b he | | WEALTH OP ANCIENTS NYO THE ENORMOUS ‘sume THEY ACCU- MULATED -AND SPENT. Potentates Who Disposed of Annral In- comes Reaching Inte the Millions mense Works of Im- Art and Skiil Carried Oat by These Rulers. It would be pelite fiction to assert wre (i . : ‘ that everybody who leoks upon the i } AN} ne fj His great monuments of antiquity—the a AN ul va v' wa il pyramids ox the Coliseum, for oxample— thinks of the «ost and wonders where = n+ Cn nei nl sata the money came from. But when, by k ent DUS ELISTS chance, a learned person suzyests the — . inquiry only xn idiot fails to be struck ass for a moment. It is so cnrious that ne , arena cao fT einy while mod n states, with ali the ac- CUS ty REWS i uit tHE SICK. cumulated wealth of the antique world at their back, and the treasures of Mexi- Chill ' Oh 2 * bs bs syne 4 : + age Ausitalia, he trae aed f ys i. ays Witt Adyisa, in addition, have to consider ways and means with anxious care ‘before build- Py aiming and At toned You | ing a government office, the early mon- RACH Gal Rlicha by archs raised palaces and temples by, the Bhenintoly:Croe hundred at W ill. The thoughtless have KUSOY sik bi G&e a ready explanation—slave labor did it ee ae all. But, in the first place, the slaves had to be procured somehow—-by war or purchase—and either means was expen- sive. There is a reply to that objecticn equally tacile—the war paid its own cost in loot. But this only leads usa step backward. The loot must have been | enormous, and where did it come from}? GREAT FREE OFFER. In the second place, those slaves had to ring = fhe av in thie Pity Wl ee oe Curing Gur Stay Mi wl iy W¥2 > be fed, and, however cheap their ra- Wili Wistributa To Every Person Who.falls. Sampie Vials of Munyon’s Famars Rheumatism, Kidaey and Dyspepsia Cure. SUFFERERS From Any of Tkese Hisezses are Welcome to the Remedy that Wilt Cure Them. The public will receive the best med- teal attention from the most skilled dectors at the office, Revere House Chariottetown. without a penny te | mense when such vast numbers were employed. But captives of war could only do rough work. They might build the Gol- iseum or the pyramids, directed by an army of skilled craftsmen. But the sculpture of Assyrian palaces, the paint- ing of Egyptian temples and tombs, must have been effected by artists, probably free, or, if slaves, trained at great ex- pense. When-we read that the city of Dur- standing on a mound of brick 700 acres in area, its walls 60 feet high, broad enough ‘for seven chariots to run abreast, and faced with stone, all the evidence | is needed to make us credit the stary, but ‘the wmarvel becomes fer greater when we:observe the milesof sculptured stone that cecorated Sargon’s palace with colossal bulls on each side of every | doorway. .No unpracticed hand carved those reliefs. They are the work of .art* ists. Wevre.all the sculptors of the:em- pire summoned to this task, to be din- ished in eight years? private individuals in Egypt must have been painted, at the ccst of the family, by masters of the craft. Animals:and birds show.a skill not to be surpassed. We may 8e.quite sure that-work dike this was highly paid—by comparison, that is, with slave labor. So the qnestion recurs, How much guid and silver did these ancients pos- sess? In the.ioman time men appear *to have been struck with the evidence «of vast wealth displayed by their predecas- sors, such asithe Ceesars could sot equal. But they eseaped the difficulty with easé by granting them riches literally beyond the dreams of avarice. Dr, Ar- buthnot, for example, has patiently reckoned up :the amount of treasure heaped upon fke pile of Sardanapalug by Athenwus, and he finds that it cams to £16,953, 120,000 in cur money at the least, for if a computation which Athe- neeus himself suggests be admitted the total would be :about twice as large. After this the statement of Diodorus— that the Pharaohs.counted upon a reve- nue of £133,000,000 annually from gold mines in the Bishari desert and drew an equal sum by taxation—is very mod- erate. But when the same most valua- ble writer—who talked nonsense only when he repeated ‘the words of other men—comes to deal with Babylon he lets himself go. There wasa gold statue of Zeus (the Greek assigned his own gods to Babylon as usual) 40 feet high; of Rhea equally tall,.with a lion of gold at each knee and ailver serpents to correspond; Juno weighed 50° talents; in front of her was a golden table, 500 talents, upon which stood two cups, 800 talents each, and three bowls, 1,200, G00 and 600 talents. These orna- ments of a single temple represented about £11,000,000, and the building was covered with gold plates. It has been calculated that the statue of Nebuchadnezzar mentioned in Daniel would be worth £3,500,000; that the treasure left by David ammanted tc £150,000,000 in gold, £200,060,000 in silver, but the value of the Hebrew tal- ent is doubtful. We are told that Pyth- ens, seemingly a private gentleman of Phrygia, entertained Xerxes and all his army, ‘‘with most sumptuous ‘easts,”’ ; No money will be received for exam: | ination, no mwoney will be received | fer advice mosmmoney wili be received fer medical attention, - | Munyon’s remedies,can be obtained from any druggist miostiy ter 2% cents a vial, Professor Munyon,.the head of the Muoyou Homemopathic. Honte Remedy | Company, Phiuiadelphia bas sent io this city ove of his skilled .specialisis. du order to educate the public how lo duc- tor and cure themselves, the professer proposes lo treat patients at his oflice absolutely free. Me says be cau dem- onstrate that his Baenmaiism Cure will relieve rheumatism in afew hours. He guarantees that his Dyspepsia Cure will cure any case of indigestioa or stomach trouble. «1 will demonstrate, says the Professor, -‘oy this test that ninety } per cent of ali kidney .compuints, m-j vluding Bright's disease, can be cured by my kidney eure. ‘‘] know“ con- | tinued the Professur, «‘that my Catarrh Cure will cure catarch of the head,throat and stomach—uno mutter how caronic | or long standing. 1 will prove by this test that deafness can be cured oy my | new system of treatment. I wil! show that nervous affections and disexses of | ihe oeart are controlled and cured Ly | my Nerve and heart cure. i will prove that my Cold Cure will break up any form of a cold ina few hours. J wiil vouvinee the most skeptical that my Headache Cure will correct any form ot headache in from three to ten wintes apd thatitis a splendid stomach and heart tonic. I will guarantee tbat zny Asthma Cure and Asthma Herbs, taken uccording lo directions, will relieve apy case of asthma in five minutes,and cure in a few days. Iclaim that my reme- dies for Female Complaints anno child- ren‘sdiseases are posilive cures, and should be in every nome. I will prove to. the medical faculty that my remedies are absolutely harmless; that they will eure more than ninety per cent of ail disease 3. ihus it will be seen by these state- ments that Professor Munyon dees not claim to cure all diseases with one rem- a edy, but he has a separate cure for} too—and then had £4,770,000 left, or, each disease. as some compute, £3,600,' 10. The tale The Professer invites physicians to | of Alexander’s loot is most wondertel bring their so-cailed incurable cases, facuities uf Colleges are invited to ap- point investigating committes,the Board ot Health is urged to keep a careful re- cord of each individual case. News- papers are expected to make daily re- portsand publishfacts of this great | lest. of all. and that is historic. If w3 enter- tain doubts, it is futile to express them when the statements are soclear and the means of disproving them absent. In the Persian camp, then, and at Baby- ion Alexander secured something Jike at Persepolis, 218 000,- $00; at Pasagurda, a trifle of £9,000,- 660; at Echatana, £270,000,000—say £550,000,000. And Darius carried off £9,000,000, which his murderers seized. —Loncdon Standard. £70, 0C0, 000; fhe doors are open—all are welcome. Cail at the Munyon Parlors, Beginning Monday +* eo — | tions, the sum total must have been im- | Sargunu was created on an empty plain, | by order of the king, in eight years, | UNNECESSARY HEROISM. j . - in A Connecticut Mom EX} Substitute Dat One of the mo: erience With a itub, t ridiculous situations which at the the coldest | sweat out on a man’s brow and eyer after’ remain with him @ cons source of mirth occurred to a Shelton merchant. He thought he would take a bath, and as his flat is minus ove of the chief requisites for the job—a bathtub of «small washtub and enjoyed a.cooling ablu- tion. J He had ji tame bring tant stant -—-he extemporized one out ust concluded and stepped from the tub for the towel, when sud- tienly the top hoop of the tub burst with | a sharp report, and the horror that the whole contents tub would soon be flo man saw to his of the ding the floor. At the same momeut he thorght of the store beneath and the amount of dam- age the water would do as it ran down through the ceiling. He is a man of quick thought, and in a moment he did the only thing possible—-threw himself down beside the tub arid, clasping his arms around it, held the already fast Swelling staves together. He was suc- | ecefy] in rAani ”D cessful in keeping what a situation! He dared not yell, for ers, especially as he knew that all im the bleck at the time were of the gentler sex, and he realized at once that the only thing left for him was to stay in that position until the return-of his wife, who was out on a shopping expe- dition. Like the boy whe saved Holland, he manfully remained in his most uncom- fortable position until relief in the shape of his wife appeared. Then, tocap the climax, when he asked her to get a rope or any old thing to tie abont the tub, she, after a long fit of uncontrella- ble laughter, asked bim why he didn’t carry tub and contents out to the sink- room and pour out the water. Witha ! lock that froze the-amile on her face he ; did as she said and without a word don- ; ned his clothing and wandered out into the cold, unfeeling world, a crushed and humiliated man.—Anscnia Senti- nel. Voids SCIENCE AND SKULL ‘Devoted Te The Prepara- tion Gf Diamond Byes. ee But the tombs.of | ; Pe | up colors for home dyeing work that can | give aay degree of smii-factioa tothe public. It is impossible for the makers of imita- tion and adulterated package dyes to put Imitators have the scientific kaov= ledge or the eepital to do honest and gocal work Scientific men of the highest attainmen’s in the chemistry of colors give the benfit of their knewledge and researches for the preparation of Diamond Dyes and the pro- tection of those who use them. Common dves are gross frauds and are cold by dealers tor the snke of extra profit Diamond Dyes, though they cost vastly more to prepare, aremuade to give satisfac- tion to milli@as by their perfect qualities. Beware of tre dealer who says his crade dves are equal to the wonderful Diamond ibyes. Goods colored with Diamond Dyes are fast to soap, water and snn; of no Other dyes is this true. + LiGe — Matched. ‘‘Here are a few letters I wish you ‘wonld mail for me, dear,’’ said Mrs. “Tenspot to her husbawd, who was pre- :paring to go out. As Mr. Tenspot took them he glanced at the stamps and asked: ‘*My dear, why did you put 15 cent stamps on these letters? Twe cent @tamps would have carried them,”’ “I know it,’’ replied Mrs. Tenspot, “but how would ared stamp look on envelopes of that lovely violet shade? This new statiouery is of an exquisite color, and I could net think of spoiling ite effect with stamps which did not harmonize. These purple 15 cent stamps aré the nearest match the postciice keeps. ’’—Harper’s Bazar. Head and Limbs All Covered With Eruptions—Could Not Work, the Suffering Was So Creat—ticod’s Has Cured. “Twasall run down with complaints peculiar to my sex, and I broke out in sores on my body, head, limbs and hands, and my hair all came out. I waa under the doctor’s treatment a long time without benefit. They called my trouble eczema. Finally I began taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and after I had used three or four bottles I found I was improving. I kept on until l had taken several more bottles and the sores and itching have dis- Mrs. J. G. Brown, Brantford, Ontario. **J was allrun down and had no appe- tite. I had a tired feeling all the time. I was advised to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I did so and it benefited me so much thet I would not be without it.” Mrs. G. 1. Burnet, Central Norton, N. B, the water in—bnut ' be was hardly in a condition to receive | appeared and my hair has grown out.” | THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, O°TIBER 9, 1897 —_ “Sener eT eA” REN PERN a Lite Marks Are Indelible. We are vet writing in the sand. The | tide does not wash it out. Weare not | painting our pictures on the canvas, end with a brush, so that we can erase the error of yesterday or overlay it with another color today. our lives with a chisel on the marble, _andevery time we strike a blow we leave a mark that is indelibla—Lyman Abbott, a). D. When you buy a few yards of cloth in Japan, the merchant always unrolls the whole piece and cuts off the inside end, in order that you may not have to We are writing fe Vv Ne NA % Ses% ae "a Sweet 10 cts, os ~~ e - MI: LZ @ per i } Ate “ be “ae t a! package = X\ a \% ie apor aK ais e $s a CIGARETTES se take the part that is faded and shop <2 gos SG s | + ore - * THE “SMITHY'S’ DAUGHTER, SS. ¥" i% etal “is = ie a “i 2 ste Attack -by That Most Insidion- of Ma-| @¢4 q Pe | Ei x rauders—Kidney Disease—Gets Good “43 At lh 4 et e 1 O seo = | Health Back by Using South Ameri- Wi ar eC ZB j ? _ pe 4 yo 3 —@ can Kidney Cure—A Kidney Specific. Vie DS 7 p 8 oie? | Theophile Gadbois, of Arnprior, writes:. Ais sir (“My daughter was a great sufferer frow > GC : ‘¢ A 4 = i 7 ES 9s, kidney disease. Medical men did their wa ‘ =p _ best for her and we tried ali the remedies | @\ at command, asd not until South Ameri- ae * Os can Kidney Cure was tried did she get any ds a enn *j, henetit. Three doses brought great relief, x % 52 Two or three bottles comple ely cured her 4S ’ ZN — not ® sign of pain or distress of any kind ba s 4 } left. Ic is truly a wonder worker.” S& d sy Rbail H VorTy wioere. aA _by Dr. 8. W. Dodd and Geo. E. Hughes iS sy) ee edna oie o dies shes thes athens seins sites ll ial | THE CRATER OF RAINIER. | 3@ “Experiences of a Night on the Summit of the Weird Mountain. Throwing off the life line, which had become almost au intolerable burden, I scaled the pile of bare rocks and gained the rim of the crater. The great bowl within was deeply filled with snow, but the black circle forming its rim could be distinctly traced. Descending the in- ner slope for about 100 feet, I found a _ place where steam was issuing from a crevice in the rocks and warmed my benumbed fingers. Soon my companions joined me, and wo tceok refuge in one of the many caverns that the heat of the rocks and of the escaping steam had melted in the lower portion of the snow and ice partially filling the crater. In these weird caverns one may descend far beyond the light of day. The white vapors drifting silently through the climly lighted passages assume grotesque shapes and suggest to the imaginative visitor'that spirits of the time when Pluto’s reign was supreme there make their homes, the cracks from which steam was issu- ing we soon had water enough with | which to prepare tea. In the absence of sugar and cream a little -alcohc! from the supply brought for fuel was added te each cup and proved a welcome stimulant. Making ourselves as com- fortable.as possible under the circum- stances, we passed the night in the cay- ern of ice. There were no ledges broad enough to lie down on, and we were forced to stand or crouch against the hot rocks all night. The floor of our cavern sloped steeply and led down to an ugly opening of unknown depth be- tween the descending roof of ice and the rocks. To guard against accidents, the life line was stretched across the cavern and made fast to crags. This proved a wise precaution, as we were able during the night to walk up and down with the rope in our hands and avoid the stiffness and discomfort that come from remaining long in one posi- tion.—Israel C. Russell in Scribner’s. oo TARR and HAY FEVER POSITIVELY CURED Vanishes ike snow in June before the treatment of pR, RAY the Great English Specialist. 10 Days Treatment Free iSc, postage or express on the outfit is aif iit costs to try it. “ADDRESS: Dr. Rry’s Successful Remedy Co, ROOM, 24 MANNING ARCADE, TORONTO London, Engiand. ‘Tarente Cenada. Melbourne Australia, BAGS - BAGS BAGS 15.000 second hand. 19.000 new, at current prices, Carvell Bros. h’town sep 28 pat 2 aw 1 mo JAS. E. WELSH TEACHER OF Vooal and Instrumental Music, A singing class for ladies and gentlemen a lowest Flood’s “tart parilla REVERE HOUSE, Charloitetowa. Hatirax, Oct. 8,—In the double eccull rice yesterday the Lyuch brothers, of Halifax, won easily over McKay of Dartmouth and Johnson of St Stephen. | Hours from 9 a. m. to 8 p. m., ALL ARE WELCORIE. Is the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. © Hood’s Pills act harmoniously with Hood's Sarsaparilla, 25e. will be organized about the 15:n October Also an afternoon Children’s class, i Ap- piication for membership to be made ae t . 7 before above date. Terms moderate. Enquire at the store of L. C. Worths, Upper Gt. Geo, St, ai. cept 30 —dw d&w By melting snow in our tin cups over YSIS AS AS US AS AS OS OS US OS OS Wish ut Hi VAN dala gs Mae co SE = Paha vauh 6! ree. 1 BOVRIL SEAS O.NED BOVRILLEMITED Can You Rely on Good Work at our tailoring establishment. hand. We employ none of that kind. easily boast of 50 workmen if we did. We are bound to hold the reputation we have made as high-class tailors. ae > 2 @ @ @]e MekKay Woolen Co., High Grade Tailors. ‘OUR BIG EXHIBIT... — ~ OF NEW CLOTH -- —_———-—— We are opening our different lines for the new season, with much the same feeling of confidence which a fellow ex- periences when he-has a good thing. So many good h “rouped together that ic is impossible to tell you all abou hem. Come and see the | REAUTIFUL LIVES OF OVERCOATINGS the finest ever brought to the city. And Trouserings, the finest you ever laid eyeson; and for Susts, they are beautifu. inthe extreme. Those goods Avill be shown with much pleasure, and will be on exhibi# this afternoon enl to-morrow JOHN MACLEOD &¢O MERCIANYT ALORS, Not one stitch put in a garment by an apprentice, or an unexperienced We could ore ‘hy r= zx oe a es oe ee etl cere int Re a ag" EI ee Ip IRN ER: SALE ME TTR Se - s 4 it 7