os CO ird nes, vert ach lou 1a0 ew lie ti- d= she ta- for ne uy B- py | Re Be ae A A Se ee “ee ee” ee ee ee POWDER Absolutely Pure, . aventt celebrate i | ony sireng!! ’ « a ’ bs rest “9 rulterat mr “arorms or #a ae tothe cheap > : , . NG POW ee > ~ iA Coolirg — a delicious . “es 1 ] i 7 made Wilb & Wive L F nN ' MOWER'S LIME IGE CORDIAL os a tnmoier OT **Stower 8 LeEStTOVS aDny Impurities | wraua P. TIPPET : a General Agents fer & Cf., the Dominion Ow ate ete * i ee _—__ fings County Exhibition, 1898. Ameeting of the Joint Committe ap- yinted by the Provincial Government an‘ te King’s County + xbibition Association, will be held at the Grand Jury Room,La« Coar.s Building, Georgetown, on Wedner- jev, the 14th, inet, at 11 o’clock, a. m., revise Prize List for King’s County Ex- pibition, to be held on Sept. 29th, prox. GEO. F. OWEN, Se’y King’s Co. Exhibition Association . Cantigan, P.E.L.—July 5—42i wli GAPAUD TEA. ee = Atthetequest of the people in‘erested, the Steamer Jacques Cartier will, on Sat- uviar, the 10th inet..l ave the Steam Navigation Compauy’s Wharf at 9 o’clock am,for Crapaud, and returning will kare Crapaud for Charlottetown at 5 delock, p. m. On account of this arrangement there will be a0 boat from here at 2 o’clock on Saturday as advertised. L. C. OWEN, Ch'own, July Sth. Avent. Hiamond Jubilee oe (fathering. aw competes theG0th year of England's shall gr atest Queen, and »s the same year besignalized in the history ot Kelly's Grose by 1 ecompletion this autumn of the MW St. Jos-ph’s Chureh, the pari-hioners feos commemorating the fo mer event sat at the same ter u dertaking dabiee ‘Tea Grounds, on Thursday, July 45th, 1897, when ‘verything shall he arranged by an meertic committee to entertain in a sump- ao manner all who wid patrcnize them ou *ceasion . time raising funds for the by holding a Grand Gatherieg near the Church cathough hot amongst the first of the tt Similar gatherings the committee iipate that it shall be am mest the bes ee successfulof tre Diamond Jubilee fe Reserve the above date, then, for. Sint outing. Forder of Committee. ifthe weather be wet the oa Will be held on the fol- Wing Saturday. M. A. SMITH, secretary or To Let. " Kelly s Cross, June 5, 1897 a 5 for Nal ap Houres on Pleasant Street. Good | Xabie and vard. WI LLIAM DODD. ‘ay 6,°97— 1m etree Str Fastnet SEASON OF 1897. -___ — —_— nant from. Chitown every Friday at on H alifax, calling at Summerside, egy ort Hasting, Port Hawk-- 2g eer ane’ [save Harbor, Sal - bates Halifax t Harbor. Returning beclock ee every 7 nesdav evening at i callx, including Marough Freight Solicited. *icwto Halifax. Apply to as ing S4mp¢€ | | W. W. CLARKE, Agen‘. ne I thman, but the black manu and the own man and the yellow manin_ their F millions, I kave sea many of teem at i strength of empire goes round ; } | bringing its homage to Victoria now, was | Opinions of English Writers Conceraing } News, guys: ail bere, the vou Cw s % eal | Seas, | before and after | Know this now, 3 THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLGTTETOWN JULY 8 1897. ECHOES OF THE JUBILEE. the share of ** Greater Britain"! in the Grand Keent, Mr. the London ‘Lhey Tenniel’s im Henry Norman, in Vy bovs 1° were £ lions of lo Kng ish eves every ! nto Insignificance bye mortal drawing. royalty faded away Slue those aplen lid fellows in therr gallant liinbed, rrand ruce eding beyond the ppings, ti cie “eyed, it ve straight-back« Britis! n that Britain is bre : The 4 spoiled so long as they guard its tar por cheers thas went them told how wel We If the royal i homes will wever be de tals, The explosive pro esSslion ee procession Was indeed. Here was in trath a nder that the British Empire keeps is kept by not only the ‘pink-faced ’ } Wi iome Coionlal } MNpoera and work—Sikh in Hong Kovg, Chinaman in S.ogapore, Cingalese in Ceylon, Malay in Perak, and I know their pride and faith. fulness of service. We give them hberty, they give us Jovalty. In their strange and hard, discolored palms the the world. » Old Roman triumphs astonishing bar- barians were paraded as proofs of conquest io remote lands; but never till now and here vas such a significant picture of con- juering civilization been possible. And the inception of con ues, faces this Givilizing on that big day when George slew his dra- gon and England chose her patron saint— ‘For Valor.’” Mr. Clement Scott in the Telegraph sav-: “Stuil!, ere our eavalry and our stati otheers conquered their fair critics, We have printed an imposing list of 2 ? jubilee celebrations beld in many colonies, os aod the messages sent by them to the Queen. From Canada, from Australis and New Zealand, from the Cape, from Hony Kong, from Singapore, from Africa, from Newfoundland, trom everywhere, in fact, wherever the flag waves, the telegraph has brought news ofA yvreat Commun senti Never was the whole empire knit so closely in bonds of fellow ment. before r y fey | understanding. they hadmuch to sav, I must confess, friends. Wei set up, trambed to perfec- thor iscarding pomp and color and gold ; (or Midbaat Ke Wait | 4 their Tyrolean hats and rough suits, and their cifles on their knees, they hit the admiring women, who prefer manly wen to ‘curling darlings,’ pretty hard. According to my Observation, the average women is,as@ rule, more enamored by power or force than by fancy. She Hirts with a dandy, but she adores the rough rider. And this same modern female critic, who is supposed to detest and despise men, but whe, in reality, is their slave, had a very good selection to choose from im the colonial basket. They were divided in opinion Setween the Can- adian Mounted Police, with their helmets aud the New South Wales Mounted Rifles with their Tyrolean William Tell bats, and the New South Wales Lancers, and the Victoria Rifles, jaunty apd careless in attire, down to the representatives of the Natal Cavalry and the Rhodesian Horse, of course were cheered to the echo, and the Cypriote Zaptiehs, in their uniforms of dark biue, with red fez and sash, who are the military police of the [sland of Cyprus, redolent of Othello.” Mr. Harold Sponder, in the Chronicle, says: “Then, after a long paure, came the final and perhaps most inspiring show— the colonies. Atany rate that was the feeling at Westminster. Ourcousins were greeted with a continuous roar of cheering, better maintained and far more hearty than that which greeted the familiar faces of our own soldiery. The Premiers were especial favcrites, and the crowd was desighted with their native pleasure at the enthusiasm, and the cordiatity of their bows, in no slight contrast to the rather weary inclinations of the royalties. This was a first class success; and all thanks are due to Mr. Chamberlain for so brilliant an idea. Mr. Laurier was ove of the stateliest figures in the procession, and he was received with an unmistakable ex- thusiasm. The British Empire had remembered its colonies.” A writer in the Standard says: “The colonial procession was the next feature of interest. It was received ‘with something like passionate emotion. The bronzed sons of England and the colonial premiers went by amidst a roarof cheering. The hand- kerchiefs were brought out once more; the hends were raised; every one seemed anxr- ous to show the guests whom we most dearly honor that they had been slighted, not by the British people, but by the officials who had failed to interpret the feeling of the multitude. As the colenials rode in glorious array down the strand— Canadians, New South Wales troops, Vie- terians, New Zealanders, Queenslanders, South Australians, men frem Natal and the Cape, Riodes.ans, Chinamen, Sikhs and Haussa-—tbe brown knaki caught the first rays of the sun the sea of heads whitened, and the long line of spectators swayed in a paroxysm of excitemeni. Here were the men who were making the Greater Britain of our day, avd as they rode in triamphal procession before the queen the wild enthusiasm muet have atoned for every slight and written on tne tabletof every niidan inetia earble re- collection of the gratitude which Enylish- men can show. Cheered above all were Mr. Laurier and Sir G. Spriggs, who have struck the latest blow at the Little Eng- lander Surely in this splendid reception the imperial instincts of the Englishmen of our day are fitly manifested. Tre tumult died away as the troops and car- riages vanished down the yellow Strand.” Editoriatly the Chronicle says: ‘Amor g | all the remarkable and gratifying aspects | of the present great celebratioa, the recip- procal movement between Great Britain and ler colonies is perhaps the most note- worthy. On the one hand we have seen an unaproached display : called centrifugal seotiment. From the centre of the empire a great wave of feeling bas surged out and thrown its white spray of affectionate and inviting sentiments to the remoteet parts of the British world. On the other hand, a centripetal move- ment has been equally striking and unique. From the farthest outposts of the empire have come swift wares of loyalty and | practical suggestion to the imperal ceatre. This union of sy pulhy 18 @ Species 4 of federati min iteelf. The London Daily Graph (Jane 23) says: The sum—that sun of which we proudly boasts that it never sets on the Britien em ,ire—shone yesterday with Jubilee bril'iancy on a pegeant which the ‘my ice will never forget. The teeming en- erg e8 which have gone forth from. this little norinera iste from the days of Drake and Frobisher and Olive and Cook to set the stan pot Ang ue Saxon life in every sea and zone, se med to » ther once more to hold high festival inthe norther- land, to hay the tribute of their glorious achievemeuts at. the ststool of the | venerable sovereign under whose benign and wise rule they have proposed, as never did humane: before. The pageant which unrotied iteelf vesterday in the streets of an Inipressive picture, of the Ka pire, aud a ere es Lon -O0 Wa- at Once strangely fascinating lesson in political ethtes. There were pictured to ns the forces which have won and. the love which bas kept the great offering of vations which has sprung from the loins of Brituin and the liegie whom the sword bas made vassels of Er ¢ | and freedom has made her devoted object ) races F giig - Opi oi LOSAL AND OTH&R ITEMS The Liberal Conservatives have engaged the Lyceum as their Campaign Rooms, from this date till after th. Elect- ion. This Hall willbe open ev ry day and evening. All friends of te party are ex- pected to attend, and will be made welcome, Kiislnidoa Seventy-Kicur in the shade to-day. so idiiiencdiliias For Drit..—No. 1 Company, C. A,, will meet for drill at 8 o’clock tonight. Tue Wearner.— Moderate to fresh winds mostly southwest and weet, fine and con- tinned very warm. — —$<— -— Svereme Covrt.— McRae vs. Mark Wright. Th's case is still before the court and will be given to the jary this after- noon, ilhidateinaa Tae Meriot Piontc at Midgell yes- terday was largely attended and proved most enjoyable. Market Hatt.—His Worship Mayor Dawson has kindly consented to preside at the Liberal Conservative Rally meeting in theMarket Hall to-night, iid 1.0 G. T.—Chariottetown Lodge, No 68, will meet at 8 o’clock this evening in Wright’s hall. A full and punetnal at- rendance is requested. Important business. Visiting strangers welcome. _ mana, Never in the worid’s history hia imposing ®& pictur t world-wids | empire been brought together; and vet the | imperial aspect of the pageant its chief centre of interest. The FOS Was a = crowut cheered the Liaeiackets and rede vat-: they shouted tuemselves hoarse ut lie } ce flontels and Tndians, but the enthusiasm silver-haired lady in whose honor the whole ceremonial had been organized. Pride of empire blended with and lost itself in the mighty outburst ot uation- ai love which greeted the Queen at every step of her imperial progress, If tae panorama of British dominion, was gran- dioso and impressive, far more eloquent was the picture of loyilty and national contentment. Nor was this supreme vote confined to the demonstrations which greeted the Queen as she passed through the metropolis of her empire. It was re- echoed throughout the length and breadth of her broad dominions. The day was indeed the Queen’s day. { 4 § ¢ } : on } The Perfect Pill : > $ Perfect in preparation. $ Perfect in operation. 4 2 ( > . ' } Ayer’s Cathartic Pills : 2 oe ¢ 3 Perfect post-prandial pill. ¢ > Perfect for all purposes. q } THE PILL THAT WILL | $ )) ( Port of Charlottetown, ENTERED. Julv 7—Hydra. Beandreant, Sydvev; M. and E. Jenkins, Bennett, Sydney; Rhuama, Hendersen. Wallace; Morning Star, Arse~ neau, New Castle. CLEARED. July 7—Hydra Bandreau, Hawkesbury: Barrington, Henderson, Wallace. A i ae RA in WE POET One NF Nt Net ee ot a at at See Sms! att Nat Neal ae Baby’s Own Soap IS NOT, as most soaps, made from “soap fat,” § the refuse of the kitch- en or the abattoir, VEGETABLE OILS supply the necessary in- gredients — one of the reasons why it should be used in nurseries and for delicate skins. soees cocoa . COCOCOCECOCSCOCOOSSCK CL SSOOCSoaNSee Sooooe]ecececcS of what may be | The Albert Toilet Soap Co., Mfrs. Montreal. i ee an in PIO Aw yi gt : e A house on Dorchestor St-eet, next block to the New Cathedral, a present occupied by Mrs. Leahy. Pos ess on give. last of June. ARTHUR G, PEAK *. Office on “Peake’s” Wh :rf. exe XK Se SM KN RR KK KKK Ned tes te tee te ee i i i in ln i in tm dl iin il Mn dil il il i ile dln, il il i inn iin Nae Nae Naat None? Nee? Nee Mn Name Nee Nae Nae Nee Nee er ‘ ( ( ( ( ( ( 4 ( { { ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( W.C.T. U.—AIl members are req est ed to meet this evening in tue W.C. T. U, parlors at T o'clock. A prompt attend- ence is desired, as business of importance will be brought before the meeting. > Tue Freo Barr.—The tug Fred M! Batt, Snow master, arrived from Halifax ast pivot, aud will a dredge Prince Edward when working for the Steam Navigation Company. A Correction. —The Miss Maclaren whose marriage at Vancouver was referred to in vesterday’s issue is a grand-laughter of Mr Philip Maclaren, of this city and not of Mr. Robert Maclaren as inad- vertantly stated. Actuate Scorrisn GATHERING.—The great annual Scottish Gathering of the Clansof P. E. Island, under the auspices of the Caledon- iay Club, will be held on Suumerside Driving Park on the 18th August next. ores City Taxes.—Thursday 15th July inst., will be the last day for receiving discounts on city taxes. Citizens are asked to bring their notices. The Appeal Court will meet on Wednee- day, l4th July. Workixe rae Oracte.—A crowd of men went to Pictéu yesterday morning to bring over the Stanley. The steamer is expected here in aday or two, and will probably remain for the election. Mew Missinc —Two young men named Dalton and G’Shea have been missing from Pictou the past week. They left Pictou to attend some fishing traps and their boat was picked up off Skinner’s reef a few days Jater. Upto the present nothing has been heard of the men. — All electors should attend the grand Liberal-Conserva- tive Rally Meeting in the Market Hall to-night, as prom inent speakers will address the electors. ae SroreopricaN lecture by Rev. W. V. Higyins at the Baptist Church tonight at 8 o’clock. Mr. Higgins is a returned missionary from ParlaKimedy, India. The views will be instructive a: to the country as al:o of missicnary value. Lecture free. At Bircn Grove.—Tbe is no more delight spot on P.E. Island for a day’s outing than Birch Grove, Freetown. Make a note of this fact and be sure you attend the big picnie which takes place there on Wednesday next. Amusements of all kinds. Special wrain leaves at 9 o’clock, Jocal. Return fare only 45. Sovrts Noves.—The cruiser Kingfisher i3 in port. Two American fishing vessels put in here vesterday. Tie approach of election day is evi- denced by the presence of the road ma- chine, wh'ch after a long absence has put in ils apy earance near Souris. The Liberal - Conservative sandidates, Messrs. Blake and Paton, will attack the local Govt. to-night in the Market Hall, at 7.30 oclock, and Messrs. Rogers and Prowse the Liberal candidates, have been specially invited to be present and address the electors, and they are expected to defend the Covt. That the cheapest is the b2st is eminently tru: with regard to Soverzign Lime Juice. You pay for Lime Juice, not water. Hammocks.—Reclining Hammocks at declining prices. Tae great value we are giving is moving out our large stock of Hemmocks at a great rate. A Hammock will help to make life easier this hot weather. For the best and cheapest Hammocks visit Carters’ Book-tore. 157—thur. sat. All nvgevenevevenevenenenenen.penenenenenenenevepenen eT epapeET nT TTeyT Enya eT TTT DEneTEnEn ETE ERED TPT PprprDepy pri retenr prone petens penny enittty » ASS gets you what you want everytime. UPPOPPPODNNDE PDD PRDrTRprPDRPPH ARPT epprrennrroneOnOPoRrODNn Trion pe = Meet me at The Always Busy Store. Shirt Wais GOOD FITTERS, WELT MADE, and: sdbdedes ortment that 089066609750 Special Values at ~~" 65c. 85c. '$1.25 and $1.50 GIRLS’ SHIRT WAITS “All Sizes, 50 cts, each, AiiAbee MANASAdd SSLAMALMAAAGAAAAAAAALALAAAAAdS adh Addddd ©2008 2000687 STANLEY BROS., ‘ The Always Busy Store FI UMMWdNibbddsdbdsdbdbabdbddidsbidddd Gbdddddbdddsdbdbddddidddddidbadd Sve = @ @]B ee Boe2soeesdesd Send Awa O your friends abroad. You can get acopy of PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ILLUSTRATED securely wrapped, ready for mailing, at this offise, or at any of the bookstores. Call at THE EXAMINER OFFICE. soo QUEEN STREET ..... , Ves B*VSVSVWS VWIESBWVSSSsESSISsSESVsEBVssesesesovwesese#Vswesess Oe OS Oe Ss = ® @ & @ @ @ @ 2Ob2888S8 8B BBTSBS3E BS3E 388 =e oa em @ @ ® > @ ee & ee 2 ae Windsor. Nova Scotia. INCORPORATED 1891. Rr. Rev. Bisnor Covrartyey, D. D., Chsir- mano Board of Trustees Lerroy, of Chelrenbam Ladies’ College, Eogland, Principal; eight Resident experienced Governesses from England ; Housekeeper, Matron and Trained Nurse. Board with Tuition in English Department, SiSS. Music, Art, Payyical Culture, éte., are extras. Preparation for the Uniser- sities. Year begins Sept. 15th, | 897. For Calendar apply to Dr. Eixp. Miss OPERAHOUSE one week, commencing MONDAY, JULY MAIINEE WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY. Return of the Favorite » lel Tt supported by Boake MEJLDON'S Excellent Company STRONGER AND BETTER THAN EVER. To-night, ‘Thursday, July, 8 the charming comedy-drama in 4 acts, entitled, THE GOVERNESS. | A carload of Special Scenery —hand- some costumes. Clever - Specialties - Catchy EXTRA! The wonder of the 19th century, the Cnephotograph The best cf all Motion Pieture Machines. PRICES.—Night, 35¢ and 25c. Matinee-, 0c. Seats now on sale at Dodd’s & Rankin’s Masonic ' Temple Co The Annual Meeting of the Masonic Temple Company, will be held in the Masonic ‘Temple, on Wednesday, 14th day of July, 1897, at 8 o’clock; p. m. for the election of Directors and gen- eral business. By order, D, MacLEAN June 28—d3i, wli WANTED. -Immediately, an experiznced nurse, Apply at ars Geo. W, Hudgs 3ns. si guar. WANT?D-—- Bya young manofl4 years exp rence +s bock-keeper and salesman, a position in an office or #s traveling sales~ man. Wages mcderate and references first class, Appiy by letter to the re — Ww ’