'_ PAGES Daily Ivjaizmm __¥_P7’_|_lif9v_ Roz , . _ ` mg 1_3 1 _il _ #L_ 111 . onlin; Malls- _ 77 ' Y 'T 1 _ _ _ {- -V - - - i.---._.- , LY TDUNDED “fo G 4 f ' l- , _ , ‘V1~1=i%’:u;l{N§fI1uaahuh1hvi8'i'liln} CHARLOTTETOWN PRINCE EDWARQ ISLAND; CANADA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1908. {‘i'gii~},}1ii{1§§§iil}ifii\QAlii_l5iA,imisAh§'a___ Dowkd $0 IM Likratursi Ilwtma'/1 , _ __ .f Succeeding “‘Tlu Prince I'd\aq»§ Isl/c_lore and best Interests' of . -n ._ , _ 'll P»-»»ceL'd.eafa1.ze..e-d 'I;_i_|_¢;r;rss_iol_ii_l;_0ud_i;zed gziileoi l=_li_d_ shpilottiéigl 13:: _1_1:_1_i_Y__l;:_1:itle were in the best condition of cn it. Another day one of the mea start it. The load itself was too iit__m° hc. add°d_ "He *as "om the he looked around and seemed °:_1: not diaemntiy putting his hanianlmsls depends as much on the care] had a bottle of whiskey. He always much on a good road. "I'll show Island wo; _ com rehend "sh __ sho th __ ____ _ they get the kind usage-as on iced. found their bottles wherever they you_whst we can do" cried,the boss For °.ll1°ll1°11i the ole woousmehihe pr ld' I iowa ml: the came I; on i 61;” sl B oh one pm and 'nd th” Wm d° mm’ W°"" ind umm' This '°n°w bngged t° "”°“° mad and hi’ *H1111 1111111" - - V- ow e . n I . i. I ' ~ . 5 0° .1111 1° Whore ° ° 11° ° ° 1 o °ti1_°1- Tho, Ne one dared ge into the hers Bead that he wouldut dad 1112- 'rhey came. "They een heel lr. sem was lost in thought and a smile played around his lips like the shadows around a fire. 1 had ,,,,_ loved bie_.sterlss before. I settled myself back in' the deep armchair vlithethal- -fvcllos ol entire enuelee- tion that comes' to one who has eaten liear;tily_ of a good dinner but not too ,lql\qh. Neither of us smoked so th_e,il»ll' .Rag pure‘and uncontamin- ated. Thljo_ fthe western window which was .wldoqpeu came the: delightful P01101!!! ,that _defies the best art of U10 Ddrfiimer,-the rich aroma of hay newly_,el\t. At the front of the h0,llSe Ilhmdll B bed ' 0| poppies, 3, moss of deep redfadalug e ceueh ni vivid ¢0i0llr ~t0 a somewhat sombre Canadian landscape. "He came to the camp in the evening," continued the woodsman "but he _-didl1’t know anything about it till the next day. In the afternoon he awoke and rubbed his, they st00d_ Ha walked around them hoofs were worn thin on the side of when the cattle were in_ The ox‘Read said nothing. When all were in This was received with iieiiiiioii but never put a band near them, the foot on which the oxen pressed' ht d th lst sup er he said to e "Gi if . There was no mud on their legs or 1110” ilodviiy i11 i1H11ii11Z- ‘aisle Eitaoohrglzh 0€|ta;:-tpT€lhi:?;1g:'that slfovel." With onem sweep iv|:`tlI: 233' :T italy? mlgie thembnnd’ any indication_ or what they had "Ti10 11113 day |16 WHS 1”1111dY '01' through him; The kick of an ox is|ll`19~1111F° Pile |19 Unllaflihed 91° b°t' harne se; H g y'id B islam was worked at. He oever had been in the road. The oxen were hitched. worse than a. horse at close range.'tle." t the ' 6 sa no ng' His that countr beiorei HT ,ve ii It was an he __ ___ d 0 c i __ ee were set Kindly he talked to ringing cheer was given by the men. Y hey eea o d 0 t get the When the new_ teamster came in the How did he train his cattle? the oxen Gmdiiau ui b iit uiiiiii » ii W0Ti1i118 011 B001 ground- and been big team to turn tbelong heavy un-:spring he had to pat that ox in the Oh no one knew But he did it at Bel,” i._o'¢_ha lima avefy pair iiu i; W O had gnhemd “round and 'mm' » , ' . . y p e true and every double tree kept per- Q“° “ight I °f°Pt °“t “nd Watched fectly straight. He spoke louder. him but he saw me. For weeks he Tim y seemed to settle themselves never spoke to me. He was a quare more _ami strain iiimier put the badly used." Now the old ssrhent (the Woodman 'sometimemdropped DMR into the language of the Woods) how did he know? That was just where they had been w_orking_. The boss seeing him came oyslf, "Well Read, are you going to hire?" he asked. "Tile csttle'll have to be shod and have a door under .Y-hem." "You can have what you like if tou stay." said the boss, for we wanted a teamster bad`. “I’ll ,s_tsy" said Read. "Pick what now you want and do what you like for them were the boss’s last words. Read picked four men and that day we made the floor for the oxen to stand gainly wagon and it empty. The beasts didn’t know anything. Thai _boss 'wasted him to take me with hini to help him unload but he said "No, not this time." Well when he came back from that first trip the cattle tliyned the wagon as well as a .horse would and Read just sat in the rig and never went to their head at all. Before a week they would do anything he liked and knew him as well as we did. "Feed'! No he did'nt feed heavy but he never let any one else feed them. In the spring after doing more work than the same sizediteam back. , "He was a half witch I think. He could do anything with and would do anything for the cattle One day the people at the nearest farm lost a young beast and could not get it back, lt ran oil into the Woods. We told Bead, He said he’d take it back alone without a rope. A number of us went with him. When we got pretty close to it he told us all to stay there. In less than fifteen minutes the creature was licking his hand and it followed him like a dog to the stable. Yes I night. I used to hear him roaring. customer and odd in his ways. that is a. fact. They would haul bigger loads for him than any one else but he could made them haul tlll they were blind or~died. A few years before this he was at a camp far up river. The boss thought he he knew it all and was very odlcious. He knew Read's team could haul more than any of the others. Thro watched him He just walked slowly brutal wagon and load did not move. “He could haul cattle blind. Yeslneiid spoke to each imimai by name. Now spottie, now Niger, come you beauties, come Dick, go- long Poley and so on to every ani- mal. Tho whole team seemed -like one mightyvengine. Thehattld an- swered to the pulling all they were able and more than they shou.ld,.Tl_ielr eyes were staring wild, the cords ever did before in the camp in the around gradually getting nearer and_loads. One day the wagon got into 81011115- ilileill Wllllges 1011811 fF0l1\ that peculiar roar that oxen gli., when pulling hard. Read t_al|.l¢.. louder. Then' flinging out hh wh.,- he shouted and cracking his douriall. |111 WND 11° cried. "Nom take ii. - AWGN" With a roar as of pain til. brutes made a lsst tremendous el I°"t- T110 Great cumherous wagon Save a._lurch and moved on while i. hearts were with the struggling team. But Read stood as one who heard not. Tears were in his eye: and he was heard to mutter "Oh my P0013 Poor brutes, my beauties. P001' Niger. poor Poley." The animals took a few steps forward, then theyhesitated and staggered as if uncertain of the way, and than stopped. With one look of indig- nant scorn and hatred at the boss who stood near. be threw down his whip with an oath, and taking one more look at his loved oxen, with eyes dlle`d with tears he left the .camp and never worked in all that region again. The cattle were blind. Oh my. there is a shower com- df their necks stood out like whips., ing".safd th dm 1 ` greed he used to put on tremendous their feat were Bunk dew in the. aim, a muse i:i?i(:ie_ “HI riifixgghag _the boys put on that load of hay." RIG-Il0N AND ' .>P-A-RTY Sermon fBy Rev. G.SR. White, a -Plea For 'Christian e Activi Voting And_'|1he_ -Ballot In ` ."Ele‘ctions I' *mimi* \ "Render theriforeisunto Caesar they things which are Caesar's, and unto God the ‘things that are God's." -- Matthew XXII : 21. The doctrine of our text which is here illustrated- and enforced by our divine Lord is, that welxare citizens as ,well as Christians,\snd such be~ ills the case, we owe .lduties to the state as well as to iGod: Render therefore unto Caesar tbe"things which are Caesar'-1; and unto God the things that are God’s. , The proper attitude of the pulpit. towards politics has ..l_on$=been,.nnd still is, a matter lol grave and lfreat importance. These.-are lunssy sood people who think _politics should never be mentioned~irom‘thej Pulpit; that they-pulplt,is sacred1to the things o "fx-eligi0n.or as they phrase it : More -we.'shonld'hslr. onl' ine o ` l"` amid." lliinlc y g on the other,5:n3r'°there are others._ equally ~ nun .-and -=-lntelllgeni. whe zhlnififhuiltlle .meeting er pel- ltics is s pcrtA_qf_,tne~<|ospel~wnieh was pr ‘tic d_ l,5%dypreaohed~hy our divine 'scel',““ risc, and that he who fa to uphold politics in the pulpit is to'_f;=.¥rsaoh=‘a='whole S05: Del. T must he pulplt,‘Iike the ?'°°" ‘*"~“*' 'i‘°'ei.2‘£‘i.‘5‘l$l’ ;"°.i ween _ n . _ y n ii the §2gnQ`s§“,give _the _Scylla too wide e ' iii,~/he- will ‘fell me ine- arms of bgharbdie, _.and 11ii 52115011 comes is so don't ask me to dedne it. It death, as they say, and see the poor 119011 \1B» What f011d 11'1911101‘i€B i1QV01‘ i ne thing to ve a good idea of a icreature torn to pieces by the dogs. 11l'01111\`i U10 IBSUW P18 Skill- have' 9 . ._ . Ji? thing for your fo,/n satisfaction, bu "The bad Spaniards won’t 'learn a‘ 11 BiiKi1i1 iid? i11 0116 168 that reminds am late ‘for civic .electious, I am in time for 'Dominion election. vs zen who neglects his public duty is a public euemy.” There are many in this land who never think its duty to vote unless they are paid 1'-:r so doing. They remain home to await the most generous candidate. Surely the pu pit owes that man a lesson .I on oilals it is about five hundred other thing lesson in gantleness from the tender 111° ‘li tim l111¥11 I Cimdlld ii! Q.” -ifit an the iiiiiciis iihere X if you try to define lt lor somebody hearted Irish and En"gTfsh‘gl§ntFyTW5°f=i1‘¢il1llI5Y‘§ll50'"'d`11iT >5.'é§i¢YiIY1i'¢ 3753 else. We gage a people by the gen Ganadians are now well into the diouidl over its diameter or words tleness of their sports. For in- gentle age. Once on a time it _was t° th” 55°C'-~‘ `Fil111iB’8l1 I W01lid stance, take the Spaniards, a cxuell considered sport for two curmud- 1'i1i5i1¢1` 80 l1P B8l1il111f» J0oGal1Bf0l‘ a have had a church some good man has come to me at election times and said; to me. when we were voting for the same persons," Mr. White, if I- were you I would vifte the ining cnwerd1y_ sei. 'rhey let n li.illl-ness geene te lhmbnece one _nnether with very limited uumbor pl rouudo lfhau is too vile,-» 1 elweye sem, ne my in a. two acre field and shake rod padded mits but we revolted against gp through some of those old foot- rags at him and tease Ilim with harlsuct atrocities and have taken to ball arguments "Rah, Rabi Riihli - nardlllos or things with names nhouli the gentle game of hockey, where the ,, as bad. After the bull |;ois»a` few, boys must not touch each other with etc' P`w'C' But to “se the ready of the dagoes ready for the hospital a mit.- If it is necessary Ito put out a they dx him up for rrlnrket, iii fellaw’s eye,disjoint his nose,dislocate |1813 is all i11 101' 1111 111111 liild foot Of cents for the hind quarters. Now his jaw or kill him entirely it the old boys." ‘ ‘ l vernacular the- gentle game of foot- thd Wi10i°B01l1d i11Bi5ii1lf»i011B. 11115 U19 neighbor's liberty, he is fast putting feet in order to buy votes. He must sood laws under which we live himself end his fellows into epelieic Siu osolust his own manhood. s- een should be-our pelltleel levers al slavery worse lu some desrpos than 2411"” '=i1°.1‘1WS 01 111° °°“1111Y- 111111 ‘ the bondage of Russia. He is as osaiust his fellow man-yea blah 111° 11“1‘1Y- had if not wom than Em., who ever eu, against his Gnd. Ieii: net toe many women it ls ooo louz mor- Ti1°1`0111'° 501110 P60916 Wi10 think wld’ h1s.bii.¢hr1ght' for 8 _-ness of strange that the man who would tyrdom from the time they are bud-_ politics.osme from the evil one, and pnttags. There is many a poor S11111`l1 15° 110 11 111111111 ¢i1i11$ ill blldilledd. thither all should return, that is ignorant fellow who does the withed will' stoop to such mean acts for not so. That thing which they call dllsd, who does not sense tue gv.-vlty what he calls the honor of the politiesis not politics at all. That _;the N31 logic of his ,,¢t_ go they-5 "party" which is much to the dis- which they denominate politics is the is hnqther mah, who isis, a create; honor of himself and his party? looms up only al few days ahe_ad\of "curly .»ll>1r11." -which holds over elnner then the peer iellew who sells Now men will have their political with oo many. that which studies his God given libs;-ty_t-,hat is the dlfierences-one man thinks that s not the-beat interests of the Country, mah who buys the vote-he is till-lee protective policy is for the best in- but the 81017 of the."Dl11‘i1Y"Wi1°til°1` a signal--you 1-and the form of the terest of the country, while his neigh- it.be Grit or Tory. That is what oath he,n-met tmmpfa beneath his bor, a man of equal mental calibre, 1 some .people call politics, but that _ thinks free trade will serve the coun- is onl the abuse of politics. try best. I h ld su ort the side whose .Whagthen is politics? Look up _ 11 011 PD _ political policy in my ludgment is brother I think you are wrong. It ls_ WEAK, PALE AND WORN OUT WOMEN Can be Saved Prom a Life Of Misery by Dr.Willlam Pink Pills I Women are called the "weaker sex" and yet nature calls upon them to bear far more pain than men. With ding into womanhood, until sge be- gins to set its mark upon them. They are no 'sooner over one period of pain and distress than another them. No wonder so many women become worn out and old looking be- fore thelr tlme.` In these times of trial Dr. Will- iams’ Pink Pills are worth their weight in gold to women. |'1‘hey ac- tually make new, rich blood, and on your dictionary-the dictionary for , .fur the best interest of the country accurate speech and clearness of de_-l dnltion, is next to the Bible- of any, book we have. It is our best and' surest authority outside of the Holy Scriptures. Politics according to the Stanrlard_bsns¢ui=innamces.upou A theirlg tsousoonscisace fs mos des- truetiv ,sa .it. only '.p_o __ . No»nij»cgi.tahs.dro lnlhls nl, n 1 _ u .frm i J ‘ I in this Iznd, -than any liorm o e:iT_, A ,'°.‘_~‘ T .> <1 .bil il. raid tr gl in llfsnrty ego-ll." -uummnin _ - fi span. moral' ber-offthe lpeoble., '~ .iwbo buys and sells -cogelsace ls»no.t's;ss'fe-msn in' _is- is -6f~tbs free. -‘Phe msn who sells his vetsltn -the ',fpstty»_buysr" is t ll mt only- wo is-own, b_ut_,,l _ _u;“m1he--mama.-_“fthe liberty i ss __ hola ‘un to 111° lull sue of mu. luv of _,hu h¢_g¢hh¢|-_ Rs 5| q9la¢,.wbst z _ _ moral aspect of this whois question he ~een_to nu euthlsewn and im =- »ei politics. 'rust the men who my _ , ' » I' I’;"` 'ua A . '_'_\_~`,. _i,.~ eu:ofdi¢even,dus _ »H00ney’s Perfection r_li'_‘_y_- *_ _ ,',»___'__ _7n_, Slides' .,.\\‘l\ ___ roi Delidemlyclnp ssdlrsny-ode!- ._ eacyforevcrymcd = mdevu-ysppufcc. ` ` Wfsppdd in - mdhlrs-Fod's|`ll dnnpmot papa, _ '_-',r_i',,i-I md packed is dis _il _"'l'/~. 'I W fur Gr-snr _ lsttlsl. Talks Half _the iPccpIe in this Provhm And let each man stand true to I hlsl principles and do his best to have them prevail, and let him persuade‘ by all honest means his fellow to see' as he does, but don't tako yolzri neighbor by the throat, because you are a man of greater physical forcei than he, and say to him you mi=st,or rwlll ehekg the life out ei you-er! do ss I ask, or you will work no' more for me,if yo-lr childre starve! es liberty. And don't say such things re not done, for they are, and you know h . t ey are But study -carefully what you think is for thebeat interest of the country and stand by those princip- les as one who shall give _an account of his political deeds at the day of judgment. _ For, if you think you _will never meet your political conduct at the judgment of the great day you sro mistaken, all will be there. Theo you Christian people, go from the prayer meeting on Wednesday evening,to the political caucus mort ing on Thursday, and there uphold every righteous principle, and frown down s.ll that is not worthy of men-for that is where things great and small, goo_d and bad, are hatch- ed out, set in motion, or choked out, as the case may be. But in order to save the political situation morally, you must attend the private meetings of your politi- csl psrty. I do think that the pulpit dlould for than you rob him of~his @1711 liv-i the richness and regularity of the blood the health of every girl and every woman depends. Mrs. Ubrane C. Webber, Welland, Out., -is one of the many women who owe present health and strength to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Mrs. Web- ber says:-"About three years ago, while living in Hamilton, my healtbl began to decline. The drst sym- ptoms were headscbes and general weakness. After a- time the trouble increased so rapidly that I was un- able to attend to my household duties. I lost flesh, looked bloodlsss and had frequent fainting nts. I was constantly doctoring, but without any benefit, and I began to feel that my condition was hopeless. One day a friend asked me why I did not try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and me1\~ tionsd several cases in which she knew of the 'great benedt that had followed tbeir_ use. After some urg- ing I decided to try the pills, and bv d only used them a few weeks when I began to feel benefitted, and from that time on the improvement was steady, and by the 'time'I had used about a dosen boxes of the- pills I was again enjoying the bleeeil_18 Of good health. I cannot too strongly urge other discouraged euilerers to glvei Dr. Williams' Pink Piill A f8i1` l. "nal-.` wliuune' Pink rim will eurc ell il-euhlee cue ze poor. waht! blood, such as anaemia, gtnersl weakness. ind1t'¢lf»i0u. neur\itil» 'U11 troubles, rhetmstism, 'the sfter ef- 'fects of la grippe, and such nervous troubles as Bt. Vitus dance and par- tial paralysis. _Sold bg _all mdlildine dtulers or by mail st 0 cents s box or six boxes for $8.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine To., Brockville, Ont. my duty to vote. I i in one straight ballotndtqgazg. do you vote lor?" I lelclike saying iihat is my business, then I remelix. ered ,that ,was di to t ' of the Province. amor ng in M' I dd i10De that the new Mayor -and Council .will do away with the antiquated system of pen voting. t is an in ustice to ev r vo rand ut 'undue pgwer i tb ig ygd ui pl n e an - Charles Summer said: "That eil-iitical-boss. -It is the dnt; of sex:-y man who has a vote to vote. If the political machine is vile, ,good men should lay hold apon.it and purify it. B_ut as Mr. Spurgeon said: "Tha fact is a certain class of man lqvg ' ‘ be quiet, and are ready to ppl] th 'country to the eviliope ly ‘ '_ |they may live ea 9, enemies. They _ ' ‘ ' . .liness to plead for the_._ fgh't,_ for it might cost them a onstppier, or is friend, so they profess A superior holiness as a reason for _sknlki.ng`." An :ble writer in the United States says:"In our day it seems that men who are almost completely destitute of all proper ideas of their relation- ship to free institutions, have a greater influence than those who fully understands this relationship." Another writer asks: "Boca se politics have become miseilagly corrupt, being almost _synon- ymous with fraud sre the cultured, the refined, and the minister of the gospel, instilled in holding themselves entirely aloof, and by their refusal tcrbecomo fn- cereeiea in their hfgh and import- ant concerns making an increase _in corruption still more possible." That is a statement which all good citizens should ponder. There are moral evils here that should have the light of honesty let in upon them. 'And the pulpit should do its duty here. Our system of re- sponsible government makerevery man responsible for the _ good conduct of the country, according to the »full extent of - his ability. These h,gh -privileges were given to us not only to enjoy, but to pass on to future generations not corrupted and misapplied, but still further purified-andwmade more useful for the generation yet unborn. In grder to do this we -must re- member tbat "eternal vigilance is the price of liberty," and that our free institutions cannot be main- tained in highest eBlciency.wit\_lout the support and active co-operation el ell *intelligent end highmindsl citizens. Then in closing let me ask- "What constitutes a elite? f Not high-raised bsttlement *or lab' ored mound, Thick wall or mostedgate; Not cities proud, with spires snd'ltln- 7ets crowned; 1 Not bays and bread armed ports, Where laughing at the_sf.0rm. _rich navies ride; » Not starred and snrangléd courts, Where low bowed baseness wsfts'pu-- fume to pride. No:-Men, high-minded _mem Men who their dutieaknow, But know their right, s\id,~k'ubwlng dare maintain, ` Prevent the long-aimsdblow. _ And crush 'the tyrant whiff-they These constitutes s state," ` May God Almighty multiply-the number of such men into 's great and mighty host.-Amen. read the chain; . l l