THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 15, 1899 FEV T TSE | CFF F SS TTT eT eT eee. - vcore “ as, eee ia x ; a eee } 7 ADAM: DADAM AADS » rr ' \V i LESLIE E. MACLEOD. { bumble offering io his memory. It is but ) : srt | ee oe i 1 the scant justice that is due from a fellow { eneenn scribe. There are those who either of laie | ' ; —— ; 1., | vears or earlier were more intimately ac- eh, iT : > From the many touching tribut es to the } } Wile! t NOVEMBER 15, 1899 Om eae at quainted than I with Mr, Macleod (as 1 | ; memory of Leslie E. Macleod, who died | know him principally by what he has ; . in New York recently, we print the follows | ten) and trom these gentlemen l woud | - fe ; [HE PROPER COURSE ere were Crees nes as : | : no Fin’ v ‘ ; ' } y taht or refhod +} - ing from the pe! of Judge Irving Halseys | pe delighted to hear, as l am satiefi = bey . , a : Fa ington, Keatucky.ang | can more adequately deal with the subject.’ “= , oo e°N R (Ineonoclast ) ol Lex DON, Aeo TUCK Y and j clast . + Y ~ : wnt f Lemperance of New Bruns-~ : ayeten N 7 St 7] Y N ’ B 4 { 7 oer < rst ex Trpts rom ji . ae . j / . . j bas append & pumt ‘os erp from | wasin his writingsa marked i + Cw ~ y CS, : € W ack grounds UC > ; have prepared a petition to Lord | ~ hs P. ” =) . 3 : > | MI ; : ; the writings of others ' AVE SOuRKE to icuitivatien none too common among king his terfere > pro- ie : 5 : : = P 3 ] eBay secon neh stadg , lo justice to the memory of that gifted | writers oftoday A bright, vereatile writer, . rt’ } } } 7 ' . : ' ney ao not, we are told,|} é fanda@ justand generous critic, hie place | > ’ ; a ae (and @ jist ao pa itiC, } © | ’ : F ; slander : : : . y, > DER TR 4 isk Lord Minto to dismies his } isla } am scribes of today will be hard to | Corns r Queen & > 7 | ) ' hu Wiinto to dism1 : & . : “Tn the rush and hurry of life in this} qil.”—The American Stock Farr Lex: a ‘ . 5° Tr aiseGgive the house, but | 7 In . 7 . . il . A As * Us arms, SAS & 5h Mn 5 Graiton Streets > i i country we scarcely pause lO notice our | Ingtut HONE 9 orth that TOV i u , : bs fel y i : ’ Set forth that the government introduc: | unfortunate companions who fall by the | ‘A+ a turf jourvaliet he made a bright D om [In VAT a RT }aod parliament adopted a measure for | wayside, If miseed at all iti> but fora little} and « hining mark. Thoughttul, well. : ry > | ascertaining the will of the people on a while. Each presses torward to the goa) | read, @ very gracetal writer, his articles | 11. - ~ ~~ > es : his ow esire, giving little thought to} eo led attention. anc > vO y " ee ee o ee ee ” — a Ry e cer.ain question, and that having 8&0 of his own d ee a ! AVE LL c man 1@a atl 10D, & 1 nt young map < SE BAKER) : ; those who shall no longer walk in the! ever hada more brilliant start in his line 4 > | ascertaired it they refuse to act upon tne ee . Five } j ny B A KES ] rom RREAD . eo ee ee : i accustomed paths or mipgie in the fa- i than Leslie McLeod. Vhe sudden con~ a2 A ZAA 2d ) cw 4 PAR Sis . MOrTrmMeEetion, and ney a m to re pape miliar strife. | clusion ¢ f aecareer of the greatest promise i Was SSeS > grievance. The St. John Sun remarks ; | “Jt makes little difference how love 1,} and of much achievement PHANIX of Hartrord FIRE INSURANCE Co, Cash Assets Over, $5,000,000,00 ee ee ir patronage is solicited le Company, A hare of yo “ old Relis PLEASING CONTRACTS, CSNEROUS SETTLEMENTS, LOWEST BATES. ~~ Ke Hi. BEER. Great GeorGe Srreet Authorized Agent for P. E. I )representine other, Fire, Life and deat Insurance Companies. BULB DIRECT FROM TOLLAND. eee ener Cur shiment of BULBS has arrived. They are the linest we have ever seen. Hyacianth, Narcissus, Tulips CHINESE SACRED LILY, CATTA LILY, FREESIA. Haszard & Moore (Mail order promptly atlended to) ¢ rms ¢ It Pays t— ; Have the Best Even if you ~ pay Rut when you get the best for the least money, then you get @ snap. And that’s what you get when yeu subscribe for The Montreal Daily Star aT , $ 9 7 RR Canada’s Greatest Daily Newspaper. One whole year for $1.00, Rk. L, COTTON AGENT Toe weet OR ives Charlottetown. SO aw = 4 264084847 é ¢ ¢ ‘ 6 ¢ ; e é ‘ ' ; * ~ iT PAYS 10 SELL => » e® @2 6 ae Gool— how admired, bow trusted he may have ** This Dominion has had as much gove | . : been who has just joined * the innumer- rn t bv Governor General and by . ; ; ee nn G i ia good for it if able throng’ who have taken their abode Lieutenant Governor as 18 goo bike ‘ ae ae oe ee , . silent halls of death.’ “Lhe grass ‘ ronment Dy pleb scite 18 to be made a in “the sile : cs i | grows over his grave as though nature | strove to blot out all traces of his existenee, | and even in the hearts of those who knew him best and Joved him most he soon be-~ comes a fading memory. “He lived, he acted his part, Now he is gone, and the great stream of human life tiows. Life is too busy to take much thought of the dead. The tale is so | familiar,we have heard it repeated so often, | govern part of our constitutional system it will be | necessary to devise some means by which goveroments and parliaments may be made to respect the verdict of such a popular vote. But Parliamevtary govern- ment knows nothing of plebiscites, which are extra-constitutional devices. The | whole plebiscite affair was meant to hum~- | bug the temperance people and has ful- | filled its purpose. The Governor General _- wae its iteration scarcely arouses | will neither dismiss his advisers because | ‘Pat mevad aia Pi Pa -.» ; . I y uy L | they are guilty of humbug and fraud, nor | ™omentary 5 ore — ve dies who hat been remarkable among his fellows for shining qualities, his exit from life scarcely causes a ripple on the surtace of human affairs. He was; he is not : this is all. Leslie E. Macleod, whose very recent death wasto the major‘ty of the readers of turf literature so entirely unexpected, was certainly a man deserving remembrances He wasthe possessor of very marked abilities. Be first became known to the American publie as a writer and associate editor of Wallace’s Monihly, when that journal] was in the high tide of its pros- perity. Bus articles underthe nom de plume, “Recland,” and hie editorials at- tracted great attention. They were bright, pungent, incisive, and dis» played a rare mastery of the subject he discussed. His style was always easy and graceful. It was never labored,and when he did not instruct he alwayeamused, He always said the right thing in the most agreeable way. He had a rare talent for newspaper work. He appeared to write spontaneously, entirely without effort. There seemed to be no end of his vereatil- ity. He turned from one subject to an- other with the ease of one who was master of all, “I am glad to be able to contribute a Fire... and Marine “~—Isnurance FIRE RISKS taken on al- most every descrigtion of property: lissolve the houee because the majority in the chamber are supporters of humbug fand fraud. But the government must | needs cause the house to be dissolved be- fore many months, and the people can do the rest.” Yes! tbe opportunity of the electors of Canada must come. Meanwhile, the electors of Belfast and Murray Harbor miy legitimately express their opinion concerning the passage of the Farquhar- son License Law by polling their votes against Mr. Irving and Attorney General McKinnon. Vote them down,—that’s the proper course, NOT LIKELY. A short time ago, the people of the Bedeque district were induced to vote for Mr. J. H. Bell, because he was “on the side of the government” and would be “able to get favors for the district.” But in respect to harbor, improvement and the Stanley, the influence of Mr. Bell now counts for nothing. Nothing is being done about Summerside harbor and the Stanley is not going there,—though the people were as sure of these “favors” when they voted for Mr. Bell as the people of Bel- fast and Murray Harbor now are of the immediate construction of the railway and bridge. In view of the experience of Bedeque district, it is not likely chat the ahrewd electors of Belfast and Murray Harbor will allow themselves to be fooled. oro —The attempt of Sir Louis Davies and the Patriot to convince the electors that Mr. A. ‘C. McDonald, M. P., Mr. A. Martin, M. P., and all the Tories are against the railway and the bridge is toothin. It will not carry their Attorney General or Mr. D. P, Irving to victory. —There’s a great deal in imagination. With potatoes at l5cts, oats at 27cte and pork st Sects, Sir Louis Davies imagines that the farmers of this Province are all rapidly growing rich, even though the prices of store goole are away up! A MARINE RISKS, on car- goes of steamers and sailing vessels, cyvered at all seasons, LOW RATES i is very sad.”— Turf, Field and Farm, N. Y. “As 4 writer on equine topics Mr, Mac cod was undoubtedly one of the ablest that this country has produced. He was a deep, origiaaland independent thinker and a writer of both vigor and polish, bis literary style being informed with the grace and distinction of arare and cultured in- tellect.”—Horae Review, Chicago. “Ona turf mattersand dissertations on the horse he was the ablest writer of them all. His style was clear, incisive and forcible. He wasted no words, and wrote pure English.” Veritas, (E. C. Walker) ia Trotter and Pacer. “Mr. Macleod had no mean traite, was quiet, unobtrusive, rather inclined to be uncommuniczative, and while he made no enemies and was cordial to all, he had few preferred friends, His library always occupied his spare moments, and no wider read man than “Roland was.” Trotter and Pacer. “As a polemical writer he had few peers, surely no superiors, and he handled the Qaeen’s English with vigorand grace. The virility and vigor of hisdiction was one of the striking features of his writ- ings. He was naturally endowed with a bright intellect, cultivated by a wile range of reading, and men who crossed swords with him found him a foenan worthy oftheir sieel. Those who knew him ‘ntimately testify to the bigh sense of honor thet actuated him inal] his relations with his fellowmen.”—American Horse Breeder. ‘* Brilliant intellectually, Mr. Macleod excelled chiefly as an essayist, and his matter, never dul), often sparkled with the brightest thought most tersely expressed.” —Chicago Horseman. “ His fame will last. * * ® Leslie had @ triumphant vindication of his character.” —John H. Wallace. “He bad achieved perhaps the widest reputation of any man of his day and vocation. Close acquaintaace served to inspire @ respect for his intellectual genius. He was an intejlectual athlete, and of the best training. The full, copious richness of his style, at times brief to sententiousness, at others almost grandiose, was the result of deep thirking and wide culture. No man ever paraded his gifts less, nor waa less eelf-aseertive in his private relations. Knowingly I think Leslie Macleod never dida deliberate wrong toany one. Of his own failings he was most keenly aware, and this verse of “In Memoriam,” which I find marked by his hand Thy leaf bas perished in the green ; And, while we breathe beneath the sun, The world, which credits what is done, Is cold to all that might have been, will seem tonching!y appropriate to those who knew him ‘est.” —“Volunteer,” of the staff of the Borse Review. Ulsters! Wlisters !—150 mens ulsters— price $3.75, %4.75. $5 75 and $6.25. Weask you to compare quality with those sold elsewhere. We have lots Me “ar «il aif} «t{] «({{] «{) aff are our Fancy Oak and Mahogany finished Screens with nice Draperies. Your choice of woods and draperies for $2.25, ALSO_- Fancy Oak Music Racks Qak Book Racks - These are good goods and the prices are right. $2.60 $3,40 JCHRN NEYWSON ‘THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPANY The Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York RICHARD A. TicCURDY,' President ASSETS—$277,517,325.36. ANNUAL-ANCOME—$55,006,629.43 INSURANCE IN FORCE—$971,711,997.78 Wee> All Canadian Policies payable iu gold=ayy Before placing your insurance, please call or write fo stimates, JOHN McEACHERN, AGENT May 27—Sat"& Mon Imo- No More War Swords will be beaten into plough shares later on; bui ik armers do not need to wait till the ‘Peace Conference” is over, before buying their plough rhares, as they can do so at once, by calling at tie Masonic Temple Store, where the share, or other plough extras can be had for Jess money, and ee than any imported. Prove this at once, by trying them. few years ago, under more favorable con - ditions for the farmer, Sir Louis imagined ‘blue ruin.” Yes! there’sa great deal in imagination, and something in the point of view. - | FRED W. HYNDMAN Offices, 33 Queen Street Telephone 67. Side ‘Boards of testimony that ours are 25 per cent. better value. Come and see.—J B Macdonald & Co Keep your hands warm with a pair of our nize warm gloves.—R. H. Rameay & Co. Rubbers and overshoes, the iron wear kivd, at the model store—R.H. Ramsay & Co. Esdale Foundry and machinery Depot. LEG LG TE T. A. MACLEAN | MANUFACTURER Of ALL KINDS OF DAIRY & FARM MACHINERY, Office,Masonic Temple, Charlottetown, 4 The BRITANNIA | MINING CO. OF ONTARIO, LIMITED CAPITAUCIZATION ; $300,000.00 fully paid and mon-assessable Far value of shares, 30c each Owning and operating the celebrated * Gold Hill” near Rat Portage, Ontario, Lake of the Woods, between Sultana and Regina mines, peey | Sth he SS ee property which comprises 1,308 acres “of valuable Jocation situated 3 Vein filling sufficient to supply 30 stamps. Controlled by strong Montreal synd, = s in this line®our stock is very hae + RS LA reece y a5 Ro Groceries complete. © * Several bundred of feet of work done. f tov i .. e e A pa Rbsxoue webs Cae as he AG ! Equipped with steam hoists, pumps, and 16 stamp mill, Wa tmore. The first sale ie not the only 7 All necessary buildings (about: 20 in all) are in good repair, ga’> we wish to make. fj PRICES A working property now producing bullion. 26. People whe buy— ty Assays are usually satisfactory running from $3.00 to $400.00 per ton. a ; ¢ Mill runs show the ore to average $15.00 to $20.00 per ton. Last mill ran (August 21,1899), of 38 tons gave $579.85 Sanderson & Co S, Goods fi , or $15.25 per ton. The neat run is expected to exceed this value per ton. ae i oe 3 Ni+-@-beve to 0 deaplale ; RIGH' l yr For shares ond reports by engineers JshojfE Hardman, S.§B. and Capt.Z.’J.J3. Williams. 4 boat. theis . a : | =f Wa LOCALZAGENTS§W ANTED | Do You Trade There? ' 3 “y ont é; ’ . kK 7 ? As 1 by ieicw eu MIARKWRIGHT AND GO THESAWYER COMPANY, tenpeBalding Hota, cx | — ? roker, 48 Sparks St. fre: — eT meee \ Home Makers OR J OH SUTHERLAN i 1 Ottawa, Out | ‘Bar 3