ee oat ee ee gral a * th Te, ete ae il Bi Nene ar GE i ae ey Ail CU LSA, TLE LI A: pea ————EE——EE——EEEEE— i et eee a ee ae ‘ al dl i ey BE A ae I 8. oe Mig . ~ eee, 5, ea Bro * Me wes wnt Wi iE REO OF Ag - iis cea al ect itt Bh ite int Bi SMES GROOT BREE le, PRS * ~~ Sui, i at at A EE AE AE IE IS OO on UE ES coh - (Mow Mir cem a wg p> - — - THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 9, 1898 bd ° € | 9 9 9 y 9 ’ : 9 . 6 6 Every mother should welcome into ‘& :§ the household » ¢ Baby’s ! aby 5 - ‘ > ‘ ~ Own ‘ y 7 ‘ Soap 5 é Like ” iby hims:lf, though sinall it é ‘§ brings happines Sica se it is so 3 & { od 1 r baby’s sin, and makes him & :¥ so fresh and nice 2 @ fcAsYsS OWN SOAP is made from @ -“ purest vegetab! is delicately 2 “ ith fl r extracts, and is a soap of % OF pe ‘ 7 N y aa NOVAS 5 —GRAND— PROVINCIAL EXAIBITION —AND — INDUSTRIAL FAIR —AT— HALIFAX, N. S&S: Sept, 22nd, -- - Sept. 20th, 1898 $16,000 $16,000 By 25 per cent. the largest Prize List of- ferjd in Ewtern Canada. Improvement in Every Department Wonderful Special Attractions At Great Expensejtiie Commission have secured the Grand Historical Spectacular Drama. The Relief of Lucknow Magnificentiy mounted with beautiful Costumes, ep ploying a full Batallion of Troops and Bands Produced under the management of Hana & Teale, of f amilion, Ont., with display of Fire Works surpassing any- thing ever seen East cf Toronto. To- gether with numerous other new and original amusements from London and New York, Superior in every way to the Great Show of 1897. tor Prize Ligts and all information, addrese, J. E. WOOD, Mgr. See’y Citv Hall, Halifax, N.S in Premiums FOR SALE Dwelling ich on sat Water Front opposite Park Boulevard We are instructed to offer for sale that desirable and beautifuliy situated dweli- ing house and premi-es lately ocenpied Lv Simon Davies, facing West Street, and lying between the re sidence of Sir ‘Lou ~ Davies and Benjamin Heartz Esq. This property can bs had ata bargain and porsession can be given at any time, within a month from pure hase. Terms of purchase easy and reasonab! € Particulars and inepeetion on applic ation to DAVIES & HASZARD, Solici tors “ce 171 2aw tf EMPORTANT 10 DAIRYMEN = 2 o> Q) ——en. 15 to 20 gallon wilk cans madeot ne very best materia obtainable. Prices right. The J- D. Bell Manufacturing Co ‘ove and Hard ware Merchants, Montague, June 7—-lm CROWN OF GOLD Gold Seamless Contuur Crowns, war- re ited 22k and guaranteed not to eplit. ». Moderate_Prices DR. J. P. MURRAY TO LET The Southern halfvuf the residence of the Jate Chief Justice Palmer, containing eigbt rooms, electric ight, hot water fur- pace; rent moderate. Apply to H. James Palmer, office near Bunk of Nova S cotia, or Mre EF. Palmer, QucenSt, 162 dy 2wks TIA'S } i | LOVE'S Where Lore built his humble nest ired and thankful did I rest. Sweeter reat there could not be, Thouch the black night covered me, And Love whispered, ‘‘Art thou blest?” And I answered, ‘‘Love is best."’ Where Love built his nest I knew Thorns beneath the rose leaves grew. Bweeter roses could not be, Though the keen thorns crept to me. And Love whispered, ‘‘Art thou blest?” And I answered, ‘‘Love is best.’’ Where Love built his nest a blight Blew from lands of Death and Night. All that life had held of sweet Lay in ashes at Love's feet. Yer I—folded to his breast— Weepnig, «! ispered, ‘‘Love is best.”* So, with Love abiding still, Iam Love's, to do his will, So his lips on mine are laid, So his hand my couch hath made. Still he whispers, ‘Aré thou blest ?"" Biill I answer, ‘‘Love is best.”’ —Atianta Constitution. ARTIST AND CRITIC. The Former Owes a Debt to the Lattes, Although Seldom Acknowleged. The debt which the artis® owes the critic is not a small one, nor is it any the less actual for being commonly lost sight of. It is a current belief that the public is educated by the mere existence of the good work of art, and not by the elucidation of its commentators. Edu- cation by absorption is perhaps the most deep going and farreaching form of edu- cation, but it has never been found practicable to rely upon it solely in other branches of mental acquisition. Then why believe that it can be relied upon solely for the proper development of the art sense? In effect it never is and cannot be. How many people care about poetry, let us say—-feel it, are reached by it? And can cone doubt that if a more loving and careful analysis of such of its products as appear today : undertaken by critics competent to convey to an indifferent public the perennial value of its ministrations, some of the MepESER Tene * the average reader would disappe and the etern: il ins Inessage sses now give some perception of cance of the poet's ter the cla would ex- to n over to uothing more tonic in the way of read- ing than the daily newspaper? We say that one is born with the feeling for the enjoyment of poetry and another is not. Not so. At least, to say this is not to say all. The feeling for the highest wsthetic enjoyment and appreciation is cultivable, and cultivable as is any oth- er faculty, by studying the material to be enjoyed, by reverently conning its constituent parts. In short, a vague, dreamy delight in the presence of some beautiful work of the artistic spirit is not enough. It is not enough for intel- ligence, it is\not enough especially to produce the atmosphere of interest which stimulates the painter, the masi- Cian, the writer, to sustained effort and keeps him true to the pitch. We love best what we know best. To rest in loving without knowing is often the merest sentimentality—a sentimentali- ty toward which our Germanic forefa- thers had always a leaning, while it was especially antagonistic to the lucid Greek and Latin spirit.—‘‘The Super- fluous Critic,’’ by Aline Gorren, ia Jentury, me If you are iJ] you need a doctor in whom you have confidence. If you need a remedy you want one that has been tested for years; not an obscure, un- tried thing that is urged upon you, or on which you save a few cents—that is no consid- eration as against health. For wasting in children or adults, Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- phosphites has the recognized remedy for twen- ty-five years. soc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists. Toronto, NOTICE — been ~ Tne annual meeting of the Liberal Conservative Party, of the First Electoral! District of Queen’s County, will be held! in Bradalbane Hall, on Monday, 15th August next, at 2 o’clock p.m. The presidents of each polling division will please have public meetivgs called, and delegates ap pointed to attend the convention. 5 dele- gates from each polling division. WM.CAMPBELL. MICH. RFADY, President Secretary Wky & Wat. 31 WANTED, A few active agents in each County t handle a fast selling article. Good com mission. Apply at once to M Box 17 harlottetown. 163 cw. OWN. , ¥ known, LAW OF SELF DEFENSE. The English Theory of Where Protection Ends and Revenge Begins. The right of self defense is by some eld writers declared to be inherent in all men by the law of nature. Now, these ‘‘natural rights’’ are all very well, but they are not recognized by the law of Great Britain. It is the law that a man may defend himself, his wife, child or servant from physical ag- gression. He may also repel by force a forcible attack upon his property. When you, or your wife, child, or servant is attacked, or threatened with violence in such a manner as reasonably to lead you to believe that violence is about to be used, you may resist the aggressor. And as the best mode of resistance is very often to attack, you may lawfully follow the advice given by an old prize- fighter to a pupil—i. e., ‘‘get in the first wbhack.”’ But self defense must be moderate. It must not be totally disproportioned to the attack. For instance, if a bulk- ing rufficn runs at me with a knife, I may shoot him. Butif he runs at me merely witb his fists clinched, and I shoot him dead with a revolver, I shall probably be hanged by the neck. Not that the law expects a man to be calm and cool and collected in all circum- stances. By no means. For instance, if the said burly ruffian rashes at me witb clinched fists, evidently meaning mis- chief, and I hit hisn with a heavy stick on the back of the é¢ar, I may kill bim. But I shall uot be banged for that. I had a right to use the stick, and in the circunistances Iam not to be supposed tc be cvol enough to aim for a spot not likely to be fatul. Again, self defense niust not develop into revenge. Thus, if l am threatened with a knife, and by the timely display of a pistol I frighten my assailant so that he runs away, 1 must uot shoot after him. If I do, Iam just as liable as though he had never threatened me, becanse I shoot at him not in self detense, but by way of pun- ishment or revenge. —Family Lawyer. LAW OF THE UMBRELLA. Opinion That Has Ascribed to Lord Coleridge, The law as to umbrellas was settled once for all by Lord Coleridge in a lead- ing English case. His lordship held: ‘‘Umbrellas, properly considered, are a part of the atmospheric or meteorolog- ical condition, and as such there can be no individual property right in them. In Sampson versus Thompson defendant was charged with standing on plaintiff’s fr.ut steps during a storm and thereby ecaking up a large quantity of rain to yw uith plaintiff was entitled. But the court held that the rain was any man's raiu, no matter where it fell. It fol- laws, therefere, that the umbrella is any man’s umbrella. In all ages raip and umbrellas have gene together, and there is uo reason why they should be seperated in law. An umbrella may, uuder certain circumstances—the chief of which is possession—take on the at- tributes of personal property, just as if a man set atub and catch a quantity ef ruinwater, that rainwater will be considered as his personal belonging vw! ae itis in his tub. But if the sun cvsporate the water and it is rained down ) again or if the tub is upset and tbe water spilled then personal ownership izstantly disay pears. So if a man hold his umbrella 1. bis hand it may be considered a per- sonal helonging, but the moment it leaves his hand it returns to the great, general, indivisavle, common stock of nimbrellas, whither the law will not at- tempt to pursue it.’ So far as we know there has never been a snecessful appeal from this de cision.—Chicago News. An Important Raen A Disturbing Sermon. Many years ago an English clergyman in a small town preached as his owna sermon, one that he bad bought, and which had been originally preached in London when the plague was raging in that city. After reproving the vice of the people, the sermon went on: ‘*or this vice it is that God has vis- ited you and your families with that cruel scourge, the plague, which is now spreading everywhere in this town.” At his uttering these words the peo- ple were all so thunderstruck that the chief magistrate was obliged to go to the pulpit and to ask him: ‘*For God’s sake, sir, pardon the in- terruption, and inform me where tke plague is, that I may instantly endeavor to prev she its further spreading.’’ ‘*The plague, sir?’’ replied the preach- ok on nothing about the plague. Whetber it is in the town or not, it is in my Lomily.’’ WOooD’s PHOSPHODINE. The Great English Remedy. Six Packages Guaranteed to promptly, and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotency and all effects of Abuse or Excesses, < ‘ ® Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opiumor Stimu- Before and After. at which soon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, $1; six, $5. One will please, six will cure. Pamphlets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windscr, Ont., Canada. Sold in Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggist. the attribute of Historical and Clerical. The London Journal swers, which are warranted genuine. given: Vill, who exclaimed, my God as I hava served my king, I confusion between Wolseley and Wol- sey is perhaps not remarkable, but a notice. A better story, however, is of a definition of ‘‘tithes’’ which will be of special interest to the church and stage guild—‘‘things worn by ladies in cir- cuses and pantomimes.’’ Tired. ‘‘The children wish me to ask yon to fe)] them some fairy stories,’’ said the politician’s wife. ‘*My dear,’’ was the reply, ‘I can’t do it. I have been talking to a great many voters today. I must have some relaxation from the routine of busi- ness. ’’— Washington Star. The Way It Struck Her. He referred in the casual way that is characteristic of members of his profes- sion to an operation at bis hospital that day in which a man’s rib had been re- moved. ‘‘And why did they doit,’’ said the sweet girl. ‘‘Are there not enough women in the world as it is?’ —New York Sun, Borrowing Trouble. He—I suppose you would scream and wake up everybody in the house if I were to kiss you. She—Why is it that some folks can’t ‘yelp borrowing tronble? ~~ Chicago News. ——— eon sid YOUNG WOMEN LOVE The D & A Corset, sit fits so comfortably, supporting the figure, while yielding easily to every movement. It lasts wel!, and sells at popular prices. —MORAL: YOUNG WOMEN WEAR THE D & A CORSET. (5) Mes We SYS Ne SY ’ ° lane g° ‘@* “—° “le (eer Oreee’ This isa new Breakfast Focd, put upina ten cent package, it is absolutely pure, and is recoramended by medical men as a very nutrtious and easily digested food. Directions for use’ on every | package. For sale at Beer & Goft's aa NE » arbys ond NS as as Pruit dar Hiliclency —~ The jar that will keep "ihe fruit costs no more than the jar of doubt. Use the “Canada” Jar When you putup fruit, and you’) lose no preserve by*fermentation. Special low prices this season on fruit jars. SANDERSON & CO Teeth=== ii lly, regularly, then can the owner de- sctreadily and moreeasily, in its inciep- mtstage, the dead!y decay which sooner r later attacks nearlyeverybody’s teeth. (hen you discover the cavaties don’t elay, but come at once and have them fled at Sunnyside Dental Parlors, DR. AYERS Patnless Extraction of Teeth of Education publishes the following schoolboy an- ‘to the question, ‘‘What do you know of Lord Wolseley?’ the answer was ‘“‘He was a minister of Henry ‘If I had served should not bave been beheaded!’ ’’ The post mortem speech of this kind deserves COUTTS CT TCC S SCTE The Man who rides a Wh eel only half enjoys its delights until he gets a Rigby Porous Waterproof LQQG5 29.0 Jas. Paton & Co Bicycle Suit In dry weather you would not know the cloth was water-proof, and in wet weather you can ride all day without getting wet. The Rigby cloth admits the air but keeps out the rain. Any wheel- man will see the great advantage of it at once, Rigby Bicycle Suits are made only by H. SHOREY & CO., Montreal, but are gold by all up-to-date clothing dealers. RLOQLIOAQQ QHD , Selling Agents for Ch’tewn lag GG fw T J HARRIS, Cheap Pianos plan, cases made at one place works at another,thoen thrown together by a selt styled man ufacturer are offered daily, at prices so ridiculous as to con- vince any intelligent person of their utter wothlesness The P. BT. Cononly Building, % durability, | Ladies’ Capes Blouses wallor Hats At greatly reduced prices ee ee ee londen House N MARKED COX- TRAST ARESOUR : Low- Priced Built on the patch-* wo Heintzman & Co riane —= Which are remarkable for tone, touch, finish, and rs well as price. ¢ Come and hear them and in- . vestigate not only the instru- ments, but also our plan of ce payments. We are not here for a month or two, but permanently, and just and sat- isfactory treatmentcan be re: lied upon, bia House Queen St. The Primus The best oil stove®ever invented, consumesf one quart of common kerosene in 6 hours. Generates oil ‘nto gas Price # 4, Refrigerators Ice Cream Freezers 20 p ¢ discount ——— > > 2. i‘ - poe | any Se ee