EEE ae: peta gene tari ile, Ba Hee 2 penmerententeeionieelilsanninidiatun Ambemdialindihitisinnrnen rs ceaenmecincec.4. 4... i OUT OF 2.000 CLAIMS Against an Aecident Co. for last year" 131 were Sor aecidents eaused to pedestri- ans Waiking en ihe sidcewatk THE OCA ACCIDENT Insures against all kinds of accidents Its premiums are low, and tt issues a good Policy 6.I0. Brow General Agent Charlottetown THE DAILY EXAMINER. i JUNE 16, 1897. “HEAVIER TAXES. One of the strongest proofs that we shall is to be It is not probable that Mr. Peters will proceed to collect taxes under this act before the upon to In the meantime, a report is being sedulousy ard have an election this summer is to be found in the new tax act. people are called vote. quietly circulated to the effect that the taxes under the new act will be lighter The utter falsity of this report is patent. Mr. Peters needs more money this year than he did How, then, can he manage to More money will necessitate heavier taxes and more money is required. The new tax act, carefully worded as it is, bears upon its fase proof that the taxes under it are to, be heavier and not lighter. Under the first act it was provid- ed that improvements in farm buildings should not be subjected to taxation. But this provision has been repealed by the new act, and the following substituted : than they were under the old. last year. make ends meet with less money? “The value to be stated in said declara - tion and taxed upon shall include the value of the land with the buildings c Vlie That is to say,a new barn or other building that wovld not have been taken account of under the old act wiil be eub- jected to taxation under the new. In other words, the enterprise of the people is now THE DAILY FXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN JUNE 16, 1897 ed Hat NOTES AND COMMENTS. —The Patriot makes a sirong plea for min of action in the Legislature. Perhaps the Pat: iot will state what “ action” hes bcen taken by the present rerresentativ: s of Charlottetown in the t.--r-iature. The Patriot maintains thai it is to their credit that they haven't said much. What have they done ? —Laurier is, we are told, “the lion of the hour in London.” He doesn’s arn anything for Canada. Not he. He is ready t» give the Canadian markets, every- thing, up to the dear old Mother Country. Is it wonderful that the people of the Mother Country make a pt of their new lion? or thatour own Mr. Davies is going home (at the pubiic expense) to share the honors ? —Montreal Star: I:sagive the poor Grand Truok, ruiaed by Intercolonial €0 npetition which will sweep by ‘t over its uwn line and over its own Victoria Bridge, and unload at its own Bonavevture Station ! Imagine General Manager Haces mcuraing over his dep'eted trade and sadly taking rent for the privilege of beat- iig him on his own tracks, If you havea healthy imagination, practice it wy al! means, On the above. —The Toronto Globe remsrks that “th. circumstances under which the present Parliament was electe| were decid-dly in favor of improvement in the tone of public morals.” These circumstances are being turned to aceount in such corrupt “deals” as that which has been made with the Grand Trunk and Drummond County rail- way in which the taxpayera of Canada stand to lose at Jeast $8,000,000 and to gain nothing. The Moncton Times remarks that “at the end of 99 years,which is the term of the lease, the govermment will have paid the Drummond county Railway company the sum of $6,930,000. The railway, which is Only about 100 miles in length, has always been run ata loss, and the owners appear to have madea splendid disposal of their property. The lease money if put out at interest would within fifty years make them among the wealthiest men en the continent. The principal beneficiary of this scandalous dea! is a wealthy Mont- realer who is reputed to have made a handsome subscription to Mr. Laurier’s corruption fund in Juve last and another to the liberal fund in the recent Quebec elections, _ _—- = ——— NEWS NOTES, The report that Great Britain purchased and is in secret possession of Delagoa Bay has been revived. Ac yalty does not protect one from un- comfortable experience. The German crows prince and his next brether have been laid up with chicken pox and are now recovering. A decaying oak tree at Cowthorpe near Wethcrby, Eng., is more than fifty feet in circumfereace, and is believed to be the to be taxed. enough money underthe old act. The deficits he made yearafter year were, upon the average, as large with taxation as Hon. Mr. Sullivan’s deficits were without taxa- tion. So he must needs have more money or else drift more deeply into debt. It is possible, of course, that circumstan- | ces will prevent an appeal to the people | before the new taxes are imposed ; and in that case we may be sure that the new taxes to be paid next autumn will fall as lightly as possible upon the electors. But, in that case, the electors will have to pay double az much in future years! However this may be, the report that taxation is to be lightened under the new tax act is false and misleading. IMPORTANT PUBLICATION. WE are in receipt of one of the most im- portant publications issued for many a day, in so far as the farmers of Prince Edward Island are concerned, It is a pamphlet entitled “ How to Raise Hogs for Present Market Conditions.” To raise hogs with profit is the point sought to be made. The pamphlet shows (1) what are the actual requirements of the present markets and (2) the opinions of the best authorities as to how to breed and feed hogs which will produce the quality of meat required by the consumer. The pamphlet will, we believe, repay careful perusal. Mesers. B. & M. Rattenbury, by whom it has been collated, will be prepared, on and after tbe first of November next, to receive at their new slaughter and curing house in Uhar- lottetown, two thousand hogs per week, summer and winter, the year round. Their enterprise will thus involve a revolution of the pork raising industry of this Pro- vince. Three times as many hogs will be needed as have been sold in any past year, and a different quality of hog will be re- quired. The proper system, as the Messrs. Rattenbury points out, is to prepare two or three batches of hogs for delivery at the packing house at intervals throughout the year, thus ensuring a regular supply the Hogs that will weigh 180 to 200 lbs., live weight, at six months old, wil] be in demand. i I year round, —Isn’t it remarkable that the Govern- ment of this Province is unable tc «give a single dollar towards the Queen’s Jubilee celebration! Did they spend too much to gain their victory in the last election, or are they saving up for the next election? Self and Party before Couatry or Queen,— is Liberalism of the Peters Government stripe. Mr. Peters could not get | largest in the world. Two young oaks have been planted to perpetuate its memory. The Austrian Government has presented | through the Foreign Office, a prote:t against the new Canadian tariff in that it discriminates in favor of Great Britain, with which country Austria has a treaty containing the “most favored nations” clause. A man in Lewiston, Me., where bicycles are taxed, refused to pay a tax on his biey- cle, because it is worn ont and useless. He demands to kiow of 1 assessor whether they could tax # man for a dead horse. If not, he wishes to knew why he should pay fora dead bicycle with a punctured wheel. In the London Lancet an eminent vby- sician says that after a long ride ona bicycle he experienced “paraesthesia in the fourth and fifth fingers, with impaired sensibility and paresis in the interossei lumbricals and the aquetor pollicis.” A layman would say that the long ride made his hand numb, provided he mentioned the matter at all. The C. P. R. mangement in the West will endeavor to develup a trade in British Columbia fruit, both in shipments to Kootenay, the : Territories and Manitoba, and Manager White has in contemplation the§ fitting up of a number of box ears, or construeting new refrigerator cars especial- ly for the traffic. Quantities of straw- berries have been brought east during the past few days, and dealers are well saiisfied with the quality. — oe ScROFU LA in its worst form yields to the blood cleansing power ci Hood’s Sarsaparilla. ‘Thousands of cases have been perfectly CURED. THE QUEEN’S JUBILEE. American Wealth to b» There, William Waldorf Astor enjoys the diec- tinction of having paid the largest eum yet offered for viewing the procession, having secured for £1,000 ($5.600), Lord Normanton’s house in Pall Mall, about three times its present value. The follow- ing isa list of Americans who will be present and the wealth they represent : Cornelius Vanderbilt......... .$16€9,000,000 George Vanderbilt..........-.... 75,000,000 William Waldorf Astor ... 75,000,000 Ogden Goelet............ 50,000,000 Eloridge Gerry... ..+..4+ seeeee 25,000,000 Duchess of Marlborough.... 10,000,006 Bradley Martin........... 10,000,000 Robert Gollet. . . .j.e<cscsescose. 20,000,060 George Gould........ Kb jocSs gin 25,000,000 Andrew Carvegie.......eee = 75.000,000 Prince~s Hatizfeldt...... ....-» 4,000,000 Ogden Malle.............eee0-. 5,000,000 J. Fh. Plaghetivicsisessccccscscss 75,000,000 Whitelaw Reid................ 4,000,000 Start Miller... 0.05 dé ddet.ee' 3,900,000 Ex-Gov, Morton. .......-.0..-. 50,000,060 George Kidd.....+..-..+sseereevee 1,000,000 Oliver H. P, Belmont,..::: 1,000,000 Mrs. Colgute eo eccceescescasece ® =e 1,600,000 Lady Beresford............... 4Q0,000 Mrs, Arthur Paget......... 500,006 Mie Romane, oo, sitiewveices 500,600 Misses Van Allan..... belie ka 500,000 Walter Channing Barclay...... 500,960 Mrs. Ralph Vivian......0+.. 25,000,000 Eugene Kelly.........-. a 500,000 Mrs. Dudley Leigh...... Severe. 500,060 Mire, G. 8S. BOwdoiws ccceccoocce 1,000,000 Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brice....... 1,000,000 LS I TI ci ss cdi sa 500,000 Ambassador Hay....... ... 1,000,000 STARTLING MURDER FIGURES, (From the Philadelphia, Pa., Press.) In 1896 there were 10,652 murders committed in the United States, but there were Only 122 legal executions. Only one murderer in eighty-seven paid the penalty for his crime. With such a great disparity between crime and its punishment, is it any wonder thatthe public took vengeance into its own bands, and lynched in the sume year 13) persons? There is no excuse for mob law. It is better to endure many miscarriages of justice than to per-— mit a mob, under the sway of brutal pas- sion, to mete out even a just punishment But for helping to create the sentiment which calls a mob into being, the courts with their delays cannot be held blame- less. For the Jubilee—A large stock of Fireworks, have just arrived atCarters’ Bookstore. Jubilee Wheels, Lawn Lights. Vesuvius Fountains, Grass toppers, or Nigger Chasers, China Fiyers, Roman Candles, Sky Reckets.Cannon Rockets Sky Scraping Parachutes, Can- non Salutes, Star Mines, Can. non Crackers, 2e and 5¢ pkgs. ofr Fire Crackers, ete — Geo Car ter & Co, the Jubilee Store 136 - eod tl Jub Senator-elect Mallory, of Florida, when in New Orleans recently, spoke of his start in life in that city and told of the struggles he had to make both ends meet. The only times he had enough toeat were wheu his friends would invite him to take Sun- day dinner with them. On these occasions lie said, he would eat enough to last over Monday, oe aagpaeeas Jan., Dec. A drink for all the year round is SOVEREIGN LIME FRUIT JUICE. Ask your dealer for it. How un- pleasant is Lime Juice whenaccom- panied by that bitter and mouldy taste. You will find neither ot these faults in SovereignLime Fruit Lime Juice. Ask for it. —e Simson Bros. & Co. Manufacturers F"ine - - - SS ae ——s ¢ er Baby Days. These June days your doctor will tell you that it’s wrong little folks indoors this kind of weather. baby plump and healthy. See that yours gets it, to keep the The spring air will make No need to worry about how to do it. We have the Carriages, and as the season is get- ting late, we will make the prices interesting on the few remaining in ark Wright & Co. Ltd ‘HOME MAKERS. steck. The Weather > err. Like the Queen Iit“S REGN, REIGN, NO CHANCE FOR THE SON OR GRANDSON TO SHINE WE SHINE IN—~ RAINPROOFS RELLAS See onr $5 line in Men’s Macintoshes. See ovr $1.35 line in Gents’ Umbrellas UM JAMES PATON & CoO. hires Nallstacl The Bell Fiano Has given to its purchasers universal satisfaction. Pure, Rich and Melodious Tone ‘The bass is powerful without harsh ness. The upper notes sweet clear and mellow. Prices range from $20C to $400. For sale at Fletcher's Piano Warerooms OPERA BOUSE BUILDING AGRICULTURAL PIONIC. A grand Agricultural Picnic In aid of tha CHURCH FUNDS will be held AT ST. TERESA’S Tuesday, June 29th, Inst Abuudantly supplied tea tables and saloons well stocked with temperate drinks, will be provided, and the amusements usual at such gatherings will be asranged for. In the after- noon those assembled will be addressed by men of education and practical experience, on matters specially pertaining to the interests of the farmers. Mr. A. G, Gilbert, manager of the poultry department of the Experimental Farm, Ottawa, will speak about poultry, now becoming so important to the farmers. This isa subject with which he is thoroughly con- versant. Mr. G. W. Forrest, Superintendent of the Experimental Farm at Nappan, N. S., will speak on Dairying, rotation of crops and stock raising. One or two other speakers are also expected to deliver addresses on agricul- tural subjects. Farmers are urgently requested to attend this Picnic, as they will not only de- rive mnch benefit to themselves, but will also assist a good cause. Thetea tables will be ready at 12 0’c’ock sharp, and the speaking will commence nor later than 3 o’clock- Train arrangements will be published later. Tickets, including tea, 25c. BY ORDER OF COMMITTEE. June 12, w1i,—d6i. AARAAAAAAAASAAAAAAAA AAA AASASAARAASAAARASSARAARAARA AA AND 4220S 28263088 ) 2220208208 2eeu PRAAAAHARERE SRRARSAARARAAS * The Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Prgra mt ri TUESDAY, JUNE RRERIRARARARAR Royal Salute fired at 12 noon. from Queen Square at 2 o’clock. Opening of Park Roadway by Mayor Dawson at 2.30 o’clock. te sing the Nationa] Anthem, Canada Forever, etc. The Military wili be drawn up in line at ‘Victoria Park to receive His Honor the Lieut. Governor with a General Salute at 3 o’clock. H.M. S. Rambler will be in port and it is expected thai a detach- ment of sailors will land to join in the afternoon’s celebration. His Honor Lieutenant Governor Howlan. Presentation of Medals to School Children, , IN THE EVENING. fllumination of Public Buildings, Stores, and Private Residences. Torchlight Procession by the City Firemen, Paradc by tLe Bicycle Clubs. Grand display of Fireworks at Victoria Park. Arrasgements have been made for reduced tares on Railway and Steamboate. G Hi. M. DAVISON, W. E. DAWSON, City Clerk. Mayor. Secretary Jubilee Commitee. Chairman Jubilee Commitiee SESS FS SESS S| ASAAA ; rf Procession of Military, Fraternal aud National Societies, starting i i. ad Assembly of Schoo! Children on the Grand Stand at Victoria Park } “{ 7 Addresses will be delivered by His Worship Mayor Dawson and {J i 7 a 22010. 3. e Hs 4 a! # a> 7 ee: ¢ Ae 4 Presentation of Governor Gereral’s Medal also Watch from His i ag Honor the Lieutenant Governor to Joha Sark, Chief of Micmac Indians. es