The Examiner Publishing Company ——s val anne ay ke tae FROM THE OFFIC®@ oF KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION {LIN ADVANCE) @ue Voar . 84.00 Six Moths 2.00 Thr ‘onths 1.00 Uae Vonth 0.35 - ost paid to any part of Canada or th 1 ‘ states rHE WEEKLY EXAMINER fasued «very Friday morning. It is made up Of mm ‘which has appeared in the Daily a! a first ciasss newspapercontainine wich teat news Subscription $1.00 a year THE DAILY BXAMINER OCTOBER 16. 1897. 7 SECORATIVE JAPANESE. Ilonce \Vays of Summer Life Among the Mikado’s People. nus excepted, there are no out- ‘ wwifestations of the old poetry ‘ cere life so remarkable as those houses occupying all the pic- sites of the to country. Wherever t 2 view worth going to see you \ most ¢ertainlvy find a summer L. uilt to cemmand it, no matter how wild or poor the district. will find summer houses cling- ince to sea cliffa over the thunder of tre.acrs, nestling in shadows of gorges over tic roaring of rapids, strutted out e-er the precipice frouts like eagles’ nesis :% the verge cf dead craters, for in Jap in there will always be summer gas. w Dorever there is summer beauty, travciors happy to please their eyes aud *t their feet and to leave rome copyers in payment for the privilege of tle v. :om and the repose. The summer house at which I am pow s‘sring is typical of the class, a skeleton structure of two stories, simply and ¢trongly built after the manner of peasants’ dwellings and at a cost of po: bh. 3 $60. Timber is cheap here. On the other? side of Japan sech a build- ing could not be put up for 2300. It stancs om the edge of a lofty cliff and overlooks ‘a little bay pear ancient Moizuseki From ground floor to roof itis epen op three sides, and on the seawurd side shelter from the sun and wind is given by trees rooted in the cliff . low; But towerfig ‘far above the eaves—enormous pines, with branches muvy feetin girth Between the zig- zags of those mighty Jimbs tbere are glimpecs of the sea and fishing sails (canvas or straw) flitting like white or yellow butterflies, and the far pale threxd line of the Hoki coast, and Dia- een's cone thrusting into the clear sky like some prodigious blue crystal, or, looking directly down over the needie foliage of younger pines, you see the wim piing of the bay and bathers laugh- ing among the rocks, and children play- ing with seaweed and shelle. You view the world as a fishhawk views it, though I presume with vastly different sensations. After a swim it ie delight- ful to sleep here, the sharp, sweet sea wind in your hair. You are furnished with a bathing dress, sandals, a big straw hat of curious shape to keep off the sun, barley tea and cakes, a smok- ing box and a pillow, and the price per day of this entertainment is—8 cents! The guest is expected to bring his own food with him and to provide himself with towele.—Lafcadio Hearn in At- lantic Meathly. A curious laudslip cecurred a few days ago in the village of Sattel, in Canton Schw: z. road which runs across the slope of a hill was earried, without eustainiuy any injury, thirty five feetdown the hillside, stopping jast short of being precipitated into the River Steinen. The road from the house, the garden, and all the immediate surroundings of the inn are intact. At the house were two large elms, and even these have in no way suffered. Loxpox, October 12.—Mr. Timothy Healy, anti-Parnellite member of Parli- ament for North Leuth, who hae jaet re- turned from a cycling tour in Ireland, says: “ The potatoes are generally bad. All the crops have been saved where the farmers had the sense or the money to spray them. Nodoubt there willbe keen distress ia the south-western and western counties during the coming winter and spring. Insome places it may approach etarvetion. Mr. Healy admitted that their had been some exaggeration of the difficulty. Hay fever is unusually prevalent in Kansas City, and the chief cause is said to be the pollen of the rag weed which has been allowed to grow as it listed in the streets and door yards. Ee When you buy Sarsaparilla Ask for the best and you'll Get Ayer’s. Ask for Ayer’s and you'll get An inn situated by the side of a) THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, O°TOBER 16, 1897 A New Fashion Needed, Foreman—We need a few lines to complete a column. Kural Editor (wearily )}—Well, say the Prince of Wales has begun wearing old clothes because they are more comfore table. Perhaps it will start a fashion that you and I can follow.—Punch. False Prophets, **They told me,’’ said he to himself, “that when I married her I would be | spoken of as Mrs. Bingle’s husband. But they lied.’’ **So they did,'’ said she, who had overheard. ‘‘Yon are not spoken of at all.’’—Indianapolis Journal. Postponed, Employer—I thought you wanted te go to your grandmother’s funeral this afternoon. Office Boy—Please, sir, it was post- poned on account of wet grounds.— . Truth. Quite Probable. She-—How do yon account for the enormous increase of the English spar- row in America? He—They're too ugly to go on wom- en’s hats!—Chicago Record. ~~. THE GOLD KUSH Is Not More Enthusiastic Than Are the Praises of the Thousands who are Living Today Because of South Am- ericrn Kidney Cure. Thousands verify what is claimed of, South American Kidney Cure Greatest | safest, quickest acting, permanent results. A specitic for kidney disorders in young or | old, male or female. It enjoys the dis-| tinction of a hearty recommendation by | most eminent pbyricians. It relieves dis- tressing kidney disease in six hours. Never fails to cure if persisted in. Acts, dircetly ou the circulation and eradicates from the system all solid end fore gn substances which clog up thete sanitary organs of the human anatomy. Yon test | what others bave proved. Theee words | from a letter received today : “I despaired | of recovery until I u-ed South American Kidney Cure.” Sold ty Dr.S. W. Dodd and Geo. E. Hughes. Toronto, October 12.—The Baptist Min- istets of Toronto yesterday at their regu- lar fortnightly gathering, adopted a resolution, settling torth opposition to sectarian teaching in public schools, and advocating merely ethical teaching of religion. A deputation will wait on the Public School Board to combat the request of the Anglicans, that clergymen be permitted to teach religion in the schools, a certain half hour in the day. THE KLONDYKE'S WEALTH Would be No luducement to the Sufferer if it Stood Between Him and Perfect Health. H. H. Little, Campbellfurd, writes : * About one year ago | bad aeevereatiagk of Typhoid fever and it left my system in a very wesk and nervous condition, in fact, so badly that I despaired of recovery. I was induced to try South American Nervine. In a remarkably short time my health improved, and when I had taken a few bottles | was completely cured and have better health since than for years before.” Sold by Ur.S. W. Dodd aud Geo. E. Hughes. A Very Unit<4 Family. The valne attached by the poor, and even by those who are not in the depths of povertr, to decent surroundings in family life is a very variable quant:ty. Decent lodging is not by any meana universa!!y regarded as one of the prime necessarics of life. Occasionally it is relegated to quite a back seat. An instance was given before the comtnission of a family of seven per- sons—father, mother two grown up sons and three grown up daughters—all liv- ing in one room. With them tbis ar- rangement, was a matter of choice, not necessity, for they earned between them about £7 a week, more than £350 a year, and even from a slum landlord they could ne doubt have afforded ta rent another room or two. Having screwed down the item of rent to an vreducible minimum, they determined to have a thoroughly good time, and this is how the witmess describes their pro- ceedings: ‘‘In the evening they would all go out to the music halls and to the theaters. On Saturday afternoon they would take five tickets each for some Omnibus or conveyance that was going into the country, and om Sunday they would go to Brightom and to other places.’’ It is comforting to reflect that these Arcadian beings were a unit- ed family and always took their pleas- ure together as well as their naps. It is not stated whether they took ip lodgers.—From ‘‘The Housing of the English Poor,’’ by the Right Hon. Lord Monkswell, in North American Review. Remedy For Excess In Eating. A hint to those whe may thoughe¢- lessly at some time or other indulge in excess in eating. If this indisoretion is committed, especially in high seasoned things with rich sanoes, a draught of cold water, aciduiated with lemon juice, will take off the sense of weight at the stomach and assist the digestive process by moderating the alimentary termentation.—-New York Ledger. ECONOMY in taking Hood’s Sar- saparilla, because « 100 doses one dollar” {3 peculiar to and true only of the One True BLOOD Purifier. t = . USE FOR SCRAPS OF TIN, Employed Largely to Stop Rat Holes in Houses and Factories, A twe borse lead of tin clippings was being trensferred to the rear basement of a promirent hotel. It bad come from a ean factory, and the narrow, curling strips bad become so twisted and intertwiued as to form a conglomerate mass that was moved with the greatest difficulty hy two sturdy fellows with stable forks. A bystander who was curious enengh to inauire what use aswell hotel had for such trices was answered by an attache of the house: ‘*We use it for rats. I mean the big, gray fellows with whiskers. The ho- tel rat is bigger, bolder and wiser than any other rat. He laughs at traps, fattens on poison, and the killing or chasing of dogs, cats and ferrets is his pet diversion. Even when energetic measures have rid us | of the pests they are with us agsin in augmented force within a day or two. They will tunnel through almost anything for incredible distances. It is their boring ability that has given us so much trouble hitherto. No matter how we closed up their passageways, the routes were promptly re- onened. Filling the holes with broken | glass was considered a good scheme until we found that with marvelous patience they removed the glass piece by piece. “But we think we've get them now. With this tangled up tin we construct a sort of abatis, covering all places where the beasts are likely to enter our cellars. They can’t get throught it. They can't chew it, and they can’t carry it away as they do broken bottles, for, when Mr. Rat takes hold of a single strip of the tin, he fiods it an inseparable part of a network weighing many pounds.’’—-Philadelphia Record, A Tall Rat Story. The London Field tells this story: A rat was caught alive on board a British naval vessel in a trap, and the beast was thrown from the trap into the water without be- ing killed. A large gull that was follow- ing in the wake of the ship to pick up scrapes of food thrown overboard by the steward stopped several times, endeayor- ing to pick the rat up. Once the bird got too close to the rat’s jaws and the beast grabbed it by the neck. After a short fight the rat succeeded in killing the bird. When the gull was dead, the rat scram- bled upon the bird's body, and, hoisting one wing as a sailand using the other as a rudder, succeeded in steering for the shore. Whether the rat reached shore or not is the question, since the ship soon got out of sight of the skipper and its craft. A Wily Watchmaker. The following story is told of the late Sir John Bennett, the watchmaker: He was, with two friends, traveling up to town from an outlying place some 15 or 20 miles distant, when a little dispute arose as to the exact distance of the jour- vey. The two friends were emphatic in their contradictions of euch other's state- ments, and eventually offered to back thelr own opinions. At this point Sir John came to the rescue. He would not bear of a money bet, but consented to al- low them to settle matters by betting a ten guinea (Bennett's) watch, Vielding to Medical Advice. “Mabel, the doctor says you drink en- tirely too much coffee. It is not good for you.”’ “Why, mamma, it doesn't hurt me a particle, and I like it tow well to quit using it. I just couldn’t get along with- out my coffee.’’ ‘‘And Mme. Loockes, the celebrated an- thority on beauty, says it is ruinous to the complexion.’’ ‘Oh, well, if the doctor thinks I ought not to drink it any more I'll drop it of oourse,’’—Chicago Tribune - - as -_—= — —_—ws “T guess I’ve been victim- ized,”” That’s the guess of many a hard- working man, who, worn-out, “nervous and sleepless, has been for months paying exhorbi- tant bills to a high - priced doctor without a dollar’s worth of benefit. Fre- quently the guess is entirely correct. There / are too many doctors who are only lifted ont of obscurity by the size of their bills. ' The business man or working man who gets run-down and in ill-health from over- work, needs the advice and treatment of a physician who is famous for the thousands of, cases he has cured, and not for the thousands of dollars he has charged. In Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., he will find that kind of a physician. For thirty years Dr. Pierce has been chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgi- cal Institute, at Buffalo. He is the discoverer of a wonderful medicine known as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It is a marvelous med- icine for broken down men and women. It w iets the appetite, purifies the blood, makes the digestion perfect and the liver active. Through the blood it acts directly on every organ of the body, driving out impurities and disease germs. It is the great bleod- maker, flesh-builder and nerve-tonic. It cures nervous prostration and exhaustion, malaria, liver troubles, rheumatism, blood and skin diseases and 95 per cent. of all cases of consumption, weak huings, spitting of blood, lingering coughs and kindred ail- ments. When you ask a dealer for the “Golden Medical Discovery’’ insist upon having it. A dealer is not a physician and has no right to advise some substitute. When the trouble is of long standing write to Dr. Pierce, who will answer let- ters from sufferers without charge. Ver serious or complicated cases, or those need- ing surgical treatment, sometimes find it necessary to come to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, for per- sonal treatment and care. Dr. Pierce can be addressed there. ———. A. A McLEAN, Q. C. Barister, Etc., Brown’s Block Charlottetown Money to Loan. octl3- d&w 3mos. ' Clear Evidence. Judge—What’s your name? Prisoner—I’m Pat Murpby, konor. Judge—Where do you live? Prisoner—Sure, I don’t live any- where, sor. éudge (to second prisoner)—What’s your name? “I’m Denis McCarthy, sor,’’ “Where do you live?’’ ‘*Begorra. your honor, I live next door to Pat Murphy.’’—Punch. your Hew She Appeared, Sumething whizzed by—a mingle- ment of steel spokes and red bloomers, ‘*‘What ts that there?’’ asked Uncle Hiram, withdrawing his gaze from the bigh building to look after the vision. ‘*'That is the new woman,’’ answerad his nephew. ‘‘The new woman? Looks like the old boy.’’—Kalamazoo Telegraph, Stopped the Elopement, ‘‘How did they step the elopement?"” asked Maud. ‘*By a detestable piece of trickery,”’ replied Mamie. ‘‘Her father put his head out of the window and shouted that her hat was on crooked, and when she grabbed for it she upset the tan- dem. ’’—Wushingion Star. His Business, sudge—What is your occupation? Prisoner (who was caught iu a game bling house raid)—I’m a locksmith. Judge—What were you doing in there when the officers entered? Prisoner—I was making a bolt for the door.—-New York Sunday Journal. | SICK HEADAGHE Positively cured by these Little Pills, They ziso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Mearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Taste in 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 carter'’s Little Liver Pills. Wants, Lost, Found &c¢ ———— TO LET—Two new and comfortable dwell- jingson Alley street and rear Upper Prince street, each containing six rooms. [mmediate pessession given. Apply at County Cour office or to the subscriber—George Alley WANTED.—At oncea Tin to M. Stevenson. WANTED.—Poard in aprivate family, in vicinity of Hilisborough Park or Prince of Wales College. No objecticn to one or two o' ber boarders, Add:ess A B C Examiner Vitice. oct 12 tf -Emith. Apply cot ll WANTED.—A servant, must understand rlain cooking, bring reterence. Mis kdward Palmer, Queen Street. oct 11 eod WANTED—An experienced saleslady want ed by James Paton & Co No other needa ply. oct2—t LOST—The party who picked upthe um- brellx on King Square Thursday night or orev morning will kindly return itto W r. WANTED —A cook, Apply to Mra F. w Hyndman, Kent St, oct 9 ay lwk TO LET,.—House with five rooms and stable on Edward St East. Possession given on the 15th of November, Apply to A W Newberry, oct 15—law—ul W ANTED.—A houvekeeper for a family o two who live five miles from town. Protest ant preferred, Apply at this office octé—2wks déw WANTED —An elderly woman as house- keeper inavillage. Four of family. Must be a good cook. owashing, Apply at once to this office. stating wages Srequired and giving references. octl0-3wks FOR SALE.—A three story building situat- ed on Pownal Street—containiog shop and 14rooms. Good stabling on premises. A desirabje business stard. Sale made on easy terms, Apply to B. TRAINOR. sep 30 blw wil ART CLASSES,—Mrs MacNutt will re-open her art classes, October 2nd, at her residence upper Prince Street. Lessons Py in Oil, and Water Colors, from model and nature. Special attention given to Perspective Draw- ing. sep 27 3i TO LET—A House on Prince Street next to Mr, Thomas Alliey’s, eer ee seven large room in first class order; thereis alsoa fine eeller under the whole of the house; there is a good stable with coach house and yard, The above property will be ready a tenant the first of October next. It is occupied at present by George Toombs Esq., who has lived in it fora number of years. Apply to MrT Mc- — Lower Queen street, orto the owner, dward Kelly, Southport, sept 8—eod tr ee MUNYGNS VICTORIES What His Improved Homepathic System Has Bone For the People cf Canada, —_—--— MADE SICK WELL. Troops of Rescued Invalids and Suffer- ers Tell Their Glad Stories. WHAT THE PEOPLE ARE SAYING. Mrs. Annie L. Knox, Gagetown, N. B., ssys: “] suffered from sciatica for four years. The best physicians prescribed for me, but to no avail. Afjer suffering untold agony and sleepless nights, my condition borderiug on nervous prostration, J visited M unyon’s offices at Trem nt Temple, Bos- ton, and was told they could cure me. I commenced the treatment, and in three weeks’ time was cured.” Munyon’s Kheumatism Cure seldom fails to relieve in one to three hours, and cures in a few days Price 25¢c. Munyon’s Dyspepsia Cure positively cures all forms of indigestion and stomach trouble. Price 2§c. Munyun’s Cold Cure prevents pneumonia and breaks up acold ina few hours. Price 25c. Munyon’s Cough Cure stops coughs, night sweats, a!lays soreness, and speedily heals the lungs. _ Price 25c. Munyon’s Kidney Cure speedily cures pain in the back, loins or grcins and all forms of kid- ney disease. Price 25c. Munyon’s Headache Cure stops headache in three minutes Price 25c. Munyon’s Pile Ointment positively cures all forms of piles. Price 25c. Munyon’s Blood Cure eradicates all im- purities of the blood. Price 25c. Munvon’s Female Remedies are a boon to all women. Munyon’s Asthma Remedies relieves in 3 minutes and cure permanently. Price $1. Munyon’s Catarrh Remedies never fail. The Catarrh Cure—price 25c.—eradicates the disease from the system, and the Catarrh Tab- lets—price 25c.—cleanse and heal the parts. Munyon’s Nerve Cure :s a wonderful nerve tonic. Price 2§c. Munyon’s Vitalizer restores lost vigor. Price $1. A separate cure for each disease. At all druggists, mostly 2§¢ a vial. Personal letters to Prof. Munyon answered with free medical advice for any disease. — <a> + <a Haman Telephone. To talk through a human body—or a row of human bodies, for the matter of that—is one of the weirdest of the elec- trician’s feats. If a telephone wire be severed, and the two ends be held by a person, ove in each hand, but far apart, it is quite possible for two individuals to carry on a conversation through the body of a medium as readily and as distinctly as if the line had been prop- erly connected, _ d PAIN CRIPPLE, — += —_——- Tortured and Tormented'with Rheumatism aud Sciatica South American Rheuma- tic Cure Works and Wonder. Mrs. John Fieher, Woodstock, N. B, writes: “[ had been euffering for over three years from muscular rbeumatism and on one oczasion I had a very acute attack of sciataca. For several weeks I was unable to walk or attend to my house- hold duties. Tried several remedies, and physicians failed to give me reliet. [ eaw South American Rheu.natic Cure adver- tised andl bought a bottle. It did me a wonderful lot of good. Four bottles ef€ec- ted @ perfect and permanent cure. Sold by Dr. S.W. Dodd, and Geo. E. Hughes. "MISS H. MCDONALD FANCY DANCES, including Highland Fling, Flag Dance, Strathspey, Spanish Dance, Sailors Hornpipe, May Pole and Villiagers Dance. Skirt Dance, Andalucia, etc. For this seeson ouly these dances $5 each, being one third of “price. Rooms in Masonic Building. cert 30 CHARLOTTETOWN BOSTON Buy your tickets for Boston by the fast Steamer Halifax. W.W. CLARK, Ticket Agen Weuralgia In the head is almost invariably c#used by oar and abscessed teeth n’t sufler Dn essly when a can be releived in a few hours and cured in a tew days by the careful treatment we will give you. i . AYERS DENTIST. Painless extraction of teeth«* NIGHT SCHOOL Ths Evening Session —OF THE— Charlo:tetown Busivess Sollege ang Writing Academy OPENS ON OCTORE? 18TH INST, This Fession affordsan exellent opportu vity fop | these why cannot attend during t OP ¥ ta acquire a business education. T:« objet | isto assist those in need of help; and the work issoarranged that no one, ho d ficient, need fee! any embarasement ~~ INDIVIDUAL INsTRUCTVION SURJECT=—Pr-ctical Aritumetic Writ. ing, eaey and rapid) Business Cor:exponde Book keeping by single ard Double awe Actual Businers Practise, not copying short hand and Typewriting, The Per manshbip Department ise ! ship. } 18 condyet by Mr J. Harry Witliame; for sp-cimens ex his ttuden's’ work. see (ieo. Carter & Co'g window. Shorthand by Mr Wm only iicensed public ipce. Five sessions per » « m rorrates wn the C, B. C. or write tw Moran, the teacher in this Proy. ; hours 7 39 to 9 2p ‘ information call af L, B MILLER, Prine. al T@ Intending students may take up any branches desired. oct 38 dif ris ee ee Te GLOVES GLOVES | We have just received one case Gentlemens gloves, in Mocho, Im’t’ Mocho, Napa, hi eh 6 gin ancien ignagin appt, Vioolen Knit Gloves. Kid Gloves, wool lined for, 65c a pair, Bargains in Underelothing. The very lowest prices on Boots and Shoes. J.B. Macioal : . ap Oppvusite west end Market. © * AND ! SCHOOL BOOKS Seribblers, Foolscap, Ink, Pencils, Pens, Note Books etc, ets. Cheapest and Best at onnm eo at +) wee QUEEN STREET Cor. Crafton and Gt, Geo. Sts. ; North side Queen Square _—_—— —- Received to day a large shipment of imported wines for Medical and Domestic uses. PORT | Conzalez, Oporto. CLARET. | St, Julian Listrae, Cotes Midoe, Bordeaux. CHAMPAGNE. | Giesler & Co., Alfred Gratien, France,—Extra dry. JOY & DAVIES, Wholesale Wine and Liquor Merchaate. 5 Bexz_See our Men’s Heavy x : t I + # ¥ fag ten ae8 3 3 py " COLLEGE. McMillan & Hornsbys Heavy Kid, wool lined, |. 4 ot Oem. CU lee RO lke ti ~ ow et oe in fee ue Os wy ie om ot ie od We' tat OO A Oe oe <i 7 oe ei eee ee te ee eee Italian Ware House } nee A 5} Bt ss ~| ~~ ss ~& oe Se ome ~ — S Ok 6 os #8 ?*