THE DAILY EXAMINER. en TERMS: VOL, 37. Four Dollars per Year. “This nin_rue Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Publi ser.ate read. R00 c, may speak free.” EuRIPIDES, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. iSLAND, MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1897. eo Single Copies Two Cents. YO 80. re § ——— CARVED FACES. South Sea Inhabitants and Their Pecullar Ideas of Beauty. Tattooing must be counted among the most remarkable customs arising from the instinct of personal adornment. Major General Robley has devoted a good sized volume to the practice aa pertaining to the New Zealanders. The Maori tattooing, known to them as ‘‘moko,’’ is a kind of face carving. The process is very painful and the patient is generally ill for some time, suffering terribly from fever and swelling in the wounds, but he is consoled in the midst of his worst agony by reflecting upon the probable effect of the new adorn- ment in terrorizing his enemies and fas- cinating the fair sex. During his retire- ment his relatives and friends come in large parties to see him and chant verses set aside fer such occasions, praising the beauty that will be his when the moko is complete. This custem seems to have insinuated itself imto the songs of the people toa large extent. The following verse is taken from Sir George Gray's collection of Maori legends. The brother of the celebrated Te Henhen laments his death in these words: Turn yet this once thy bold, athletic frame, And Ist me see thy skin carved o'er with lines Of blue, and let me see thy face, So beautifully chiseled into various forms. In addition to the moko on their faces, the New Zealanders have their thighs stained entirely black, with the excep- tion of a few narrow lines. This, ac- cording to Captain Cook, gave them the appearance of wearing striped breeches. The women are tattooed only about the mouth and chin, and sometimes across the lips, which the Maori stand- ard of beauty demands shall be very full and painted blue. The instrument used by the moko art- ist is very much like a small chisel, about a quarter of an inch in width. The blade was driven into the flesh by - means of a sharp tap with a little mal- let. It often penetrated quite through the cheek, so that smoke from a pipe would issue forth. Flax dipped in pig- ment was applied to the incisions, aud the work was fiished and left to heal without medical or any other attention. This Maori tattooing gave rise to the remarkable traffic in dried heads that became such 2 scandal that it was stop- ped by legislation in 1831. Mokomokai is the name given by New Zealanders to dried heads. When a man dies, his head is cut off and dried. It is highly prized as a memento by his friends. In time collectors come to offer tempting prices for the heads, valuing the specimens according to the moko upon them. This created such a de- mand, it is said, that many a battle and predatory expedition have been under- taken expressly to obtain choice tattooed heads. Finally it became a very danger- ous thing for a man to be the proud possessor of well done moko. Only the great chiefs were exempt from momen- tary risk of death, and even they often fell victirgs to a combination of private grudge :f 1 cupidity. Major General Robley tells of a cer- tain captain who wished to purchase 3 head. The chief and a number of his people came on board the vessel to bargain. The specimens that were ex- hibited did not meet with the captain’s “pproval. The chief admittyvd that the moko was not very choice; but, poirt- ing to his men, he toid the purchaser to pick out any one that suited him, and when the vessel returned the head he chose should be dried and ready for him. The origin of the fashion of wearing patches has been attributed to the fol- lowing circumstance: Once upon a time the wives of the Scythian officers be- came jealous of the beautiful Thracian Captives their husbands had broaght from tho wars. So, when their lords aud masters were away, the angry dames caused designs of sun, moon and stars to be pricked on the faces of the Thracian women, hoping to make.them hideous. But, contrary to expectation, when the Scythians returned they great- iy admired the dark blue tracery, which Sef off the delicacy of the rest of the skin to such advantage that they com- velled their wives to adopt the fashion. SS Mt Eogecombe Farm FOR SALE. The subscriber offers for sale this valu- able farm, containing about 66 acres, which areall cleared and in a high state of cultivation. Gn the premises there ina fine dwelling fouse and «:x out ,buildings, suitable for all farming purposes, Thie property is situated on Mt Edward ac, about 1} miles from the city, and 390 yde from St Dun+tan’s Cuilege, and adapted for modern tarmiog. For fuller particulars apply to C. BENOIT, Eureka Hotel, Water St ¥ Ch’town, P.E.1.—75 25 w. ; | ee ———— Charlottetown. Not in it with our Great Marked Down Sale. goods; but they must be sold, Read our price list below, they represent the best values ever shown in Our stock all nice, new, fresh Marked Dourn Prices Seay BBGeebilcesinnese « LOMO dens BE i dco td eeenee Men’s Suits ooee 31D Worth 4.50 | $ Youths’ Suits Dike Ae 6+-0 MPH Aine daw uae Worth. $1.50.... 2.00; 00:0 Boys & Children’s Suits a: ig 03k tac nhc ance cial dak oats ee 1.50 ‘ich kee' <n 1,75 jtevdsia tc 9.50 ccnb veh ee acene 5.009 axvele kine 8.79 4.50 & aca os ee pin bite ecneieaee 5.00 Vi) coe \ eae Delve coerce icececsclOr. Ge o 50) 5: 5 cee We CO. 00s4 wie 6ttiewiinss s+. 200. 6 S BR on ae (Bees cctv cke denen 18 - e 6B. on ee S.AR. cs cctibetiaiees 2 Oe te ae eee 10-00 U.50. 4. oscc¥ax Bootes 10 6D 6 78. «<< jue BORO 16.56...:«<6t ee ieee t ae Tee os - window. Absolutely Pure. Celebrated for its great ljeyvening strength and healthfulness Asrures the food egainst alum and all forms ot sdulteration common to the cheap brauds ROYAL BAKING POWDEX# co. NEW YORK ARE YOU A 000 COOK Ifso you will appreciate the fra- grance and flavor whick our Extracts impart to your cooking. Why lose time and patience experi- menting with worthless and unreliable goods, when you can get the best from your grocer by asking for the “Sovereign” Brand. SOVEREIGN FLAVORING EXTRACTS Have stood the test of years, and their increasing sale proves their superiority. Ask your Grocer for them. Simson Bros. & Co. Manufacturers. |} as a boy. See samples of our values in our big Compare them with anything you can see, and then be satisfled that place to buy your clothing is the ~~” HE KEPT THE RECEIPT. And an Unjust Suspicion, Eighteen Years Old, Was Dispelled. “That time when I was dumped and robbed in the house of my friends,’’ said the old politician, ‘‘I was so disgusted that I pulled up stakes and decided to try a new community in the west. While I was out there prospecting for a location I came across a country judge whom I had known He had stolen my knife, my rabbits and my pigeons. He became in- corrigible and was sent to the reform school. It was the popular verdict that he would never be any good, and he was held up asa terrible example to the rest of us boys. ‘IT thought it my duty to give the good people out there a warning and took a prominent man of the place into my con- fidence. He had implicit faith in the squire and believed him as good a man as they had in the state. ‘It’s easily tested,’ I said, ‘and you can’t afford to have adishonest man in his position. Here’s a promissory note given me 20 years ago, and I indorsed it at the time. I loaned that fellow moncy to get out of town and turn over a new leaf. He vowed by all that’s good that he’d repay me, and this is all I have to show for my investment. If he’s an honest man, he’ll make some settlement.’ ***We’'ll see,’ said the squire’s friend. In an hour they came back together, and the squire gave my hand a wring that stzrted the tears. ‘I paid that paper 18 years ago,’ hedeclared. ‘Here’s the receipt. I wondered why you never wrote me,’ There it was. With it was a letter from the mnan that was then my lawyer, saying that the note had been miislaid and that the receipt would zerve. **In five days the squire and I were back to the oldtown. The man who had bought the nomination from under me was the rascally lawyer to whom the money had been paid. You should have heard the squire comb the sneak down and then make him resign in my favor. We don’t reed men any more honest than that same justice of the peace that I suspected,’’— Detrojt Free Press. The Usual Way. ‘“‘Papa,’’ said Jacky, ‘‘would you like to have me give you a birthday present?’’ ‘*Yes, indeed.”’ ‘Then now is the time to double my weckly pocket money, so’s I'll have the money to buy it when your birthday comes. ’’—Pearson’s Weekly. NO BACKSHEESH. Arabs Will Not Accept Any Gifts From Their Desert Guests, R. ‘Lalbot Kelly, an English artist who has lived long among the Arabs, writes and illustrates a paper entitled ‘‘In the Desert With the Bedouin,’’ which appears in The Century. In dis- | cussing Arabian hospitality, Mr. Kelly says: I had not much time for quiet ob- servation, as one by one all the head men of the tribe called to pay their re- spects to the ‘‘stranger within their gates.’’ Taking off his shoes at the en- trance, each one advanced with many salaams and, kissing my hand, uttered the single word, ‘‘Mahubbah’’ (‘‘ Wel- come’’). They then seated themselves in a long row at the other side of the tent, discussing me in undertones. No one spoke to me unaddressed, and even the sheik himself, whose guest I was, would not sit on the carpet beside me uninvited. Literally, while the guest of the Bedouin, your tent is sacred, and all the tribe are your willing servants, and, though I have repeatedly paid comparatively long visits to them, Ihave never yet succeed- ed in pressing a gift upon my host. I remember asking the sheik Saoui el Tahoui, chief of the Hanaardi Arabs, if he knew any of the pyramid Arabs at Gizeh. He replied, spitting upon the ground, ‘‘They are not Bedouins; they tuke backsheesh,’’ thereby expressing his contempt for mercenary service. On an- other cccasion, while living with the Nephaarta, the sheik Mansour Abu Nasrullah had attached to me a young Arab whose special duty it was to at- tend to my various wants while paint- ing. At the end of the month I tried to induce him to accept a sovereign as backsheesh. Looking much alarmed, he exclaimed: ‘‘Oh, my master, I can- not! It is not allowed. Thesheik would kill me if he knewI had accepted a gift.’’ And all my arguments failed to persuade him to take the tin. snarp Iectort. First Boy (conten:ptuously }—Huh! Your mother takes in washin. Second Boy—O’ course. You didn’t suppose she’ leave it hangin out at uight unless your father was iy prison did ye?—Strard Magzzine, RICHARD Iil. De Never Injured the Masses and Was Not Unpopular With Them. If Richard be tried by the only proper standard, that of his own time, he will be found to be not more but less cruel and blocdy than either his predecessors or those wRo came after him. The act which has especially blackened his inernory is the mysterious removal or murcer of the princes. Yet Clifford, backed by Margaret of Anjou, had kill- ed in egld blocd Richard’s brother, the Earl of Ruthland, a boy of 16, while Henry VIJ imprisoned and executed the feeble minded Earl of Warwick, the son of Clareace. In mere numbers of exe- entions, excluding, of course, on both sides those whe were taken in open re- bellion, Richard has much less to an- ewer for than Queen Margaret or Henry VII sand far less than Henry VIII, who put to death anybody who happened to be distasteful to him on political, per- sonal or religious grounds. There was no public opinion in that day against putting to death any one who had played and lost in the great struggle of politics. Executions were a recognized part of the business. When the game went against 1 statesman in those days, as Mr. Speaker Reed once said. he did not cross the aisle and take his place as the leader of his majesty’s opposition; he Was sent to the tower and had his head cut off. Autres temps, autres merurs, At every turn of the whee! in the long struggle between the Lancastrians and the Yorkists the victorious party al- ways executed every leader of the other side upon whem they covld lay hands. Such were the rules of the socicty and such the politics in which Richard was brought up, and he played according to those rules and without excess, paying the final forfeit. himself with undaunted courege. : Nothing is farther from the truth than the notion that Richard was un. popular with the masses of the people. He had never injured them, and they did not care how many nobles or princes he put to death.—Hon. Henry Cabot Lodge in Scribner’s. Weare the Clothiers and the Hatters, and our stvles and prices say so. —McKay Woollen Co. GIRL LIFE IN MEXICO. fhe Has Considerable Freedom, but It Is of the Right Kind. Mexican home life is unique. It dif- fcrs very essentially from the domestic life of the Anglo-Sggon race, for it is founded on respect for parents. The in- fluence of the Catholic church is power- fulin maintaining a high grade of fam- ily behavior. There is a sweetness and a charm about a well ordered Mexican home which is a revelation to northern people who have imbibed a false idea of matters here. The women of the best Mexican families are naturally of 2 gen- ile disposition, but they command obe~ flience, and rarely spoil their sens, whom they idolize. There are excep- tions, but they are not erough to brea down the general social discipline. As for the girls, no reputable Mexi- zan father or mother would allow for a moment the thought of permitting a girl of any age to be on the streets after dark unless accompanied by an older person, a trusted servant or elder broth- er. So, even among gir!s of the humbler class, there is no street strolling im the evening. They may, in warm weather, go to the alameda, or public park, when there is a band concert, but always un- der escort. They may go to a tertulia, or evening party, but with some com- petent person. They may dance, mildly flirt, on such occasions, but they are al- ways under the watchfal eye of a rela- tive. There is plenty of proper freedom for young girls, and a larger liberty in the cities than formerly, but they are not allowed to run about without escort, and avery careful eye is kept upon them by parents and relatives, even to distant male cousins. Such.a thing as a young girl or young wdpan of any character or family being upon the street at night, alone and unattended, is unknown. Your daughter goes to visit a friend in the afternoon and stays to tea. Then the gentleman and lady of the house, the gentleman alone or ana old servant brings her home. So the streets of this big town are never the scene of foolish, flighty girls being fol- lowed and ‘‘picked up’’ by strangers. And as for men who insult young girls and wemen, the rethedy is usually a sudden and fatal one. In milder cases the newspapers give minute descriptions of the ‘‘satyr’’ who has insulted a lady, and the public is asked to take warning. One fellow, who, in an interior city, made an insulting remark about a lady standing at a window, was conducted to the alameda, and, in view of the chief part of the town’s best society, was heid dwwn on a stone bench and caned until he yelled for mercy, and was then or- dered out of town on the next train. He went. In another city a male teacher, a was ‘‘too fresh’’ in his conduct to- ard young girl pupils, was waited on by a deputation of gentlemen and asked to favor the city by his permanent ab- sence. He, too, went. The etiquette regarding the protecticn of women from molestation and insult is such as prevails in the southern states of the American Union. There is no fooling on the streets, in the theaterg and public places with respectable wom- eu. There is something left here of the old Spanish idea of the sacredness of womanhood, and the line is sharply drawn between honest women and the other kind.—Boston Herald. Factory Wages In Russia, As for the distribution of wages, the pay of a woman amounts to three-quar- ters of that of, a man, that of a boy or girl of 12 tv 17 years to one-half, that of a child under 12 years toone-third of & grown man’s wages. The advantage arising for the factories from women’s and children’s wages is such that no bumanitarian attempts have becn as yet able to solve that harassing problem in any civilized country. But as the wages of workingmen in Russia are ab- solutely reduced to a minimum, and scarcely sufficient to keep soul and body together for more than 13 hours’ daily toil, it is a cruel and gross injustice to cut working woraen’s wages by a third, since the first necessaries of life aro alike in men and women regardless of sex. The monthly wages of an adult la- borer, man or woman, in England are 214 times (124.05 per cent), in America 4 4-5 (379.14 per cent) times, greater than the wages >f a like laborer in the Moscow factories. Since, however, the duration of working time in the three countries is different, Mr. Dementieff has reduced the comparison of wages per hour and come to the conclusion that wages in England are by 284.5 per cent and in Massachusetts by 423 per cent higher than those in the Moscow facto- ries. If we make a good allowance for the higher cost of living in America— which, however, is to be understood cum grano salis, cnly the luxuries of life being dearer here, not the neces- saries like meat, flour, bread—still no comparison can be drawn between the mode of living of an American anda Russian laborer. —Catholic World. Try amince, lemon or apple pie tonight, ‘and buy it at the Eciipse Bak ery. 2S AIR, 2 ces paca nemegsin he a Sint Rages sap as co rang NOIR gy a “ «ta te es oe es ie ee ee, ae