a a THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 28, 1897 —_—_ The Dally Examiner EVERX AFTERNC FROM THE OFFIC® oF The Examiner Publishing Company —_— RATES OF SERSCERIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne Year .... 84.00 six Months 2.00 Taree Months 1.00 One Month O55 sent post paid to any part of Canada or th Cw States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER issued every Friday morning. It is made up of roatter which has appeared in the Daily ! S a rst ciasss newspaper containing a@liibe latest news. Subscription $1.00 a year. | KEDAILY EXAMINER MURDERED BY ACHINESE, More Facts About the Capture of the Pegu by Dirates, >an Franoisco, Ang, 26—By the steames Copan which arrived at Hong Keng SUvVices are received giving the first fuil deiaiis Of the looting and murder on the sicumer Pegu vy Chimese pirates on the; Penarg COast on J uiy O. Eleven Achinese teu aad Ove Womau boarded ihe steamer wl brid, one Of the stoppiog places, where pepper Was taken In. Capt. Koss, accord~ ine to Mis cMstom, searched the men tor Weapous, but did nul search the woman. Sie carried under her Malay weajous with which the bloudy work was douc. Wuile the Captain and Chiet Engineer Craigie were at diguer six armed Ach:nese burs. into the saloon and allacked them. ‘Tue otticers were unarined and defended themscives Wilh Chairs, bUL were lerribly Biased about the banods and arms. Botn reached the deck. lo the engioe Touom Where he door aud was safe. He wasa’t badly hurt. lie Captain sprang ondeck, where he was attacked by one of the Chimese wita a carving Kaife from the table, who liter- ally disembowled the Captain. As he fell the vihers backed bim with their Khives, and Le svon breathed his last. ‘The pirates then attacked the mate and steersman, aud cut tuem down on the bridge. Lhe safewas opened and $15,- @UU taken. Two boats were lowered aud the pirates made off with their booty. When the steamer reached ‘Telak the Wouuded were taken ashore. The vesgel’s deck jovked like & Charnel house, being spatiered with the blood of the slaughtered Viclitus, Captain Ross had been in the Malay trade ivr fourteen years. ‘wice before he had been attached by Chinese pirates, but he was fearless. ‘Lhe place where the crime occurred is the same where a steam- er was once befure attacked and looted, the weapons in this case being smuggled on board in the bedding of @ spurious sick VWolial, sarong Lie ———- * NOTES AND COMMENTS —The King of Benin, who recently maue vbeisance to the British political ageut vy rubbing his forbeau three umes @gulu-t the eartb, is the same dusky pote. tate who # tew months agu murdered au by glish consul and thep sent bis rings tu tue British admiral with an insolent mess. ge tO the white Queen. Under the circuustances, the King of Benin seems to Dave ucen let off too easily, but as he evideuily thinks no smali beer of himself, Uraigie made his wey bolted the |} hu dvubt the rubbing of his forehead ou | the earth will give him as much paia as a joug term Of bard labor, especialiy as he has wandered for some months in the busi: and must have missed his accustom- ed iuauries,. —The Liberal St. John Globe complains | of tuc Liberal Toronto Giobe that “1s du.uy great injury to sound principles of tied, and to tne Liberal party as weil, by the jiwgoism Oo this (ihe iog duties) and Ov wauy similar subjecis with which its are now vuvei flowing.” Muuucai Gazette, commeuting vn this tact Lhe Sc. Jobn Globe dues not allow COlulsUs BBYs : we The | tor tue zeal of a new convert. The Toronto : Giobe has noteonly to ict the Canadian peopoe Know that it is loyal, bat destroy their memory of used iv print to show that lo British divorce the Dominion fiom the’ continent lo which it belonged, —tere is how ihe Mail and Empire puts it: lr we import goods from a British pos session, the duty is twelve and a half per cent. higher than on like goods foreign lanas. If we import from Ger- ulaby the duty isthe same as the euty on ike English goods, provided that in co ming to Canada the goods do not touch at a british port. Should we take the G erman gooas to Great Britain, and bring them over on British ships, then a duty of twelve and a balf per cent. is collected. We give the nations the same rates of we give to. British we _ decline to permit foreign destined for Canada to pass through Britisb ports, and to come on British ships. this is what we call a British pre ference—a vo!untary tribute te our British brethren in celebrauion or the jubilee year. European duty as producers. But Best to take after dinner; prevent distress, aid diges- tion, cure constipation, Purely vegetable ; do not gripe or cause pain. Sold by all druggists. 25 cents. Prepared ouly by C. 1. Hood &Co., Lowell, Mas- fror | goods | Hoods Pills It has to! articles { the aruicies IL) Guenees without being aware of it. be 6 to be zealous | go not inhale enough to attract their at- apd Cansdian interests was to | | { | A New Guinen Wedding. A missionary letter describes the wed ding of a native pastor in New Guinea. A wreath of arsififcial flowers adorned the head of the bride, which was further wrapped around with yards upon yards o! ribbon of all colors. She and her friends were greatly disturbed because they could not get a piece of mosquito netting for a veil. Their presents were in cloth, bo present under eight yards, and for pur- of display the cloth was all tied to gether at the corners. It amounted to more than 100 yards, and seizing this the friends of the couple danced around the village. Then the bride and groom were seated in a garden wrapped around with these hundred yardsof printand six shirts placed on the knees of the bridegroom. <A hat was placed on the ground and money gifts were next in order. ‘The separate gifts rose as high as $10, and as each gift was thrown into the hat a man standing besr gave an ubearthly yell and shouted out twice its value. —Christian Work. poses A Resem blance. ‘Death and the people of Gerinany are alike in one respect.”’ **Name it.’’ “Pie people of Germany like to use money direct from the minzt.”’ “<0 On.” ‘Death loves a shining mark too,’’— Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. Equal to Two Kingdoms, As regards wealth, the single state of | known remedy and different physicians, | New York fs equal to Belgium and Hol- | and receiving no help, I was persuaded to land put together. fi Vanity in women is a) forgivable. It Sp - was Nature’s in- Bp teriti that w <i ae ention that Wo- 27) §> ff 4 man should be *, vain of her per- -'* Q sonal appearance, ae and the woman & SKA ’ who fails of this Se ‘a fails of her full A womanhood. No woman should be satisiied to go through the world with a complex- ion made hideous by unsightly blotches, pimples and eruptions. : Sa No woman should | " AP P be satisfied to : have a sallow, sickly complex- ion. The remedy for these conditions does not lie in cosmetics. Skim disease is caused by impurities in the blood, and by nervous disorders due to weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine organism. Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is the greatest of all known blood-purifiers. It not only drives all impurities from the life- stream, but fills it with the rich, life-giving elements of the food. Dr. Pierce’s Favor- ite Prescription acts directly on the delicate and important organs that bear the burdens of wifehood and motherhood. It makes them pure, strong, well and vigorous. A course of these two great medicines will transform a weak, sickly, nervous, despond- ent woman, who suffers from unsightly eruptions of the skin, intoa healthy, happy, amiable companion, with a skin that is clear and wholesome. These medicines are made from herbs and roots, and contain no minerals of any description. They sim- ply assist the natural processes of assimila- tion, secretion and excretion. Medicine dealers sell them. It is a druggist’s business to give you, not to tell you, what you want. ‘““About four years ago,’’ writes Thomas Har- ris, of Wakefield Station, Sussex Co., Va., ‘my daughter Helen was afflicted with eczema in a distressing form. Dr. Pierce’s medicines cured her after all other remedies had failed.”’ In sending for a free copy of Dr..Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, enclose 31 one-cent stamps, to cover customs and mailing only, if a paper-covered copy is desired, or 50 stamps for cloth - binding. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. <th. Ot angers From Escaping Gas. So many people suffer from headaches, extreme lassitude and disinclination to muake any mental effort, acondition which fAmounts to positive inertness, that med- ical men have been investigating the why and wherefore of this state of things in order if possible to find a reason, and, fol- lowing that, a remedy for this annoying and discouraging condition. Among other facts brought to light it appears that many beadaches and much discomfort are traceable largely to the poisonous effects of gas of various sorts. Ordinary illuminating gas has, as is well known, the properties that produce asphyxiation, and, even though the vic- tims may survive the accident of inhaling a large amount of gas, the headache, nau- sea and prostration following such an ex- perience are distressing in the extreme. It is often the case that people who live in houses lighted by gas suffer serious conge- They tention, but the poisonous vapor slowly but surely undermines their health, pro- Guces headaches, congestion and a long train of unsuspected evila—New Yark ia. ... i. =aow Boston Owls Hoot. She had just returned from a visit to Boston. “Is it true,’’ asked an acquaintance, *‘that there is an air of culture and ed- ' ticational refinement plainly noticeable additional , | in the speech of Boston residents?’’ “*My dear,’’ she replied impressively, “even the owls around Boston hoot ‘To whom!’ instead of ‘To whoo!” as they do in the west.’’—-Chicago Times-Her- ald. A swallow is considered one of the fastest of flying birds, and it was thought until recently that no insect could escape it. A naturalist tells of au exciting chase he saw between a swe!- low and a dragon fiy, which is among the swiftest of insects, tie latter finally escaping. It is stated that animal life appears to be almost absent in the neighborhood of the north pole. Beyond latitude 83 degrees the Frara met with neither whales, seals, walrus nor bears, though dog fishes were seen as high as 85 co- grees. i | A Winona Lady. Saved From & Life of Torture Paine’s Cetery Compound Cov quers After Years of Failures With Other Medicines, Mrs. G. H. Parker, of Winona, Ont., was for eighteen years a complete martyr to neuralgia, that cruel end merciless tor- menter of thousands of old and Canada, young in Daring hie r loug years of agony she bad the services of some of the best medical men, and consumed any quantity of patent medicines, but all failed to driye off the tyrant that was making hte a bur- den. At last she was persuaded to test the power and virtue of Paine’s Celery Com pound, and the happy resuits that reward ed her faith are described in the following : [have beeu uw great suff rer fom neural sia for pearly eighteen | years, these suft-ripgs at | words would fail to describe them. Atter having tried every times were so bad that try your Paine’s Celery Compound, whicn | I have beea using for the past four months. I am happy to. say that 7am now adit r nt whman and com-— piete lv cured, ] Cah rec me p { your Almost Hopeless Cases of Kidney Trouble | tor it has been worth hundreds of Paine’s Celery Compound toall my friends dol lars to me.” A” THE RIVER OF LIFE, —_ ’ "Ms a fleeting, changcful river, Blent of calm and crusted wav@ Flowing in and out forever "Tween the cradle and the crara Changeful river, ever flowing, Narrower and broader growing, Flowing, flowing, ever going Toward the still and solemn sca, Forms of light and shapes of shaduw Float upon its troubled breast. Through the moorland and the meaavw On; the waters will not rest. Here a bud, by churl hand wrested, Flung into the angry foam. There a fower with blooms invested Placked and ravished from its home. Youth and age, and strength and weakness, Benuty, innocence and sin, Pride and power, and love and meekness, All in turn are gathered in. Time and Death, two grand old warders, Watch it rise and mark it flow. Death, upon the siill sea’s borders, Bids the ive wind on it blow. Changefual river fond hearts parting, In that still and solemn sea Joined to heal the grief and smarting Bud and flower with stem shall be, For o’er Time and Death an angel— God's strong angel—walks the wavea, Claiming with his trump, Evangel, All that pass within the grave. Claiming for his Lord and Master, ly the fiaming cross he wears, A4lN—though batiered by disaster All the sullen river bears. Changeful river, ever flowing, Narrower and broader growing, Flowing, flowing, ever going Toward the stiil and solemn sea, —C. D. Sinart in New York Ledger. The Use of Lactated Food Means Life and Health for Baby. — Notwithstanding tho warnings of able physicians, many mother? persist in using arrow root, cornstarch and similar farina- ceous for their little ones. Such prepara~ tions have but little food value, and in the hot weather are often sources cf danger, as the starches they contain undergo formen- ration in the digestive canal ard fr: quently , bring on diarrhea aud dysentery. Tue baby’s good heaith can only be maintained when it is fed on life-giving Lactated Food. In the past, thousands of mothers have declared that Lactated Food saved their children from death. Nv other food soid in Canada has such a bright record with motbers as Lactated Food. The little ones relish it and quick- ly grow strong and vigorousr The purity of Lactated Food makes it the most nutri- tious and most easily digested. No sick, frail and punny bobies when Lactated Food is made the daily diet. Try it, mothers, during the present month; it means life and health for your child. <= Siain Direction, Canon Knox-Little told a good story once at a church congress. He said he remembered a lich gate in front of a beautiful church, which had been re- stored and made very nice. There was painted over the door, ‘‘This is the gate of heaven,’’ and underneath was tbe large notice, ‘‘Go round the other way.”’ —Housebold Worda. CURED AT THE SHRINE —_— Daily Being Cured by That Most Won- derful Remedy, The Great South Ameri- can Kiduey Cure. D. J. Locke, of Sberbrook, P. Q., spent $160 in treatments for a complicaiea case ot kidney disease and received no perman- ent benefit. He says: “I began to use the South American Kidney Cure, and when four bottles were used I was completely | cured.” This is but one testimony of | thousands more who have gone alinost! § discouraged to this great cure shrine, and_ have returned with joyful hearts and lasting cure. Sold by Dr. S$; W. Dodd and Geo. E. H ughes. | munity THE ARTIST’S PRIVILEGE. No Phase of Life Which the Realist May Not Touch. In a defense of his literary methods Arthur Morrison, the English novelist, writes in The New Review: “T have been asked, in print, if I think that there is no phase of life which the artist may uot touch. Most certainly I think this; more, I know it. It is the artist’s privilege to seek his material where he thinks well, and it is no man’s privilege to say him nay. If the community has left horrible places and horrible lives before his eyes, then the fault is that of the com- munity, and to picture these places and these lives becomes not merely his priv- ilege, but his duty. It was, my fate to encounter a place in Shoreditch where children were born and reared in cir- cumstances that gave those children no reasonable chance of living decent lives, where they were born foredamned to a criminal or semicriminal career. It was niy experience to learn the ways of this place, to know its inbabitants, to talk with them, eat, drink and work | with them. ‘‘For the existence of this place and for the evils it engendered the com- was responsible, and every member of the community was and is ‘ responsible in his degree. If I had been a rich man, I might have attempted to | discharge my peculiar responsibility in one way; if I had been a statesman, I might have tried another. Being neither of these things, but a simple writer of fiction, I endeavored to do my duty by writing a tale wherein I hoped to bring the condition of this place within the comprehension of others, There are / those who say I should have turned away my eyes and passed by on the other side, on the very respectable | precedent of the priest and the Levite in the parable.’’ Positively cured by these Littie Pills. They ciso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too klearty Eating. <A per- fect remeay for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dese. ss _ Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the dap. See you get Carter's, Ask for Cartez’s, Insist and demand > Carter's Little Liver Pills. DR CLIFT treats Chronic Diseases by the Salisbury method of persistent seif-help in overcom- ing past errors and Removing causes from the blood, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Shortness of Breath, Pleurisy, Tuberculosis Consumption of Lungs or Bowels, Indiges- tion, Dyspepsia, Gastritis, Ulcer, Cancer, Dropsy, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Constipa- tion, Piles, Fissures, Fistula. Diseases of Heart— Valvular, Fatty Enlargement, Palpitation, Of Liver—Jaundice, Diabetes Cirrhosis, cite, Of Kidneys—AlLuminuri: Gright’s Disease, etc. Of Spleen and Bladder—Cystitis. Of the Blood—Anae- mia, Chlorosis, Scrofula, Malaria, Rhen- matism,Gout,SciaticaScurvy, Purpura.OfFe male Organs—Inflammations and Displace ments of Womb, Ovaries, Bladder or Bow- els. Menstrual irregularities of Sexual Organs. Of Nerves andSpine,—Nervous Prostration, Sleeplessness. Decline, Hy- steria, Tremors, St. Vitus’ Dance, Chorea, Epilepsy, Convulsions, Paralysis, Loco- , motor Ataxia. Paralysis, Agitans, Soften Bing of Brain. Some forms of Insanity— § Dementia, Mania, Hypochondria, Melan- chulia. Failure of Vision and Voice, i. Rness. Of Skin— Eczema, Salt Rheum, § Erysipelas, Syphilis. Tumors, Giandular e batty, Fibroid, Uterine, Ovarian and Can cer, Goitre, Cretinism, Obesity, Corpul- pency. Drug and Liquor Habits—Opium, h Morphine, Chloral, Cocaine, Tobacco, e Stimulants. Of Bones and Joints—De- 8 formities, Curvatures, and Pott’s Disease B Of Spine, Paralysig, Hip Disease, Knock- . knee, Bow. Legs, Club and Flat Foot, Wry Neck, Rickets Scrofula, Sore Legs, Var- zicose Ulcers, etc. Continuous intelli: gent treatment insures Minimam of suffer- § ing and Maximum of Cure,possible in each case. Avoid attempts unaided or under | blind leaders. DR. CLIFT a Graduate of N Y University ard the N Y Hospital. 20 years’ practice in N Y City. Diploma registered in U S and Canada. @ Address :— Charlottetown, P. E. 1. B Office :—Victoria Row. Telephone Call. Accommodations Reserved for patients References on application. 94,—d&w lyr. ee ee KLONDYKE]| The Land of ~~" boiden Nuggets ‘JOSEPH LADUE, the pew Bonanza King of the Klon. dike Gold Recions, vives the § 'His book reads like “ The Arabian Nights” BUT acts, | Ladue KNOWS whereof be writes. He was the first man 'the spot when the first gold was discovere : last August, 189% | He located one rich claim, and immediately purchased tWelys others at alow price before their value was known. He has ‘refused $100,000 for any ONE of these claims, as they are rich with virgin gold nuggets beyond the dreams of avarice | Joseph Ladue then Established Dawson City, _at the mouth of the Klondyke and Yukon Rivers, by erecty the first house in the region in September, one month ; ‘the gold was first discovered. He bought 178 »eres from the ' government on the city site where his town lots, 15050, ae ‘now selling for $5,000 each. Mr. Ladue was fortunate enough to be successful in his trading post investments to have on hand ample capital to out his plans, and there is no man living who is better on Alaska and the great North West Territories than Mp. Joseph Ladue. He has just returned from that country to his ‘old home in Schuyler Falls, N. Y., where he passd a portion of his boyhood and eurly manhood. Mr. Ladue lef his home nearly twenty years ago to seek his tortune in the West, going first to the Black Hills, where he was succeggfy) in goid mining, thence to Arizona and the Pacific Coast, anj finally located in Alaska and the North West, where he ha covered almost the entire country since 1882. Mr. Ladueis a typical pioneer; strong, hardy ana resoiluve—a man of iron as one must needs to be to go through the hardships he has and come out with a constitution unbroken and unimpaired at the age of about forty-three. Mr. Ladue has not only worked his muscies to good advantage to himself with the resultof an abundance of the world’s goods far beyond the dreams of men, but he has evidently all his time been closely observing the conditions of thai strange country—the Yukon Valley~ which has so suddenly become one of the great centres upon which human interest throughout the world is focussed. When the wonderful stories began to come down trom the Yukon country it was naturally concluded that it was at least half exaggeration. That any such amount o1 gold = be taken in so short a time from a country like that under the most unfavorable conditions was held to be incredible. But & when the great bags of virgin gold began to be poured out upon mint counters in San Francisco under the eyes of the whole world (fur modern journaiism does this, annihilating time and sprce), people began to wonder, and the wonder grew day by day as the real facts were disclosed, and 20¥ people who are well informed as to the facts declare that half | the truth has not been told of the golden treasures of the Yukoa Valley. Az we have already said, there is no man alive today who knows more about this wonderful country than does Mt Ladue. What makes his talk of it specially interesting aud reliable is the fact that his knowledge of it is practical, It has not been gained from hearsay nor from desolutory vist made now and then at certain favorable seasons of the yeth but from steady living there through the long summer dis and the Jong winter nights year in and year out for 15 yeats where he now owns the best minmg claims on the Klondyk aud its tributavies, ; In presenting his book to the public we do so knowmg that it is by an authority on the subject of which he writes His first work entitled RUGERTS ” “ KLONDYKE |is a brief description of the new gold regions, and anya desiring authentic information should not fail to avail them selves of our NOMINAL OFFER, | which places the facts in the possession of our customers. , REMESIBER, that our office is the sole distributing point ‘for this locality, having closed exclusive arrangements. wit) | Mr. Ladue’s publishers. ; a | The cover of the work is beautifully printed in red gold, the gold showing one of the author's nuggets as B it 1s possible to reproduce it on paper. ve 4 SO eerie i R = ea — , : - ’ | ¢ f i net N ts " secure a copy of onpon wal ste : uggets. -“ KLONDYKE ing NUGGETS.” —~_ Cut out this coupon and bring it with you as nee that you are a reader of The Examiner and | oy Cents in cash and a copy of ‘**Klondyke Nuggets will Joseph Ladue, the Bonanza King of new gold regions, be handed to you. : th 12c.it we will ddres Cut out this coupon and send it together Wi Stamps for clerical work and mailing expense, and send a copy of * Klondyke Nuggets” to your @ Write very clearly ard give your name and address im Remember. you should not delay as you will be unable © secure this valuable work on the gold region In any ENE OE (Cut out the Coupon _— * eee So eee way. Call at our office or address and follow The Examiner, he a : Cherlottetow® Instruc’lons: j : 6—_——_-. —___-.._ —___—— - — ~~