—_ THE PAIL’ EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 28, 1900. } OTHER | y has two a with av ursing ba! E . ar Gac} Ps atmos, Sareaeh, lives to SUP} ’ } ann viftalltv re etren rtp Alia ‘ aie s\ TCily d } strrarct 9 ey the utmosl nd ‘ ed L aad , tax¢ , tained OF DOthn must be maint ’ wii sult ly fail. —- =o Po; Scolls Cmulsion keep up the mother’s tl ; lt also hes the baby’s nourish- ment, and supplies the ele- ry for proper } 2 os ‘- > F growth and development of bones, teeth and tissue. and £1.00, all druggists, . Lhemists, Torrent and specify- | | \SSeSSIent on Estate and Personal Proper- tue City of Charlottetown ivis purposes under Victoria, Chapter 12. } Be it enacted by the City Council of the City of Charlottetown as follows :-- : i Ist. The raie of assessment on Real Estat for general Civie purposes under said Statute, for the year commencing the first day of Jan- nary. "9 1900, is here by specified and one per centon every dol- fixed at the rate of lar of the value of Real Estate, as assesst i by the Assessors of the sa d City of thariotte- town in t General Assessment Book and Valuation oll of ali R Estate and Person- al Property lial to taxation In sald City, and of ail persons bic to pay Poll Tax therein, made and duly returned by them on the tweitth day of Ap-i, A D 1900 29nd. The rate of assessment on Personal Property tor such general Civic purposes, for the year con mencing the first day of January, AD 190, and ending the thirty-first day ol December. A D 1900, is hereby specified ana fixed at rate of seven-eizhths Of one pes eent on every dollarof the value of Personal Property as assessed by the Assessors of the said City in the General Assessment bok and Valuation Roll made and turned by them JAMES W the duly as atoresaid,. RBURTON, Mayor. DAVISON, CityClerk. H. M. A By-law for allowing a Rats of Discount on the Assessments on Real Estate and Personai Proper- ty ia the City of Charlottetswn aE ET & <3 PHOGPOSOOOS 2.490290. | >t The __cqsttii> <b | ? Transvaal War =| for gevieral civic purposes for the ; curreit year ending the thirty-| first day of December, A. D. 1900. Re it en: of Charlot lst. A di ted by the City Council of the City ‘LOWN AS [OLLOWS: ‘Ount at the rate of Twoand One- half Per Cent shall be allowed to alllaxpayers who shall, yn or before the sixteenth day of Juiy next, A D 1900, pay tothe City Clerk, at his office, |he taxes severally due by them [for the curren! year on Real Estate and Personal Property for civic purposes. JAME3 WARBURTON, Mayor. H. M. DAVISON, City Clerk. —dv2w A By-Law for Levying and Specify- ing the Rate of Assessment on Real Estate and Personal Pro- perty and Poll in the City of Charjottetown for a Waterworks Fond, under Statute 40 Vic- toria, Chapter 8. ‘¢ it enacted by the City Council of the City ef Chariot ctown as follows: Ist, The rate of Assessment on Real Estate fora Watcrworks Fund under said Statute ior the year commencing the first day of Jan- wary, A D 19.0, and ending the thirty-first day of December, A. D. 1900, is hereby s} ecified and fixed at ihe rateot one-eighth of one per at on every dollar of the value of Real Es- © 8S as ssed by the Assessors of the agaid @ty of Charlottetown in the general Assess. mént Book and Valuation Roll of all Real Es- late and ) ersonai Property liable to taxation in said Ci'y, and all persons liable to pay Poll Tax there. n, mude and duly returned by them on the }weifth day of ~prii, A. D. 190. 2nd. The rateof Assessment on Personal Property for such Water Works Fund for the year commencing the ‘iret day of January A D 1900. and ending the thir'v-first dav ot December, A. D., 1900, is hereby specified and fixed at ti + rate of one-eighth of one per cent on every dollar ofthe value ot Personai Propet ty 4s asse-sed by the 4 ssessors of the said City ood nde _ Assessment Book and Va- aaadannie ; nade and duly returned by them érd. ‘lh very pers in Said Ge ation Kol] “ orks Fi commen: l' 00, and « 1900, is he Oo! len Ce EO BESCSSE amount of Pol! Tax to be paid by m returned by the said AS&SeSSOFS 1¢ral Assessment Book and Valu “a8 liable lor such Water nd under said Statute, for the year ng the first day ot January. A. D. ding the Sist day of December,A D eby specified snd fixed atthe sum is (Uc) on the pollof every pe:son and returned as aforesaid. JAMES WARBURTON, Mayor. H. M. DAVISON, City Clerk. thereto ISLAND HOSPITAL } i e is herelsy rthat in pur an ‘ ! € act ¢ f incorporailoa a Public oe hg ol all contributors to thetove insti on wel be held in the New Hospit Acrth side of St. Peter's Ry ad, Charlottetown, Thursday, 3ist. May, 199% the hour of 7 30, ecuing lastituti , fur the purpose of Tustécs ior the Government of the at tao a accordance with the Bye Laws, s shall i yo “action of such other business — rought tefore the meeting. Te hag ; , iaS een Cecid ‘ rin k Cecided tehcld akove meet > r ‘ergerten Hallon the same day UU ' B. BALDERSO Y ’ Sec’ ‘ noe May 7] h19CO, Yaw ta. ec y ot Trustees. led isesses another great THE BOERS AND THE BRITISH. Generally speak he most strik ng difference between e Boer army nd ours the difference of intelli ence the Be army has no great general, its officers and men are’ un ain ed, neverthel« there Is a great | € { practi ry sense and let ness Of mind ULES through the whole mass. On the other hand, urarmy isa huge complex of or- anized stupidity; not aii fools, Dut tnat the system sup ses them to be such, and ts calcy ted to make them such. With superior intelligence goes superior . 7? ) ro “_ » t2 ‘ re , moral courage (he Boers have had ) il? ing in pt ysicial courage, such us IS given in aregular army ; they are } neasants who value and are not even for great ends C i i git Chius. cenied tnat S } tasks that no to an extent we should never think of doing against larger held on toposition after position as long as possih'c, never yielding further than was abswiutciy mecessary fur the meo- ment No troops could have shown greater skill in rear-guard fighting than Cronjes wed in the action at Drieputs 'which they ‘may |! absence ot drill and all the complicat- } ' morning to night. ‘low a foreigner to interfere actively | and in a few dave he was own ¢ yrrespondent of \e Lond n | mes Savs: that our officers their lives highly, to run great risks But it cannot be Boers have shown during this cam- Their generals have attempted British general would ive undertaken with similar forces. In action they have thinned their lines ae InciIned yreat moral courage igen. in erder to preserve their front force. They have on February 16. Another advantage, ugh perhaps doubtful one, possessed he Boer army is its homogeneity. e | freely inte'csange- +. There is no difference of cava'- officer or in be sent off separately men to several thousands, and composed of any men that may be available quite commandoes from be drawn. In the parts are r infantry, of soldier. Detachments ¢ of any magnitude, from five irrespective of the evolutions invented by drill ser- geants in times of peace to keep the mischief, the Boer pos- advantage. The Boers in camp never seem to be har- assed by all those multitudinous par- ades, inspections and fatigues, which keep the British soldier occupied from soldier from »4f ¢ rHEIR ARTILLERY. In treating of the Boer artillery sys- tem I have purposely left outof ac- count their artillery. The Boer ar- tillery has surprised us in many ways; itis handled with considerable skill and freedom, and the Boers have shown great resourcefulness in turning every kind of gun, whether originally intended as a field gun, a gun of posi- tion, or a naval gun, te some usetul purpose. Nevertheless the essence o! the Boer system lies not in the ar- tillery, bat in the riflemen. A great deal has been said during this year of foreign mercenaries servizg with tie Boers. The remark has often been made that we are fighting not the Boers but all the nations of Europe. Unfortunately, that is not true. If the Boers had been led by European ad- visers, it is not very unlikely that our troops would have been in Pretoria at the end of last year. There has been a good many foreign experts with the Boer artillery, and many foreign ad- venturers hav2 joined the Boer com- mandoes, or, as_ the case of the Ger- mans, Scandinavians, and Hellanders, formed commandoes of their own, Or- ganized on the Boer medel. But the Hoers have much too good an opinion of their own military skill even to al- with the direction of their operations. THEIR DEFEATS. The advzntages possessed by the Boers are, however, combined with Gentlemeo,—While driving down very strep bill Jast August my horse stumbied ond fell, cutting bimerelf fear- tully choutthe head ana body. ] veed MINARD’S |} INIMENT freely ov bim »» well as ever J. B. A. BEAUCBET ; natural instinct of keeping cover i ¢ t \ . | become a rabble, and to dwindle away } he Boer army is prac- | untrained; sina by the commando system is not — to serve asa real substitute for without ¥ ? 1 rs great celects. tscally the cohesion cient training, and discipiine no army can ever be really effective. he persuade their men to overcome their and ; i | | > } Boer generals have rarely been able to | } LO CrOSss a wide zone ot dangerous : order to qdeliveran attack, an important Chey ? vround In Or secure nNosition | { n have never been able to execute a | rapid counterstroke when our troops | have made an attack and been repuls- | ed, and they have often had great | difficulty even in getting the majority | Ot {eit forces tO advance into their | Arigg line. Want of discipline, 1009, m ats that ? ie Boer army, when Oughiy routed, rapidly tends to yy desertion. Of the 4,ooo prisoners taken with Cronje, cnly about 1,000 were Free Staters, out of a very much larger number who had accompanied him on the flight from Magersfontein. At sy SHOWS UP BOERS’ SCHEME. KRUGERS PI RPOSE IS POWER OF BRITISH. The London Times prints fou | : columns of mail correspondence from Bloemfontein, based upon original documents, official correspondence not readily accessible, going to show the settled and long-standing determination of President Kruger to destroy the British power in South Africa. The minutes of two conference held in 1882, between representatives of the two republics are cited. President Kruger and his colleagues in the con- ference were looking into the question of a customs union. He was against railway connection with the Cape, and against acommercial unien_ with the British colonies. At a second conference in 1852, Mr. Wolmarans, one of the emissaries now in Washing- ton, is represented as saying :— | We have had much experience of Her Majesty’s Government, and we| vill, and must shake ourselves free and become incependent. To this end the Times asserts Presi- dent Kruger in this conference was concerned te getan affensive and de- fensive treaty with the Free State. President Brand did not see a neces- sity for defeace. After Brand’s death in 1888, says the Times, Mr. Kruger zet his way in using the Free State to further the aims of the ‘Transvaai. BADEN-POWELL AS A MOUTH- ORGABIST. Here is a deliciously humorous study of the cabotin side of that many-faced genius, Colenel Baden-Powell, taken from the Mafeking letters of the Pal br. Ghase Cures Piles without the Danger, Pain or Expense of an operation—The Cniy Cuaranteed admirable pendant to the skirt-dancing and ¢ ther cert, which andience and went with a snap. no idea that so Inely good arust andl am held an pleasure than out Sleged ones. tations, a Cape Police instrumentalists’ Union, and a« | Ous items by our gallant light of the elder ones at the youngsters, anything more startling in the line than a Kaffir. up his ‘turn’ by rowed somewhere, and the command Ing officer sweep-tramp coster left the Stage amid a tempest of yells, plaudits and whistles from the gods, ar vated applause from the refined rows” been relieved, it immediately proceed- ed with the help of the relieving col- umns to attack its besiegers and took the main Boer laager and a gun, scat tering the enemy in various directions. A diet of mule meat and oats may be plain but it is evidently not dispiriting. Mall Gazette. ‘The picture forms an | episodes which I the same _ source, last ‘The feature of the day was the was enjoyed by a crowded I had company of tT) — ‘ ae a cial Peopie couid yleid such a ¢ qucted from week: con- small a rop of genu 5, and even a conjuror: a ] : ; dirmiy convinced that ne in the U lance augience music} cea ae ; ! MiUsiC-Nail nitead wihgaom ever !: re sites ere more filled wit! 1 i congregation Of de- We had songs and recl iple of capital humor ( lonel, who impersonated Paderewski in the first part and keptthe hail in a roar. | Afterwards he paraded as something like a cross between a cl ney swee and a White-chapel ccst¢ de a the fear of never human The colonel wound playing ‘Home, + >on a mouth-organ that he b who had seen e ts, 1d culti- The garrison at Mafeking heving Asthma Can be Cured deal of Clarke’s Kola Compcund, and urg- ed me to $2 for a bottle, but that ama marvel to all who know me. ure. Grom nearly every town and village in Canada come . iters from persons \ » have ! n rescued from tne ails- wee of Pixs by using Dr. Chases Cihii li i s “a ur. FE. Stokes, 116 Duniop street, Bar- r Cnt. writes:—"'1 was troubled a » blind, 3 sing piles for years, and 1d g thing to stop the constant : ) [ was always in pain uniil « fri 2 of mine told me of the won- deriul C es Dr. Chase's { intment had made among iis Guaintances. : T only used one box and am entire- ww cured. In sr titude for this marvel- a s cul and [91 th penefit of others suffering as i did, 4 8 nd you this re- cord of my case.” When operations and every other have failed to cure you, you can begin the use of Dr. Chase’s Ointment with perfect confidence that it will It has never failed to cure means cure you. : piles and will not fail you; 60 cents a pox, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates and Co., Toronto. SUNNYSIDE DENTSTRY. first door to the right stairs. Telephone connection. IR. AYEPS, Desirable Dwelling TO L.T. The western half of that house si uated on the curoer of Euston and Hillsborough Streets, at present occupied by Mr. D. B Sherbrooke. Stewart. Poseessicn Ist Jure next. <1] modern conveniences. Apple to MRS. F. PARKER CARVELL May 14, if. And is Being Permanently Cured Laily by Clarke’s Kola Com- pound. Here is What a Hamil- ton Lady Says:— Mrs. Gilbert, 105 Rebecca street, Ham- liion, writes :--"' I suffered from a bad form of asthma for over nine years, and, not- withstanding ali the doctors could do for ine, got worse and worse, so that my neighbours looked for my death at any time. I spent money lavishiy in the ef- ferts to get relief, but all to no pur nose. For six weeks at a time I could not get up or down stirs, and was in a niiserable condition. My a:ughter, who cierks in a drug store. had heard a good last resort. I paid is nothing, for it that for every tea- gave me_ splendid but one bottle I Iam do- ing my own work, can get around as well as ever, and feel like a new creature. Clarke’s Kola Compound has been a God- send to me, and I look upon it as a mar- try it as a than doses is worth more spoonful. ‘Two relief, and after using vellons remedy. You may use this testi- mony as you see fit, and I shall be glad to give further particulars to anyone en- quiring. I gratefully endorse Clarke's Kola Compound.” Sold by all druggists. A free sample will be sent to any person troubled with this disense. Enclose six cents in stamps. Ad- dress The Griffiths and Macpherson Co., Limited, 121 Church street, Toronto, Ont. COATMAKERS! Good coatmakers wanted at once steady employment, good wages. i CHAPMAN BROS, Amherst, N. 8. i > - 3) Bcd) OFS @ ae — — ea Sa joe—spel dea. he e!- trey ci Wear at W: ar at the ihe n~— SS — P= ee a wer a if — where you car make } snanes & lo Prd & clsew here and ta much Child’s Dongola 1 SS FN Cril ’s Uh $O0c $1.15. h e}, sewn sole, €1 Miss‘s’ sho:s or slippers Black, 90 $1.10. Ladies’ patent } ather shoe strapped $1,540 Ladies’ Choco'ate buckle skpper $1.25 Ladies’ boots tnest Dongoia ton or laced $1 20 $3.00. Ladies’ Chuculaie 2.50. Gents’ boots in all the latest aud Browns, extra quality $3.25. Also farmers’ whole stock pegg:d bi ots for spring and fall, end fisherman’s makes at from $2.50 to $4.00 per pair. N> matter where you ,o you ean i invest your money to > the seme ac variage you cal here, We woulu like you to verify this statement by ccming to sie the spe cial valres ¥e offeo Go elsewhere ard make compariscns ycu must in jus ice to vourself rturnto the old ric! MATTHGW & Mica. SOURIS, Some of our snaps | Children’s & A nice fine Oxford for child- ren size, 8 to 10, fur 55e. A fine chi'd’s Tongola but-, toned boot,soft tip, spr-ng heels’ for 80c. | A Oxford for nice fine Office in New Prowse Clock yyigses, sizes 11 to 2 for 75e. up: nice A Tan Pebble Uxford Tip, a and serviceab'e shoe, misses sizes ll to 2, for 75c. ee, Oe a ot ee a for Shoe LA)}ES' A pretty little strap slipper with patent tip for SUc. A nice fine laced shce self tip for 8de. A nice tan pebble Oxford self tip for 85c. And a very nice fin? button- ed boot with self tip for $).25, A splendid style and finish, you 29 af Wear even! —ait)r » «iy months of comfcrt ard thorcugh atistacticn yeu f} end yor r sho HWATTHEW & McLBANS HOT AND SHOE COUNT: t as: ketion from COCO pairs, | ° . } lighter figure than you can purchase self tip, spring hed, colat Visses’ Box Calf button boots, Misses eXtra tine buiton or lace hbo Le, patent boots, self tip, $2.25. . BOY'S Boy's Real Calf Jace boots, extra wel! and tinished, great wearers, $1 10. Boy’s extra tine Dongola bo ts, ‘ared $1.30. MEN’S B00Ts Gents’ fine Buff lace boots tip $1 40 Gents’ <xtra fine Box Calf or D 1 gola b cts 1k MEAS NR AP NO MEM Na SS EK ‘ ’ } } ) ccd Geal, e morey at ” ~ ; sty! test Styies Kid buttoned or laced becots, 652 81.10 e button hoots., sp i! 9g he 1, self \ip, spring ©) in Tan or Kid in but- BOOTS ma le stades of Tans lo.g boots, Lest lg wre P. ee & buyers MEN'S A strong wording boot for men, $1.00, all solid. A good Buff nailed kc st for | $1.00, worth $1 50, | A nice Dongola laced % elastic side boot for $!.75. A fine Box Calf laced } «t for $2.00. Such value wae never seen before. And sve our lines of $3.0u goods they can’t_be matched in ibe city, We only mention a few lines bur we have many otbr s just as go d ar? chap. Why? Becaus: peo, le are findins out tuat they get better Our shoe trade is inereasing, value from us than they can axywhere else. won't be sorry. Let us sell you your ext pair of shoes you R.H. Ramsay & Ce a. a a » ter