*¥ Pa ® "2 * @*? a a0 —— PER GENT rO CLEAR OFF Ladies Waterproofs i very best English make. | . | = Wol th © ! | k Cashmere— extraordinary value. | ‘ 7 | b and Colored Snimmer Capes. Big ts and half price to clear. ks’ WORTH $1.00 Gents’ very best quality i ulaundried Shirts. ‘CLOVES Thin Summer Sllk Gloves, black, tans, greys, 3Se regular 4186 Fast Black Hosiery Ladies,’ Gents’ and Children’s: guaran- teed perfectly fast color; will not stain the feet. All summer goods cheap. W. A. WEEKS &6o. Wholesale and Retail “Prince Edward Island School Series,” TG EXCUIS ti ee ee By Wm Wordsworth. as prescribed for entrance to Prince of Wales College, Now Ready< Sent by mail on receipt of price, me LJC, TRAZERS AND MERCHANTS wanting a quantity will be given a special discount on application. FASZARD & MIGORE unlight - Soap Wrapper Competition JUNE, 1897. ead The following are the winners, in district | No. 5, Province of of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. Winners of Stearns Gicycles Mr. 2. &. Holmes, Yarmouth. Mr. A. 8, Black, Truro. Winners of Gold Watches Pte W. Lawrence, lst Boyal Berks. Ret. Halifax. : Miss. Georgie May Fulton, Bass River. Mr. Gcorge W. Proctor, North Sydney Junction. Mr.S. R. Fraser, Dartmouth. Mr. Daniel McKenzie, 6 Poplar Grove, Halifax. [he above competition will be ccntinued each month of 1897. EVER BROS, Limited, Torontn THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 3, 1897 TELEGRAPHIC, SPECIAL DESPATCHES TO THE EXAMINER, UNDER THE SPOILS SYSTEM. Dismissal of Fishery Officers, v, 1 ] ’ ® l ne wooiesaie dis Moncton, Aug. 3 missal of the fishery cflicers of New Brunswick is imminent. It is said that of nearly thirty overseers in the distric1, over twenty have been dismissed or wil] shortly receive notice, so that practically the entire service w) be disorganized, Rumors are also concurrent of Im pend . y , : ’ ine changes in the interc ontal stall and of further dismissais of working men. GERMAN PRESS OPINIONS ———— ee Denunciation of the Treaty. European Trade League. Beruix, Aug. 1—The German press actively discusses Great Britain’s de- pnunciation of the Commercial Treaty. Suggestions are made for an European trale league against America with threats of serions consequences should England refuse to join such a league. TURKEY AND THE POWERS. ——— + The Draft Treaty Will be Maintained. Paris, Aug. 3.—A despatch from Con- stantinople says that the Ambassadors have determined to maintain the wording of the draft treaty of peace without any change. Palmyra Island. Loxponx, Aug. 3 —In the House of Com- mons yesterday, Mr. Curzon replying to a question, said that the British occupation of Palmyra Island would be maintained. | rrvvennennerrnevnnnennennenntnntans ENGLISH CLASSICS Authorized for use in the pub lie schools of Prince Edward Island The Excursion book I, price l5c, (now ready). Addison’s (selected), ready). Spectator price lic, (now We have the correct?author ized edition of the above books, with full evplaratory notes. These books are re- quired to be studied by all intending jcandidates for entrance to the Prince of Wales College and Nor- mal School in 1898. For sale at our bookstore or Sent by mail, postage paid, On receipt of price. Special prices to teachers and mer- chants. GEO. CARTEE & 60. Queen Street. POVPTTPTT TPN PN TPP TN PTOnT Tn orn Te nE renner renner ooo nnOnnen pO neR 1 } SUAAUAAAALAAALAAbLULSLAAGdAULGdbdGdLddLddddbdddddddddddaddddddddddddddd —— ee oo oo o- oa eo a om o~ o ao eo ee = oe oy e- ad e~ je - oo oa > o- eo o ! Fowler's Extract of Wild 6 SOS OOS9SSSCO8CHRE a ° ° ° : Price 35 cents per ° bottle. 3 34. W. REDDIN, Phm, B > SUNNYSIDE, > a e 069 20006008 DG OH96 8800880 ee eee. Strawberry = NEWS NOTES News has been received at Madrid of the flooding of one of the mines in the Balearic Islands by the sea. Nineof the men em- ployed in the inundated workings were drowned, A severe shock of earthquake was felt at Pontedra, Italy, and other places in the Arno valley. Many buildings were wrecked and a large number of persons are reported to have been injured, | Li Hung Tsao, grand councillor and | member of the Tsungli Yamen of China, , in dead, He was abelieverina strong anti-foreign policy, and was the chief op- ponent of Li Hung Chang, who will prob- ably be promoted, The Belgian Chamber of Deputies has dasseda bill compelling all foreigners who have had a year’s residence to enroll them- sel ves in the civie guard. It is expected that the Senate will kill the bill. A farmer near Whitemouth, Man., re ports that he saw a baloon twice the size of his house floating in a northeasterly direction, and the question is asked, “Can Andree?” this be |} Severe storms have prevailed throughout Out of 130,000 hectares of vinelands searcely 5,000 have escaped. In the districts of Ragoga and Gerona at least of vinelands have been Seriousiy damaged, Catalonta, Spain. S0.0°0 heetares } theaemand of th? German ambaagsadora | Constantinople, Baron Saurma De Jeltsech hat aprovision be inserted in the peace treaty between Greece and Turkey for a Kuro- pean control of Greek finances meets with disfavor among the other ambassadors. Even the Turks oppose the project. Uganda has advanced enough in civili- zation to have a hospital established by the government at Mengo, the capital. It wi!] have a men’s ward with six beds, a women’s ward with four beds, and operat- ing room, and a storeroom. A missionary docvor will be in charge. It has been estimated that the amount of doweries carried off by American wives to Europe has reached $275,000,000. The drain of meeting the interest on this amount will grow with each addition, and will create what the mercantile school calla fvoraable balance of trade. A treaty was signed on June 15 by the representatives of the five central American states or republics of Guatemala, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras and Salvador. This treaty will go into effect on Sept. 15, if ratified by that time. The union is named the Republic of Central America, and the countries forming it will now take the name of states. At Bessemer, Alabama, the citizens showed their dislike of smallpox by goiug in a mob to the hospital where the patient was being treated, and firing a hundred or so shots into the building, forcing patient, nurse and guard to flee for their lives, Is the south of the United States either a civilized or a Christian country ? A keg of beer and a luncheon are very ancient institations at a funeral. Indeed, they have scarcely been discontinued in some parts of the country. But a dance is somewhat new. On Tuesday night last a number of women assembled in Vaseel’s Hall, Hoboken, to dance in honor of the death of Mrs. Livermore. It appears that Mrs. Livermore gave testaraentary instruc- tions in her will regarding this matter. It is reported that the ladies, and they were twenty-five in number, did not particularly enjoy themselves, but wept when the de- ceased lady’s name was mentioned. .% A returned member of the Canadian contingent at the Jubilee remarked to a Hamilton newspaper reporter: “Wha amazed them most was the ignorance of the ordinary English psople whom thev, met about Canada and Canadians. It was not uncommon to hear such remarks as “Why they are not Indians,” and “They speak pretty good English,” from among the crowds of people they met. Nearly forty years ayo, when the 100th Regiment arrived in England, precisely similar remarks greeted the Canadian soldiers on their landing at Liverpool. The report of the cession of Kassala to Great Britain is quite likely to be correct. Italy took up the task of African co'oniza tion at the suggestion aud request of Great Britain, and ever since the disaster at Adowa, she has been anxious tolay down a burden which has proved too much for her strength. The factis Italy has enough to do at home, and since the Abyssinians * gavethem such atborough beating they have no heart for the work. The imperial spirit which inspired the Romans has passed to other nations. England mourns her slangh- tered aud avenges them, Italy mourns and submits. Fons The latest excitement in Springhill, N. S., is the disappointment and indignation over the apportionment of the I. C. R. coal ; contracts, Springhill’s share has been considerably cut down, and now amounts to only 45,000 tons of screened cea] ani 5,000 tonsof slack. Considering that Cumberland connty gave tie Government a inember under the bait of great promises | for the benefit of the county, the | fulfilment of the promises came aa a ' ie ... shock non- severe to the local industry, the mainstay | of the town and of the miners. Last year | Springhill supplied 72,000 tons to the I. 1 C. R. and a few years ago the contracts froin the same source were much larger, i } | The United States stature debarring British and other foreign miners from tak- ing up mining claims in the United States ‘is enforced in at least some of the states. ‘A Canadias inthe State of Washington writing to Mr. Maxwell, the representative in parliament of Burrard, B. C.. com- plains of the one-sided condition of things obtaining in Canada and theUnited States. | He says: —“In British Columbia American citizens can take up claims without be- coming British subjects, while in the State of Washington we British subjects cannot ' take up claims unless we become Ameri- can citizens.” Even where foreigners are allowed to take out claims without ques FOR SUMMER Untied GOODS ee, ee * mee You will be surprised at what wecan do for yoy ir the way of cheap Dry Goods. Our regular prices are extremely low,but they become lower still when we find seasonable goods any way tardy in moving out. Weare now cutting the price on Hatsot ajj kinds, Millinery, Boys Summer Clothing, Men’s Lys. tre Coats, Sweaters,Golf Hose, Bathing Suits, Muslin Cotton Crepons, Cotton Hosiery, and many other line swnich should be cleared out during this month You wont find a better place to buy Dry Goods tion, if their claims were afterwards disputed, they could not be npheld by the courts, Mr. Sherman, the United States Secretary ot State is, it seems, very ill- informed in regard to the mining laws of his country. The renewed trouble at Chitral will not caure any great surprise. The tribesmen were known to be belligerent and unruly, and the garrison left in the country by the British Government was criticised from the first, by some who knew the district,as insvfficient. A small force was kept at the head of the Malakand Pass to control a very large district. It is this force which has beea attacked, with some loss. But reinforcements are kept within call, and before long the tribesmen will be again chastised and taught that though the British Government makes no great dis- play of force, it has along arm and can reach from far. It is predictel by the manufacturer of herseless carriages that within ten years these vehicles will supersede the ordinary vehicle drawn by horses, There are many things in favor of the new invention— cleanliness, noiselessness of movement, and economy in maintenance. Carriage making a® at present carried on will not, however, become a lost art uttil the price of the horseless affair is greatly reduced, nor will the ranching businese become obsolete, no matter how cheaply they may be produced. The sewing machine did not drive the needle out of the world, nor did the telegraph banish the mail service. Santa Rosa, Ca., August 2.—Prof Otta Fiiei Debendeleben declares that there isa mountain of gold in Alaska, situated at 65 degrees, 25 minutes and 11 seconds north latitude, and 172 west long- itude. The mountain ie called Mount Debendeleben, in honor of the professor, and was pamed by Prof. Gen. Davison. It was in 1866 while he was a member: of the famous Western Union Telegraph Russian extension expedition that Prof. Debendeleben first saw the mountain. It is the higheet peak in all that region, he says, and istull of gold. Many scientists have been of the opin- ion that all gold that crops out on this coast came some time from a great deposit in the north, and the professor thinks that mighty floods that moved everything before F them carried the golden particles from the mother lode to fields fnrther sooth. It wa Prof. Debeneleven who prepared the report on the resources of Alaska that went to Secretary of State Seward which Mr Seward declared.to be one of the most comprehensive documents of its character over compiled. It was on this report that the secretary principally relied when urg- ing the purchase of Alaska from Russia pdy the United States. 2+e+o IN MIDSUMMER, Watching the reaper in the harvest field— The mingled pathos of the falling grain, And Summer’s glory, now so soen to wane, A new life-picture seems to me revealed :-— How gently Nature’s leading is concealed ! How deftly she deceives the eye and braim. : Whileairs and scents, intoxicating feign A youth-time in the year so soon to yield! As we implore no Season to delay. But follow eagerly the brave advance Of bird and bud, of kernel, truit and | frost : So, kindly, Fate beguiles our haunted way With dear Delusions, that befare was dance And pipe the music of “The world well lost” —Charles H. Crandall, in Harper’s Maga- zine for August. Norice.—All persons owing for poll tax had better attend to the same, as after the 15th day of August executions will be issued, tf. ne z For Sale or To Let Two Houses cn Pleasant Street. Good stable and yard. WILLIAM DODD. dly 6, °97- Im Theres a Boom than the Sunnyside Dry Goods Store. ee dusiacee .: — BUSINE ‘ > Of Shirt Waist selling these days. Our big mark down offer does the work. the following prices, There are some Shirt Waists left at all Can’t guarantee a full range of sizes, but itll pay you to see if yours is here. Neat Waists, good cotton, collars and cuffs attached, regular 78c line, clearing at 52e. A especially nice line, neat small figure, collar and cuff: atteched, regular 85 cent value going at 37¢, A grand value, splendid cotton, well made, well finished. mostly in pinks, reg- ular 98c, going at 66e, Another nice line, has detachable col- lar, and attached cuffs, fine cotton, cheap at $1.10, going to-day at T4e, er $1.00 Three good grades, regularly priced 4 $1.15. One is of a neat, pink stripe print white detachable collar, attached cafls, was $1.15, isnow Z7¢ Just a few left of a fine muslin blouse, detachable white collar and cuffs, was $1.30, is now SSe. ’ A very pretty line, stylish, detachable cufta and collar, was $1.55, Here’s aspecially handsome line, de tachable cufts and «ollar, etc, very nicely made ard finished, was $1.75, is 00¥ SL.17 Wa, i { what we alverti¢e we have, MOORE & McLEO AGENTS /MONTREAL* Perkins, Sterns & Turner. a iit. ie. i “uno T buil che: hou: groc ada) D; Ai a >» Ta = ' I RB; | ; | —_