(nlite ay © , ¢ ‘ , : , , r pi a pki retigae et aan a. tos ‘ aig tReet ong 3 SE ae ee x ae a - Ces * “a « > wr Bante eer ee The ally Examiner . ore er « A AA 4 e T) nm UC ixXamin Publi 1s hin o KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION ’ Inwy : Company THR DAILY FE SUPPOSE. thas you were I, And by your side your sweetheart sate Suppose you noticed by. and by The distanoe 'twixt you was too great Now tell me, dear, what would you do? Bunpose, my dear, ) take such I know, and so do you And t} S ymmifortably placed, Suppose you only grew. aware That that dear, dainty little waist Of hers ed very lonely there. Pray I what would you do? Lk ‘ you Then, ha ‘ e whet I just did, With not a frown to check or chill, Sup ier red lips seemed to bid Defi e to your lordly will? Oh, tell me, sweet, what wenld you do? I know l so doe you —Pearson’s Weekly. A TOOT HBRUSH FOR KOKO. Costly Toilet Articles icdatensiadl by Rich Girls For Theit Pet Dogs. arti- and jeweled, were A score or more of dainty toilet cles, gold mounted scatte re os over the glass counter, and the obliging clerk in the fashionable shop was vainly endeavoring to satisfy the whims of a daughter of <wealth, who had every appearance of been spoiled by overindulgence. a costly toothbrush was poking the She had in her hand and other articles with it in a dissatisfied way. “This is vot smali-.enough,’’ she said, ‘‘and the hair is not fine enough.’ ‘‘It is our very best grade of gootis,’’ suggested the clerk hal? apologetically. **Them you orght to get something better. Yes, really, you ought,” ex- claimed the willful customer. ‘‘I can’t a clumsy toothbrush as that | home to my Koko.”’ LN ADVANCE One Vear SL SEX raths 2.00 | Tia lent! 1.00 | @ne Vonth @.35 | - st} th | Un State i THE WEEKLY EXAMINER | iss e? s made up | of rw ut i i ne Dai ly y | aT a uss ‘ I miainin | ali tes \ 31.00 aye ar. | | | i | rs ; ' | | SI i LB R ra Ad, a NEWS NOTES, ' 4 ‘ } 1 + on I . Fe rman rpeceo WOR recentiy ( ip- 5 i k off Cuxhaven, and eight of! Lit w were drowned, ! ] -teamer Ika, with acrew often and Ca! yfifty Ausifian passengers, was sunk i acollision on Tuesday evening as she wus entering the port of Flume, and mi t her passengers were drowned in full sizht of thousands.of people on the pr lt arved that no further advance wili te made at present by the Anglo- Egy pt.an expedition up the Nile. Aa | attace vo Khartoum would require aj strous vacking of British troops, and ow i lnodiatr troubles the War Othce cannot send such a for: ej >to E gypt. i fi rntiog at C imp Siieael on Men. | day nigut was so fast and farious that in| the @ilacK On thie br tish PqQuare by the | followers of the Haddah Muilab some of | the trivesmen were forced withia a few | yard= of the muzzles of the mountain guos. Geoeral Bourbaki, who was in com- mani ofthe Imperial Guards at Mentz during the Franco-Prussian was, is dead. Druvami, the king of Benin, who bas been va trial at Benin City, since August 15tn, last, with a number of leading ch.ets charz+i with being concerned in the asa cre of an unguarded expedition, un- der British Consul Philips, bas been coa- demoed and transporied to Calabar, a elave settlemeot of British West Africa. Tie Paris Libertaire has been seized by the poi'ce for publishing an article ad- Vocating the assassination of President Faure, King Humbert and the Queen Reg ni of Spain Constitution and Guerriere, The Constitution’s guns were double shoited with round and grape. The broadside was as one single explosion, and the destruction was terrific. The enemy's decks were flooded, and the blocd ran out of the scuppers—her cock- pit flied with the wounded. For a few minutes, shronded in smoke, they fought at the distance of half pistol] shot. In that short time the Englishman was lit- erally torn to piecés in bull, spars, sails sud vigging. As her mizzenmast gaye vay the Englishman brought up to the ayind , aod the Constitution slowly forged 1, fired again, Inffed short round the « .er’s bows and, owing to a heavy sea, f il foul of her antagonst, With ber towsprit across her larboard quarter. While in this position Hull’s cabin was set on fire by the enemy’s forward bat- tery, -nd part of the crew were called —. *som the guns to extinguish the threatening blaze. — Barnes’ ‘Naval Acticus of the War of 1812,’’ tm Gone Over to Bacon, Bef f believe,’ anid the fanny boarder, “thet the landlady has been won over to the unti-Shakespeare crowd.”’ Will you please elucidate?’ asked the ; ng armed, ‘*Well, she gives us bacon for break- fast every morning now, you will note.”’ —Philadelphia North Ameriean. aves aC Fifty Years Ago. President Polk in the White House chair, While in Lowell was Doctor Ayer; Both were busy for human weal One to govern and one to heal. And, as a president’s power of will Sometimes depends on a liver-pill, Mr. Polk took Ayer’s Pills I trow For his liver, 50 years ago. Ayer’s Cathartic Pills were designed to supply a model purgative to people who had so long injured themselves with griping medicines. Being carefully prepared and their in- gredients adjusted to the exact —— of the bowels and ver, their popularity w - shined, aie te larity has been maintained is well marked in the medal awarded these pills at the py oric's Fair 1893. i | i how | fessor Pontus. **Ah!? murmured the clerk, with a scarcely perceptible air of impatience. ‘Then you wantat brush for your dog.’’ ‘Yes, of course I do, and I want something very soft and very dainty,’’ replied the young woman. And, after a pause, she added, with an affectionate purr, “There isn’t anything too nice for my Koko.”’ “Certainly not,’’ responded the clerk, with a cordial smile. “Here are some brushes of rare quality. I had over- looked them. Here is one with hair as soft.as silk and a handle of solid gold.’’ The girl fondled the expensive trinket for a moment, and, withont asking the price, said, ‘‘That will do. Have it sent with the other things, please.’ When this spoiled maiden’s father gets a bill from the fashionable jeweler, he will doubtless be moved to emotion by the entry,‘‘One toothbrush for dog, $22.50.’’ It is no uncommon thing for shop- keepers in New York to be called upon to supply toilet articles for dogs, mon- keys, birds and other domestic pets. Some stores maintain especial lines of combs and brushes for pet dogs, and as ® special concession to the enthusiasm of the fair owners of these pets the prices of dog combs and brushes” are kept aristocratically high.—New York Times. The Blackguards of Malaga. Besides my man Mohammed there were several other Arab passengers aboard, and the appearance of these, as they leaned over the bulwarks of the steamer, was the signal for a shout of derisive laughter, curses and _ stone throwing on the part of the crowd of ill fed and ill conditioned boys who throng- ed the quay. For downright black- guardism nothing can beat the type of ° the yeuth of Malaga, whose expression, like their morals, ig of as debased a type ai conld well be imagined. Mowls of filthy languaye greeted thé appearance of the Moors, who, had they disen.- barked, vco7'd have run a great risk of being torn to pieces, so great is the an- tipathy of tue Spaniards to their former conquerors, ihe captain of the steamer. appealed to the police, but the ty, 2 sep- resentatives of this noble body were busily employed in stealing figs from the cargo and paid little or no attention to the fact that an infuriated crowd of the worst characters of Malaga—that is to say, the worst in the world—were pelting the steamer with stones and mud. Affairs, however, reached a cli- max when one of the Moors, who spoke Spanish, asked after the health of Gen- eral Maryailo, the general who had been killed before Melilla, and then the cap- tain was obliged to order them below, though the ill conditioned crowd hooted and jeered until at sunset the steamer left.— Harris’‘‘From Batum to Bag- dad.’’ Millions of Frogs Rain Down. One of the most curicus phenomena of nature is the precipitation of frogs, fish, crabs, angleworms, etc., with rain from the clouds. The story is told in the annals of the French academy and may be found in the August num- ber, 1804. The narrative is by one Pro- In it he gives an account of an instance of millions of frogs which fell in a shower near Touleuse. He states that he himself saw numerous young frogs on the coats of two gentle- men who were out in the shower. Pro- fessor Pontus says that he ‘‘forthwith repaired tothe spot where the storm had burst and found the roads and fields literally alive with young frogs end tadpoles.’’ ‘‘In some places,’’ says the professor, ‘‘they were three or four deep all over the ground, and the hoofs of the horses and the carriage wheels killed thousands of them.”’ Economy and Morals, Wife—John, don’t you think you bet- ter give up trying to shave yourself and g0 back to the barber? Husband—Why, of course not. much I save every month. Wife—Yes, I know that, but then Willie is always around when you See | shave, and he is learning so many bad words.—-Ohio State Journal. The greatest of all lux:urfes in central Africa is salt. To say that aman eats | Salt with his victuals is the same as | saying that he is a rich man. Mungo et says, ‘‘The aoe: eC pines use of getable food | crea having | in the | testing my discovery. : without pigeontoed. XMAMINER, CHAR! THE NOSE AND THE TOES. A Physical Culturiet Says Pigeontoed Peo- ple Have Crooked Noses, A professor of physical culture an- nounces that he has discovered an in- timate connection between deformities of the nose and the position of the feet. His name is H. L. Piner, and, he com- municates his observations to the New York Journal: ‘“*You can tell:a pigeontoed person looking at his feet or seeing him walk. The discovery was made t me in 1891 while teaching culture. 3 found a-stabborn awkwarul- ness in the movements of my pupils’ feet. Looking for the cause, I found that many of them were pigeontoed. In others one foot was«orrect and the other turned in. ‘In teaching correct breathing I had to investigate the condition of the nasal passages. Then [ found that wherever the person was pigeontoed in the right foot the right nostril was stopped up or otherwise deformed. It was the same with the left foot or nostril. If both nostrils were defective, both feet were At one time lexamined 26 persons, and every one of them was pigeontoed left foot, with a corresponding defect in the left nostril. At another time I examined over 40 with a view to Some of them had | well developed nostrils and were not at all pigeontoed. Some had overwide nostrils, with overwide angles at the feet to correspond. ‘ ‘Girls I found more worse pigeontoed than boys. generally and The per- | son who has a whining or snuffling | stoop voice is usually pigeontoed. ‘‘Another discovery is that with the defective nostrils were found invariably stooped shoulders and hollow chests, the and hollow always bearing a | direct ratio with the defect. In extreme cases there was an ugfy protrusion of the abdomen, a tendency to draw back and upward the upper lip, exposing the teeth, that have also an unsightly pro- truding tendency. ‘*Tell your friend to walk from you. Watch his feet. If the left turns in, tell him that his left nostril is smaller than the right. That is, that he can take more air atany given inspiration through the right than through the left nostril alone. If the right foot tarns in, tell him his right nostril is the smaller. *‘Conversely, tell him to place the end of the thumb under and against the nostrils alternately, breathing through the open one each time, and ask him which nostril admits the greater amount of air. If it is the left, tell him be is pigeontoed in the right foot and vice versa. Demonstrate by having him walk naturally. “‘Remember that the proper angle is 80 degrees on either side of the median line, or 60 degrees with both feet. Do not close the nostril from the side, but gently from underneath. ”’ Poisoned Blood These come from poi- Malaria sonous miasms arising from low marshy land and from decaying vegetable matter, which, breathed into the lungs, enter and poison the blood, Keep the blood pure by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla and there will be little danger from walaria. The millions take Flood’ S Sarsa- parilla The Best—in fact the One True oes Purifier. Hood’s Pills eure nausea, indigestion, biliousness. Price 25¢. Edgehill--Church School for Girls Windsor, Nova Scotia. INCORPORATED 1891. Rr. Rev. Brisnor Covaryer, D. D., Chair- roan Board of Trustees Miss Lerroy, of Cheltenham Ladies’ College, England, Principal; eight Resident experienced Governessee from England ; Housekeeper, Matron and Trained Nurse. Board with Tuition in English Department, 818s. Mvsic Art, Puysicat Cuture, ete., extras Preparation for the Univer- sities Year begins Sept. 15th, 1897. l’or Calendar apply to Da. Hixp Government Farm Stock by Auction. Will be eold from the Government Stock Farm,on Exhibitien Day, in each of the Counties. The following Surplus Young Stock, at such times and places mentioned below:— QUEEN’S COUNTY. On Thursday the 23rd inst, at 12 o’clock noon:—2 Ayrshire Bull Calves, 3 Shorthorn Buil Calves, 1 Shorthorn Heifer. KING’S COUNTY. At Georgetown, on Exhibition Grounds and day, at 3 o’clock p. m.:—2 Ayrshire Bull Calves, 3 Shorthorn Bull Calves, 1 Ayrshire Heifer Calf. - PRINCE COUNTY. At Summerside on Exhibition Grounds and day at 2 o’clock p. m.2 Avrshire Bull Calves, 2 Shorthorn Bull Calves, 1 Shorthorn Heifer Calf. RICHARD§SMITH, Sec’y of Puclic Works. ws 16 d&w;jis Strawberry Plants. Strawberry Plants, ready for delivery Address rar JL ; ile 2 ‘. pete? met cs ‘TETOWN, NOT THE WAY IT WAS. Things Had Not Changed at All Since Fe | Was Voung. Three young men were sitting fo- gether in the rotunda-.of one of tue big hotels. They were discussing the prcg- ress of invention. ‘‘Tt’s strange,’’ said one, ‘Show com- pletely old ways of doing things have been superseded. You may talk about its being hard to introduce inventions, but if a scheme is any good it’ll be uni- , | versally adopted nowadays in no time. PpHoYSsieal | Why, you’ll find even middle aged men who remember when everything in use was different. There’s hardly a thing now that’s done the same way or by the same appliances as it was when they were young. Why, my uncle can remember the time when every kind of goods was made by hand, and he isn’t very old either. It’s laughable to hear him tell how they used to get along. Everything, it seems, was done about the slowest and hardest way on earth. People used to think that they were in the world to work, and it didn’t make much difference what they were at. I tell you, boys, you don’t appreciate what it is to live in these days.’’ At this juncture a man with entirely gray hair folded his paper preparatory to departing and looked at the crowd near him. One of them, observing him, ventured to ask what he thought about it. “Pretty nearly right, I guess,’’ he said. ‘Now, JI suppose,’’ began another, ‘‘you can remember when the horse car was the only known method of metro- politan conveyance, when bicycles were a thing to come, when telephones were an experiment, when they didn’t make any ice in July, when most of the steel in buildings was in the door locks, when newspapers printed two sheets and thought them heavy, when fountain pens were an undisturbed dream, when aluminium was a theory and when harvesters were beginning to be talked about.’’ ‘‘No,’’ returned 4ne person addressed, **I'd like to agree with you, but I can’t do it. The facts are otherwise. When I Was a young man, business men used typewriters. A good many were think- ing about putting in a phonograph. Peop]ls who didn’t own any bicycles or feel like paying for acab usually tray- eled around town in a cable or electric cer. Telephones cost 10 cents a try just as they do now, unless you knew some- Lady you could eponge on. Airships would gc up and come down pretty much as they do now. The Sunday pa- pers were so full of ads. that it took till Monday to find anything to read. Smoke cousumers were making Chicago a beautifcl place to live in.’’ The gathering was now looking in- credulous. Things seemed to need an explanation. So he concluded: ‘‘You see, I got this gray hair trying to make a soda water manufactory pay in Kan- sas. Then a beard will add afew years. I was 27 last March. "—Chicago Times Herald. Oysters Oysters Oysters. JOY! JOY! JY Victoria Cafe, Great George Street. Oysters served in every style; Lunches and dinners with despatch. As usual, I am prepared to deliver Oysters in any quantity to customers to any part of tne city. Telephone Connection, JOHN P. JOY Vicror1aA CAFE Gt. George St..... SSOCOOAOCCROMCSEOS 20080000 WHOSOEVER WILL CAN Save some’ money by leay ing their order for Job Printing at the Always Busy Printing Office. DO WOT place your order before get- ting prices and see samples of our work. JAS. D. TAYLOR, The Printer Queen Strect 990090006055 002060000006 0890S S069 088080009868 9008 600898005895 000 SOOS CEOS OGOSS £0GE O008 000900880850 6928088000 McGill University. Montreal SESSION 189798 The curriculum comprises course in Arts, (including the Donatpa Spectat Course ror Women), Arpiizp Science Mepicrne, Law, and Vererinary Scrence Matriculation, Examination and Scholar- ship Examination will be held:—Arrs and Mepicine, litn Sepr.; ApPLier Science, l6vu Sepr.; Law, Tru Serr Vererixarny Science, 22np Serr. 0 SEPTEMBER 27 1897 fant SEE : THAT THE # FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE 2 a: o* GF, Is ON THE WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTLE OF Castoria is put up in one-size bottles only. It (gis not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyone to sell r you anything else on the plea or promise that it fA is ‘just es good” and “will answer every pure Ml pose."! A&P Sco that you pete C-A-§-T-0-R-I-A, . Ls ~ AVecelable hiss tration Sic be - | {| similating theYood and Regula- ij Ling the Stomachs and Bowels of Remar rae Promotes Digestion, Cheerful- ness and Rest.contains neither Opin, Morphine nor Mineral. Nor NARCOTIC. Treeipe of Olél Dr SAVE CEL PITCHER Tronphin See.t - Seppermnt - Bi Carbonate Soda ¢ ‘ | Horm Seed - terete’ suger - Haleryrect FUuvenr Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stoinach, Diarrhoea. Worms Convulsions, Feverish- mess and Los: 3 OF SLEEP. ——_$ ——___—» Fac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. UCT et i 36 Doses Arete : mm The fac- EXACT COPY CF WRAPPER. eee ae a c3 every a Lleddie 7 it ove J Hy i , gilts * i TI Weel Zh er > h santdett su Julby NN - am S) ‘S 47 pn she Av S & Oy et a rl ides: mol oe jp Seer VASSE Woop & ©. onrrEALY” HARDWARE We sell Good Hardware, we sell Good Hardware Cheap, we sell Good Hardware Cheap because we sell Good Hardware wet OR CASE... When you want Hardware, Paints, in the line, call at CITY - HARDWARE - STORE eoooeQUEEN STREET.... But Don’t Ask For Credit, ce eae Oils, and any thing R. B. NORTON & CO. J FE, Norton- eo . Klondyke. Raving arranged for mining interests in this celebrated region, we are prepared to give our customers a grand chance to make money, without costing therm anything. We want you to share with usin this great Gold Field of which the half was never told. Call and see us for explanations. to gain and nothing to lose. GOFF BROS. You have everything — ‘lhe above shows the Myopia, or near-sighted eye, with and withor correcting lens. The eye-ball is too long, and this condition greatly inte rhe with distant vision, ead if neglected, may produce serious results hen — tending the exhibition, make it a point to have pene eyes examined * il ‘falnl pie a a * de SUL i 4 a . ’ —— Jue tet & 1 Oe 8 tee oe we PR lt ne