. Fr. ‘ oe” _" ig See >. i ee > $I 4a , oP erg noe CORs pte 8 * 2 - | = ~s SEE, Spee gf mn, emma , a > he Ua ane FROM e The Examiner Publishing Company RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne Vear .. 84.00 Six Mouths.... 2.00 Three Months 1.00 @me Moméh.....s.... . O35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or th Cnuitec States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER fassuei every Friday morning. It is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily and Ss a firstclasss newspaper containing all the latest pews. Sabscription $1.00 a'year, THE DAILY EXAMINER SEPTEMBER 1, 1897. "SAUCE FOR THE GOOSE”. Mr. M. Cameron, M. P., in replying to the Goderich Signal, explains the difference beiwe: n a Conservative public man getting sion appointed to public office and a Liberal M.P. acting in the same way. The Conservative is responsible for an act of nepotisms the Liberal gives h:s friends to serve his country. Because of this di-tiiction Mr. Cameron writes :— | did not denounce Sir R. J. Cartwright becau-e be had two sous +e-vingthe country did pot assail Sir O. Mowat because he made his son sheriff of Toronte, or the Hon. Joha Dryden because he made his brother registrar of Ontario, or the Hon. &.S. Hardy because he secured agudgeship or his brother.” Mr. Cameron, the writer of these lines, did denounce Sir John MacDonald because ot his marriage to a relative of a civil service employe ; but those whe appreciate the distinction he drawa between bis own ard others relatives will also see how good a Liberal he showed himself to be in both cases .—Montreal Gazette. a re CAUGHT BY A BAUBLE. Sir Wilfred Laurier said in London, Ontaria, that he would get us a trade preference for Our procucts in the British market. Thiswas during the election. ‘neo Sir Wilfred went to London, England, and violently: opposed such a preference when it was offered him. This was after the election. But Sir Wilfred is bringing-ever with him « large shiny Cobden Club medal. So that if be has lost preferential trade and its immense benefits for Canada and the Empire, we have at least the consolation of kaowing that he has earned a medal with which to decorate himself.— ‘Mail aed Empire. GREETINGS. The-Arabians shake nands six or eight time-. Once isnotenough. If, however, they be persons of distincton, they embrace aod kiss one another several times, and alse: kiss their own hands. In Tarkey the salute is to , lace the hand upon the breast and bow, which is both graeeful and appropriate, in Burma when a man meets @ woman, he pu's his nose and his mouth close to her cheek and draws a long breath, as if inbaling adelicious perfume. He does not kiss her cheek, strange to say. A «man is greeted in exactly the same way. In the greater part of Germany it is cons dered an act of politeness, not of gallantry, for a man to kiss a woma ;’ band. In Italy that privilege n allowed only to near relatives, while in Rusia it is extended to kissing the :fore head. The menof Continental Europe have a custem that would seem queer, not to say larghable, here. They greet one another with a kiss, if they be friends, not on the cheek but right on the lips.—Harper’s Round Table. OBITUARY. Suddenly passed away, on the 5:h inst, at Ro!lo Bay,aged 58 years,Ma’gsret Jane, beloved wife of Richard Keefe and daugh- ter of the late Hon. James Dingwell. A family of seven children sturvive her. She was & woman possessed of many good qualities both of head and heart. As wife aod mother she was affectionate and de- voted. As a neighbour she was kind and obliging, and in all the other relations of hfe upright and conecientious. The fune- ra! services were conducted by Rev. J. R. McKay and were mest impressive. Her remains were accompanied by a large number of persone to the cemetery at Bay Fortune where they were laid away, beside loved ones gone before, to await the resu- rection morn. —_———_-4>o——__——— Mary Kyle Dallas, the well known writ- er, died at New Yark last week fro, heart failure. Mrs. Dallas was fifty years of | age. Her husband was Jacob A Dallas, an artist well known in New York art circles. Dyspepsia Is weakness of the stomach. It is the source of untold misery. It may be cured by toning and strengthening the stomach and enriching and purifying the blood with Hood’s Sersaparilla. Many thousands have been cured by this medi- — cine and write that now they “can eat | anything they wish without distress.”’ Hood's “pari parilla {s the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier, Hood’s Pills act easily, effectively. 25e. NEWS NOTES. A despatch from Bombay says that cholera has broken owt in the Northump- shire Regiment. Cincinnati bas been chosed as the place for holding the next encatupment of the Grand Army of the Republic. It isexpecte| that the first hundred miles of the Crows Nest Pass railway will be completed by November Isc, The alien tax law bas keen decided to be wnconstitutiona by i of the United States Court at Pa. The strike of progressive tailors in New York, which was begun on Sunday has been declared off, the demands of the strikes for an increase of wages #eing yvranted. Judge Acheson, Pittsburg, A preat American scientist is now busily engaged in perfecting an instrument which carries words on the rays of light. He bas é ed me already succeeaeca in telepooning ivy this | means for one mile. As the resnit of drisking whiskey bonght in a Sitka saloou five Icdiaus are dead and the rema‘ner are dying. The whiskey was atixture of whiskey, coal oil, lemon jeice, and alcohol. A musical bicycle has been invented by aman in Presberg, Austria. The motion of the wheel grinds out a tune like a hand- organ, avd the rider rolls along to the strains of delightful harmony. A family of unenviable cheracter at Oxford, N.&., recently invited a Jewish pediar to dimner and while he was eating they ransacte¥, his valise, taking ,oods therefrom. He discovered them and pro- tested but he was thrown into ‘the streets. A crowd afterwards smashed every window in the house with sticks stones. It is estimated that at the beginning of the present century not more than 5,000,- 000 or 6,600,090 copies of the Scriptures were in existence in the word. Latterly more copies than that are being printed every:year, and the total number of Bibles published since the year P80 is said by a recent statistician to be 404,000,000. Mr. Henry Crank, of New York, has been permitted by the New York courts to change his oame. In his appeal the petitioner eet forth that ke was handi-- capped in life by the name. He wasa Crank, and yet he was nc crank. When his name was mentioned people smiled, and their mirth made it smpossible for them to take bim seriousiy. The courts saw the point.. Twelve years ago a young man in Rock- land, Me., was etruck by awooden picket thrown by his playmate, which went through his left cheek, the scar making a smal! dimple when healed. A few months ago the young man, while bridling a horse, the animal swung around, kicking him in the face, the calk on ome shoe cutting through the right cheek. (t has healed now «0-as to make an exact match for the dim ple on the other side made twelve years ago. The establishment of a sert of “Siberia” for the anarchists of all mations has been proposed by Spain; a pental colony where dangerous anarchists, who have not yet taken the life ofa king, emperor or presidemt can be confined for life. It ia said that Austria, Germany, Italy and Ru-sia.bave received the proposal favor-— ably, but Great Britain, France, Switzer. land and the United States have not yet been heard from, and will probably uot consent to the proposal. After an agitation which began more than onedhundred years ago. and which has beamearried on vigorously ever since, in Norway, the Natioval Legislation haa at length, by an overwhelming majority, abrogated the law which excluded the Roman Catholic religious orders and con- gregations from this formerly vltra- Protestantecountry. Only theJesuits are stillto bekeptout. But with thisexcepticn the emancipation of the Norwegian Catho- lics is complete. A number of Lutheran pastors whe occupy seats in Parliament voted with the majority. The expedition of Prince Luigi-of Savoy, who bas arrived at Victoria, B.€©., to the summit of Mount St. Elias, Alesica, bas fixed finally the altitude of Mount &t. Elias at 18,120 feet. ‘There was not the élightest indication of volcanic origin anywhere. A new glacier was discovered by the explorers from the emineace ot Mount St. Elias, be- tween the Augusta Mountains and ‘Great (Logan and was named by the prince “Colombo.” At the summit of Mownt St. Ejias there was neither wind nor fog and only 20 below freezing. The prince does not cousider the ascent difficult, excegt for the last few hundred feet, which is a solid mass of ice. The first census of Russia has bean completed, and shows that the population in Ewropean as well ae Asiatic Ruesia ameuats altogether to 129,000,000 inhabi tants; that is totay, 3,500,000 more than the figures at which the empire has until now been officially rated. In point of population, therefore, Russia comes third | inrank. Cbina comes first with an esti- mated horde of 400,000,@00, while the British Empire comes next with 208,000,- 000. figures based not on guesswork, as in China, but upon the most recent census. Russia in Europe has 94,000,600; Poland 9, 500, 000; the Caucasus, 9,700,000. and Siberia, 5,700,000. St. Petersburg hasa population of 1,267,000 inbabitaat:; War- eaw, 614,000, and Odessa, 404,000. Coresvitie, Pa., Aug. 29.—In a fit of ungovernable rage, Frank Moore instantly killed grandfather Ruben Segner and seriously wounded Victor Segner, his uncle, and Charles and Benjamin Moore. There was a dispute among the five men, and young Moore becoming incensed, rushed into the house with the threat that he would shoot his opponents’ heads off. A moment jate he appeared at an upstairs . window with the gun and fired directly into the group. He made his escape, but was soon afterwards captured. IN VAIN Sing to the narrowed souland hardened heart full well Songs of the fairest trath and purest love that be, Nothougbts rise up to zreet; no joy, no sympathy, Nor hope, nor aspiration gladly answers thee; For beauty stirs no soul where beauty doe- not dwell. —Preston Cooke Farrar in August Lippincait’s, _— en Temperance Lectrures.—[o the brick Methodist Church on Sept. 5th, at 8.15, p. m. “The Temptations that Surround that Boy of Yours” will be discussed by Rev. EK. O. Taylor. It isan important subject. All parents and teachers should hear inn. Healso speaks in Baptist Church on Monday evening, 6:b, at 8 o’clock and in Zon Charch on ‘Tuesday evening wth at the same hour, Hicrway Rossery —While,Miiton Gra- ham aud sister, of Moulus River, were driving liome from Richebueto en satur- day evening about 8 o’clock they were held up by four men, and atthe point of a revolver, compelled to hand over what money they had, which happened to be quitea sam. Mr. Graham had $180 ana his sister $15, all of which the highwav- men got. It was too dark to recognize thee and no definite Knowledge is known as to their identity. There is po place where you get so | hungry as at an exnibition, theretore pre- pare yourself by getting an early dinver -at Large & Sons showrooms on Great Geerge Street, where each tiay of the ex- ‘hibition you can geta substantial dinner for only 25 cents, and an-extra good tea at the same price. Dinner will be ready at eleven o’clock and you can have it on sour way to the exhibition. Tea can be tad from four o’clock for those who wi-h to leave for home earlier. When we sav the ladies of Grace Church are providing the good things for the tables that is switicient to ensure perfect satisfaction. To investors, -- The ubilee Mining and Developing Company are giving to in- vestore a better advantage than anv other company inthe market today. Besides the shareholders boiding shares in the K londyke, they also obtain an interest in the eleven gold claims which the company own at British Columbia. These claims, which will begin operation in the spring are: The Maria, Maniteba, Stanford, Aggie, Vista, Ella, Eina Last‘Chance, Vancouver, North Siar, and Brown Jug. Investors should particularly vete this. A limited pum ber of shares now for sale at 10 cents per share. Apply to ©. Redmuad, agent fer the Island. lw The Waltham and €lgin factories ad- vanced the price on their watches. W W Wellner bought largely'before the rise aud «-lls at the old price. 196—3w We are always busy selling towels, sheeting and pillow cottons. We suppose it is because we sell geod qualities at low prices.—Stanley Bros, The Always Busy 210, Sore. Ili &ealth is a luxury thatenly the rich can afford, and that mo one can en- joy. very woman is not so situated that she can be an interesting imvalid, or rather, an uninteresting invalid, for there never was an.interesting one. The woman who suffers fram weakness and disease of the distinctly Yeminine or- gans iswertain to become am invalid. No woman can suffer in this way and be a healthy, ihappy, amiable wife aud a compe- tent mother. Troubles of this mature sap the stremgth, rack the nerves, paint lines of suffering upon the face, destrary the tem- per, make the once bright eyes dull and the once active brain sluggish, and trans- form a vivaciqus woman into a weak, sickly invalid. The one #ure, speedy, permanent cure for all disorders of tue distinctly feminine nature is Dr. Rierce’s Favorite Prescription. It acts directly wn the delicate and import- ant organs comcerned, and makes them strong, healthy, vigorous and elastie. It cures the internal ulceration and inflamma- tion that give rise ito a debilitating drain on the system. It és the best medicine for overworked, ‘“‘tumdown’’ women. “‘ About six years ago my wife became affli¢ted with female weakuess.’’ writes the Rev. { f. Coppedge, of Eimo, Kaufman Co., Texas. “Stie could not stand on her feet or get in any position in which she did not exffer great pain. Ske despaired of ever again being well. She took sig bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription ané has been well and happy fer twelve months.”’ It is a druggists business to give you, nat to tell you, what you want. Thirty-one one-cent stamps cover the eustoms and mailing of a paper-covered copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Med- ical Adviser. Cloth-bound, 50 stamps. Send to Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y, BUSINESS STAND FOR SALE J. W. HUGHES offers for sale his well established Business Stand at Emer- ald, consisting of a large store, two dwell- ing houses and barns, with four acres of land, for sale by private negotiations with Geo, B. McKay, Esq, Clifton, New} London, until Tuesday, 21st September, | next, when it will be eold by Public Auction on the premises at Eleven, o’clock, a, m. Title guaranteed. J. W. HUGHES, augl4tf Ottawa chester Sts, business stand and fHE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN SEPTEMBER 1, 1897 EQUINE HISTORY. | The skin of the horse is valuable for | both gloves and shoes. The first English riding academy was = founded by William III. The trotting horse is an institution of *| the present century. Before 1800 run- uing was the only method of racing. In most ceuntries of Evzope horses were not employed in agricultural labor unsil a comparatively recent period. The best known horse of Napoleon wus Marengo. From first to last, Napo- teon had 19 horses shot under him in battle. As a rule, wild horses, though not 80 large as the domesticated animals, are more muscular and can better endure | protracted labor. ‘he werking age of a horse rarely exceeds 15 years, though his natural life sometimes extends to more than twice this period. The first mention of the horse in the Hobrew Seriptures is in the blessing be- stowed by Jacob upon Dan, in which the patriarch alludes to the animal as syell known—*‘ Dan shall be a serpent by the way, an adder in the path that bit- eth the horse heels, so that his rider shal} fall backward. “—-St. Louis Glebe: Denrocrat. eT sf 7 <= SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They aiso relieve Distressifrom Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Mearty Eating. <A per- fect remeay for Dizziness, Nausca, Drowsi- ness, Rad Tasteiin the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. _ Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand <arter’s Little Liver Pills. DR CLIFT treats Chronic Diseases ‘by the Salisbury’ method of persistert seif-help ia 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, Gastwitis, Uleer, Cancer, Dropsy, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Constipa- tion, Piles, Fissures, Fistula. Diseases of Heart—Vaivular, Fatty Enlargement, Palpitation, Of Liver—faundice, Diabetes Cirrhosis, etc. Of Kidaeys—Albuminuri: Bright’s Disease, etc. Of Spleen and Bladder—Cystitis. Of the Blood—Anae- mia, Chlorosis, Scrofula, Malaria, Rheu- matism,Gout, Sciatica Scumwy, Purpura-O“F male Organs—Inflammations and Displac ments of Womb, Ovaries, Bladder or Bow- els. Menstrual irregularities of Sexual Organs. Of Nerves andSpine,—Nervous Prostrition, Sleeplessness. Decline, Hy- Steria, Tremors, St. Vitus’ Dance, Chorea Epilepsy, Convulsions, Paralysis, Loco- motor Ataxia. Paralysis, Agitans, Soften ing of Brain. Some forms of Insanity— Dementia, Mania, Hypochondria, Melan- chulia. Failure of Vision and Voice,. ness. Of Skin— Eczema, Salt Rheun,, Erysipelas, Syphilis. Tumors, Giandular Fatty, Fibroid, Uterine, Ovariam and Can cer, Goitre, Cretinism, Obesity, Corpul- ency. Drug and Liquor Habits—Opium, Morphine, Chloral, Cocaine, Tobacco, Stimulants. Of Bones and Joints—De- formities, Curvatures, and Pott’s Disease of Spine, Paralysis, Hip Disease, Knock- knee, Bow Legs, Club and Flat Fout, Wry Neck, Rickets Scrofula, Sore Legs, Var- icose Ulcers, ete. Continuous intelli: gent treatment insures Minimum of suffer- ing and Maximum of Cure, possible in each case. Avoid attempts unaided or under blind leaders, DR. CLIFT Graduate of N Y University ardthe N Y Hospital: 20 years’ practice in N Y City. Diploma registered in U S and Canada. Address :—Charlottetown, P. E. I. @ffice :—Victoria Row. Telephone Call. Accommodations Reserved for pat‘eats. Keferences on application. 94—d&w lyr. a siimeiidiaiiiteist a a For Sale or To Let. That centrally situated 3 story brick building on the corner of Queen and Dor- | dwelling | house, suitable for wholesale or retail | groceries. These premises are well adapted. Apply to MRS. 0. CONNOLLY, | and follow er; ~~ instructions: Own Or to John McKenna, Queen St, Aug2 —3wks JOSEPH LADUE, ‘at the mouth of the Klondyke and Yukon Rivers, by erecting | ‘ which places the facts in the possession of our customers. The Land of ~~ Golden nuggeis the new Bonanza King of the Klon- dike Gold Regions, gives the facts, His book reads like “ The Arabian Nights” BUT Joseph Ladue KNOWS whereof he writes. He was the first man on the spot when the first gold was discovere ' last August. 1896, He located one rich claim, and immediately purchased twelve others at a low price before their value was known. He hag 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, the first house in the region in September, one month after the gold was first discovered. He bought 178 »cres from the government on the city site where his town lots, 150x50, me now selling for $5,000 each. Mr. Ladue was fortunate encugh 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 posted — on Alaska and the great North West Territories than Mr. Joseph Ladue. He has just returned from that country to his old home in Schuyler Falls, N. Y., where he passd a la portion of his boyhood and early manhood. Mr. Ladue left his home nearly twenty years ago to seek his tortune in the West, going first to the Black Hills, where he was successful in goid mining, thence to Arizona and the Pacific Coast, and» finally located in Alaska and the North West, where he has e»vered almost the entire country since 1882. Mr. Ladue is a typical pioneer; strong, hardy ana resoiuve—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 result of - an abundance of the world’s goods far beyond the dreams of men, but he has evidently all his time been closely ie the conditions of that 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 could 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 bigs of virgin gold began to be poured out upon miat counters in San Francisco under the eyes of the whole world (for modern journalism does this, annihilating time and space), people began to wonder, and the wonder grew day by day as the reel facts were disclosed, and now people who are well intormed as to the facts declare that half the truth has not been told of the golden treasures of the Yukoa Valley. As we have already said, there is nc man alive to day who knows more about this wonderful country than does Mr. Ladue. What makes his talk of it specially interesting aad reliable is the fact that his knowledge of it is practical. It has not been gained from hearsay nor from desolutory visits made now and then at certain favorable seasons of the year, bat from steady living there through the long summer days and the long winter nights year in and year out for 15 years, where he now owns the best min ng claims on the Klondyke aud its tributavies. In presenting his book to the public we do so kuowtng that it is by an authority on the subject of which he writes. His first work entitled “KLONDYKE NUGGETS ” is a brief description of the new gold regions, and anyone desiring authentic information should not fail to avail them- selves of our NOMINAL OFFER, REFESIBER, that our office is the sole distributing point for this locality, having closed exclusive arrangements with Mr. Ladue’s publishers. , The cover of the work is beautifully printed in red and gold, the gold showing one of the author’s nuggets as nearly as it is possible to reproduce it on paper. , 9 itis easy to — Secure a copy of Conpon for“ Klondpke Kugges.” | “KLONDYK!: NUGGETS.” os Cut out this coupon and bring it with you as evidence 9 that you are a reader of The Examiner and Ten Cents in cash and a copy of ‘‘Klondyke Nuggets,” by Joscph Ladue, the Bonanza King of new gold regions, wii be handed to you. Cut out this coupon and send it together with 12c,in stamps for clerical work and mailing expense, and we will send a copy of ‘*‘ Klondyke Nuggets” to your address. Write very clearly and give your name and address in full. Remember, you should not delay as you will be unable to secure this valuable work on the gold region in any other way. Call at our office or address The Examiner, Charlottetown et ao Cut out the Coupon ee POOL POO OO DL OS —— o— .