732 Leib) 1aAte aU er Ct LIE FUTISIC we NCVEMIFE 21, 1900. DAILY EXAMINER SRE * eesued every afternoon from the ot- »f publication, Londoa House Feaiding, corner of Queen and ~ * eh mon & Streets, (upstarrs). Sub- ption FOUR DOLLARS A "SAR, toanv address in Canada ethe lt S$. WME WEEKLY EXAMINER siesued every Friday morn ng. It mertains a complete su: ts nary of the weews of the week, and is the best Jeomd.. rewspaper to and to friends aervad Subscription price ONE HeLLAR A YEAR, to any adl- essin Canada or the U. smt EXAMINER JOB PRINT red ity of ta: job printing it at THE EXAMINER office wledszed by all. All classes yok and job,from dainty in th: latest style to ser bound books. Also all display printin@é, commer- J levi! b'anks, etc, etc, at yrisingly low. de ss all business € € Su} exre J sknar 2TiO! rk inb < Si si communica- The Examiner Pub. Co. i, » P..E. ~ CAP) bie it SOSEBERY’S WORK. H ESTIMATE OF HIS “NAPOLEON” BY MRS. }1UMPHREYS. <—e tK7 a . s ee LS Sommended for Con- emnation of Bonaparte’s Treatment in Exiie by the English. mor FE = Shee Rosebery’s long-expected | “Napoleon, came from z last week immediately created sa erere, altraciing the attention of th whose comments have bee orthcoming. Covering, a: the later days of Napule parte, the book is a fine char. ic! ont: and is classed as one of ih fesafy_events of the year. a lengthy review of the Arnhur L Huaitiirey in the Dui.; mph says: etd Beaconsfield ence explai why he roe Alarcos.’» ‘It was . i aecaser work =S$5 em... =~ ~ ~ ee ? wtiy > + 2 ees Seas a fx 4 S ¥« sare — —~. St z ‘ bi Ot a : ro mr Atala Cant ay a ne 3 @ Lvrd J.oseb r the a eicama, ‘Count ywcucesd, she said, cspeaposing a great tragedy, but of lay a one lit rary ghost of a story wh'c ed him. 3043 U,’ says the author of ‘Na- mi,’ ‘the last phase with this little wade It cannot help embodying a tugede. but it was written to lay a, i eemy ghost dormant for years, and | wae -guickened into activity by the ~amax. eis of Gourgaud’s last journals’ “ord Kosebery gives us a_ picture | se & Saat ce ptivity, where the emperor | ami fis fw faithful companions were | wecned like clipped sca birds ona a ical rock,’ with asuccinctness and | ‘alization which are the! SEGEAESC 1: rm di the volume. at 8 = J Bx $ ™~ wat “ “5g HOLY OF LONETY EXILE, “he .wearines and melancholy of | ##@ & Lonely exile are re enacted. Rus |} S.ustria and France sent comniss | sk @mns to St. Helena to ‘assure them sacs of Bonaparte’s presence.’ ®s a matter of fact, they never, or cyuwrcely ever, saw him. The Russian eamtzission deciared that ‘nothing exasx cE Ibe mere absurb, more impolitic, “leemaerenesous or less delicate than the sazme.éuct of the Engiish to Napoleon.’ “ord Rosebery indorsed every | s¥aed°Sr/tuis coudemnation. If Sc, '=® ctena recalls painful memories for | <@eee8ench, much more poignant are itmee that it excites among ourselves. Piwaess _acisfortune to England to be wszmeecnted by men who forgot the! Sg ce of their own nation and ignor- | e-@eT ae quality of their prisoner. «\ wgrest peo} le must not desend to petti- EEE. In the treatment of Napoleon SES pettiness all through.” “ - = ile wish” wrote Lord Liverpool, «be King of France would hang: : cele }.onaparte as the best termin 22 ec -of the business.’ “-Gihis was the spirit of men toward “gemesetio threw himself on British mag- ty. They feared the extraord- may gianiour about the fallen mon- “ss. aod therefore ordered that he was “afte treated, net as a former emper- oie, mat “as a general not in employ.’ _. “Aer the Duke of Sussex and Lord "S Hei land in Parliament had protested <2ggieest this treatment the style was ; = te shat of a general of disting: - te ete 4 aR! HUDSON LOWE TACTLESS. wie ts Kez es, MEETS “ : wife of-—Lord general of India. Sir Hudson thought ‘net im the hore of | / rooms fourteen feet by twelve feet, and | tenor twelve feet high. | court. ‘and lean against the furniture. -wacant place is kept for the empress, .but 1s given now and then to some fig with six horses’ andan equerry “alt of the trouble of she i scat aafortunate Sir Hudse udsen. #4 fe ee cabs St. Ai “oul oa ad ee ps A i oe at Ae TEHGCO OF te. —4e SF 7. 4 lowing invit ’ 3 7 ol Ss agents Of General Bovapirte adm ‘ir Hudson and Lady towe w Clim iuified in tre fon Pa ympany to meet the Countess 0! | London at dinner next Monday 2! | 6 o'clock. They request Count Bert- rand to make the invitation known to him and forward to them his reply.’ “The faithful Bertrand did make the } | invitation.known to the emperor, merely remarked. ‘It is too silly; no reply.’ who send countess, governo: the the “Lady Loudon was Moria, itan aimable condescension to invite ' Napoleon to dinner with the countess, -and addressed him by atitle which he _knew the emperor considered an in- sult to France and to himsel!. “The irritation was maintained to the end. Hobhouse sent his book on “The Hundred Days’ to Napoleon, writing inside it ‘Imperatori Napoleon.’ This book, though the inscription afte: all in strictness only meant to Gen eral Napoleon,’ the conscientious Lowe sequestrated. NAPOLEON’S GIFT DECLINED. “Three weeks before his death the | sick captive sent ‘Coxe’s Life of Marl- borough’ as a token of good will to-the officers of the Twentieth Regiment. | Unfortunately the imperial title was written or stamped on the title’ page, and the present, under orders of the | governer, was declined. In these days the Twentieth Regiment would perhaps not mind possessing the life of the greatest of English generals, given by the greatest of French. “Yet to the very end, to the grave itself, this pettiness was kept up. ‘On ihe emperor's coffin plate his followers lesired to place the simple inscription ‘Napoleon, with dates and bis birth and death. Sir Hudson re- fased his sanction te this unless ‘Bona arte’ was added, the emperor's Dut -uite felt themselves unable to agree to ‘ihe style, which their master had de-| clined to accept. So there was no name on the coffin. it: seems in- credibie™ but it is true’ “Lord Rosebe y_ throws responsi- bi ity for the offeusive .inap khude = of he treatment of Bonap arte-on the juvernment rather than on Admira! Cockburne and Sir Uudson Lowe. “Of those ‘successors of Pitt, he r-tnarks, ‘Liverpvol, Eldon, Bathurst Castlereagh and Sidmouth were whose names can scarcely be said {ee in history. They had h.ir great enemy. Their first wish vas to get somebody else to shoot him or hang him, failing which they determined to leck up like a pick- Ailthey felt clearly was that he had cost them a_ great deal trouble, and a great deal of money, so ih&t he must cost them as little more as possinie. They were honest men. acting up to their lights. We can only regret that the men were dull and ther lights were dim.’ tO aere him pe cket. of LONGWOOD. skiil Lord | us the life at CAPTIVE’s “With much literary Rosebery sketches for Longwood.’ “ihe master of many palaces is domiciled ina damp house, swept by eternal winds, containing two -mail LIFE AT “In one corner ih the adjoining room he spends many a sleepless night, while on an old sofa he passes the long hours of many a tedious day. “In these ettguous quarters he up- holds at times the rigid étiquette of a “Gourgaud, Bertiand, Montholon and Dr. Anton Marchi are kept stand ing till they are ill with fatigue, “If Mme. Bertrand or Mme. de Montholon enters and the men rise unbidden, they are sharply rebuked Napoleon is served on gold and silver plate, and waited on by French ser vants in liveries of green and gold. A ‘favored lady. . “When he drives out it is ina car- in full uniform at each door. “His rooms are littered with books. His one real pleasure is the arrival of new works to read. He took 800 vol- umns to Waterloo, including the Bible, Ossian, Hlomer, Bossuit and all the seventy volumns of Voltaire. The British government sent him a bill. for £1,400 for the books, and the sum being unpaid at his death they fee in Jamies for a few hun- Ses s oF his | life in captiv- ppaleon, exhib- arance with ffering contra- “in a way we Ifish, domin- ander. é im. playing at chess not ry we ell, cheating at games, though Ja “taking winnings, moralizing ii, ersation were distrac- ions. the principal MIGHTY SPIRITS WEARINESS. ‘in sp.te of all, the weariness and manu vi Lais mighty spirit are terrible. tL. turns upon the peculant, captious sulky G urgand with pathetic truth. ‘You speak of sorrow, you and L—! \What sorrow have | not had? What bings tc reproach myself with? You at iny rate have nothing to regret, Do ‘you suppose that when I wake at night | { have not bad moments when I think if what I was and what I am?” “In an eloquent passage Lord Rose- berry says: ‘Europe buckled itself to ‘he unprecedented task of gagging and paralyzing that intelligence, that force and intelligence that were too gigan- tic for the welfare and security “of the world That is the strange, unique a d nideous problem which makes the _re- cords of St. Helena so profoundly fas- cinating.’ “Napoleon often gibed@at the Engi- place of | men | t! }and had no ‘sympathy with liberty or caught | | secret is $2 comp'ex, possibly lish, yet he said: ‘The Efiglish char lacie ec is superior to ours. They are in i eve) thing more practical than we are. | They emigr themselves with less indecision | we display in going to the opera. They are also braver than we are. I think I can say thatin courage they are to us what“We are to the Russians, to the Italians. Had I had an English army I should have conquered universe.’ GREAT SOLDIER’S AMBITION. “Tt was the ambition of this restless spint to be not merely the iord Europe, but the emperor of the East. kweypt once in the possession of the reich, farewell India to the Bhiitish. Uhis was one of the grand projects iimed at. The East only wants a man Now we will see what will com2 to the Enghsh from Russia. Russia is the power that marches most with ihe greatest strides toward versal dominion, for now there is France, theretore no ¢quilibrium. ' T7 > ihe unt > QUEBEC CONTEST.. Lumbago Driven Out Prémptly by Dodd’s Kidney Pills. QuEBEC, Nov (Quebec is called “the Gibralter of America, ’’ and well deserves the name, it is by no means impregnable against the assaults of Kidney Dis ease. Fortuniicly the inhabitants | have an ally in Dodd’s Kidney Pills that succeeds ‘2 driving the enemy out, every tim» it eains an entry, Some time ago Mr, John Ball, of No. 57 Little e amin: iin Street. was attacked by 71 mhaco, He suffered for two years without vetting re- lief from any of the medicines he used. Then he tried Dodd's Kidney Pills and the first box he used help ed him. He used only three boxes, and is now well and strone in every way. 19.-- Although | stillet tpdiiiitteiinat ies con Towson—lIs your daughter a fin- ished musician ? Yorkrode—Not yet, but neighbors are making threats. the y a ey marry, they ki 1) than | the | ithe Russians ‘@ the Germans, the Gerinans be ot | surely and! ne | “Lord Rosebery takes in general a | view favorable to Bonaparte. Ihis, 1. observed not because the liberal! statesman is under any ilusion as t che leanings of a miitary dictator to ward a democracy. “One of the stroagest passages in this abiabng volume goes to show at Bonaparte feared the populace iL} apira ions’ ‘Moraliy, he thinks the man Napol- eon not s> biack as he is painted. He sugges that his civil and military cberacter require to be treated = sepa: ae'y, each by experts, and when ail done he wilt perhaps remun an_ enig- ina uf history, possib'y hecause the because there is none—‘only the play and de cision of destiny.” cc AIR mm — To Suceed mandy : Lonpox, Nov. 19.— The Rev. Campbell Morgan, minister of New court Congregational chapel, Tell ington Park, London, Is N a will occur nét later ‘than February next,he says: ‘‘I have come to the conclusion that the invitation from Northfield is the call of God.”’ They have been ana yzing the eom- position of the new British House ot Com-nons, and the results, aceording ‘oa London newspaper, are rather en- tertaining as specimens of nonencia- ture. Incolors there are Black, Grey, Green, Brown, White and Reddy ; ornithology is represented by a Schwann, a Finch and a Martin ; of mammals there are a Bull. A Well-Known Beachville Lady Cured of Catarrh in its Worst Form After Years of Suffering. . announced | from his pulpit yesterday that he) had accepted to past: orate at North-| be | ing kidneys are tast becoming a thing of thc } remedy | i Oo ~<a : An Old Theory Exploded The old-fashioned theory of tearing down disease was entirely changed by the advent of | Dr. A. W. Cha3sz2’s Nerve Food, which cu by creating new rich b'ood and nerve tissue. | 4 Through the medium of the circulation an nervous system th y strengthen and invig | o-ate every orgzn in th: hu nan body. eo Stenographers might be said to! be among the fastest men... af the | city. a Coll te aes To Cure a Coid in One Day. Quinine | Take Laxative Bromo Tablets. All druggists refund the | money if it failstocure. 25 cents. | h. W. Grove’s signature is on each | box. | — oa — Prince Ching—Why doesn’t the Emperor bow to the inevitable ? Li Hung Chang—tI think he has Luinbago. oo ee An Enormous Saie. To all who have felt the evil effects of de- mnged kid.eys, it is interesting to kuow thai | A. W, Chase’, Kidney-a iver aic meeting with enormous sale and umparalleled | success in this district. bBackaches and ach +. ' ins is Where Dr. A. W. Ch se’s K.dney-Liver | iills are known. One cent a dose, 25 cen: | box 2 at ali dealers. a OR 'T Pne City Council of Bramtford, Ont., is acquiring landsin the west end of the city for park purposes. i Mother's Favorite. Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpe tine is wothers favorite. remedy for croup, bronchitis, asthma, colds and hroat. Tt has by far the largest sale of am) for coughs and colds — It is pleas 1:1 oie coughs, Ore at : rly with the quality for price. ae Are cheap or expensive just as surely as they Wecan safely say tha i cheap when compared with others at the same price. $2.98 Compare Well gp it our Ulster are wae - Pretty cheap for an all around good solid Ulster. Well, 9 it is, | , but you must remember that others sell the same U \s ‘ter at nearly double { that. Other Ulsters, $4.50, $6.50, $3, 39.25, $10 and $12. © Many not ’ a to the taste, pr -mpt in action and is an abso- © : NY ce : eee i flute safeguard against consumption and preu- cood aan a ee oe : = tf - ’ anaes today: monia. 25 centsa bottle. Family size oc} ——. ou need one at once. Our prices , Cclts. a er — ———— ° The more delusion some people ‘have the more happiness they es- 5 OO | JOY. g * é E ~ - Minard! .‘ Liniment ‘ _ $6.50, 37.25, $8.50, These are good grades of Beaver, Melton and Cures Distemper, | President cloth. Ocr prices $9, $9,75, $10.50, $11.75, $44, $15 are ey $0 ‘ eltons, Beavers, W hipcords, Chinchille and Cheviot. We fit you The widow of Jesse James, the} time, or your money back, without us having a fit. ge field, in *succession to the late | famous bandit, died at Karsas.City % Dwight L. Moody. In a letter an- | recently. nouncing His resignation, which a ithe Prince and Princess of Wales | will visit Ireland in April. 4 + JAPANESE GATARRH CURE CURES. | There are hundreds of so-called catarrh cures, | but those who have tried them all proclaim | Japanese Catarrh Cure the only real and per- manent cure. A. Nott, Beachville, Ont., writes:—“I feel so gratified for the inv aluable benefit de- rived from Japanese Catarrh Cure that I would | like to make this wonderful medicine known disagreeable disease, I had catarrh for years. There was almost a constant dropping in my to others. Nothing I could permanent relief until I used Japanese Catarrh Cure. I used in all six boxes, and it worked | wonders in my case. I have not now the least symptom of catarrh, and cannot praise this remedy too highly.” and teed cure for catarrh. sell it, 50 cents, or mailed, Griffiths & Macpherson Co., a ae stpaid, by e Limited, 121 co t-gamibling. Reading and con- Church St., Toronto. throat, and my breath was very objectionabie | et gave mic any | to all who suffer from this most annoying and | } } } } } Japanese Catarrh Cure is the only permanent ‘London, Ont. } | TL Minard’s Liniment Gures Diptheria. . ee It issemi-ofticially announced that oo ee itching, Bleeding Piles Mr. W. G. Phyall, proprietor Bodega AH. tel, 36 Wellington Street East, Toronto, says: ‘*While living i in Chicago 1 Was in a terrible state with it ching and hleeding piles, I tried several of the best physicians and wa: buint and tortu:ed in various ways by thei: treatments to no avail, beside. spending a mint of money to no purpose. Since coming to Torento I learned of Dr. Chase’s Ointment, I used but one box and have nv been troubled with piles fn any shape or form since.’ ~~ o Lord Salisbury’s Cabinet will consist of tw enty mem- bers, the largest British Cabinet ever formed. re organized <A <a Asthma : | Mrs. Gea. Budden, Putmar.vi! le, Oat., says : “*T felt it my duty to recommend Dr, Chase’s Syrup of Linse:d and Turpentine, as 1 had the asthma very bad; could get nothing todo me any good. A friend of mine persuaded me to try this remedy, as he had tried it, and it proved successful. I tried it and it cured me. [am a well woman through the use of t remedy, 25c¢ a bottle, Family size 60c. | 2 Do not suppose that anyone is. more interested in your ‘welfare than yourself must be. | °° ae” Minard’ s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. | So } The establishment of a sanitarium | for consumptives is advocated in ‘Minard’s Liniment. Cures Carget in Cows. ' better ones at $18 and $22. for the money, [am thankful today to say | CTS ia Canada. is | that, we'll stake ours on its bei | jacket of ours. loo Our SOV. UU SPecia-s : . Now, 2 jacket of fur for $15 is pretty cheap, is it not; "i we ve , The best Astrachan jacket on P. $25. Others $30, $40, $45 anc $5. This latter is the fest | pr ice. Astre®chan jacket j in Ch’town at any deal- It’s made by the Knadinge & Sons, Montreal, the largest fOr tian prtation on this jacket. 0 best Astrachan jacket for your buy until you Sse . L They stake thei r re ~ +}, L 2 Liié 4 cket. Don.t y 5 a aL Tis time to get your fur j Prowse Boos. - Advertisers of Facts