SYMPATHY. Ya < tal } te to a touch harps that vibrate to a tone! eare aS NS) : : as vasaerinierl . os eranger hands, unconscious of the ons 7 strings. , 2 eont's slumbering echoes wake to life tle THe SOs . vee ooh ite halls re nsive music rings. Anc ' y , ' he Davids to these harps of ours! are the Da Few § ‘arn the cunning of the instrument! ww ical Cae : . : cae those to whom t t has been denied An menos horn our lives are Are “* God's! es : showered around. But * yaa too like heaven, ag? : deep and long, if w > That ther cif iv were given 3na* Hamilton Aide. - DID NOT PAN OUT. crv Few Ohio Ideas That Did Not Succeed. one of the Ve “The fying machine fever,’’ said a pot an va , rery ‘The ent oftic: riled ver ox en aeely 20! nt Grant’s adminis - ro} T yo? ~ } tra whe! senerai Leggett o1 Ohio was commissioner patents. Many in- . aft ef WPrSOnSs - = . _ gentors, or at least pers me who supposed that they ters id it very bad, and there vas scarcely a week that some fly- jng machin » fellow did not turn up or write tothe patent ofice. The great majority t so far as to make nted themselves with their ideas of of them never even Tues a mé del, : ' nr eninining crude UTaAWIDKS ' Q.3.08 t & gerial locomotion All of them were poor and wanted e patent office to furnish the mone build th machine I re member fellow in particular. He was well known to General Leggett and served yonder him in an Ohic regiment during the war. He telegraphed General Leggett from Urbana. O.: ‘Hold patent on flying machine untill arrive. Refuse ail applica tiens until you have seen mina’ The genera! nstvered him, by mail, however, thet the office would consider anything he had to offer, or words to that effect. Then there came ‘ nthe inventor a laily } / ter for : up f weeks describing the inventicn Win great cetafl. To cut off the supply of letters, the general wrote him a personsai letter, with Kiea of ecoling mm dcwn, but it had the opposite effect, for it lowed by the announce- ment that t ontor would arrive here ina few days and would give an exhibi tion of the machine. The man did come, and with him came his machine. In shape it was lixe a Siger hogshead, with the customary wing nearly all flying ma- chines. It was xht, and was made of covering a spiral steel frame. Nothing w suit the inventor except that the pate fice take a short recess, While every one connected with it could ¢ t and see the machine fly from the F street porch of the building. The generai finaly persuaded him that the first ezhinition should not be so publicly given and that he and a few others would exami- ine the machine that afternoon after office hours. About 4 o'clock a hal? dozen or more repaired to the F street porch, and the inventor, after screwing up 4 half doz- eporso springs and counterbalances, an- nounced that he was ready to fly the won- der. It was supposed that he intended to goup in it, but he soon dispelled that idea by saying that the machine he had was but a miniature model of what he in- tended te make, but that it was sufficient to show what could be done. Finally he let her go, and tothe surprise @every'ane the machine flew nicely up inthe air and across F street. By a mis- calculation it struck the corner of the post- Office department building very hard and fell in the area a mass of broken metal, smashing itself into a dozen pieces. The inventor ran across to look at the rem- nants, and by the time he had returned to explain the cause of the disaster the porti- eo was deserted. ‘It was an Ohio idea,’ General Leggett remarked, ‘and it was one of the very few Ohio ideas that did not Pan cut.’ ’’—Washington Star. white cotton should Explosions In Warehouses, Mr. Charles T. Hill writes for St. Nich- olas an article on ‘‘The Perils of a Fire- man’s Life.’’ After speaking of the ‘‘ back dmft.’ that is responsible fer many deaths among firemen, Mr. Hill says: Another kind of back draft that is greatly dreaded takes the form of an ex- Plosion, and is usually met with in fires in storage honses and large warehouses that have been closed up tight for some time. A fire breaks out in such a build- ing, and. asa rule, has been smoldering for some time before it is discovered. The G&remen are summoned, and raising a lad- der they pry open an iron shutter or break in 4 door to get at the fire. The combus- tion going on within the building has gen- erated a gus, and the moment the air gets te this, through the breaking open of the door or window, the mixture ignites. An explosion follows and a portion or tie whole of the front of the building is blown Cut. Several accidents of this kind have occurred in New York, one in a storage Warehouse in West Thirty-ninth street a few years ago, when the whole front wes blown out, hurling the firemen from the ladders and severely injuring alarge num- ber. Another accident of the same nature eccurred shortiy after this, in a large Wholesale four warehouse down town. In this case it was supposed that particles of flour in the air inside the warchouse be- fame ignited and exploded, but it was practically another case of the back draft. several firemen were maimed apd injured - tals Case, “3s Hg 33 Sh “ont a. | E Op ret os 7 ies “Sg” Cage? Sees «= He Should be ir Waveller’s yvrip. They are | inva! , . thie ston ac? & Medicine chest and every he. biliousness, an¢ at Mi3jd and efficicnt. 2 cent : T° Be ali t ail KINCS. irgains to-night. Calli to see me before ghing elsewhere. P GOGBDSTEIN. N.w York Cheap Store THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOPVETOWN JULY 14 1897. GRAS D KALLY. The Peoples’ Pa vty at Vernon River Bridge, Last night’s crow led be re menibered at meeting will long Vernon River Bridge and vicinity as the first re-l warning to the Peters’ candidates, that the people were heeding the warnings of the people’s popular Candidates, Messrs, McLean and Wood. Cheer after cheer were given when Mr. Wood took the platform. The feeble defence of Messrs. Forbes and McDonald has disheartened the Grit rank and file Such a sweeping change as last: pight’s meeting indicates has nat taken place for twenty years, Vernon River poli promises to be the banner poll for Messrs. MeLea» and Wood on the 21st inst. Facrory.—The Sammerside (ter tactory.it is pleasing to hear,is amply fultilling the expectations of its promoters I six to seven thonsand pounds oJ mika ereceiveddaily,n ating weekly about ] bs of butter, and ition from twelve gallons of pa-teurised > Pp »UTTER t in ad seven to ’ cream are sold cach day. ease An O_p Axnp Wet Triep RemEeDY.— Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup bas been used for over fifty years by millions of | mothers for their children while teething } with perfect success. It soothes the child, soitens the gums, allays all pain.cures wind colic, avd 1s the best remedy forDiarrheea, Is pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow’s Sooth iug Syrup, and take no other kind 1 3 bw Mysrertous DIsaprPEARANCE. The Summerside correspondent of the Guar- dian writes: Mr.John McCabe. aged 30, a well known harness marker of T'vror, left ' bis home early Sa‘urday morning and has i fare we not been seen or heard of since. A note was found in his room giving some busi- ostractions, also saying that he was tired of snifering and bidding his friends It is supposed that he comm '‘tted suic.de, and searching parties have been out continuously since his disappearance but so far no trace of him bas been found. He has been in poor health f rabout seven years. Some years ago he attempted suicide at Crapaud bv jumping over the bridge into the river at that place but was rescued. For some days previous to his Jisappear- ance he ‘vas busy preparing his day book and ledger so that his friends would know his fiuancial sianding when he was gone. —_—— ——<— «ane oo ness THAT ENDLESS PIN QUESTION, Ne Sotution of It Expected, bat a Few Facts Are Known, Who has not heard the question, ‘‘Wha becomes of pins?’’ Millions of them am made in a year, millions are sold, and ye the supply no more than keeps pace witl the demand, which seems growing enor mously all the time. By a computatiorz made in London ten years ago it wa: shown that at that- time the weekly pro duction of pins in Great Britain was 280, 000,000, of which 180,000,000, or consider ably mere than helf, were made in bir mingham. Then 120,000,000 were made in France and 120,000,000 in Germany Holland and Belgium. Since that time the production cf pins has increased large ly. The biggest pin manufacturing city in the world is Birmingham, where 387, 000,000 pins on the average are manufac tured every working day. The other pir factories in England together turn ou about 19,000,000 pins daily. ‘The daily output of pins in France exceeds 20,000, 000, and Germany and other ceuntries ir Europe manufacture abont 10,000,00 more daily, the total production of pin. being 86,000,000 every day, or 602,000,00( a week in Europe. This is, of course, ex clusive- of the pin factories in the Unitec States, which number 45, h4#ving a capi tal of $2,000,000, giving employment t 1,600 persons and turning out ina yea) pins to the value of about $1,000,000. I is calculated that only 1 per centof thr pins manufactured are worn eut or bro ken. The other 99 per cent gare lost, bu what becomes of them, where they go anc who gets them, or why some of them are not afterward discovered and again put te use, are mysteries. At the rate at whict pins are manufactured and the rate a which they are lost every third person i Europe and North America must lose 1 pin a day, and it is te be inferred, thougl the statisticians take no account of this that there issome pin losing going on, too in South America, Asia and Africa, thougt tourists in the dark continent aver tha the garniture there is such that pins are not necessary. Pins are made of copper and zinc wire The metal is cast into ingots, which an rolled into sheets after haying been an nealed several times. Afterward th sheets are cut into strips so fine as tore semble wire, and then by machinery the wires are cutand afterward the pins are pointed and headed. After the completior of this process the inequalities are worn of in a revolving iron barrel filled with saw dust, and then the pins are putin a prep aration of tin and are polished by the fric tion of sawdust tothe point of resemblance pins of commerce. The process ii by no means complicated, but much in genuity is required, for the competition ix pin making is considerable, and the mar gin of profit from pin manufacture b therefore no* so large as to permit the sue cessful operation of any factory not util izing the most recent improyenicnts.— New York Sun., to t} is interesting 'o remerober that numan if injected into dogs or rabbits vets like a deadly poison, according to M. Arloing’s experimeuts. Perepiraiion 8¢c- reted durng bard mescular work has more poiscnous power than the ord nay kind, while thet obtained from sro} cts whose secretion has been checked by colr So some people think lesirable even in ii pet rea,pin, is very poisonous. woolen uoderwear weather. +2 URE BLOOD is the foundation hot? ewe. of health. Hood’s Sarsaparilla makes . the blood pure, rich and nourishing and givesand maintains good HEALTH. W here Princeton Got Ner Siyrocket Cheer On all public occasions student entha siasm finds expression in the welgknovw1 Princeton cheer, the “‘skyrocket,’’ as i has been called. Undergraduates of today may think it has come down from a time “whereof the memory of man runneth nol to the contrary.’’ But this would be ar error. All college cheers are of modert date. Princeton’s is among the oldest Nevertbeless, 36 years avo it wes unknown Where did it come from? Who inventec it?) These are momentous questions an are answered differently by different men. A member of the class of '60 declares that the late Dr. Woolsey Johnson of New York of that class first sounded the “hooray, hooray, hooray, tiger, siss-boom ah Princeton,’ in one of Professor Schenek’s recitations. But Chancellor Alexander T. McGill of the class of °61 siys he remembers quite distinctly wher the Seventh regiment of New York went to the war and how nearly the whole co] lege went down through the Potter woods to the old depot by the canal at midnight to greet it as it passed through. The cheers of the boys were responded to by the Seventh with the ‘‘skyrockets,’’ which s0 impressed the youthful mind that it was indulged in ut fist as borrowed prop erty, and later, as time advanoed, was adopted as the college cheer.—-James W. Alexander in Scribner's Suspicious Gentleman (in railway train)—How aid this accident happen? Guard—Soine ene pulled the bell and stopped the train, and the hont express Tan into us. It will take five hours to clear the line for us to go ahead. Gentleman—Five hours! I was to be married today. Guard (a married man) sternly— Look here! Are you the cheap who stopped the traint—London Tit-Bits Blest Be the “Ties.” A railway contractor recently advertiscad for 300 wooden sleepers. By return of post he received a letter a neighboring clergyman offering him the whole o° his congregation on reasonable terms.—Lon- don Saturday Review. irom Woman's Part. ‘‘What part of specch is ‘wornan,’ pa®”’ **Woman isn’t a part of speech. mr son. She’s the whole speech.’’-—New Olrean; Times-Democrat. ert cllcwle ee. a Teachers And students who have snecesfultv will need a good time keeper before taking charge of a school. We bave a 'arge stock ot Cold And Silver Watches timed, and ready for delivery at at low prices. Z . : Ch ‘ 7 iP x. th. FAY LOR Jeweler and Optician. orth Side Queen Square. —_ passed their examinations (SK YOUR GROCER FOR Royal Oak Soap the best lanndry Soap ou the market. One bar will doas much as two bars of ordinary imported Soap made from filthy material. CHTOWN SOAP WORK If You ATC We... Going \ —To— BOSTO! Or any part of the United States. the cheapest and best route is via the Plant Line, THE POPTLAR SUX- MER ROUTE NIRVUAYP ATDVICE uM hou k 7" NL F oA FROM CHCTOWN. The favorite 3. S. ‘ Halitax” will leave Ch’town for Boston every Friday at 1 p. m. : Returning leaving Boston every jav at noon. Steamer calls at HAW BURY and Halifax both ways Via Pictu & Falitax Pacsengers leaving Charlottetown Mon- Tnes- TT © m5 , days, Thursdays and Saturday morpings, vila Pictou make close connection at Halifax with steamers “Qlivtte’ and “Halifax” for Boston di- rect Teesdays and Fridays at 7a. m and Saturdays J1 p.m. : Tickets for sale at stations — PKL, Railway, Ch’iown Nav Co, ana Clark ticket office. : i. L. CHIPMAN, Can. Agent, ! Halifax, N. S. | d&w Pure, a na oe ne nn mae mana et hic cee poor nap entree er ene ee TT ov ~ s Se ee , OD od a tt lavas als he Bell -1an0 23 given to its purchasers universal satisfaction. hich and Melodious Tone The bass is powerful without harsh ness. The upper notes sweet clear and mellow. Prices range from &20C to $400.‘ For sale at Hetcnar's Piano Warereoms OPERA BOUSE BUILDING Piling and Piling all kinds of Lumber Everything new and good. in Cedar and Spruce daily. Shingles all classes; We VYvant You to see us before you build or repair. New customers come again and bring others. It will mean mon- ey in your pocket if you give us a call. Lumber of all kinds in stock JAMES BARRETT, Telephone 181. Connolly's Whar KOKANIE CREEK SHARES NO FANE ——”""™.\ But legitimate mining. FOUR CLAIMS. Ove being on the famous Molly Gibson vein. Two above Enterprise, which sold $300,000 cash. and another one haif mile from Slocan River. igh grade ore out cropping on threee Well defined ledges onw.d. Capital only $250,000 in 25 cent shares, First issue tor development 3 cents, non assessable. Next issue not less than 10 cents. Reliable management. Nothing less than 500 shares sold. Order through bank. GEO. B. SCOTT Agent 42, Fort St. Victoria, B. C, _—_ > a°t, a ea. > See REC IT 3 el RIVE . aaa a Sa NS rez pn ‘wy ow Fe | Poor cre! = fee * set er set ge UbK Just opened. All sizes——all prices. Bargains in Base Balls, Base Bats and Child ren’s Garden Tools, For value cometo Sunnyside Bookstore. HASZARD & SEASIDE HOTEL —~ RUSTICO BEACH P.E: I. Opens isr the cerson on July 3-d, JOHN NEWSON & Co., Proprietors. Surf and Still Water Bathing. Covered Ball Alley. Croquet and Tennis Grounds, &e. for the above Hotel, every Tuesday Returning Monday Charlottetown calling for Guests. Coach will leave r ~ ° Thursday avd Saturday evening, Wednesday, and Friday morning. or eg . : "a : a < Trains leave Charlottetown for Hunter River, 6.30. m, and 3.30 p. m, Leaves Hunter River for Summerside, 7.28 a. m. & 4.58 p, m. Leaves Hunter River for Charlottetown 10.43 a.m. & 8,18, p.m. Summerside to Hunter River 8.45 a.m, & 7 p.m. Trains run on Eastern time, which is an hour slower than local timé. Address al! Correspondence to JOHN REWSON & CO. VACAT! 6 es Footwear’s the thing just now. Soft, light, easy-on-the feet that belps to make life worth living these hot days. Men’s Colored Kid shoes, the new shapes. Womew’s Colored Kid and Canvas Oxfords Shoes for Boys and Girls. W. H. STHWART & CO, London House Building i Retrigerators, Lawn Mowers, Ice Cream Freezers, Green Wire Net Spring Door Hinges, Garden Trowels, Gold Paint, Rubber Hose. SIMON UW CRABBE 134 STOVES HARDWARE : \), peeeesd op ome Yee ao et CJ CLA BAAAAAA Walker’s Corner . Paris Green. VPPVETPHTNT NAPE RTP HTT Machine Oil, Haying Tools, Hardware. Everything cheap for cas at CITY HARDWARE STORE, Call and see. Don’t ask for credi % 80., J. F. NORTON, PROPRIETOR SS SSeS” SaeeNcSeeeres : — BINDERS, MOWER AND BRAKES ; MAXWELL BINDER 1sreeognized to be the best im- lement on the marked. Itis trne only right hand cut, and also the simplest and surest knotting machine, never break- ing twine. MOER.—The lighest ing strongest machine in heavy or bight hay. Hlasai!l the best improvements —foot lifting spring, raising finger bar clear ofall obstructions, stumps, roots, etc. RAKES.—'iger and Sthied. These Rakes are fitted with the new steel wheel, having 26 teeth and solid steel axle. Also, angle steel bar to hold teeth. ‘he teeth are set to rake, not toharrow the ground. They are the most perfect Rake made today. Inspection of those machines in- vited, or write us for prices. | FINLAYSS: URINNON TERLIZZICK'S CORNER ; 4 ing and “* ee CUGL é MOORE Paris Green, Paris Green, as