fhe aly Examiner The Cxaminer Publishing Company OF SUBSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE ncATES @ne Your S4.00 Six Meuths 2.00 Three Wonths 1.60 @ane Menth O35 | = st paid to any part of Canada or th | a “tates (HE WEEKLY EXAMINER) | “s very Friday morning. It is made up of m er whi is appeared n the Daily and * a first os ewspa per containiu mMiithe latest pews ption $1.0 ayear | ' seybT i 1 ne ‘ j Al NOVEMBER 23, 1897 NOTES AND COMMENTS. I Washington Tran-cr pt, rev jen j £ the w nt Canadian delieyvales, reteérea I , oa ’ roy rait nm) and SaVSs: “T vas the rock ucon which the ne 18 were wre ked Phey ire not ilke o be reFunit :, ’ —A.-cerding to Mr. Tarte’s evidence in) the ¢ ier case, between $700 and $800 | was ubsecribed by Quebec Liberals and Be! Onta io at the last elec.ion to help the cxuse of Mowat and pur.ty. The) Montreal Gazette suggests that there isa hint nthis,to the Conservatives of the vrovince as o what ivfluences they may have to fight ‘a thecomieg combat. If the Liberals w were poor and in Opposition cou $700 or $500 for an oulside provincial contest, what may they b+ expected to do when they are rich and in power? —Tue reports to the department of agri- culture from the Eoglish commission houses state that butter shipped from the creameries in the Northwest territories to Great Britain is very satisfactory, al- thougt the market is somewhat depressed at pre-ent, the depression being made by unustally large shipments from Denmark Russia aod the United States, ai a time when the yery open and mild weathe pree vailed in Great Britain. For one week the shipments from these coungrics amounted to about one thousand tons of butter mere than duringthe same week of last year. The market is now slightly better, and Canadian butter is in better demand. sist’? MIRACLY IN A CHURCH, An Image of the Vi gin Appears Upon the Wall~The Church ‘Ihrongs. Scrayxron, Pa., Nov. 22.—T here is much excite:nent among the church peuple here over tue appearance of the figure of the Madonna on the «ast wall of St. John’s Cathvlic Church on Fig Street, ove: the thirteenth station, which repre-ents the taking of Christ irom the cross. The figure of the Virgin appears to stand out from the wal when viewed from a short dis tance, but when the observer com — /! the reli-t figure givee way o a very dis tinct outline on the wall. — A young woman noiiced the apparition first Sunday night at her devotions but paid ne attention to it mistaking it for a shadow; but yesterday several hundred caw it while attending the 7 o'clock mac and the atiention of Rev. Father Melley, the pastor, was called to it. He made an ex- awin<« tion and felt inclined at first to d the entrance to the THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 24 1897 ‘nm on the; liceto keepthem from blocking church. The figure represents the head and shoulders of the Virzg.ia, with n veil Ly hs head stichtle elevated, and fromthe crewn and over the shonlders. The presence of sunlight intensifies the lulous are resemb'es imeve and eveo the most incr now inclined to believe that it the upper portion of Murillo’s great paint ing of the Madonea. The excitement and religious ferver reached sanch ex tremes that many ailing persons visited the church t.day in hope ot being relieved. St. John’a Church en structure built is ina pari of the city inhabited chiefly by steel workers. have isi we : fen vears @#7o ana —————— <[e - (een THE NEWS IN SHORT METRE, Items of Interest Bolled Down For More Massy Reading, extension of Montreal! Couaty the service De- The arrangement for the the Intercolonial Railway into over the | ne: of the Drummond road are pow completed, and is expected to commence the first of cem ber. years and | Joseph, Mo, a Joho Joverton, aged 100 month, was married at Sc. | few dave ago to Mrs. M-ry Henderson, wio is T7 years old, This is believed ob: @ record breaker for marriages of old jer sons. Both bride and groom are in ex- cellent health, [t is stated that Senor Guesta, the p:-~ sident of Uruguay adinter:m, has deewed to declare himself dictator ar with the servicers «f the legislature. Great excitement prevails at Monte Video, i dispense The Knights of Labour, at their as sembly in Louisville, Ky., have passed a strong resolution condemuity the proposed Anglo-American arbitration treaty, simply because England isa gold-coiming country, and a majority of the Kaights of Labour are silver men. A boy named Jos. Larouche shot Mias Bella Johnson at the Central Depot Newa Office, Ottawa, last week, smashed ber jaw and knockedtwo of her teeth out. He didn’t know the revolver was loaded. lt is stated that the reason Mr. Sover- eign resigned from the office of Grand Mast erWorkman of the Knights of Labour wae that he might bave free hands to run for President of the United States at the close of Mr. McKinley’s term. The largest mortgage ever recorded in the reg strar’s office at Menominee, Mich , was tranecribed last week It wae tne mortgage of the Chicago and North Weat- ern Railroad Company to the United States Trust Company of New Yorke and Joho A Stewart trustee and was for $165, 000,000. The mortgage was in the regular form and madea pam phiet of eighty-three priated pages and is effectual until 1987. AvMost aCentenarta..—Mr>. Jonathan Campbell, of Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia, recently celebratcd her ninety sixth birth- day, in the presence of many friende. Mrs. Campbell was born in the county of Caithness, the land of Joha O’Groat’s House, among the gr.cite end gneiss mountain ranges of the north of Scotland. Her father, aecording to the Truro News, was Captrin Sutherland, retired army officer; bis long lease of 99 years for his tenancy having expired, add would no* be renewed, sold all his valuable property, and embarked ina smal eailing vessel, with hie wife, one son and s < daughters for P. E. Island, whee, through an Eng- lish agent, he had purcussed or Jeased oa large quantity of lend. It was a long passage, and when they arrive! in Pictou, credit telief in anything of a supe: .ature nature but finally was obliged to concede that it was a decidedly peculiar matter and today he is fairly impressed with the belief | that th: image,is that of the Virgin. Devout @atholics from all sections of ihe city and «1rrounding towns flocked the church ,todey, and sodense did the crowd Lecome that it was nec*:2ary to call ———9 —_—« A — a Fifty Years Ago. This is the way it was bound to look When grandfather had his “picter took.” These were the shadows cast before The coming of Conjurer Daguerre And his art; like a girl in a pinafore Some day to bloom to a goddess fair. Men certainly were not as black, we know As they pictured them, 50 years ago, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla began to make new men, just as the new pictures of men began to be made. Thousands of people fronted the camera with skins made clean from blotch and blemish, because they had purified the blood with Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. It is as powerful now as then. Its record proves it. Others imitate the remedy; they can't imitate the record: they were transferred to a little fishing achvoner bound for Charloitetown, The day they landed on the “Gein of the Gulf,’ & great storm came up in tue night, and the fragile fishing cratt was sunk in the harbor. The little band of immi- grants lost a lot of their personal eTec >, and what were saved were almost ‘uined in the salt water. Captain Sutherland found tae land he had settled on poor, and in the spring he re- turned to Pictou, and travelled on foot to Shubenacadie, to visita friend. He took up a gravtof land near the mouth of the Stewiacke river. He had been settled but & few yeas when he died leaving a widow and a family of lit.le children to struggle as best they might with all the difficulties of strangers in @ thin and spareely peopled locality. The widow, who boasted of a lineage descended from some of the best blood of the oldest families of the High- lands of Scotland, knew no such word ag failure, and bent al! ber energies to improve the wide lands on which the dead husband bad built them a homestead. She sueceéed- ed nobly. She grieved that there were no schools for her growing family, but she became their teacher, and started them al! out in the world, educated and highly re- apected citizens. Se ee Lonpox, Nov. 20.—Mr. Thomas Marton, the big provision exporter, left five hun- dred thousand pounds chiefly to missions, excluding his heirs. It is not to be devoted to existing Missions but for the establishing of new missions. Waco, Texas, Nov. 20.—Editor Harris, Waco, of the Times Herald, bit a Harris, his brother, and Judge Gerald fought a duel to death on the street at 5 o’clock, Jast night. W.A. Garris was shot dead, J. W. Harris mortally wounded and Judge Gerald may die, by Editor Barris’ refusal to publish ‘an article by Judge Gerald bitterly critcising the Baylor University and the mobbing of W. C. Brannen, ConstanTINOPLe, Nov. 20— The Russian Turkey. It is believed Turkey has drop- ped plans for reorganization of the navy. Buy corsets at Paton’s. 2 large spools “Mayflower” crochet silk for 25c.—Moore & McLeod. Ladies’ jackets $235, 823.00 and $3.50, worth up to 85.25 50 Years of Cures, at Paton’s. The trouble was caused | Embassy has sent a note to the Turkish: for I Embassy demanding a pertion of the. arrears on the war debt due Russia by. ‘particularly for little folks. It WESTMINSTER ABBEY. Bomething About This World Famous Old English Church. The architecture of Westminster ab- bey dates back to a remote period, but long before any part of the present ‘‘glorious pile’’ was in existence a Sax on church stood upon the same spot. Many years before the « was conne chquest the ted with a Penedictine order, me Western monas- to its place of it from St. Paul’s, Saxon church monastic body of tl which gave the ni tery, or Westminster, abode. to distingulsi in London, which was known as East i * sidered architecturally, the first { 1 here of which we have any an- th: tory wus erected by Edward the Cont r a rated on Holy | I r part | of ry Ill in | ‘ L an ¢ ivy i I 3. The | we with . beautiful windows, belongs to the fiiteenth cen- tury, as does also the completion of the | nave and the aisles. The extreme length of Westminster abbey is 511 feet, the width aci the tr ts is 205 feet | and the wicth acress the aisles 79 feet; the height of the re is 102 feet. The tortunes cf the al bey have fol- lowed and are closely interwoven with those of the neaticn, and many, there- fere, are its historical associations. There th sovercigus of Ensland have been crowncd ever since the conquest. The ccronztion brought from Scotland by Edward I, may still be seen under the corenation chair used by Richard Ji. ‘his chair has ever since been occupicd Ly English rulcrs during the corcuaxticn ccer¢dmcnies. Withim the walls of the abbey the fencrals of many crowned heads have taken place, and severeigus and mem- bers of royal families have graves and tombs benesth its recf. Oliver Crom- well never wore a crown, bet bis re- mains were deposited for a time ina vault beneath Henry VII's chapel wich | pomp never surpasscd by that of royalty. The south transept is known to the world as the ‘‘poets’ ccrner,’’ because there, sleeping their last sleep, are Chaucer, Spenser, Ben Jonson, Cowley, Dryden, Beaumont, Addison and Ten- nyson and near by are monuments to Shakespeare, Milton, Isaac Waits, Gold- sinith and Johnson. In the north transept are buricd many renowned statesmen. There lie Pitt, Wilberforce, Fox, Peel, Canning and Palmerston. Many eminent divines, men of letters, generals, admirals and other persons known tofame are buried beneath the marble pavement or have monuments by its pillars or on its his- toric walls,—Philadelphia Times. gfcne, a Y = = = —— / Hy) of ga A * SY BABY’S OWN SOAP is made is the purest soap in the world. Really and truly the purest. It looks good ; smells good ; IS good ; and does good to the pink and tender skin of infants. Thousands of men and women use BABy’s Own Soap—be- cause they like it—but for Babies it is indispensable. 7 THe ALBERT TOILET SOAP Co., MONTREAL. Unprincipled makers are offering an inferior a? the same in color and shape as Baby's Own *evevteee?e “MESSAGE TO MEN Proving that True Honesty and True Phil- antrophy still Exists If any man who is weak, nervous and debilittaed, or who is suffering ftom any of the various troubles resulting fromm youth- ful folly, excesses or overwork, will take heart and write to me, I will send him con- fidentially and free of charge the plan pursued by which I was completely restor- ed to perfect health and manhood, after ears of euffeting from Nervous Debility, oe of Vigot and Organic Weakness. I have nothing to sell, and therefore want no money, but as I know through my Own experience how to sympathize with such sufferers, I am glad to beable to assist any fellow-beings to a cure, I ain well aware of the prevalence of quackery, mvself was deceived and imposed wpon until I nearly lost faith in mankind but I rejoice to say that I am now perfectly well and happy once more and am desirous therefore to make this certain means of cure known to all. If you will write to me you can rely upon being cured and the proud satisfaction of having been of great service to one in need will be sufficient re- ward for my trouble. Absolute secrecy assured. Send 5c silver to cover postage } and address Mr. G. Strong, North Rock ,; and, Mich 135 p&w. | Are gaining favor rapidly. Teo Much Salt. The New York Journal of Hygiene says that many people eat altogether too much salt. The result is that the skin and kidneys are excessively taxed to get rid of the sait, and both are in- jured by it. Few people have healthy skins, and it is believed that many cases of derangement of the hidueys are due to the salt habit. The Cause of Confusion, ‘‘Isn’t it strange the way people make mountains out of molehills?’’ ‘“‘Ob, [don’t know. When youaren’t big enough to see over them, there isn’t much difference. ’’—Chicaga Journal LALO EY OS od’s 3 Business men and travel- lers carry them in vest pockets, ladies carry them in purses, housekeepers keep them in medicine closets, friends recommend them to friends. 25c. EPPSS COSA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homoopathic Chemists, London, En; land. r ae are aiid OOS $O999S09 9999999990 O 3 Gi > 63 : hive The only food e ; > that will build 3 Baby up a weak cons- 3 titution gradu- Martin’s Cardinal Food a simple, scientific and highly nutritive preparation for infants, delicate children and invalids. ne WATSON 4 CO., Saahtect a 3 Chance ally but surely is : MONTREAL. eec00 meme |] OO OSD e Souvenit P E Island Acopy of “ Prince ¢ Edward Island illus- trated,” is about the best thing for the purpose of giving strangers an ‘ea of this beautiful Prev- ince. It consists of 100 pp. printed on the best paper, The engravings are nu- merous and __first- ¢ class. The piice is 25c a copy. They are for sale at all the bookstores in Char- lottetown, Sum merside and Souris § and on the train. They may be ob- ¢ tained at this office securely | wrapped, . ready to mail to ¢ friends abroad. Write or call, THE EXAMINER OFFICE, seeooee QUEEN STREET...... A. A. McLEAN, 0. C. Barister, Etc., Brown’s Block Charlottetown => ee e @ @ 2 42042046046 8 8 G22 8 E408 88686046 8632 66. Money to Loan. Printing in all its branches at the Exam- INER Office, one of the bese equip- "TL IM #F:! ia & a LIM a Good Time to Buy Watches NOW. In spite of the advance in price at the Factory, T hayt been able to buy,ani will sell a nice lot of uzw Wate reg a : ° . Mii: the old rae, the order having been given before tha raige, Call and see them: also our new Rings. W. TAYLOR, you look through our Factory. ever before. Prices always right. ee ——= We Are Daving Money LVcry5easo Carpenters and Builders Who trade wich us for Doors, Sash Moulding, Spouting, Flooring, Clapboards. Balusters, Rail Posts, &c., &., we make a specialty of WOOD oMANLKS ang Newel Posts in Common and fancy woods. If you are not yet cur customer, we wonld like to haye We can soon show you wh we are able to give such value as we do—in fact, better thay Work never inferior, A. Duchemin & Co.. Charlottetown. P._E. Island, _ feet tit oat adnan ¢ Headquarters for Shoe Bargains Macdonald's Market Square. Neg ee lines equally lov, Look for your fall and winter Boots, from us, We are seiling at the lowest price yet. strong leathr bh «ts for boots 5@¢, mens strong boots $1 00. You will be sorry if you buy without seeing ourprices. Womens 75e, children’s strong Other air eG ~ } J.B. Macdonald&Co FOR SHOE BARGAINS. . ade ag eeing egiath Hagta agin 5 |], teeing bagee bene A GLANCE AT OUR SHOES will convince all who want style, comfort and durability that our stock comprises the best that shoemaker’s art can produce. aaa Women’s Felt Laced Boots Women’s Buttoned Felt Boots. Women’s Elastic Side Felt Boots, from 85c and upwards Felt Slippers. Cloth Slippers. " PIANOS T, C, P. YEO, ped Job Printing Establishments | on P. E, Island, 2 “a eo ¥ Agent at Summerside In new and elegant designs of cases. C. P. FLETCHER, W.H Stewart & Co ——— ———— a PIANOS PIANOS, Now Opening —Ffall Stock All prices. Opera House ‘Buildins —- & — = 4 a t: — 379 ae 7 2 4oS8 wow a & tT n e tae 9 hi St: dr in, d a > A y fy