Ao . THE DAILY BXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 24, 1@90. '4 YEARS tch g ntly ft with which the , 4 I ea b i : om PF . oe ] - I Deal - «| ving bs by I Ww ( T : ol 4 k wr fy : i aTiY ni _ « of havi * y ‘ A i r ‘ \ . ul i \ p tre i L } Y tnat I at ‘ ueliel of PG. ¢. HUTCHESON, Ladysmith Sir Vie y bookstores this ave It me bis and Pshou.: be in the hands of all. e3 it at the Bookstores, | RICE 1O CENTS, iS a souveneir of memorab!] raduate McGill University) Crh. « (91" Houre—9 to 10, a. m., 1 Bei’ 7 *, p.m , attention to couatry calls. an p—=a ad P11} PHONE6?7. W hen vie Get the catalogue. ~~ Y, ty i See the Chainless ok “The Relief of Lady- ty and How it was Celebrated 1 ib it crlottetown” wi | be on sale in (saturday) } ; that event which "Dr GORDON ALLEY a PHYSICIAN & SURGEON ‘ud Residence— Dorchester Stree tc 3 DMAN & CO. AGENTS LOST MOTION. your chain slackens every revolution of your procket, you experience lost motion. “Lost motion” is hard on you. your wheel easier than 80 now. OLUMBIA CHAINLESS $85 oevel-gear bicycles has ne lost motion- pedals reaches the wheel instantly. The gears rno easy. There is no “lost motion.” ride 100 miles with the ease of riding 80. Every Colup bia Chainless Wheel has the local guarantee. MARK WRIGHT & CO., Ltd. 5 The “Glevaland” Past es ) Prestige and Reputation } Stand Ii in Good Stead Bat the prospeetive purchaser will weigh it by its present work. Judge it on its Merits To-day and yon’ll find it the highest type of bicycle construction. Seethe Ball and Roller Bearings, = MARK WRIGHT & CO., Ltd CANADA CYCLE & Moror Co., LIMITED, HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO, CANADA. | macadamizing sheuld be done. | Opposite Open equares or vacant lots may | | be macadamized forthwith, but not those THE DAILY EXAMINER APRIL 24, 1900 COUNCILLOR WHEAR’'S LETTER lore ou: of office at the end of their | erm. } | Councillor Whear expresses the opinion | tha 5 3@.( OU w I] cover the cost of maced.~ amzing all our principal streeta. It is to | remembered that if such work ig} not done well ji had better not be done b and exp 43 ~p 1 th €30 000 w it a rt wa ‘ at Tep!y m 4 nd lar varas { to « r W : macadan I stret . the C " a " oe why we ‘ s ir i should n« : ctu plunge head | Coun or i and « oO ) expensive impr volv~ vely They V é 1 t x g 4 y x penditure 3 r diser ) € conon ‘ r Wa € ructed es Fi y Airs 4! y I ab le v nee and abr love s to b2 ba Over % equencea oO a y? Cou Hillsl rough in add tion to numerous r Whear has vell to ask advice | local works and the great work proceed- g i | i 1 inv discuss Conce ey i - ae tle y HE EXAMINER s n oO tou not D ~ ertall i the 1 \ not resu | adadit 4 ¢xpen ire Aad x I burdens the \ t ¢ ready heavy enough. Make them heavier, aud there will be disc As to apprel end that tie cac. be done to ad-~ the macadamization of vantage until the sewer services aave, for at least the greater part, been put in aod the broken ground has reyaiued it ness. At this holes in the streets caused by the settling moment there are many ° ] . and falliogin of the earth over pipes ; ground is ready forit wi the sewer and macadamiza the waste of the considerable amount of money that will necessarily be expeuded for repairs. In ouropirion, a year,or two, or three ought to elapse before upon which there are residences, For the same reason, the work of laying many stores or ; Permanent sidewalks ought not to be too much hastened. But in view of the heavy anoual cost of plankways and the away- | back look which they present to visitors, | everything should be ready for the vigor- | ous prosecution ofthe work of constructing permanent sidewalks as soon as it can bs | done to good advantage. To this end | we suggest the passage forthwith of an act of the Leg-slature | Owners of property whoee frontage is to requiring the be laid with stone to pay a portion of the After the passage of this law, the extension of siiewalks may proceed ac- cording committee and the city surveyor. From the purely financial point of view there is a good reason for hastening slowly cost, to the judgment of our street j in respect to the matter of Councillor | Whear’s letter. debenture debt at the end of the present year will be $150,000 ; and next year the interest of this amouct ($5,259.00) will have to be Our sewer ¢ provided out of the annus] assessment of i the city taxpayers. fin addition to this Pamount the citizens have to make up the ; interest of @ debt incurred for mecadims izing etreets aud laying stone sidewalks, they will be very apt to kick their coun- It is hard on the whe e}. Pressure on the You AGENT:. atre ets. we | ormes- i Submission at: tion before the | certainly involve | at much , Streets ’ natives took place. Oa ing at Syduey. Wages t S ar be i i i € cu ’ stances, would it not be mor lent ti Bave our clty money uatil it will go further than it will this yeer or next? | mania pS Sah Aa ARE A COMPARISON. Apvices fro effect that the Siauguter of the past ste to the | | n the Philippines week | The end of the | has been unprecedeated. \ War 18 not yet ln sight, though it has been 1a progress for coasiderably more thana year, and though upwards of seventy-five thousand troops of the United States have been employed to reduce the natives to f aboat $100,000,008. Americans in killed, a COST Tue losses of the wounded and invalided through disease amount to nearly 106,000. What the | losses of the Philippinos have been will never be known. While so many persons i» the United States arz criticising the British Empire’s action in respect to South Africa a, few words voocerning the Philipino war, by wav of comparisoa, may be permit ted. First, asto the causes. The Philipinao war, a3 well as the war with Spain out of which it grew, was begun by the United States; the war with South Africa was begun by the Boers. The Fhilipinos were struggling with the Spaniards for their liberties ; the Americans came as friends ; afterward? they purchased the Philippine Islands for $20,000,000 ; and it was Wien taking possession of ‘heir pur- Chased domain that the clash with the the other hand the British in the Transvaal were stru,” gling for their civil liberties and rights, which the Boers persistently refused to the trouolas which naturally arose, the Boers found excuse for arm‘vg to the teeth, issuing an insulting ultima- British greatly superior numbers. Then, as to the conduct of tie war, tLe Americans are grant; io tum, and invading territory ip carrying 02 operations against an uowarlike people, ill-arm:J. The British have been compelled to pat down the insolence of a warlike and siub- born race of men, well arned ani all mounted, who went to war declaring that they would destroy the paramoun tey which Great Britain bal previously woa in South Africa. Results have not yet b22n arrived at in either case. If the Pailippinos_ should prove to b2 obdurate, it seems unlikely that they will be ready to treat with the purchasers of their Islands before the war in South Africa has been coacluded_ In the meantime, it does not lie in the mouth of any citizen of the great R:- puplic to find fault with Great Britain concerning either motives or conduct. + <> + j NOTES AND COMMENTS. —We have received a lengthy letter from Mr. Joseph Wise,M.L. A, It wil! appear in THE ExAMINER to-morrow. —It is noteworthy that our Liberal organs are not reproducing Mr. Tarte’s Paris interview. That part of the prox gramme is for La Patrie and Le Soleil. —“F orward” says that “there never wa- ® more unreasonable,if not dishonest, excuse for disregarding public opinion than thac urged in regard tothe plebiscite vote.”’ Sciil there are temperance workers who seem to be willing to reward the Gov- eromert by continuingto give it their support. -~-The Liberals at Oitawa are admitted ly out of their latitude every time they at- tempt to navigate; the Liberals of P. E. Island are no more seawise. Advices from West Prince inform us that a eum of money was granted to a local merchants to stop up some hole or other in the sand hills of Cascumpec with brush. There was of course no tender, no specification, nG condition of any kiad—a true grit job Of course the merchant shifted about to fod how he could turn the Federal order into grist for his own mill. He succeeded in expending the money. But the brush intended by the Government, if but we wont. Miss MeFachern _examples of what Hood's it had any intention ar all, to fill the hole in the sand hills, now lies at the moutb of the South West River to the great disgust of the clam digger. Somebody will have } to Orientate the jobber and the job, or a terrible case of the wrong quarter stop-- ‘ped up will be on record. This is characteristic cf gritism. Minard’s Liniment for sale eyery wh ere ! goods and millinery. fe Something other than patronage must bring them to Ch’town’s Greatest Store. Perhaps it ss the low price asked, or may be the large assortment. ; A great many think as we do- its the style exclusive style that Miss McBachern gives every hat. No fear ot anyiady running against her own hat on some ether ladies head, Wow I: dies. If you want your bennet or hat nextSunday leave your order say to errow morning—Miss McRachern does not like pitehing a hat to- gether the end of the week or at half past eleven on Saturday and giving you the bother of answeri: Parcel boy at a quarter to 12 p.m. Ca pniseemneaheo- eosin apes Su aster Selline We will let the half hundred trimmed hats and bonnets trimmed] by ‘end sold by cur raleswomen in our millinery department te the Uh’town, Tig nish Summersid:, Sovris and Georgetown ladies do the telling. ig the door bell forou Leave your erder early; we will do the rest. A Bloody Week ee Mania, Aor’! 23.—Last week has beea bans One Of the blood.est of the war since the (A first dav’s fizhong around Minla. Anthbs» A eantic renort« mo-tly official, showa a total ne of 387 F lipivos killet, 12 officers and 244 Mi mea captured ax. mauy more wounded. | The number wounded is hardly gue-sable. DY \ Considering tha the Filipiags en irely al lack hoepital taciltiex, a great majority of the wounded will die Probably ihe week’s work fisished 1.900 insurgente. The Americans [4:; «ae nie killed aod sxteen woundel. Iwo sergeants and Oue priva e wer- k ‘lef ia ambush while escoriing prov'soe ran’, A RRO Wee 2 UN ne A We aie making a show of Silks, Vre:s Govds and Mil- linery that will do ourselves sredit ; a show that will make it worth your whie t» attend. Come to-morrow ( Wedresday ) night ; you wiil not be disap- pointed.— Stanley Bros, a “Example is Better Than Precept.” It is not what we say, but what Hood’s Sarsaparilla does, that tells the story. Thousands of testimonials are ye ment of Ladies’ has done for others, and what it will do for you. Dyspepsia — “I was weak and had sainting trelie Dyspepsia and indigestion in severe form troubled me. Five bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla made me well and strong.” Mrs. WILLIAM VANVALKENBURGE, Whitby, Ont. A Good Medicine — “ We have taken Hoow’s Sarsaparilla in our family as a spring medicine and used Hood’s Pills for biliousness and found both medicines very effective. For impure blood we know Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a good medieine.” R. 8. Petron, publisher Bee, Atwood, Ont. y) | ie j Ne range from 5: _ Hood’s Pills cure liver ills; the non-irritating and mK il yard. galy cathartic to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. WW) — i No season ye: ave we made €o great a display of new millinerv. The elezant deeigns by Miss Toombs wi!! be on exbibi- tion Thursday evening 26h inst., frem 7.30 to9, You are resvectfally mvited tote present. Moore & MecLecd To-morrow -- (Wednesday) bight from 8 to 9.30 Stanley Bros. shuw cf silks, dress 24 |i, ») new shades--at Came rill i\ ' eS a FARRAR RRAAARARAA RHA AER 2 BRREERRECERARAA TAAL 4 é we Now 1 the time to plant sweet pess. Carter’s Seed Store is the beet place to ony them. N-arlyv 40 different kinds, the cream of the sweet peas, to elec’ from. sat, mon, wed, | i ‘ as meme: en ww We havea beuntiful Pearl Greys Frwn Greys Kharki Tans London Smoke «99% DRESS GOODS sax G\ LADIES’ CLOTH a3s3ort cleth for spring costumes in all the fashionable shades. Our prices on these goois ¢ to $2.35 per We wouldilike to show you our line of kid gloves--in the $i per pair score PERKINS = The Millinery Leaders » ro 7 “ ICE KERR h MEK ee ee eat eck