ors - it~ ve i moan rae 24 sabe a Ne Dail mow sak 2a sa ee FROM THE OFFIC®@ of The Cxaminer Publishing Company RATES OF (IN ADVANCE) SUBSCRIPTION @ne Year miner -+-- 84.00 | “ They promised to greatly reduce the public expenditure, they have largely increased it, “In the strongest language they con- demned a provincial debt In five years they bave added over a quarter of a million of dollars to our debt. “They solemnly professed that they could manage our aflairs without taxation. In three years they have taken from the Six Months.... 2.00) , Puree Menths 1.00 people over on® hundred and thirty-eight One Month...... 0.35; thousand dollars in taxes. Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the Chited States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER fssued every Friday morning. It is made up of tna‘ter which has appeared in the Daily and is a firstelasss newspaper containing ail ihe latest news. Subscription $1.00 a year, THE DAILY EXAMINER. _— acme ee JULY 19, 1897. THE GAMPAIC Peoples’ QUEEN'S COUNTY. CHARLOTTETOWN AND ROYALTY,- PATRICK BLAKE, JAMES PATON. FIRST DISTRICT,— D. B. McLEOD, SAMUEL BEATON, SECOND DISTRICT.— ALEXANDER HORNE, RUNALD McMILLAN. THIRD DISTRICT,— PETER McCOURT, THOMAS A. McLEAN, FOURTH DISTRICT,— A.A. McLEAN, HENRY WOOD. KING’s COUNTY. GEORGETOWN AND ROYALTY,— HON. DANIEL GORDON, HON. A. J. McDONALD. FIRST DISTRICT,— JOHN McLEAN, JOHN KICKHAM., SECOND DISTRICT,— W. A. O. MURSON, JAMES McISAAc, THIRD DIS1TRICT,— JAMES E. MACDONALD, CYRUS SHAW. FOURTH DISTRICT,— PROWSE, ° McKINNON. PRINCE COUNTY. SUMMERSIDE AND LOT17,— GILBERT DestOCHES A. A. LEFURGEY. FIRST DISTRICT,— JAMES BIRCH, EDWARD HACKETT. SECOND DISTRICT,— WILLIAM DENNIS THIRD DISTRICT,— J. A. MACDONALD, J.F. ARSENAULY. FOURTH DIRTRICT, WM. CAMPBELL, MALCULM KOss. PEGPLES’ PARTY'S MOTTO: VICTORY WITH HONOR. Peeples’ Party’s Party’s Candidates. | “They pretested against the practice of borrowing money ai the banks. There has scarcely been a year since they attained power, thatthe Province has not owed very jarge amounts to one or more of the banks. “They pledged themselves not to impose taxation withcut consulting the people. No sooner was the promise made thao it was faithiessly broken by the introduction and passage into law of four separate lax ' .1ts. | to be ratsed | against than sinning. | | the way he was brought up. He i sioner of Public Lands. exists, aluhough they have been in power | “They seriously engaged, in 191, to devote about 15,000 dollars of the money by debentures to the repair yf the Provincial building. This bas not ‘een done. The building bas received no 2pairs. “They loudly proclaimed, in opposition, that there was no necessity for a Commis- Phat official stl! for over SIX years. ‘“* They denounced, with one voice, Pro- vincial deficits. There has not been a Single year of their admunistra‘ion that there has not been a large deficit, —their deficits aggregate over $255,000, aud if the taxes thev collected. be added, the as- tounding result of over $393,000 wil be reached.” ——_._ Take no stock in Election dodges. AN INTERESTING FIGURE. An interesting figure in the jubilee pro- cession at Londen was that of the Arcu- duke Francis Ferdinand, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne. It is only a few montus ago that this Prince was sup- posed to be in the very last stages of quick consuinption. His death was momeutariy expected, and so certain was :t thought to be that his brother, bated alike by the Emperor and the people of the Empire, was clficially recoguized as the future ruler. Asa last resort, Ferdinand went io Egypt, and there the climate seems to have worked something not much less than @ miracle, tor, as be rode through the streets of London, there were few amongthe scores of princes who bore themselves more vigorously than he or looked more likely to attain old age. Ferdinand, who was born in 1863, is one of the richest men in Europe, as he inherited, while still a child, all the immense wealth of the Wste branch of the Hapsburg family. Lis father was the most contirmedof Ultramontanes, the Archduke Karl Ludwig, who died last year and his mother was a daughter of ‘** Bomba ” of Naples, Thus he can hardly be said to have started life uuder the best of auspices. Hewas only 8 years old wher his mother died, -yet his father straigbtway handed him over to the care of the Jesuits, with strict injunctions that he should be brought up untainted by this wicked nineteenth century. Once his own masier, a reaction set in, and he rushed into every kind of dissipation. Still, even in those days his career com. pared very tavorably with tbat of his brother Otto,and the people who have had most Opportunities to Jadge maiutain that he has always been more sinned 1 He is by nature they declare, botn intelligent aud kimdly, and his faults are the inevitable reeult of became heir to the throne by the tragic death of Prince Rudolph, and the old Emperor at once took him in hand, spending many hours of every dav in impressing upon him the responsibilities of his sew station. ' Under this tutelage he sobered down com- | pletely, and was fast Platform With both Austrians and Magyars when popular becoming his health failed. This necessitated an “ The Provincial executive will be re- #ttempt to reform Otto in a similar way, | but Ferdinand’s recovery has made it ' unnecessary to continue what seemed to ai duceu from nine to seven.” “No public money will be expended in excess of legislative appropriations, unless in case Of unavoidable necessity, such as éaured by food or sudden disaster.” ‘Provision will be made for a quarterly publication of revenue and expenditure.” “ue cflice or Commissioner of Public ence wili be abolished and the duties assigued to the Attorney General.” ** jhe present ferry system will be re- form <u with @ view lo greater economy of expenditure without diminishing efficieucy ~ of accommodation. “A reform in the adminisfration of the Surrogaie aod Probate court will be ettected. “A radical change, will be made in the administration ot the Public Works department, so that the mouey now wasted can be saved to the Province. “The present system of taxation will be s0 Changed that it will Operate with even- hauded justice, and not bear Oppressively apd uutairly on apy class of taxpayers. pay “Economy will be practised in every de- partment, and taxauien will be kept down to the lowest possible limit. “The etticiency of the Public Service will be maintained, aud revenue and expendi- | ture will be made to square as nearly as poeszible, ‘“‘No further increase of the public debt will be permitted. “Paste the ex penditure of the public money, and | ta: fr guac ded and husbanded by every legitimate . m:s ns that can be devised.” will be considerable reductions in esources of the Province will be safe- i be an alznost hopeless task.” The English, Scotch and Irish, The French Acadians, too, | Will rally forth to drive trom | i i | j | | ; power The boodling, squandering crew. Twies As Much Medicinal value in a bottle of Hood’s Sar- i i j { faparilla as in any other; record of cures unequalled by any other medicine—proof positive that Hocd’s Sarsaparilla is the best medicine to purify the blood, create an appetite, cure all scrofula eruptions, boils, pimples, humors, dyspepsia. Hood’s °*"5 Is prepared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. enre nausea indigestion , . < . 5 ’ Hood’s Pills biliousness, constipation. Allan's Ontario Qider | For Tea Parties 1 CAR LOAD—Barrels and JSalf Barrels—now lending. N. RATTENBURY, 159-— 3wks. Agent. GOVERNMENT'S RECORD, } | parilla | | Ordinarily known as home. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 20, 1897 [ MONSTERS. FORES Rame of the Ulant Trees That Are Found In Caiifornia, In the natioual parks and forest pre ecrves of California the big trees are by and greatest There are two vari- sempervirens, the far the mest interesting natural features. eties—nuamely, Sequoia redwood, the tree which has furnished most of the redwood lumber of commerce, aud the Sequoia gigantea, from which a compuratively small amount of similar lumber also been made. The for- mer is the smaller variety and grows on the foothills along the coast. The latter attains a considerably larger growth, is, more strictly speaking, the ‘*big tree’’ of California, and is seldom found at a lower altitude than 5,000 feet. Seattered along the extent of the Sicr- ra Nevadas from north to south are many distinct and separate groups or groves of Sequoia gigantea. These are generally known by names significant of locality, as, for instance, ‘‘Calaver- as,’’ ‘‘Tuolumne,’’ ‘‘Mariposa’’ and ‘*Fresno,*’ names of the counties in which the groves so called are situated. The Tuolumne grove is in the Yosemite park, and the Mariposa near by. This latter is the one most frequently visited by tourists and contains the ‘‘Wawona”’ —a tree with a hole burned in its base, through which the stage road runs and four horse stages are driven without difficulty—and the ‘‘Grizzly Giant,’’ one of the largest trees in the world. has The stately grandeur of these enor- | mous and lofty trees is se impressive that it seems quite fit and natural that some of the larger ones should have been individualized and honored with distin- guished titles. Nearly every state in the Union and every distinguished gen- eral of the civil war has a namesake among them. The ‘‘General Grant,’’ in the General Grant park, and the ‘‘Gen- eral Sheridan’’ of the ‘“‘Giant forest’’ (situated in the Sequoia park) are indi- viduals of the largest size. It is difficult to determine just which of the big trees is the largest, but these two and the ‘Grizzly Giant’’—the gnarly base of any one of which will exceed 30 feet in diameter—are probably the biggest trees yet discovered. The trees often grow in such inacces- sible mountain retreats that some of the territory covered by them has never yet been thoroughly and systematically ex- plored. Outside the lands reserved by the government a California lumber company owns several thousand acres cf these trees—enough to last 40 years, cutting many millions of feet per year. —Harper’s Weekly. A THRILLING EXPERIENCE. Showing What a Shotgun Cam Do Ina Load of Hay. ‘‘What was the most exciting experi- ence I ever had?’’ repeated Clarence Haight at the Olympic Gunelub. “I think it occurred last summer, when I was hunting doves up in Sonoma coun- ty. Now, shooting doves is not par- ticularly exciting or perilous, but this was one of the hottest experiences I ever had. ‘‘T had been traveling all day with a big bag, and was pretty well tired out when I struck the country road and started for home. It was a good four miles’ walk, and I was pretty well pleased to see a big wagon lead of hay approaching. The rancher gave me per- mission to ride, so I scrambled up on top, lay dewn on the sweet, new mown hay and went swaying and swinging down the road. I was just dozing off when bang! went my shotgun. I had forgotten to take the cartridges out of it, and something had pressed the trigger. The horses gave a jump, and the driver rolled off into the ditch. ‘*Then I discovered that my gun had sect fire to the hay, and I thought it was about time for me to escape. The horses were tearing along the road as hard as they could run, but I clambered for the side of the load and slid for the road. The tail of my stout hunting coat caught on the top of a sharp standard, and there I hung to the careening wag- on that threatened to upset and dump a load of burning hay on me at every | § turn of the road. ‘*The fire was crackling and burning fiercely, and already I could feel the flames. Still the horses ran, and still my coat held me fast to that seething mass of flames. My trousers commenced getting hot, and then I found my coat was on fire. The next moment the loose cartridges in my pockets commenced ex- ploding from the heat, and then I smelled my doves broiling. *‘t had just made up my mind that all was over, when the tail of my coat burned off and I was thrown into a ditch full of water beside the road. [ did not stop to see what became of the hay and the horses, nor of the rancher, but cut straight across that field for That, gentlemen, was the mest thrilling experience of my life.’’°—New York Press. Swindied. First Street Loafer—It’s a shame, Bill, to think that any one would swin- dle a poor hard working man in that Way. Second Street Loafer—Why, what's your trouble? First Street Loafer—Here I worked bard for half a day painting up a spar- row into a redheaded Belgian canary, and I am blowed if the fellow I sold it to didn’t give me a bad half crown for it.—London Spare Moments. } SCOTT ACT MANIFESTO. To the People of P. E. Island: Wuar will vou have, Scott Act or Rum ? the after election day. The times are laden with golden oppor- the Free Wewill have one or other tunities for, and woeful dangers to, cause of temperance; and it behooves men and women everywhere to be in real and active earnest in promoting temperance and denouncing the liquor traffic. Charlottetown holds the key of sobriety The 22nd decides which door will be opened—whethe from the fountain head of P. E. I:land will] flow a stream of good or one of damn: or drunkenness for this Province. Scott Act election, to be held July ing influence, contaminating more or less every Loy and girl, every man and woman The enemy is strongly Its power is concentrated bere and will in this province. entrenched in this city. and fight as never before for its very existence It s tenfold harder to drive liquor out of the city than out of the country. The success or defeat of the Seott Act will not only strongly affect, for weal or woe, the people of P. E. Island for some years to come but will have a pronounced effect upon the coming Plebiscite. The eyes of this great Dominion are on us, and wealth the result of this election will be strongly felt by the people from the Atlantic to the shores of the Pacific. Mr.S. F. Spence, of Toronto, in writing, says it will be a great calamity to the temperance cause if the Scott Act 1s defeated in Charlottetown. Now then, in view of these things, we ask for your sympathy «nd financial aid. May God give us all wisdom and power to fight and maintain His cause. FinanciaL ComMMITTEE OF THE TEMPERANCE ALLIANCE. cineca aS — - Positively cured by tiese Little Pills, They <iso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausca, Drowsi- ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. = They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Smeai!l Dose. : _ Small Price. Substitution ‘ the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ash for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. OSE ee ai ene. ata DR CLIFT treats Chronic Diseases by the Salisbury method of persistent self-help in 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, Gastritis, Ulcer, Cancer, Dropsy, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Constipa- tion, Piles, Fissures, Fistula. Diseases of Heart— Valvular, Fatty Enlargement, Palpitation. Of Liver—Jaundice, Diabetes B Cirrhosis, cic. Of Kidneys—AlLuminuria Bright’s Disease, etc. Of Spleen and Bladder —Cystitis. Of the Blo >] — Anae- mia, Chlorosis, Scrofula, Malaria, Rheu- § matism,Gout,SciaticaScurvy, Purpura.OtFe male Organs—Inflammations and Displace ments of Womb, Ovaries, Bladder or Bow- ;els. Menstrual irregularities of Sexual , Organs. Of Nerves andSpine,—Nervous Prostration, Sleeplessness. Decline, Hy- steria, Tremors, St. Vitus’ Dance, Chorea, 8 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, Deaf. ness. Of Skin— Eczema, Salt Rheum, } Erysipelas, Syphilis. Tumors, Glandular Fatty, Fibroid, Uterine, Ovarian and Can cer, Goitre, Cretinism, Obesity, Corpul- ency. Drug and Liquor Habiits—Opium, Morphine, Chloral, Cocaine, Tobacco, ‘Stimulants. Of Bones and Joints—~De- formities, Curvatures, and Pott’s Disease of Spine, Paralysis, Hip Disease, Knock- knee. Eow Legs, Club and Flat Foct, 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. 2) years’ practice in N Y City. Diploma registered in U S and Canada. Address :—Charlottetown, P. E. I, Oftice :—Victoria Row. Telephone Call. Accommodations Reserved for patients References on application. 94—diw yr. } | ! i GAND PROVINGIAL EX#I8iTI)] | This hot weather. ™ 4 *n Ke oe s| ri ‘ éya9 f ; Mg » bg oy " eg L X “PROM ANCIENT INDIA ano SV/ZLT CEVLON.** Are not injurious to nerves or stomach because early pickings only are used in blending. Older leaves contain strong acids that are not foung in those we use. Delicate or Nervous Women Should Drink Tetley’s, In lead Packets to preserve their Fragrance, 475. 60ce 6Oc. 7O0c. PER La. $18,000--IN CASH--$18.000, ey ele AT Ges< Halifax, September 28th, to October tst, 1897. Goid. Silver and Bronze Medals The largest amount ever offered in prizes in any Exhibition in the Maritime Proyinces. = In addition to the grand Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition, special attrac. tions have been arranged for every day and night. The Spectacular Seige of Sabastapol every evening,—the most gorgeous and realistic effects every produced in Canada. oa An unequalled half mile track for speed competition. 5 Exhibits carried at exceedingly low rates, railways and steamboats. Full particulars later. Apply for prize lists. entry forms, ane all‘ information to JOHN E. VATOOD. — Secretary, Halifax, N. & LS _. ——————————— ee SS SE SS SO SU SY SESSA ror Your Lai We have Foldiug Lawn Chairs, Adj ustable Back Canms Chairs, Camp Chairs, Camp Stools. Just the thing - Lounging Under The Trees Prices Right. Very cheap excursion tickets on all 4 JOHN NEWSON 0 ovlive ovine ochre ocho SREB HIGH GRADE English Manur OOS9O098 08000060 arbre oxbye oxy. oxdye oxy on DSU TSS SR ——— LandIng to-day ex Steamer “Irene Morris,” direct from Liverpool, bag SUPERPHOSPHATES, NITRATE OF SOD’, MURIATE OF POTASH, BONE MEAL, ETC. q All genuine, and of guaranteed analysis. The only reliable, best, and st least 20 per cent the cheapest fertilizer on the market. AULD BROS, To the Burglar who entered our office and broke the Handle of Safe we exteal an invitation to call again, promising him a free entry into the safe, and the ing him the use of the Stillson wrench. We will not insure his easy exit, but will bem hand with an ambulance and undertaker. At the same time we give the Dairymena guarantee for one year with our twelft gang Cheese Presses. Nearly al that were imported here in the past required toe repaired within a year. Our improved Cheese Vat is the most popular in the market. Our Babcock Testers never break the bottles. The press hoops are right for eighty Ibs of curd. And best of all the “ ALPHA de LAVAL SEPARATOR” is on f th fi away ahead of all others Write for prices. Terms made to suit customers. Our Pumps are winning’a name for themselves at prices to beat‘any Imp wT. A. WeLHAN Qrmua “WREEES HB cs Pa I CL 4 Oe oot fe | ee kc thw w 2s ew ~ eae WEE wy sh