enn hy Be AE ae MS RS OTR x DP cn > ne aa ie ete ee Om SUED EYER AFTERNOON FROM THE OFFIC® OF an The Examiner Publishing Company RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne eer ; » wh onan Six Wenths.... 2.00 TWhrec Weomths .........ccecrescees 1.00 One Nonth... O35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the states THE WEEKLY EXAMINER Cr iscned every Friday morning. It is made up the Daily ofn rwhich has appeared in apd a firstclasss newspaper containing ali ihe !atest pews. Subscription $1.00 a year, ‘THEDAILY EXAMINER, AUGUST 5, 1897. THE VRIDE OF BRITISH, rhe most eloguent tribute tothe great Ju e review of the pavy in June was uv M. Melchior, Vicomte de Vogue, In writte) and published in the Paris Figaro. part M. de Vogue said : The luvineible Armada would doubtless appear a mere toy alongside these ninety- three giants ranged in three long lines, motiouiess under their heavy armor, cove ed by a curtain of seventy-three despatch or torpedo boats. Behind them lay the line of foreign warships, which seemed like a deputauon of tributaries. The swarm of craft filled with spectators, from tie enormous Cunard liner tw the little sailing cutter, they move with the same confidence as busy pedestrians in the crowded London street. The sea is their home, tbe familiar room in which they would waik blindfold, the obedient mater ja) which they handle with ease. Oae eommon sentiment animates al) these men as even the most obtuse spectator can divine. Beyond the visible lines which our vision takes in, the Englishman dis- eervs their invisible prolongations, the ghain of similar rings which encircles the ‘globe. For these humetous vessels are only the children remaining at home. Of the.r brethren, scattered over every oceau, not one bas stirred. To-day, as yesterday, they are keeping Watch at their posts in Asia, Africa, Uce- ania, the trusty watchdogs of England, ready to bite anywhere at an order from the Mother Country. That order English thought can transmitina moment. It runs ai the bottom of the seacn English cables. Above and beneath the ocean the two ne. works ot iron, that which orders and that which executes, are well riveted around the planet. The world is fast held in the double net of the Saxun fisherman, a world, ap empire in comparison with which we Roman Empire was but a litie state. You will, doubtless,correct me, “Not Rome, but Carthage.” Yes, of course, Carthage in certain respects, by the predominance of material interests, by the ardent thirst for lucre. But let us be fair, Rome as well, Rome by will, courage, the intellectual force of geniu:, the duration and nobility of tradi- tions. Price—the word is ever coming from but assuredly not as a reproach. THY peo, This is the sentiment which today pours out from their souls, which is rend in tbeir countenance, which is audible im all their words. And we deem it leg:timate, this national pride. It comes frou, successes obtained by the tenacious efloris of beloved ancestore, by the sucr.tices of the present generation, by firm intention of persever- ing zt e!icost. Let us not grudge this nobie people norher that rulesit our ribut: .f admiration and respect. Were the « ~ion of this mass to crush us, he w { not be worthy of the name of in }did not feel a iittie more proud | of t pame in the presence of the} Spe ¢ offered us by the English nation, } i the presence of the greatness of these have carried human genius to suc OR cass One would have said th Luglish signified to us to-day, and | will rong reasons for their Claim, that | Lhe ¢ =s decree of the Ete rnal bad con | ferr: them the command ofthesea. | rtp lay IEE rc NOTES AND COMMENTS es { — . Mr. Foster, ex-Minister of Fin- | ance, was interviewed at Winnipeg a few | days ago. He expressed his pleasure on the a 1 of Great Britain 1m notifying Germany and Belgium that at the end of | the year it would denounce the commercial treat us removing the favored-pations | clause, which has stood in the way of the | advancibge movement for a preferential | tariff echedule with the empire and the co “The Conservatives,” said the | ex-Minister of Finance, “bave advocated | the devouncemeni of the treaties tor ten- years, as is in evidence by correspondence and resolutions of the House, as imterfer- Ing with the treaty rights of the colonies, apd only waited action on the part of the mother country in the direction row taken before they felt justified to legisiate in the matter, Liverals, on the other hand, acted, and passed a preferential tariff schedule, but will have to ccnform to the treaty till it is finally denounced.” —The Colonist, of Victoria, contends that the region from the Columbia River on the south tothe Yukon on the north is the richest on earth from every point of view in which it can be regarded, and of this vast area of 750,000 equare miles Canada owns two-thirds, and by far the more valuable share proportionately. We not only own by far the largest, but by far the richest part of this matchless domain. When the Hon. Mr. Blair said last fall: “The hope of Canada is in British Colum- Daily Examiner! HE NEVER MISSED A CHANCE TO BOOM GOODS HE SOLD. Hie Was In the Firearms Business In Texas and Made His Revolvers Talk For Them- selves—-His Last “Card” Written on a Btone With His Own Blood. **To me,’’ remarked a man of more or less brokerly appearance in manner and cut of clothes, ‘‘the advertising methods resorted to by business men all over the country are astonishing in their intelli- gence, stupidity, ingenuity and conmon- placeness. I mean by that that while some of them seem to be satisfied with the money returns of the oldest chestnuts in the newspapers, there are others who are advertising Columbuses, never satisfied unless discovering something now in the promotion of the publicity of the wares they have to sell.’’ ‘“‘Which reminds me,’’ said a man who looked like a New England Yankee onco removed, ‘‘that I have becn interested in advertising for many years, and that I have circumnavigated the United States several times, advertising various things, from baking powder t In these trips I have observed some things quite well worth the remembering, but certainly the most unusual bit of adver- tising I ever heard of came under my ra- tice during a trip I made through north- western Texas. ‘‘In a trip made there some three years previously I had met a local character whom they called Colt Thompson, and after a talk with him at the hotel supper table, for he bearded at hctel in the town, I found that he had came from my native town in Massachusetts, and that we had known each other as bers there, 40 years before, when neither of us was more than 10 years old. ‘Though Thompson was a pretty hard citizen and had a record only a few eastern men would be proud of, he was a good werker, and as the agent of an arms manufacturing com- pany in the east, with a territory com- prising several counties, he manuged to live well and wear good clothes. Of course he gambled betweer times anc did odd jobs of various kinds, but the profits in those lines were simply used for spend- ing money. He had shot several men and was accustomed to remark that he hind to do it now and then in his business toshow the merits of the goods he handled, and he always said that he weuld rather be horse- whipped than shoot a man with any cther gun than that made by his firm, a loyalty that added much to his popularity and was a first class advertisement for his weapons. '*Which reminds me that Thompson was the most enthusiastic advertiser I ever saw, and he never let an opportunity ecscaps that he could use for this purpose. I saw him shoot a runaway horse one afternoon on the main street, and when the owner complained Thompson paid for the ani- mal and had a half cNumn article in all the newspapers on his guns as runaway preventives. Another time about mid- night he discovered a fireina store cna side street, and, instead of turning in an alarm by the usual shouting, he began to shoot his gun as fastas he could. The noise soon had the crowd out, and the pa- pers next day told all about Thompson’s guns as the best fire alarins in use. On another occasion he offered the preacher who was going to preach a shot man’s funeral $50 to help out the salary fund if he would say thet the deceased had surely gone to heaven because he had bcen shot with one of Thompson’s guns. ‘‘But Iam digressing. His greatest ad- vertising idea wef his last one, to which I am slowly but surely coming. When I found I was going to bein YThompscn’s neighborhood again, I was pleased, for I had found him interesting, and he had in- sisted when we parted that if I ever came that way again I must besure and give him a chance to make it pleasant for ime. I had not heard from him in the mean- time, and when I gotto his town and asked at his old stupning place where he was Iwas greatly pained, but not greatly surprised, to learn that he had died six months previcusly. t was not recessary for me to ask if he had died suddenly, and I did not ask the question in that form, but I did ask what row wis abont, and as the result of my inquiries I found that my friend Thompson had been calied upon to act as a deputy sheriff in the ar- rest of a couple of very bsud men from the mountains who had heen ‘shecting the town up.’ “They were customers of » steam engines. te PSSU } tne Thompson, but he did not give guarantces against dis- order with his goods, and he wasas glad to arrest these men as he would have been to do any other hazardous _ service. Thompson became separated from the } sheriff and posse about noon, and no more was seen of him until about 5 o'clock in the afterncen, wher he was discovered by the sheriff lying dead beside a big white bowlder, and not 50 feet away, stretched fiat on their backs, were the two ‘toughs,’ quite as derd as Thompson. In the hands of each of the three were revolvers and it was plain that the men had died game, though apparently the end was more sud- den for the others than for ‘Thompson. This was proved by the fact that just above him on the white surface of the stone he had scrawled in as big letters as he could reach, and with his finger dipped in his own could have happened when all three had Thompsons? Call on my successor before purchasing elsewhere,’ “That evening after supper I went to the town cemetery to visit the zrave of my schoolmate, and on a plain white stone at his head was this brief inscription, placed there by his friends: “COLT THOMPSON. He Was «a Good Man Massechusetis Sent Him t and Texas Sent Him to } ‘Texas, Glory. ‘“‘Which struck me asa pretty good ad- vertisement in itself, but not comparable from a@usiness standpoint with that other one written on a white stone in the blood of a New Englander among the hills of Texas.’’—New York Sun. A Good Thing to Have on Hand. A Frankfort lady hearing that her cook had applied for a divorce asked what was her reason for so doing. ‘Well, ma’am,”’ said the cook, ‘‘me an Jake has allers got along pretty well, but —— done got my sister a divorce for $11.40, and I thoughts I’d jest git me one while they was cheap.”’ —Frankfort Ledger. bia,” he was accused of being under the glamour of mining prospectors. [f, says | the Colonist, “we add the Yukon to British | Columbia, and say that the hope of Canada lies between the Rocky Mountains and the | Pacific, we state what cannot be gainsaid, | we advanee what is the greatest economic ; fact in connection with the Dominion, we | indicate a field for stateemanship sv fiicieut gratify the ambiticn of any man.” rn ee Fays } Shortiy dfter 1824 an Anierican, Wright, invented a machine by which perfect pin was produced during the revo- lution of a single wheel. The machine was first practically workec. ina factory at Lamboth, but soon aftervard it was re- moved te Stroud, in Gloucostershire—the seat of the pin industry, and later removes ¢o Birmingham. . ae ae we * oie Sa blood, the words: ‘What else sence ein cnet tt ttt Ct NNT EON CL LO CC OC eect eee en ate en AM U COLONEL SEXTON TELLS HOW IT CHANGED HIS LIFE. JF £eat Iflave Married Young Fellows Relented a Lit- Was Wounded, The Girl Who Would Didn't Like the Idea of In Officers’ Clothes—She tle When Mer Admirer “The only bad feature of this thing | of addressing the school children,’ said {olonel James A. Sexton, the former postmaster, ‘‘is the fact that they al wavs want me to wear my regimentals, {t's a thing I haven’t the courage to do except when I’m among # uniformed body of men. ‘*My aversion to wearing a uniform ybout in public dates from my boyhood Upon that aversion is based an hays. early incident that may have had a good deal to do with the course of my subsequent life. ‘T enlisted as a private at the outbreak of the war, being then a boy of 17; rathcr mature locking, however, for those years. Like all boys of that age, Iwas of a romantic turn, bug exceed- ingly bashful in the presence of women, The one woman in whose presence I was especially shy was a dear girl whom I used to see home from prayer meeting. **No parting in all that time of part- ing was more affecting than was ours when my regiment started for the front. When, a year later, I was sent back to Chicago to recover from a wound in the jaw, I found myself as dear to her as ever, and she as dear to me, it goes without saying. I was in the hospital at Camp Douglas. My wound healed rapidly. I was allowed to go about the city very much as [ chose, and prayer meetings, With their escort privileges, claimed a great part of my attention. ‘“‘About that time the Y. M. C. A. was organizing a regiment, to be com- posed exclusively of men who professed religion. The scheme naturally attract- ed a great dealof attention. The papers were full of it. I was selected to cap- tain one of the new regiment’s compa- nies. Protest against the selection was made on account of my age—then just 18. The matter was carried up to the adjutant general of the state, who final- ly decided in my favor. My age, the singular character of the case and the popularity of the regiment caused such an amount of uewspaper gossip that it seemed as thongh everybody must have heard of the matter at least. All this time I never wore my uniform outside cf camp. The dear gir}, therefore, nev- er saw me except in citizen’s clothes. ** ‘It’s an outrage,’ she said just after we met a very youthful looking man in captain’s uniform on one of our walks, ‘that such young men are trusted with the responsibilities of command. I don’t know what the country is coming to.’ ‘‘For a moment I was overcome by the shock. When I recovered my breath, [ told her that youth did not necessarily debar a man from possession of the qualities of a commander. She declined to be convinced, and the conversation became decidedly chilly. Instead of making my customary call when we reached her house, I stopped at the front gute. ‘* ‘Laura,’ I enid, ‘I must tell you goodby. My regiment has orders to leave for the front tomorrow. It may be that we never shall see each other again.’ ‘But we did. All fashionable Chicago came to Camp Douglas the next day to see the fimal dress parade of the much talked of Y. M. ©. A. regiment, and I could see the dear girl among the crowd. My new captain’s uniform gave me a good decal cf satisfaction jnst at that time, I can tell you. The colonel of the resiinent had asked me, cn of the power of my vceice, to act as edja- That furnished additicual gratification. The parade had the cecasicn. the magnificent splendor that only a account , ‘ tant tor *cy PRs ein ome ary ann "2 ; ° dress parade can have, and the solemnity of th? eo ion wee vyestiv increased by of this occaslow Was Vasey increasea BY i : 77 + + TcmiIce : le the refiection, net to be cdismissea, that nany of those among regiment and spec- tators were seeing each other for the last time on earth. The band plaved as though speaking our last farewell to our friends. Every one, Iam sure, isnitin eke -S eeaeiel } T+ y,aqg of £ psy Impressed, 40 Was at e ai vas ; this time dear girl had her first end last view of me in my captain’s uniform. ‘« ‘Officers to the front and center! March!’ I ordered, with ail the dignity I could assume. reached the senter they saluted me. ‘¢ ‘Sir, the parade is formed,’ I said, saluting the colonel. “Phe colonel returned as grave a &a- Inte as he had received and put the reg- iment through the manual of arms. Meantime I marched a few paces be- hind him, turned squarely and took po- sition almost within arm’s iength of the dear girl. There I stood at parade rest, with my back to her, until the regiment wheeled into column to march off the field. At that juncture I took command of my company and went with it aboard an Illinois Central train. Between the dear girl and myself there passed no word, ‘“‘A few months passed and I received a slight wound. The circumstance was mentioned in the Chicago papers. Then, fer the first time after my departure from Chicago, the dear girl wrote me a letter. It was a beautiful epistle, full of regret for our misunderstanding, hopes that my wound would not prove serious, assurances that she never could : : that the As they have doubted my ability and requests | for forgiveness for her mistake. I an- gwered it, aud harmony was restored. ‘*At the close of the war I at once sought her,’’ the colonel added, ‘‘and found her—already married. ’’—Chicago Times-Herald. Sheep In New South Wales. In the year 1788 there were only 2 head of sheep in New South Wates at the bi f this cen number had increased to 2,000,C09, ard - einning Linwinge OF iched 69,000,060 now the'stock has rr Australia, New Zealand and Tasmania together posséss abort 1 sheep, whici is more than four times the number in the whole of Luropes. : “ Ce * A nailmaking machine produces as many nails in a given time as were former- ly mado by 1,000 men, With the assistance of the latest ma- chines a piece of leather can be trans- formed inte a pair of boots in 34 minutes, in whieh time it passes through the hands of 68 people and through 15 machines. A shorthand typewriter measuring only R inches by 7 and 4 inches high has been patented in Kngland. It is noiseless, | cheap and writes in lines ona roll of pa- per, the beginning and end of each line working automatically, It is said that a French chemist has made a blue soap which will render un- necessary the bluing in the laundry. In ordinary soap he incorporates a solution of aniline green in strong acetic acid. The alkali of the soap conyerts the green into blue, EDUCATIONAL. In every school in Paris there is a res- taurant where free meals are served to the children who are to poor to pay for them. Switzerland is the land of universities, It has 7, or 1 to every 428,570 inhabitants, ceeininn Gia “larly <ateenapengianaanninnatementnmmanetasneaaenaaeat while Germany has 22, or 1 to every 2,886,360. Russia has a university for ev- ery 10,000,000 only. he Harvard Graduates’ Magazine pub- lishes a table showing that during the last 28 years the university has received cash gifts amounting to $7,839,703.38. Adding to this the value of land gifts and build- ings, the whole foots up to $9,209,703.48, or an average of $328,918 a year. STREET NOISES. Women who loye peace, invalids who need quiet and workers who must sleep in the forenoon or not at all are interested in knowing whether or not they can be pro- tected from disturbances that are forbidden by law, and if not, why not?—Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. The crusade against the noise makers in New York is likely to result in the triumph of common sense and in the relief of thou- sands of nervous and otherwise ailing peo- ple from tortures that to them must be al- most unbearable. Philadelphia needs such a citidance also.—Philadelphia Star. — sick HEADAGHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They iso relicve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remeay for Dizziness, Nausca, Drowsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Smal! Bese. _ Small Price. Substitution ihe fraud of the day. Carter's, Cee ~<a oet yea mt 2c 7 7 Ss . A cl: flow insist and demand Caw ie at on ior Carter s, 1 Carter's Little Liver Pills. fn m4 iDR Fi foi Gil ii treats Chronic Diseases by the Salisbury rs method of persistent self-help in overcom- i @ ing past errors and Removing causes from thie blood. Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Shortness of Breath, Pleurisy, Tuberculosis Consumption of Lungs or Bowels, Indiges tion, Dyspepsia, Gastritis, Ulcer, Cancer, Dropsy, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Constipa- tion, Piles, Fissures, Fistula. Diseases of Heart— Valvular, Fatty Enlargement,@ Palpitation. Of Liver—Jaundice, Diabetes} Cirrhosis, etc. Of Kidneys—Albuminuria Bright’s Disease, etc. Of Spleen and Bladder—Cystitis. Of the Blood—Anae mia, Chlorosis, Scrofula, Malaria, Rheu- matism,Gout,SciaticaSceurvy, Purpura.OfFe male Organs—Inflammations and Displace ments of Womb,Ovaries, Bladder or Bow- els. Menstrual irregularities of Sexual Organs. Of Nerves andSpine,—Nervous Prostration, Sleeplessness. Decline, Hy- steria, Tremors, St. Vitus’ Dance, Chorea, Epilepsy, Convulsions, Paralysis, Loco- motor Ataxia. Paralysis, Agitans, Soften ing of Brain. Some forms of Insanity— Dementia, Mania, Hypochondria, Melan- chulia. Failure of Vision and Voice, Deaf Of Skin— Eczema, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Syphilis. Tumors, Glandular Fatty, Fibroid, Uterine, Ovarian and Cang cer, Goitre, Cretinism, Obesity, Corpul- ency. Drug and Liquor Habits—Opium,g # Morphine, Chloral, Cocaine, Tobacco,® 1 & Stimulants. Of Bones and Joints—De- : 1 oe te ORRIN ERENT CRE ET aS RS FEES ness, formities, Curvatures, and Pott’s Diseasel of Spine, Paralysis, Hip Disease, Knock-§ Bow Legs, Club and Flat Fout, Wryj » Neck, Rickets Scrofula, Sore Legs, Var-j i Ulcers, etc. Continuous intelli'f gent treatment insures Minimam of suffer-§ -ing and Maximum of Cure,possible in each = ¢ Avoid attempts unaided or unde | ® blind leaders. DR. CLINE Graduate of N Y University ardthe N Y A | Hospital: 20 years’ practicein N Y City.g } Rey s : FS) knee, TRE a . os y € fm 1g tc o Ais -ose Ase. r 2 THIET - 2 Diploma registered in U S and Canada. ? 2 | 3 Address :—Charlottetown, P. E. I. Office :—Victoria Row. Telephone Call. 5 | | 3 Accommodations Reserved for patients. 1g References on application. 1 i 94—d&w lyr. ort ak tS fn ce nktian C4 mA ; bent Jeaea Sfamas ws teh UNity fe aGikes pe ate ceciamanecsets nei f } 4 > 8 c es T have 30-8 cent Jubilee Stamps, worth } $5.00 each to n nav be worth S29 ¢ hy | : ; | 14 u I ive es One | 4 v Ri 3 Eis ! t ”. s. M i J} 12 i} Tigeieh, P ES here with us—they’ll stay on it too—we don’t want them What don’t suit you don’t suit us; we work for what you want the ihe you make on what you buy here now will almost pay the price of o vacation, Especially is this true of our Bedroom Suites. Mone E i ing prices for you on al grades, 7 JOHN NEWSON NEWSON BLOCw...... Mutual Lite Lasuray OF New YORE ee ee, RICHARD A. McCURDY, ~ . na « = 2 Presiden (THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPANY), Has more insurance in force, a greater annual income and more assets han any other company in the world. It is the oldest active American © Total Assets, - - - - $234,744,148.42 Invested in Canada, - - - - 4,257,520 75 Total Surplus, nearly - . - 30,000,000.00 Insurance in foree, . - - - 918,698,358.00 Income in 1896, $49,702,695°27, being TWELVE MILLONS more than the total Revenue of the Dominion of Canada, Issues the most liberal policies and pays larger dividends, on all policies han any other company, and is beyond donbt,, the wealthiest and greates company in the world. All policies payable in gold. Agents wanted in unrepresented districts, JOHN MACEACHERN, Agent for P E. Island. <a Sa eee Marine Insurance. The British and Foreign Marine Ins. Co., of Liverpss England, The Empress Marine, Ins., Co.,of London England. The General Marine Iusurance Co., of Dresden. Cae a Hulls, -The undersigned rvpresents the above first-class Companies. Cargos, Freights. carried at lowest rates, Sterling Certificates issued. FRED. W. HYNDMAN Queen Street AGEN eee ——Ee Warning ! I wish to inform the public that several parties are travelling the coun try using my name and pretending to be selling Spectacles for me, Me ©. H. White is the only traveller that Iemploy. He is competent to test eyes and fit Spectacles properly. Ifany others call and say they are selling for me please ask them to show their licence E.,W. TAYLOR, OPTICIAN Cameron Block, City. Paris Green, Paris Green Paris Green. FPPSEROT PER OORRPPH ORD RT? Machine Oil, Haying Tools, Hardware. at CITY HARDWARE STORE, Call and he 8 be Da Everything cheap for cas see. Don’t ask for credi oe ee tn ) (frp) & C0., F. NORTON, PROPKIETOR ene J. aska Gold Felds ou can make raoney right here at home tu-night. 2 O-NIGHT esi eis ah ; > to-nigh Until 10 o'clock; we offer Straw Hats at } price. Remember, only to io When you are in for your straw hat, get our cutter, Mr. J. J. McDonald, take your measurefor an up-to-date Suit; he has no equal on P. E. La an artist cutter, Af. i ual Y ARE MIOTS “e EYE a eS: ane . 4 * ¢ ia €& ax 2 ‘ & & 2 2 = CEES dae Pee ig # SRA nd all other tourists should call and inspect our elegant range of Suitings” Fa: ev , >” Y . i - i C2 / MeKay Woolen ia bie. £m. Aw 28 WUVsw &* ; €/ A iota 4'nn 3 TT .slare ; ” See high Grade Tailors. i » Ln a, wee Se Co @ bh. @ alt .set it a mM OM hee rma Sg¢eeen SScrrss Se os all ges ad * FS ci me PyfPEBP SE ares WEris7°