: | that are good for one are good for all.” It f ally Hyammer | is good for all to meet together, as cecasion J | may permit, to receive the benefit of good VED EVER: AFTERNOON of all to be - } : influences, and it is the duty Th iit Phe fxaminer Publishing Company | as tolerant as possible of the distinctive religious beliefs of all. necessitate any compromise of that which “KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION T} ie (IN ADVANCE) is regarded as the truth. One Wear 4.00 | pronounced beliefs and opinions may be Six Youths 2.00 ] , . — ' » - rely s ; nmale Sees eq | Held by those who freely and harmoniously tac Months ®.35| mingle with their fellows of different st paid to any part of Canada or th | . or 7 | beliefs and opinions. THE WEEKLY EXAMINER The application of these remarks is =U very Friaay morning. It is made up . * . fw er which has appeared in the Daily | 5een continually on every side. Christian sad s a firs’ classs newspaper containing | ll denominati 1 , , ‘ I i€ nir ailthe latea? pews su cription $1.00 a year, | en 68 von of ns — and of the diverse beliefs meet and j ry v | mingle together freely atour stores, ¢ flices, ‘ . , THE ) [LY KX ly | houses, m irket places avd places of amusement. From the fact that Arch- Bishop Walsh invites young men of other Catholie most NOVEMBER 18, 1897. - | denominations to come to a Nor does this! P® j . : ; thirty victims of the disease are now in most } TOLERATION Lyceum and Athletic Clubon the priuci- yle that “influences that are good for one We sli not ener toto a controvery as b ’ — im ? = : " _, | are good for ali,” we may infer thet his j to ti waning of Archbishep Ceary’s on . —— ¢ 7 ; ce" ‘ toleration would extend to the permis#ion | manua'e. In chat tV, 1f notin reason, we . » £Y ° : : of Catholic young men to go to lyceunis fee strained to acce pt (he explanations ’ : 5 & ~ sie ’ } $ and athletic clubs conducted under Protes- valrously offered by the esteemed 1a» / tant auspices. Where, then, shall the that | | line be drawn at which Catholics and pries f Albertu >» wt 1 to conclude yrchy prelace denounced as ‘'rescind- . 3 ; ; | Protestant may tolerate each other, agree friendly adulterous of | (© disagree, and live in abie,” “openiag the door to pea consul vage,” only tbe marriages _ a divo.ced persons; and that he prohibited | fellowship? Must it be drawn at ‘eieae- attenda ce at the marriages and funerals | ance at marriages and funerals? What is te seooniance | marriage? It is “the silken tie which binds merely ' . | ‘ a? But | to. willing hearts. ot uon-Catholics with ths general rule of the church. of | ife. s 2 source of the we may, perhaps, be perm tted to offer a few | of home life. It is the sourc f . | family. ‘ lati society. mutual | It is the foundation of society remark> upon the subj ct of the Christian It is a sacred and inviolable contract tolera:.on of all the churches and denominations existing in this Canada There is no wrong about it. Essentially it ofour:. Itie highly gratifying to include | 18 @ good influence. Nor is there any marri- with these somarks ‘the following report of | 8S® ceremony of those who may be properly an address delivered by Archbishop Weish | joined in Christian wedlock which may be of Toroato, a few days azo,~—the occasion termed & distinctly bad being (he opening of a Canadian Lyceus What, then, is there about a marriage and Athletic Clubfor the young men of | that precludes the meeting te Dean {larris’ congregation at St. Cather- gether of Catholics and Protestants? The idea that the spectator of a public marriage ceremony—one who goes to see the bride, and admire her dress, and wirh the happy couple juy and prosperity in lif-, or per- chance to breathe a silent prayer that the union may be — happy and prosperous—becomes purticeps criminig ‘in ‘any wrong or evil tbat tray be done is contrary to reason. As truthfully might it be said that everyone present in court is party to the proceed- ings of the judge, jury and suitors. Nor does a person attending a funeral express hie approval of all that the offi- ciating minister says or does. He goes to show his reepect for the departed and his sympathy with the survivors. If he believes in prayers for the dead, he bas an opportunity id offer his private supplica- tion’on behalf of the soul. of his deceased friead—the more necessary, in hie opinion, if that friend had been, in this life, bound by an alieo faith. That the Catholic Church bas the right to‘disciplise its wandering children and to exert its autherity is undoubted and ad- mitted. This isafree couu'‘ry. But we could wish that its rules were applied rather in the spirit of Archbishop Welsh than in that of Archbishop Cleary, and that the lines were not tightly drawn at mere attendance at the marriages and funerals of non- Catholic. As far as may be, let us agree to differ and differ to agree for the promotion of Christian charity and Christian union, and for the up- building of our common country in which, ae Archbishop Welsh remarke, we all happily stand upon an equality; and Jet the test as to churches and denominations be that contained in the Divine assurance, “ By their fruits ye shall know them.” doth eases msinentinantind Customs officers at Port Huron, Michi- ga, have unearthed what promises to prove extensive operations in phenacetine smuggling from Canada. Five thousand ounces of the drug was found at the home of Mrs. Amos Frizer, who is under arrest. A New York firm receives royalty on ail the phenacetine brought into the country. The smugglers avoid thie besides the duty of sixty per cent. The sons of the late millionaire Pull- man, were, as has been stated left only amal! legacies for their support instead of the large sums it was expected they would inherit upon their father’s death. The clause in the will declares tbat neither of the boys developed the « nse of responsi~ bility their father considerea requisite for the wise use of large properties and con- siderable eums of money, and fur that reason they were practically disinherited. Bishop Bompas brough t out to Klondike from London, England, a young mis- sionary named Bowen, who knocks around among the people of the Yukon a good deal. Last summer, on a Sunday, he told & saloon keeper in Dawson that ne should not keep open on Sunday. The liquor dealer was in ajocular mood, and said to Bowen: “Will yon throw dice for ‘the drinks?” “No.”replied the missionary, “but l will throw dice with you to see whether you keep open or close up for the day.” The saloonkeeper was “game, and threw firet. Then Mr. Bowen taid:— “Now, oe to win, because the Lord 19 0n my side.” He threw the dice and won, and the saloon was closed up at once This is from Ogilvie’s collection of true stories in the Klondike. influence ines, 0 .tario, aod for any others wi-bhing to attead. The Archbishop said : - “Tum glad also that Deon Harris’ in- tention and yours is vot that the benefits ot this iuatitution should be confined to the Catho) ca alone, but that young men of every other denomination are made beartily welcome here. Icvfluenees that are good for one are good tor ail, and al! can meet togetuer here without dix'taction, religious or otherwise. We shvuid pu. vur hand to every undertaking that is calcalated to pro- motethe life of our youngcountry,intended, as it i-, by nature to become a great and mighty power. Canada, with ber grand rivers roiling to the ocean, her far-reaching fertile plains and her lofty mountains, is surely destined Ly nature to be the home of many millions of bappy ard prosperous people. In all wedo we must keep the greatve 8 of our country’s future Io view, tor the true Canadian ideal is that which tend- to the up-building of the national! lite of (his great country. Here everyone ie tree to kneel before the altar of his choiec, but all are citizens and bound by the ow! yatious of their free citizenship to be good Canadians, All are equal io Canada, and we must bear io mind that it is upon such equality our couutry has been built, aedal-v upon such equality must our bert) aod our pational life rest.” The contrast between the tone of this addres: and that of Archbishop Cleary’s is rema kable. Archbishop Walsh has adiuit..bly summed up the conditions upon which we live here in Canada; and he bas, morevver supplied the keynote to the harmony which should subsist between all Catuo.ics and ali Protestants. “Influences — Retiring.... take Ayer’s Pills, and you will sleep better and wake in better condition for the day’s work. Ayer’s Cathartic Pills have no equal as a pleasant and effect- ual remedy for constipation, biliousness, sick headache, and all liver troubles. They are sugar-coated, and so perfectly prepared, that they cure with- out the annoyances experienced in the use of so many of the pills on the market. Ask your druggist for Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. When other pills won’t help you, Ayer’s is THE PILL THAT WILL. It is the beginning | DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 18 1897 LATEST NEWS BY WIRE AND MAIL Bomuay, November 16-—-The Bubonic plague shows no abatement in the Poona district. Within the Jaet forty eight hours there have been 134 new cases re- ported and 94 deaths. Six hundred and the hospitals at Poona. Business in sev eral of the principal streets 1s suspended and the town is being rapidly deserted by the inhabitants. Loxpox, Novl3,—The Rome nandent of the Daily Chronicle says: Baro corres V nn Ruelow(the newly appoiote! German Seureiary of Slate for Wore:gu Affairs), in au interview with the Pope was warmly | co uplained agains! the sympathy cf the Eranco Russian Alliance Triple Alliance. Vatican with the and its hostility to the ) He declared in the name of Emperor Will- iam that if the Vatican persisted in such @ policy the German Government would re ‘ aliate on the Roman Catholics Loxpvon, Nov. 15.—A special despatch from Shaughai:ays serious tension exists between Japan and Russia owing to the latter’s effurts to control the toms, and that some of the leading Japan» adoption of Corean cus- rea are urging tbe ; ese ministe strong measures, even to the ex'ent of war with Russia, but itis added the Margnis Ito discountenances this step and urges instend that Great Britain, the United Siates and Japan make joint represcn‘a tions to Rassia cn the subject of Corea. Loxpox, Nov. 15.—The ueuaily well- informed Vienna correspondent of the Times “The final treaty of pea e between Turkey and Greece bas not yt been signed and the negotiations of the powers with respect to antonomy for Crete bave bardly emerged from the initial stage, when already there are disquieting symp toms in the Balkans. , The relations between Rulgaria and the Porte are strain ed. The suitan is preparing for all even tualities and 100,000 Turkish soldiers are FAVS : ! stationed on the Bulgarian frontier armed with mausers and amply provided with horses and guns. Servia, of course, would be implicated in any couplicatious .in connection with Macedonia, while recent accounts from Albania report signs of grow:ng unrest. Onthe whole the ontlook in the east is in no wise reassuring.” Standing Up For a Principle. ‘‘How much does it cost te send a letter from here to San Francisco?’’ asked a tall, angular woman with a masculine voice and a somewhat hairy chin as she stepped up toone of the stamp windows at the postoffice. ‘Two cents, ma’am.”’ ‘“‘And how much to send a letter to Bethany, Mizzoury?’’ ‘*Two cents.”’ “*T won’t pay it.’’ ‘*Very well, ma’am.”’ ‘*T didn’t suppose you'd throw off any- thing on aecount of the shorter distance, but I thought I'd ask you, anyhow. When you carry a letter to San Francisco for 2 cents, you ought to carry four to Bethany for lcent. It’s a shame. I don’t have to send my letter through this postoffice, and I won‘t. There’s a neighbor of mine going to Bethany next week, and she’ll take it for me and be glad to do it. I don’t care for the 2 cents, mind you, but I’m not going to be swindled. I've been reading up on these things, and I’m’’— ‘*That’s all right, ma’am, but I’m very much oceupied, and’’— ‘*You ain't occupied any harder than I am, young man, but I’ve got time to tell you that this government’s a cheat and a swindle and it’s founded on wrong princi- ples and I’m agin it from the word go and it’s never going to get any money out of me when I can help it, and I generally ean. You don’t get any 2 cents out of me for taking a letter to Mizzoury. Under- stand?’’ With a look of. lofty scorn she turned away from the stamp window and went out of the office.—Chicago Tribuns. A Lesson In Frugality. Guy, the founder of Guy’s hospital in London, was as parsimonious in private life as he was munificent in public. John Hopkins, one of his contemporaries, who was nicknamed Vulture Hopkins on ac- count of his rapacious mode of acquiring his immense wealth, on one occasion paid a visit to Guy, who, on Hopkins entering the room, lighted a farthing candle. Hop- kins, being asked the reason of his visit, said: ‘‘I have been told thit you, sir, are better versed in the prudent and necessary art of saving than any man living, and I therefore wait on you fora lesson in fru- gality. I have always regarded myself as an adept in this matter, but I am told you excel me.’’ ‘‘Oh,’’ replied Guy, ‘‘if that is all you come to talk about, we can dis- cuss the matter in the dark,’’ and there- upon he blew out the candle. Hopkins acknowledged that he had met his superior in thrift.—San Francisco Argonaut. : How Tommy Helped. Minister—Ah, Tommy, is that you? I trust you are always a good boy, Tommy? Tommy— Yes, sir. Minister—That’s right. Iam sure you are always kind to your good mother, Tommy—Yes, sir. I was helping her yesterday. Minister—Very glad to hear it, Tommy. What did you do for her yesterday? Tommy—I helped her with the washing, sir. She said she couldn't get on with the washing if we didn’t take our dinner an hour sooner, and I took it as soon as she had it ready.—Exchange. Bits of Wisdom. Bear in mind these bits of homely wis. dom: Pure water, pure air, sunshine and wholesome food are the best preventives against disease. Cultivate exquisite clean- liness. Make daily use of baths. Try to always get eight hours’ sleep. An unpleasant odor for 24 hours may mean a fever for 24 days. Digestion is as- sisted by cheerfulness.—New Orleans Times-Democrat. In the manufacture of knives the divi- sion of labor has been carried to such an extent that one knife is handled hy 70 dif- ferent artisans from the moment the blade is forged until the instrument is finished «ad ready for the market. _ oi - DEER MICE AS PETS, They Were Delighted With a Home Ine Cocoanut Shell, In St. Nicholas G. Rafael O'Reilly tells of a couple of queer pets that he caught in the woods. The writer says: While rambling one evening in the woods I sat down on @ rock close by a shaded bank all overgrown with soft green moss and feathery ferns. Not far away there was an arcient tree stump, with a hole running in underneath it, and what should I see peeping out from the hole, but the head of a little reddish brown animal. At first sight I took it to be a chipmunk. Its large, black eyes seemed full of appre- hension, and as 1 moved it drew back out of sight. On rolling over the stump, T discovered beneath it some withered grass carefully rolled inte a globular nest. : drawing my Ii hief around this, ] tied it up, with whatever it contained, and hurried homeward with my treasure. On emptying the handkerchief into a box coy- Cautiously 1 indker¢ ered with wire gauze, I found that I had captured two beautifully delicate and ele- gant creatures, somewhat larger than mice. ‘Their fur was thick and soft, a rich velvet of reddish brown on the back and snowy white beneath. Their feet also were white. But their chief beauty lay in their eyes—great, black, liquid orbs half protruding from the head. No gazell ever had eyes half so lovely. They seon became quite tame, and with- out showing any fear would allow me to put my hand into their cage to give them fruits and berrics. They carried their nest into a corner of the cage and reconstructed it there. After about two wecks I procured a large cocoanut, sawed it in two, and tak- ing one-half of it, made in it a little door- way. When I put this into their cage, turned mouth down, they seemed to go wild with the excitement of delight. In and out they ran through the little door- way a hundred times in succession. Some- times they would jump up on top of the cocoanut and survey it all over, and then, after ‘‘washing their faces’’ with their del- icate white paws, jump down and again run inside. Soon they made up their minds to take possession of it as their home. Their nest in the corner they pulled to pieces and carried it off mouthful by mouthful into the little cocoanut hut. There they have lived ever since. During the daytime they sleep, but when evening comes on they busy them- selves running and jumping about the cage, and they have never once in three years tried to gnaw their way cut ~ FACTS ABOUT HEALTH ~ It is Easy to Keep Well if We Know How—Some of the Conditions Neces- sary to Perfect Health. The importance of maintaining good health is easily understood, and it is really a simple matter if we take a cor- rect view of the conditions required. In perfect health the stomach promptly digests food, and thus prepares nourish- ment. The blood is employed to carry this nourishment to the organs, nerves, muscles and tissues which need it. The first great essential for good health, there- fore, is pure, rich blood. Now it is cer- tainly a fact that no medicine has such a record of cures as Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It is literally true that there are hundreds of people alive and well today who would have been in their graves had they not taken Hood’s Sarsaparilia. It is depended upon as a family medicine and general regulator of the system by tens of thou- sands of people. This is because Hood’s Sarsaparilla makes the blood pure. This is the secret o! ite great success. Keep your system in ¢ health by keeping your blood pure with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which absoluteiy cures when other medi- cines fail to do any good whatever. ’ . are the only pills to take Hood’s Pills git: Hood's Sarsaparilla. Oysters Oysters Oysters JOY! JOY! JOY!" Victoria Cafe, Great George Street. Oysters. Served in every style Lunches sad dinners with despatch. As usual, I am prepared to deliver Oysters in any quantity to customers to any part of tne city. Telephone Connection. JOHN P. JOY Victor1A CAFE Gt. George St..... FOR SALE. Oe ee RARE CHANCE The property occupied by J.J, Gay and son situate in the village of Pownal, 7 miles from ~harlottetown, is offered for sale. The pro- prietors have carried op a large market gar- den puree and seed business for thirty years, and the purchaser will no doubt retain a large share of the local trade. The prem- ises comprise a large dwelling house, s’ore warehouse, barn, shed, orchard, and about 13 acres of the most fertise land on the Isiand This land hasbeen manured year after year. for so long that as an vid man said the other day.; “It isall abed of manure and could be hauled for top-dressing.” This would be an ideal spot for @ country merch- ant. or it would be admirabie for a summer resort, The situation is one of the most beautiful on the Island. Good bathing, —— boating, shooting and within easy distance; churches, Office school telephone and shops all at the door, For terms and further particulars, apply to Von Clure Gay, J J 6 £00 or to, Jo T MELLISH Solicitor Charlottetown d&y oct 7 AN ZESIZES +e “> et, WZ -° Ne Me Wes SY 3 Se Sess se ees 4 = 2 S » oweet GN; x . 7 \ me atl; ue We & ao 10 cts, bs per package Caporal it CIGARETTES % 6 x © Athlete =a? reo. tk 4 i ele we CIGARETTES 4 — NP a4 Cc > J Se Retail Hiverywhere. 2% Noe oxbre oxbre extern etre extye oxboe ree extn, oebre exe oboe « =O? UNS UNS AS US US AN BOF US OS AS OS SOS OFODO SOHO SOSH SO SSSSESOO SHS OSS SSO SIO DOOSO SOOO OEOO 040 s HEAVY Range. STEEL PLATE Coal or Wood. Made in various styles, from the ordinary family to the larzest hotel size. =a . Are constructed in the most substan- tial manner and after the most approved patterns. ARE STRICTLY UP TO DATEIN EVERY PARTICULAR. 2 It will pay you to investigate the good points of these ranges before purchasing others. LONDON, MONTREAL The McClary Mfg. Co., TORONTO, WINNIPEG and S a. 7 eet Tw a « a eI ae: . ee If your local dealer cannot supply, write our nearest house, | POSSSOSOSOSOSSSOS ISO SO CSSSIS OG HSS IOC OSE GO 9568056064 POSSESSES SHS SOS HSSSOSHOHOSOSOCHO SOSH HSHSSOESOOOESD : : : : d art thinking of buying any kind ofa SO LOVE This fall we can do better for you than uny one im Ch’town. y We have the largest viriety, Prices the lowest . DODD & ROGERS Wholesale & Retail 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. Women’s Felt Laced Boots Women’s Buttoned Felt Boots. Women’s Elastic Side {Felt Boots, from 85c and upwards. Felt Slipy ers. Cloth Slipj ers. W.H Stewart & Co " ? ~—— - an 2S ae ott O64 L_ nm i om A «et 4m A CUM oe CUD ~_ ~*~ a eta an wre ea eee 24 ww oe @ 06 & ee oe awe mm TS = = *