 ' nearly what they wanted.That,-_i It SMIIDIO ters ar; only a little less lively around the city. `-' Bulfalo has goneto work on the principle that the way to make money is to spend it, and the long-faced doubter who says it is not the correct principle is laughed to scorn. The infectionhas spread through every grade of society from the staid, covservative business men down Ito the newsboy and the bootbiack. Buffalo- has its mind fixed on having an all sum mer circus day. Christian work will be prosecuted on an extensive scale during the progress of the exposition. It is proposed to erecat tent with a. large seating capacity, out- side the grounds, and hold daily religious services of various -kinds therein, min- isters of different denominations, who may tend their services, being selected to conduct them. _ The promoters take the broad ground that religious work at Buffalo during the exposition is a matter of national con- cern, and have invited the co-operation _ of a number of men of national reputation to serve as anational committee of suf- ficient importance to make this work a topic of interest to the whole country, in which all localities and all denominations will be glad to have a part. - The importance ot the work of char acter dose'-at the time of the‘ff}hi&o e x tended, but by either the Duke of grave park. where the exhibition of 1888 was devoted to the construction of a pez .r park. This structure is now completed; 'ter weekaage- '11hemo|\_ “ ,. 5 Ku" b V, a nese ison in TO CURB GRIPPBIN ` g S . I N I - __. ° _ Y P3 8811' iU8¢lf TWO DAY A _ _ atm others an composed of gm_“‘N_`°ti¥:mg0tBb?§ ple in Bgifglobgext sum- IE: small attraction. ’ - raxatin Bxomogninine "mm" the _ Have decided to 01931' Out ._ ’ mer than were in chicago in 1%. overwo exhibitors are expected from - _ , the balance . gf gggdg at, lmvzgginygdmy breach I I it I' I A ‘Ii ‘ragga . _A Loon or 42.m se/tts. - Rams”-l'S Old SW-Bd 111 Si! vfi°e$1-*°- l"~»f¥1-¢\°~-- Q _________ _ _ .., CHARLES PLUMMER. ` STINGING CHILBLAINS. ,' M ,B H » `- ' ` ~=`i‘ ~‘ ;- » _; en ataall styles and) '_ Ya’rm°uth' As distressing and annoyin as are `If\`0lD 5*’ I-0 $3950 al- J- B-mt A .}'§§ .ge » lil Washable Dress .$2.9 shaun southern Pei out -L1'-one _ rare preparing for another-i ' [espeeiallydn the districts ef-.Kuiaugl Pingi- ;Fn and Hai Ming Fu, where the popu- Chilblains tncy canbe immedzlatelv re C0’S 2531.1' Ives cured 0fS¢iabi<=a Rbeumatism by iieved bythe application of nr. cttw.; _ _.f ..................... . _ _- ', Ointment. Try it when you have retired ° I I . ' ' I I ' ' ' ' N spend a sleepless night in suffering ' O . LEWIS BUTLER Sucha trial will convince you-that asaf Th? new styl°s’°h-°‘.'. hte.” mm*-i ° cure for Chilblains Dr Chase’s Ointment ‘ and mush' I A I < is the standard of excellence. It is the E inPla§°;"';;,;r"}f§;£;‘d gggggnch °n’.°°t°_° 1 ° ' - - , 8, M- _ ‘ giiciirxd s greatest cure for all itching of the i : Primed Fhnneh, Buck and t _ Cashmeros, Alpacas and Silks. 'Z : 33tf JAS. PATUN 8:00 ' _ __ ` WILL QE'[':$‘g90'0gg'/A.YgAR_ ° .................... .._... . . . . . . . I g Hurrronn, Conn. April 23.-Thomas r ' ~'*- . B“,7 7°‘“` °l°tM“3 *t J' B M‘°g“¥`u Wright Russell president of the Connect- l_ NEW Yonx, April 23.--According to a 0° 8° and P egmff - _ icut Life Insurance Company this after-nmoming paper_Frederick P. Fish willl-t r _ - t _ _ A t noon at his-homers this my area of dnb- *take me amos or president or the am- -~ ~ ~ °’-‘ -» ~ - _ . etes. He was 77 years of age. erlcan Bch- Telephone Company, and o' 11"! M ul i»i*’5°°5' s » r» ~"I;,£§_=, - ` _the American Telephone and Telegraph WWW f '_ *I* ~' 7*- " , *vt Company on 'fiursday next. His salary H V I - ' ‘ will be $l00,(l)J a year. _ He ~ is futy-. `»r`.Buller2 Abifve A I ' ` seven years of a and a duate l»°\°l'5- Wim 5l\°°"¢l' 155' " _ gen 811 0~ ' , - " Atl I ill I __ (his dgnézue § on every box of the genus.. Harvard university and law school. He fam' ‘P ‘and Y' _ ‘ , _ g ¢‘ _ _ A p _ Tablets is asenior member ofa Boston law firm. ;,m”h_ Wim Unger fm. “mv ’ _ I - -,;,,,,¢',,,,,,,j;,,,,,,‘,‘~,',,_,,,,,,.,.i,’ " -lieu? eg’-by u»e¢.°°l‘°" f°°d P'-°d“°*-S °f 01° Emvlm *his*-I anew ' I -»- -i-are samplers I em em n»¢¢:fm»af?’$ . ".7 g d c gs" _ _,;‘ 1'. ly connected with it and have watched for l w see intr°d“'“°d hm’ “her °°‘mtri°s° HG HNF* ASHORB I' I - - ~ ~- Y -1 :Y * 1. f vf 1 U i L ,_ _ if .uf \ _ , _ ; Marciano, pea at nd75c lmdtll* if " -“'. _ ~.~* I I V" ik? fx.. ,,.,. -` gd] .ruin ohotofgeecatal priee$ s in e.-;.f:.-..~.-a..-f.::-.-:-..-.1-..~;.='-,._...°-f.....~'*~ £80000 and £100 000 ieetcarso formany years 23 2| Cl &W uch 19 Tu. 8cFri. sewn. n COMMUNICATION RESTORED. N1-:W YORK. April 23.-The Commercial Cable company this morning issued the following notice: “We are advised that cammunication with Manaos by land wires has been restored but that there will be some delay.” Bltil. li' UIIASE ".3 W., A was ` ‘ I at sanxnoaitlsagzeaads al# _ ___, '.w ,.,. .I 'g ' _ _- " ' _ _ ' ____ ___ - . "5 ~ ' ‘ 'f . ' ~_.of.“-1-_ .-1 . t‘::.‘3;~..?.:"t:.:.§i';“e,z;.i“.‘::.ii3._ 1-0--~»-81-.1-0--= »-1.--»»»-=---df---~ -_ mm” F°B-“°TmS- - - g , I if -5 Old . 1186 U16 GRANGER CONDITION - - li f f h d c s i POW The ha piness that comes to a homew §r»9§i-151200; :las gdndhl-gc; inainr. chase. ‘ DERSJA genuine condition Powder, whigh ba;i>x{)’s &dv~'$th is] L00 freggkentl " b lc dt s - -- -_ now e -eat. orw ness il;.m}iI:' z§eIi$1?ebi<§esc1I€l?hey? Tiav?iear1:>1dobly;B1°°d P unset ang T°m°’ TheGr"mZer1s bf the nfothgr. Torestore the mo _ ._ , _ _ .gi “ y _» _ _ r Af at F ” \ experience that it pays to insist on hav- t guaranteed Supcnm' to many so called Flil'0l18\-U, 50 55118' bllik V520? Mid @5113); ll ` . A ` ' f I I: 'L I I A ‘ A. ing Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Condition Powders in small and large and_ tosustain her during. the nursing - - ` e f. Turpentine instead 'of accepting the packages_ . _per|od, Dr. Chases Nerve Food xsun- _ _ , "-_" '~\- alizes the nerves, and has a wonderfu restorative influence on the whole system , 50 cents a box, all dealers. _ ___.____ THE WAR LOAN. Lormon, April 23.-It is asserted that the Rothschild syndicate took £20,000,000 _of the war loan and it 'is rumored that they gave an undertaking not sell un- der one percent premiun for a given time. nrraau`euns.Ifi2f5°-& _ . __ rconsff rr e 3° D _ _ __ _ _ . ‘ d ivarious,rorms_ to the value of between icethis evenmgwreh4z.o0osea1sohe hen. ID all lines. L._ I5.. Pr0W-S0 Fpfgirg:£\;n<é°§i`3g;:g'm§;»¢5¢\fd»vSa wal' 'sat- z~“"` »» various unsciemmc ,.m,§_ups.. ,W;,,c,,_§ ___*___ 3ggimgggth