—, eo ee The Daily Examiner Pan! ser.ate t rt 20m fERMS : Four Dollars a Year E DAILY EXAMINER. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. Single Oopies Two Oents VOL 36. CHARLOTTETOWN P. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1896. NO 119 0) Printing We his ive first-class facilitie. for turni ig out the best qual- ity of Job Printing, from a Visiting card to tne largest display wock, Prices low. Work premptly done. Call and see us. Examiner Publishing Compcny own of the Czar. adtamond cross 18 sup al alll -«{{| The largest range of Men's Reefers and lowest prices. “ ‘strange of Men's oats, and lowest prices. sapphire of fabulor | ( fthe Emperor of Russia Lr i rn l At the a ben nee 3 Q . “all | Paul in 1797, and itis the} 6 \ The largest range of Men’s Suits, ‘ another o j t Andry Ww, ) t) | Vaiu Mar, Star, and ewel of he } | } } So oo” The avant range cf Yen's Ulsters, and lowest prices ae When You See It In Print. ~—e so humili- - > the writer. largest range of Youths’ Suits and lowest prices. The Mie cost. The | i pany lw RATES OL SERSOKICTION enc Ves 4.00 Six Month :.00 ghree W 1.00 ene Mon Bm gen ( via I Uniteu = THE W (LY EXAMINER i , . s ~ he | eait ue we} cout _——— NE A MS STA IH Extret x ct arly every- pod) : i h easeto pus ea @ « - ger Y KI just what yomen endea\ t ‘ e that | = t Fee f .s Bu his ia t t erful 1 the me : ‘ i not long stand a . r ny people “ work on the S S€ lun- { e c , > pre s- trat 1 every direction. That tired irz tive } f of thin, weak, im- ’ - +} bw ‘ I , at t i is h, red, v gor arts lifeand € r i 4 e, Organ a Lissue of t i necessity of taking Hoe : " a for that tired feeling is. i to eve one, and the s equa eyond | ‘ Mae a i ri bre: Pills “a -—_ CALERA DAR FOR NOVEMEER, 1896 New Moon, Sth day, ‘3h. 14.5m. a. m Piret Quar, 12th day, Ih. 22 u Las! » at - s. I ! } y 8 Sun | Big iD vor Week j Bigh rises | sets water i tees eee heel Pep ; }! i aft 1; 8 i 14a 9 : ‘ . 21) 19 i -ns $i 1 | Be 4) W, esday i ? | 10 0 6j 1 lav | } 10 44 6 | Friday ll 31 ° ‘i Sa “wy morp 8)S iay i 0 7 91M a} 2 [ ha 9 Y. eo | } - Li y = A sail l if we v | i | Zi] 2 45 3 et +8 a, 5 : -- b 16 | } sae. 74 7| i y | 20 6" is, | y . wt 9 7 ! l 1s 9 44 2% j | i t 10 22 7) 8 y | ] 32) s ro ee Ll 37 3 | M 9} 5) at If 4\ 1 oe lt] 0 57 aT Frida » mel a. 2 9858. ; wy 4 2 2\S 9 5 3 0, M 17 23) 8 10 6 43 PE Island Hailway ’ One a rf SAT DAY, lth October 1366 hh tr ue way wil rao daily Suadays ox slows .— Tra $ In wor TIONS r Read w % M M. 3 ' I th DD au8 6 2 G 16 9 34 42 7‘ 5 42) 8 45 44) 71 » 32) 8 BO 62 7 » OS! 7 52 63) 7 » 2) 7 45 645 7 i 52] 7 24 6m R 1 38] 7 O4 6” 8 | Lv. 4 15) 6 30 1) 1A t OOUL OO 22 8 , 45110 37 22) 91 ; 2810 10 =e 8 45). Port Hill ..ccce 3 001 9 21 t 10 211| 8 08 5 Lid | 551 7 38 59111 1 BP 7 O02 6 4511 12 SS & &} 645 3 9 15' 5 40 7 06) 2 9 O11] 5 BW 738 3 8 37 4 47 5 Th it ii % 15 4 1S 82) 4° j 8 10 4 00 yma 7423 2) 92 45 ~ aes! 7 2D 250 016 5 2 en Pee 6 46 2 03 ll & 6 615 1 @ A. M M M. 5 y 5 , war 810 3 os 9 37} 4 111i 2D 00 51 wr 7 oO} 2 10 - M M M 5 T&S 62 I 6 45 = - 4 Traingare run by Eastern Standard Time & McDON a1 D. POTTINGER, Superi nv ! Gen Mer Govt. Ry, Charlotierown Moncton, N B. Ralway Ome: , 189°. ee - Its Easy to ine this ie worth remem ou want lamber nowey small 0 , 7a it wil r ) | ‘ It ry to Remember | The largest range of Youths’ Reef- 3 r f — & f re ” a s Rw & ot @ mM 50 Boys odd Ve A job Jine of isoys’ yer et the money for this?” ia | ( ers, and lowe: t prices. ‘l Knickers at about half pay forte Howou Jour | VJ ae largest range of Youths’ Over. 4 price. A Perfeet Go | () c oats. and ‘lowest prices. 4 a iSoys Ds n it G I sh 1 avert the | e ail t ° et afoot of thes foolsh ant wieket| OY PMae largest range of Youths’ Ul- « at clearing prices. 5 oe Sen Se hea () sters, and lowest prices. a A job Strive. “enue it ita | 4A The largest range of Children's : Panis at cost. that sha Maken Suits. KReefers, Overcoate, and > Gna antes pidele c:parteet Ulsters, at the lowest a ae | prices in the his- 4 . tes -stepm-ep homme " Q tory of trade a BARGAIN CORNER Mi sts at odd Coats line of Mien’s SVSVSSSESSTSOS CCE J lCVSCESCVEBDE TRAGEDY IN A SHOP WINDOW. A Lovely Girl Breaks Her Back by a Fall ou can always Feel Gay... no matter how cold or stormy the day is—be you man, woman From a VW heel. It hasonly been afew days since a handsome, athietic-looking young or child—if you have your Yall mls ppd Anca of . large wr “3h . i : Ww w ofthe s ) Zz strict. anc nter clothing interlined inpoy & the err fe at was dressed in a jaunty tailor-made suit, with boots and leggings to match. ? t h Fibre Chamois. This wi Royall Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report ABSOLUTELY PURE Baking Powder popular style and warmth giver An Alpine hat was perched upon her Sells now for 5c a yard golden hair, ard her elegantly gloved . hands lightly touched the bar of a so that every one can afford to bicycle. e enjoy the comforting, healthful ‘he self-possession of the woman , ae e nie + : : licit : J ° warmth it furnishes—no extra elicited much admiration, For three 4 tpesset Shas ta Be, weight or bulk, only a pliable ; days the Net woman pedaled on, f On Augest 25 a terrific storm, fir stiffness and a cosy warmth of | eee eer te day was Fone. } move vielent Unt any we have yet ex- Sa ar a . re ‘ | Not until the beginning of the fourth erienced hee, Violent though sore ot which the coldest winds or frost- |: eel tue extied Seed ¢ the te | > aces re re Teeny Fee - iest ai cid i Rent 4 i ‘ : { day did the crowd in front of the win those have been, swept along our who iest air cannot rob you. See that it is put in all ordered clothing, | dow notice that her lovely shoulders se Ss an » £ . P ss sega “ ro jimue of comimunicat , irom Suarda to and look for the labe el which shows that a ready- -to-wear garment ; 1 begun to droop and the bright blue Malia. destroving the work of meny has been interlined with it You really can’t afford to do without it. | eyes looked sad. weeks. The day had been oppressiv - SSSSeesecececeseseecseeeeeeeneeeeD | “She's riding herself to death,” said | jy jot in Kosheh, and ominous “sand a Jersey woman. “Catch me letting | .oyiis” whirled through the camp, the my girls get pay for showing off a lurerunhers of the haboob. At about bike.” ww ae | -in the affernoon we saw a huge black :-S a eu A day or two later, when the severe mags, evidently a saud storm of great | hot weather visited the city, the cour- | jyagnitude, rise from the hor zon and age of the woman onthe wheel de- | xdyance rapidly upon us, traveling | serted her. The glance of her bright eyes became a glassy stare, her face | became shrunken, and then the roses | on her cheeks faded, one hand dropped against the wind, as thunder storms do xt home. In « few minutes it was updn us, and the wind, suddenly back- } ‘ ’ ang, struck us with the fogee of w strong listlessly at her side, and her tiny foot | s-vie, a gale which appeared to be com- 0 a n SU rance om an was gradually losing the pedal. posed more largely of sand than of air. A small boy shonted: “Ring furde | ie dense stingivg streams Of sana amberlance. Del peach on de bike’s | grove over us. No one could face the done fur.” For the beautiful woman } Jsorm and breathe; it was impossible had fa illen and broken her back, and : tO sce ay ard infront of one; it becume ASSETS, $50,000,000. the bi mde head was resting om the § aiagk as on a starless nicht. We handle bar. crouch d on the lee ride of our tokuls Phe pedals pier serenely on, how- until they were blown Gown; then | ever, for the machine was wound UP fF yhere was uothing 10 be done but to forthe day and could not stop. The | voain where we were, in the open excitement outside was intense, and no one knows what might have happened me LOWEST RATES | «lesert, with our backs to the wind and wuf heads enveloped in blankets so as had not the manager of the store pulled | ; ; ‘ » "2 : : — yart!y to filter the air of sand and lady off upstairs to be ON for Séit came torrents of rain and loud Mena mmr 8 she was built of wax.—-Philadelphia thiiud r. accompanied by the most | Times. I vivid lightning. he lightning. hows | i flerent slities of Keep all the aualities, ' w theta to you | i to please you. i vit | { piease y u don’t fs i w t Cedar | on a, C e Ae Sy Shingles, Lathe, I ooriug, | Att g, Seantling, Liemlock or Spruce Boards, Plauke or Palings 7 | H JAMES fepi Li i Con Iv! Tes BARRE! T, Consolly’s Wh sf ' as a rule, did not reveal even our but diffused the «ver, minediate surroundings, « brilliant light through How Thimbtes Are Made, The thimble is a I invention, an the first one was made in 1684 by a J. MACEACHERN, AGENT. silversmith named Nicholas Van Ben- schoten. Originally it was called a = “thumbell,” beeause it was worn on utech sand- wpaque luminous mist. It wi NS, indeed, ante appalling spectacle, and the din was fearful, a strange discord of thunder, 1e thumb. ahanihae wind, pattering rain, and = In making thimbles the gold and || elatterin, of emp:y paraffin tins, eases a | silver iugots are rollel out into sheets [ sind barrels. that were driven before | of the desired thickness and cut by @ rye gale over the stony ground. While = mes a ot ae | Stamp imto circular pieces of any re- | Tae storm was at its height no man ‘ ; quired size. These circular pieces are | «ould move from one part of the camp bent into thimble shape by mez.ns ofa | xo another, and each had to remain solid metal bar that is of the same size § «where he was until that suffocating as the inside of the intended thimble; this bar is moved by machinery up and down ina bottomless mold of the out- side of the same thimble, and each time the bar descends it presses one of the es or disks into thimble shape. ! When the thimble is shaped the next work is to brighten, polish and decorate jt. First the blank thimble is fitted witha rapidly revolving rod. A slight touch of asharp chisel cuts a very thin shaving from the end of the thimble, a secor.d chisel does the same on the side, and a third neatly rounds off the rim. A round steel rod, well oiled, is held against the surface of the revolving thimble, and it thus given a nice polish; the inside is brightened and [| «loud of dust hadswept by. Famous Active Range Happy Thought Range Aberdeen Range World’s Fair Range! ALL WARRANTED, Smon W. Crabbe circular pie Y Tp Robert Phillips, Drugegis*, Fergus. This is to certify that I have suffered from les for a long time and several articles re commended for this com- laint, but none of them Penefitted me till I tried is MOU lished in a similar manner, the [ Chase's Ointment, which Wall ker’s Corner STOVES HARDWARE thimble being held in a revolving { has completely cured me. mold. : Mas. JOHN GERRIE. Then a delicate revolving steel wheel B. Phillips, re with a raised, ornamental edge is f meine Pea i sed ter, Bella, was afflic pressed against the blank thimble on , wn: year-old daughter, Bells.x notes <7E isers prints the ornament ay ee outsi 7 Sana behind, her ears. 1 trie almost the rim. Another steel wheel covere re 3 innum- nd the child with sharp points makes tiny inden- eee aod 4 se Subewtie . . ae . > a remeé Y - pay egy all s {he home circulation is the most valuable for re ag piss teed ng maining blank sur- 9} Sort Dr. Chess Chase's Gintient, “tnd the tt apy ; . iace O i 1 . ation showed curative effect . advertisers. Tur Examiner reaches the homer | ye jast operation is to wash it We have used only one-sixth of ria tan ee of our citizens every evening. - That account: | thoroughly in soapsuds, to brush it eppeared, and Tean coniiceatly sey JouN TON. ‘ carefully, and it is ready for my lady’s (Signed) MAXWELL JOHN“ TON, 112 Anne St., Toronto | Sold by al) dealers, or on receipt of price, 60e, ‘addsess, EDMANSON, BATES & CO., TORONTO, for our large advertisin atronage. fa) THE EXAMINER PUB. COMPAN) workbasket. nan «harged air, which appeared as sem- j WAYS OF THE ANT. Members of Lis Tribe Made as Honey Pots. to Do Duty It haslong been recognized that the ant is a very intelligent insect and leads a very complicated social life. There are classes among them—pluto- crats, laborers and criminals. The author of a recent work on cn- tomology notes the curious habit of one species of ant of “turning some oi their fellows into animated honey pots.” Instead of placing honey in a comb as the bees do the ants select a certain number of workers and disgorge the honey obtained from the Eucalypti ‘on which it is deposited by coccisac and other insects) into the throats oi their victims. The process, being con- tinually repeated, causes the stomachs of these werkers to be distended to an enormous size. This extraordinary habit was first discovered in the case of certain ants in Mexico, and subsequently shown t prevail in Colorado. 1t has been found to exist in Australia and Mr. Froggart describes and figures thre« ants of the genus camponotus that pursue this remarkable practice. ‘The ants containing honey favorite food with the natives. also, are MEANING OF “THE PORTE.” It Is Derived From the Lofty Gate at Constantinople. The Port the short name of the Sublime Porte, which is the official way of speaking o’ the Turkish Gov- ernment. In the East. judicial busi- ness is transacted at the city or palace gates. One story says that the Sultan of Bagdad put in the portal of his pal- ace a piece of anal black stone of is Mecca, thus making his gate the Porte. ; Another says that Sultan Orkhan built 1a gorgeous gate to his palace in Broussa. Both of these stories are probably untrue, so far as they purport to ex- plain the name as applied to the Turk- ish Government. Just as the British court is called the Court of St. James, and the late French court that of the Tuileries. because their headquarters were in the palaces of St. James and the Tuileries respectively, so the Turk- ishccurt got the name Sublime Porte because its headquarters were in the palace of Bab- -lLumayun, or the Lofty Gate, in Constantinople. The name has been attaclhicd to the building in lrers the four prin- Government. ich sh cipal departm that city wh uts of the ‘ONS'TIPATION The bane of many lives Tt’s the canse of nive tenths of the head aches. stomach disorders, fits of “blues,” despondency, ete., which curse the lives of thonaands. Doses of cheap purgatiye pille, while they may give temo ary re- lief, only increase the trouble, as their use eas to be continued. Mack’s Rheumatic (Kidnev and Liver) Pills not only give RELIEF, but they also CURE. They so tore up the bowel wall and stimulate the eecretions, that in a short time the use of meticine is unnecessary. Price 50 ceuts a box. LONGS TO BE A SLAVE. | A Southern Negro Whe Wants to Go Ente } TN CHANCERY 3 ; d i 9 Woctan nf 1} D.! Bondage Again | Befo } the Waster OC ile h lg Some of the letters that Mayor | : : 7 re . - . | John Corly, ant & ld C. MeDonald . Thacher gets are curiosities in their | Tn W 7 ne'ee< mnier the at j ur ~ way. People from out of town who hd ore gape , . : ° . . } amen! of Hrehard ’ lan ease wish to find out anything in the city of | iain: Wes é . . . = am ‘ : ainvuer, Albany invariably write letters to the | ' mayor. It doesn’t make any difference AY what the information desired relates] Allan WeMillan. Michael McMillan, and to, the mayor, they think, ought to Alexander Mc Milian, Defendants. know. A letter was received from a negro lo the Ds fentante, Michael MeMillan away down South, who, Mr. Monahan and Alexander MoMillot says, has been dead for 30 years—not T: ke netic: that tha above nomed Complaia literally a corpse, but deceased as far dent’s proclamation, never knew tbat the North had whipped the South, and that a million lives had becn sacrificed to free the slav« In is letter to the mayor this colored man asked tw} brought South and sold back into slavery. There is no question that u found it impossible to livein the Novth, and longed again for the irresponsi- bility from self-support of ry days, which he thought still flourished in the South.—Albany Argus. B.ik\ A Pictorial Complication “All you have to do,” said Mr. Trapp. as he showed his wife the camera he had purchased, ‘is to press this little knob and there you havea picture.” “I’m sure that doesn’t seem hard.” “Tt isn’t hard. It’s as easy as any- thing you ever heard of, There!” he exclaimed as he held the camera up in front of her face, “I have a picture of you.” ‘‘Do you mean to say that my like- ness is in that box?” “Yes, indeed,” he answered proudly. "How nice! Let’s take it right out and look at it.” ‘No. You mustn’t do that.” And he entered into an elaborate but unappre- ciated explanation of the effects of sun- light on the sensitive film, She was very eager to see the portrait and he promised to develop the contents of the camera that night and print the pic- ture the next day. She was not very highly pleased with the arrangement, but accepted it because there was no alternative When he got home he had with him the chemicals for devel- oping a negative. ‘Here they are,” he said cheerily as he waved the package over his head. “I’ve got the whole business in this bundle. Yeu have the kitchen table cleared off and I'll get the lantern ready and we'll send one ben vg girl out of the house and make all the mess we want The only response to his greeting was an icy stare. ‘What's the matter? Have youl your interest in the camera?” “No. On the contrary, my interest has been enormously increased, I have read of unexpected discoveries in story books, but I never expected to tind out jor myself how true it isthata perfidious plotter is almost sure to be discovered in his iniquities, To think oe ost of you flaunting that camera in my face and me trusting you all the time!” “When you ‘perfidious plotter’ do you allude to me?” “I certainly You yourself placed in my hands the proof of your treachery. You probably chuckled as you thought of how you were leaving the evidence of your guilt with me for safe-keeping. But I have found you out. There is only one thing that 1 want to know now,” she saidin a loud- er tone as she tragically held a graph before his face, ‘‘and who is the woman?” ‘Where did you get that?” he asked in surprise, ‘I was anxious to see what was in the camera,” she replied, *‘so I took it over to my brother, who is an expert in such things, and got him to make the pictures forme. He sent them over to me an hour ago and this was among the lot. Now, sir, I have answered your question frankly and promptly. Can you answer mine? Who this —woman?” ‘Don’t you know who that is?” “I certainly do not?” say do. photo- that is, is “Why, that is yourself.” “Don’t libel me. You have injured me deeply; do not, oh, do not mock me as well.” “Maria, I wish would not be- have so much as if you were perform- ing at matinee. I tell you, that is your picture, You can recognize it by the way the bow at your neck is tied and by. the pattern of the your waist is made of, if you can’t recognize the feaiures. She looked at it steadily and he held ou@™Ms hands to her for a reconcilia- you a goods ” ants have comin: » enit against you and ced : : ‘ the other deferdants, above bn imag. in Her as his grip on hustling, progressive | Majesty’s «cure «f Chancery Tf Prip 19th century life was concerned. This | Faveerd Tsar y weit of that Cort believe hs lavery is still issued on the hirsiech day of Sep- man beheves t rat Siavery 18 stl an tember, A. PD, |- ud yom are herebw re- institution in this great land, and is | quired on or before t ' enth dvy of Dee- : it le : a , | ember, next, A, 1), 1896, to Py fend this action ignorant of the glorious fact that the | $y -au-ing an appearance to be entered there- master’s whip hasn’t cracked for 30 | to, for you at the oftice of the Registrar of the sal vT.. ena ine , P-»cj. | Said Court at Char iotretown, Prince Kdwa a years. Ie never heard of the Piesi feland. ond in default of your #0 écl-@, 'b: Complainanis may proceed theron and iudg- ment may be viven in your ab-ence Dated thisl th day of N» Sol'citor for the above named C ompiainants, an” in their behalf nov 6—4id&w-- 4i i) Richmond Bay and Malpeque OYS'FERS_~ On Iialf Shell and served in every variety at the HUD RESTAURANT QUEEN STRE NEXT DOOR TO R. B. sunrers CLOCKS Crcko Clocks. Alarm Clocks, Musical Lacks, eight day and thirty bour Uinch®, & nd rgulitr Co ksard Clecks ut ai, kin'ds and patterne selling low. Re- go Cc locks, WATCHES and JEWELRY aspecialiy. Ifyou want to save money, buy you Watches, Clocks and Jewelry at G. G. JURY’S, Watchmaker & Jeweler N3ATH SIDE QUEEN SCUARE, OPPOSITE P. ~ly & wky. EP PSS COCOA ENGLISH EAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. RATEFUL and COMFORTING to tho NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED. In Quarter-Pound Tins and Packets only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd., Homcopathic Chemists, London, England. i! Q, 99 sep 23 Bin HORSE CLIPPING, Asthe clipping season is now here parties having horses that they intend having cl lipped, would do well tocall at Nichoison’s Stables, Grafton St., where ll work is done at ‘moderate rates. FOR BERMUDA. The schooner “Sainte Mavie” will sail frowi here Ab ul the 20ch inst., for Bermuda, and will teke freight under deck and horses ou dec Fur further particulars apply to A, HORNE & ©O, tion. The gaze she turned on him was even chillier than before. **Do you mean to say,” asked in flinty accents, ‘that you intended that picture of a lantern-jawed monster as a portrait of the woman whom you promised to cherish and protect?” “Why, it isn’t my fault,” he said soothingly, but the door slammed. That evening the sailors who were hanging about a wharf saw hurry to the water’s edge, take several packages from his pockets, put them all inside a cubical, leather-covered box and drop the entire outfit into the water. It was the last of Mr. Trapp’s camera. she a man A Man’s Best Help. A man’s best help is himself, his own heart, his resolute purpose—it cannot be done by proxy. A man’s mind may be aroused. by another, but he must mold his own character. What if a man fails in one thing? Let him try again—he must quarry his own nature. Let him try hard, and try again. for he does notknow what he can do till he tries. -_—— —»> —— $2,000 worth of realymate clothing wil be sold at clearing prices. Over oats reefers, suits, etc.—D. A. Bruc?. tf Money Wanted. On a good investment. Sever cr eight *“*vough Chaser” Try it. 10¢ For sale by Geo E, Hughes and Johnson &Jobns6n Charlottetown and Souris. hu drsd colars is wanted at 6 per cent, Charlottetown Nov'!3'°% dy&wky tl 20th iin N Arg TO LET That beantifully situated two story lwelling cn Prince St, now occu ied by Mr. Thos. R. Brooks. Possession given about 1-t November. Apply to PEAKE BROS, & CO, rept26t—tf New Prices in Watches eee ee We have lately received a nice assortment of Silver Watches for Ladie’s und Gentlemen, which were bought right, and can- not;fail vojplease in price. Cal! and inspect them. W. N. TANTONS Great George Street, NEAR QUEEN SQUARE. Percy W. Carver, LLB. Formerly with Davies & Haszard, Ch’town, P. Attorney & Counsellor-at-law Commissioner for the Provinces, , for 5 or 10 years on Real Es a’rt.Insrance of sem? for $5(0, For further particulars P.O. Box 154. * octl Tremont Building, Room 629, BOSTON, MASS, | » * | ‘ ¢ ren ¥ 23 . a ee 2 a ee ee ee ee ee ee eee ee ae Pi as 3 a Sens - Be. Sea Pe tert FPP HF oe