ot i ae ee a ; ideas a > Tia < THK DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 25, 1897 Th q Ryaminer REPAYING THE FAVOR. ip d i y | Hie Was Everlastingly Indebtedé to the “an r vrp } Mother of the Bride. DEVYEEHI A EANUOOT young man is newly married and a very serious view of everything relations. It he concluded to The mv {| takes The Cxaminer Publishing Company j arrectine hie domestic 7 | only the other day that FROM 1 FE ¢ @ ¢ Was a a consult a crusty old uncle who is a bach oo en elor and holds about all the wealth there oe anes "oe | is in the relationship. Tee pa ome 1.00 “You're not supposed to Know much One JMieath 0.35 | about married life and the way to runa t paid to any part of Canada or th | home, unclo,’’ began t w new benedict, v tes ; “but I have every contidence in your THE WEEKLY EXAMINER strong common sense. My little wife has ; | the best intentions in the world, but is in- Ass very Friday morning. It is made up | i eo ae of: which has appeared in the Daily | ©*P' ee d and se t, posaensed nn wg an a firstclasss newspaper containing | idea that if she Keeps ‘flying around’ she ali vue teal DeWS Subscription Si. U a year, i is Aa woe d howuseke Te “oF ' eo | ‘Pink and white doll, I supposo,’’ snort rrr | edthe uncle. ‘‘Thumps a piano, dances T ial DAILY EXAMINER | like a fairy, murders a few French sen Ai LS &) tences, flirts like the deuce and hates ‘ eit work.’’ SUGUST 25, 1897. ‘You're wrong. She works like a flend. s ; She took up the carpets and had them beaten before they had been down two THE MAN EATER. weeks. She baked three times in one day, : s0 as to bave stuff ahead, and the supply How © Brave Shikari Killed a Cunning would outlast us if we had toeat ii. The Old Tiger. | other evening I went home and found her il knew that a man eater is gener- | in tears. For three straight hours she had ally a tiger too old, sick or inactive to | washed my meerschaum pipe in strong catch his natural prey in the jungles, so | suds and then put inanother hour rubbing he hangs about a village like an area | it with sandpaper. It was such a creamy sneak icks up goats and calves, one day white when I bought it and she could not falls on a helpless man, woman or child | bear tosee it turning a dark brown, I at dge of the forest, and, having tasted | explained, but den’t think she be lieved huiman flesh, longs for more. Confirmed | me. She's as energetic as a locomotive ma: ters, it is said, care for no other, | going up grade, but hasn't the slightest but si doubt. They may prefer it to | idea of how things should be done. any other. It is probably easier to get in ‘*Poor, silly creature. Hire an amazo- mioy coses, but whether a tiger becomes | nian housekeeper and instruct her to run the whole shebang. It's the only way.’’ @ man eater by force of circumstances or as ‘*T tried that, but the housekeeper didn’t malice prepense he is aterror to the peigh- boriecd he frequents, and as he adds to | lastaday. She went to abusing you asa the tale of his victims helpless villagers {| fiinty hearted, miserly old Villain that invest him with supernatural attributes ought to have set us upin a fine home. Amy flared up and bounced the woman so quick that she had to take her duds through the back window. You know my wife is the daughter cf Mrs. Highly, and has some’'— “T have a great, big heuse,’’ almost : shouted the uncle. ‘‘I want young people ; about me. Move in and I will leave you my entire fortune. Your wife’s mother end call on their gods to avert his wratb. A noted specimen of this class had kfled a grect namber of people about a certain Yillage somewhere in Kattyawar, and had taken to polishing off dak runners as | they prssed through a narrow jungly de- file throes or four miles from the village, | ic grow so cunning that shikaris were daft 4d time afte? tiie fn their attempts > ’ to sight him, When 4p atiped eScort ac- | did me the greatest favor a woman can do ‘com Panied the dak ruitier nothing hap- | 4 man. She refused me three times before pened. So after some days it was thought | 1 gave it up.’’—Chicago Post. the tiver had shifted his quarters. Then the escort was dropped one evening, and demediately another unfortunate runner disupposred. A special reward was offered by the vovernmént, but without results. For mouths and months the man eater *‘Sontinued to kill with impunity. My cousin in the staff corps, a keen shikari and very determined fellow, swore he would shoot that tiger, got ten days’ leave and pitched his tent near the village in question. He tried all he knew, tied up buffalo calves, beat the jungles with 300 or 400 men, even accompanied a dak run- When Tady Marie Wortley Montague visited the household of ye~the Sultan, she a write home to > eee that the ladies of the “\ harem were smothered with laughter to dis- cover that her ladyship wore ~ oi an inner vest a through the fatal defile, but “- wk one atu. haleb ‘ At last he resolved to personate the dak si tight. camel runner himself and go slone. Attired as able and sti- ® native and armed with rifle and pistol, he clung a mailbag over his shoulder and started on his perilous adventure one even- ing et sunset. JingHog a number of little bells attuehed to his person, after the man- ner cif dak runners, he trotted on till he reached the place of evilomen. Then all at once with a bound the man eater ap- peared in the middle of a road not 12 feet wide facing him. The man pulled up short «* a distance of some 15 yards, raised his 12 bore, and, by the mercy of Gad, dropped the tiger stone dead with a ball in the Lrain.—Badminton Magazine, fling, in other words, a corset. The ladies of the harem would no doubt have been equally astonished, though perhaps not disposed to laughter, had they known that the women of western nations, through false ideas of delicacy, suffer in silence untold agony, and sometimes death, through neg- lect of their health in a womanly way. Women,who suffer in this way shrink from the embarrassing examinations and local treatment insisted upon by the majority of physicians. If they only knew it, there is no necessity for these ordeals. An emi- nent and skillful physician long since dis- covered a remedy that women may use in the privacy of their own homes. It is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It acts di- rectly on the feminine organism, giving it “Limited.” “The word ‘limited’ in connection with corpor.tiens and firms,’’ explained a prom- inent lawyer toa reporter, ‘‘is now in very gener! use. Itoriginated in England, and | strength, vigor and elasticity. It stops all al:nost every business concern there is a | debilitating drains. It is the greatest of all limited partnership. Of all the cities in nerve tonics and invigorators for women. this country Philadelphia has more limit- Thousands of women who were weak, sick- ed pertuerships than any other, though | l¥, petulant and despondent invalids are he : ag . = : | to-day happy and healthy as the result of there 1g not one there 25 years ago. | : wit . Phiiadciphia ¢ the idea duri . the C | the use of this wonderful medicine. Good la go © 1668 Curing She Cen- druggists do not advise substitutes for this tenni:.i, and, it having been found by ex- perience to bea good thing, it has grown constantly. It means that those interested ina fir. are only interested to a limited eatent—-that is, only to the extent which is stutcd in the articles of incorporation. ‘Lie limit of one member of a firm therefore may be $5,000, while the limit of anct :er may be ten times that amount, incomparable remedy. ‘*I have used Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion and ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ in my family,’’ writes Mrs. G. A. Conner, of Alleghany Springs, Montgomery Co., Va., ‘‘ and have found them to be the best medicines that I ever used.” Send 31 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of mailing and customs om/y, to the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, , N. Y., for a paper-covered copy of Dr. or one tenth, o a ; ’ ; res ‘ the Srna of "B oe et a Thus, in Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser; > o sown, Somes & Co., limited, —Cloth binding 50 stamps. A whole Med- Brown may have three-fourths of the " ical library in one 1000-page volume. maining fourth. It limits the respunsibil- | ity, as in makes a member of the firm lia- ble on!y for that which is named in the True Story of Dick furpin’s Ride. A highwayman named Nevison, or icles cf i Seep Sp Nicks, as he is more generally known, ne ne on le Cinta had a blood mare, a splendid bay, whose corpori.cion aor } ae whin ae to a > etme dm ag | courage and endurance were such that a4) 4U il 1e Ss sib also og ni oe t elt I < e ed by means of these quali- quires that the word ‘limited’ shall always Nicks determined by mes q | +3 ov ibi in case of danger. eaeit: tn seeeinnione | ties to prove an ali s ae kn be Za st 9 erty all | “About 4 o’clock upon a certain morning .. i Pi ; 7 al Me cao lec ae may | he robbed a traveler on the road near Gads- JO @ aT ee i , ik ym n - : } j f elalty intérested. y! ¢ ——— | hill, then turned and rode straight off to all: Q a in a concern, their inter- | Gravesend. He was obliged to wait there st: resp i is ¢ F : . Ca ee ae a It a | nth heer Gor a boat, and he made the best ie aa . provers tae use of this time by baiting his mare. use of big names, which have sometimes 1s : | Then crossing the water, he dashed across been used to boom enterprises and corpo- | rest rations, when in reality the owners of the | Essex full tilt to Chelmsford, where he rest- names have had but little interest in the | ed half an hour and gave his horse some concerns. ’’— Washington Star. | balls. Then he mounted again and dashed — | on to Bramborough, Bocking and Wether- Wonderful Wine Cellars. | field, fast across the downs to Cambridge. The most wonderful wine cellars in the ae ee a oo world are underneath a nobleman’s palace a Scie Stratford pe fa. deiahtendl, tle ” > eens woe a — — — | good mare and took a quick half hour's ing ‘egos for over 400 years, and the L.aleep. Then.cnes mene. aletes she nenth whole vlace is one mass of fungi and sta}- | cad eeath ete dlataamaal wink tas ae ae —-- | horizon larger, larger, and whiz ho darted | through York gate. In a moment he had | led the jaded mare into an inn stable, ' snapped up some food and in a fresh green ‘Twice As Much | velvet dress and gold lace strolled out guy Medicinal value in a bottle of Hood’s Sar- | and calm to the bowling green, then full saparilla as in any other; record of cures of company. ‘he lord mayor of the city unequalled by any other medicine—proof , happened to ne there. Nicks sauntered wp positive that Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the | to him and asked himthe hour. ‘A quar- best medicine to purify the blood, create ter to 8,’ said the lord mayor greciousiy. : “Your most obedient.’’ returned Nicks an appetite, cure all scrofula eruptions, | with a profound bow. - boils, pimples, humors, dyspepsia. | Later, when Nicks was apprehended and Ft a? Sarsa" | tried for the Gadshill robbery, the prose- | cutor swore to the man, the horse. the pariila place and the hour, but Nicks brought the Is prepared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. eure nausea, indigestion, , * Hood’s Pills stock, and Jones and the others the re- i the jury promptly acquitted the resolute lord mayor of York to prove an alibi, and and sagacious thief.—Harper’s Round Ta- biliousness, constipation. . ee UNCLE LEOPOLD, The King of the Belgians Showed Con- stant Kindness to Princess Victoria. There is an article on the ‘*Girlhood Days of England’s Queen,’ written by James Cassidy, in St. Nicholas. Mr. Cas- sidy says: ‘fhe Duke of Kent, who had always re- ceived from his father a smaller allowance than his elder brothers, died in debt, and the brave duchess, with her brother's help, struggled hard to pay her husband's debts, for she knew that the duke had made ev- ery effort to pay them and would have wished her to do so. Therefore during some yours it Was neeessary for her and her little daughter to live very frugally, con- sidering their high rank. The good William Wilberforce tells that he was upon one occasion invited to the presence of the Duchess of Kent. ‘She received me,’’ he wrote, ‘‘with her fine, animated child on the floor by her side, busy with its playthings, of which I soon became one.’’ Indeed throughout ’Drina’s childish days we find her never far from her mother’s side. On her fourth birthday the child re- ceived a present from King George IV, ‘Uncle King’? she had been taught to call him. It was a miniature portrait of himself, richly set in diamonds. The king | also gave a state dinner party to the duch- ess and her little daughter. Until Vietoria was 5 years old the only mouey her mother received upon which to bring up and educate the child was that generously allowed her by Uncle Leopold, but when the child was 5 George IV sent & message to parliament asking that a suitable allowance be made. Not long | afterward parliament voted the yearly payiment of £6,000 ($30,000) to the duchess for the proper bringing up of the princess, but not even then did her mother’s broth- er withdraw his generous allowance, It was only when he became king of the 3elgians in 183land thought it right to forego the £35,000 ($175,000) a year al- lowed him by England that he ceased to allow his sister £3,000 ($15,000), as he bad done for years, GEORGE ELIOT’S HEROINES. She Showed Proper Consideration For Them In Money Matters, George Eliot, since she was a woman, had probably needed money herself at times, and this may explain why she shows proper consideration for her hero- ines, letting few of them suffer lifelong poverty. Romola’s income enables her to care for Tessa and bring Vello up accord- ing to her own educational theories. Janet, having money, repents comfortably, being enabled to arrange a pleasant home for Mr. Tryan, to be near him in his last moments and to erect a stone to his mem- ory. Hardy's poor Tess, on the contrary, is not even allowed enough money to pay for the family monument. Gwendolyn Harleth had been used to ease, and it naturally followed that it was only when George Eliot injudiciously invested the family's fortune with Grapnell & Co., ‘“*who failed for a million,’’ that the faults in her character got the better of her. And Rosamond Vincy—did she not make herself thoroughly pleasant as soon as George Eliot permitted her Tertius to pro- vide his family with a becoming income by writing a treatise on gout and alter- nating in practice between London anda continental watering place? Who but George Eliot is responsible for the tragic career of Maggie Tulliver? Did she not fail to make suitable financial pro- vision for Maggie's introduction into the society of St. Ogg's in the conventional fashion at the proper age, thus precipitat- ing the affair with Stephen? With Mrs. Tulliver, I bitterly regret those ‘‘spotted cloths’’ and the china ‘‘with the gold sprigs all over ’em between the flowers,’’ since the cause of their sale necessitated Maggie's wearing Aunt Pullet’s made over gowns and lodging with Bob Jakin’s wife after her trouble. George Eliot, however, at least permits Esther Lyon to sample financial prosperity before giving her Felix Holt, minus cravat and waistcoat, for a husband, and then wisely drops the cur- tain on Esther’s struggles with Felix and poverty. —Lippincott’s. Old Time Sunday Melon Sales. ‘‘A man would hardly imagine that negroes used to crowd around the front of that elegant church and sell watermelons on Sunday,’’ said H. T. Powell, the well known banker. He referred to Mulberry Street Methodist church, one of the finest church buildings in Macon. ‘‘Butit’sa fact,’’ continued Mr. Powell. ‘‘I’m not an old man,’’ and everybody in the crowd looked with admiration af his tall, erect figure, ‘‘but I can remember those scenes as Well as if they were yesterday. ‘*It was before the war, when all the | slave owners allowed their industrious slaves an acre or soof land on which to raise watermelons or anything they chose. The negroes were given every Saturday afternoon to tend their patches and on Sundays were allowed to hitch a mulo to a wagon and take their melons and other preduce around to churches, caimp mect- jugs er cisewhere and sell them. It was a very common thing to see a man stop at & nearo’s watermelon pile and select a mel- on, pay for and put it into his buggy and drive cn home after church, and indeed children frequently clubbed in and bought mclons from the slaves and ate them dur- ing the time betwoen Sunday schpool ana proaching “Tn those days mssters took great inter- est in the industry and enterprise of their slaves, wid did everything they could te encourage them. Nobody ever thought of vobjecurg taece interfering with the ne- grees im there Sunday traflic.’’4- Macon at elayraph. peu RE BLOOD is the foundation of health. Hood’s Sarsaparilla makes the bloed pure, rich and nourishing and givesand maintains good HEALTH. ISK YOUR GROCER FOR Royal Oak Soap the best laundry Soap on the market. One bar wil] doas mnch as two bars of ordinary imported Soap made from filthy material. CHTOW? SOAP WORKS TT 'DR CLIFT Soand Blindness. Of course we have all heard enonch ef color blindness. Many people, aithoujch they may possess perfect eyesight fur read- ing or sceing long distanges, yet con't for the life of them distinguish between green and red and inany other pairs of colors, Lately it has been found that some sulver from an exactly similar atfection of the hearing power—that is, an inability to dis- tinguish particular shades of sound srising from some odSscure affection of the car, yes quite distinct from deafness. One boy, in doing dictation, always. spelled " He could not distinguish at all the sounds of ‘‘very,’’ ‘“‘perry’’ and ‘‘polly,’’? and yet he could hear at as great a distance as anybody. Another youngster would spell ‘‘different’’ ‘aif- rent.’’ He said that was how it sounded. And several others ran the letters ‘‘r,’’ ‘fn’? and ‘*‘l’’ together in a hopeless way. —London Answers. £4 wenerg ‘‘vorht."’ by tween Only Mamunie’s Husband, The heir and hopeof the family at Blank castle was a little rogue of about 5 sum- mers. One day at lunch he was disobedi- ent. His father, whose orders had been | repeatedly ignored, at last struck the table | to accentuate his paternal authority and | suid indignantly, ‘‘William, you foryet wholam!’’ The velvet eyed scamp look- ed up, and, with subtle simplicity, said: “Oh, no! You're only mammie’s hus- band.’’ And the hereditary legislator re- mained speechless amid the derisive laugh- ter of his guests. —Exchange. Just the Place For Him. “Say, Weary, I think the Sandwich Is- Jands is the place for me.”’ ‘*Why, so, chappie?’’ ‘** *Cause I'd be free from temptation.’’ ‘*Wot kind o’ teimptarion?”’ ‘“‘Why, the papers says the climate’s so enervatin that there’s no temptation to work.’'—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Positively cured by these Little Pills. They aiso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indizestion and Too Mearty Eating. <A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Dr wsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Smal! Dose. Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Cartex’s, Tnsist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. treats Chronic Diseases by the Salisbury JOSEPH LADUE, method of persistent seif-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 inlargement, Palpitation. Of Liver—Jaundice, Diabetes Cirrhosis, ete. Of Kidneys—Albuminuri: Bright’s Disease, etc. Of Spleen and Bladder—Cystitis. Of the Blood—Anae- mia, Chloresis, Scrofula, Malaria, Rheu- matism, Gout, SciaticaScurvy, Purpura. OfF - 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, Epilepsy, Convulsions, Paralysis, Loco- motor Ataxia. Paralysis, Agitans, Soften ing of Brain. Some forms of Insanity—- Dementia, Mania, Hypochondria, Melan- cholia. Failure of Vision and Voice, 1. ness. Of Skin— Eczema, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Syphilis. Tumors, Giandular Fatty, Fibroid, Uterine, Ovarian and Can cer, Goitre, Cretinism, Obesity, Corpul- ency. Drug and Liquor Habits—Opium, Morphine, Chloral, Cocaine, Tobacco, Stimulavts. Of Bones and Joints—De- formities, Curvatures, and Pott’s Disease of Spine, Paralysis, Hip Disease, Knock- knee, Bow Legs, Club and Flat Fout, WryG | ¢ ! j } | Neck, Rickets Scrofula, Sore Legs, Var-@ ' icose Ulcers, ete. Continuous inielli: 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 ardithe N Y@ Hospital. 20 years’ practice in N Y City. j Diploma registered in U S$ and Canada. f Address :—Charlottetown, P. E. I. i 1 Office :-—Victomia Row. Telephone Call. Accommodations Reserved for patients References on application. 94 —d&w lyr. and follow KLONDYKE | The Land of ~~ Golden Nuggets the new Bonanza King of the Klon dike Gold Regions, gives the facts His book reeds like ‘“* The Arabian Nights” BUT Joseph Ladue KNOWS whereof be 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 has refused $100,000 for any ONE of these claims, as they are rich with virgin gold nuggets beyond the dreams of Joseph Ladue then Established Dawson City, at the mouth of the Klondyke and Yukon Rivers, by erect the first house in the region in September, one month after the gold was first discovered. He bought 178 «acres from the government on the city site where his town lots, 150x450, ne now selling for $5,000 each. Mr. Ladue was fortunate enough 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 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 large 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 covered almost the entire country since 1882. Mr. Ladue is a typical pioneer; strong, hardy ana resoluve—a man of iton as one mustineeds 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 nox 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 observing 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 lea half exaggeration. That any such amount o1 gold taken in so short a time from a country like tat under the most unfavorable conditions was held to be incredible. when the great bags of virgin gold began to be poured out upon mint counters in San Francisco under the eyes of the whole world (for modern journa ism does this, annihilating time and space), people began to wonder, and the wonder grew day by day as the real facts were disclosed, and nw people who are well informed as to the facts declare that half the truth has not been told of the gcelden treasures of the Yukoa Valley. Aa we have already said, there is no man alive today who knows more about this wonderful country than does Mr. Ladue. What makes his talk of it specially interesting reliable is the fact that his knowledge of it is practical. I has not been gained from hearsay nor from desolutory visils made now and then at certain favorable seasons of the year, but 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 minmg claims on the Klondyke and its tributavies. : In presenting his book to the public we do so knowng that it is by an authority on the subject of which he writes His first work entitled “KLONDYKE NUG&ETS ” is a brief descriptioa of the new gold regions, and anyone desiring authentic information should not fail to avail them selves of our NOMINAL OFFER, which places the facts in the possession of our customers. REFIEFMBER, that our office is the sole distributing pon for this locality, having closed exclusive arrangements Wit 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. ; } es OB oni oie oe Coa on i aK “dyke. Rug ts.” secure a copy of re. ee “KLONDYKE a iokidlag NUGGETS.” | _——— Cut out this coupon and bring it with you as evidence that you are a reader of The Bxamuirer and | en Cents in cash and a copy of ‘‘Klondyke Nuggets, my Joseph Ladue, the Bonanza King of new gold regions, T I ill be handed to you. Cut out this coupon and send it together with et stamps for clerical work and mailing expense, and we Wi send a copy of ‘‘ Klondyke Nuggets” to your address. . Write very clearly and give your name and address in full. Cut out the Coupon Remember, you should not delay as you will be unable to Secure this valuable work on the gold region in any othe Way. Call at our office or address The Examiner, Charlottetown instructions: nisctialla avarice, | Be =a ae a a ee “a aa Ps - ~ a