Fi. “ph OY ae gt a a AY ARE Ae ee een amie armies Wine AAUP Dimnin |” SUI ae> illime iae-mitz-ie Maicsmitlt Pn ah, Saha SALON Me a enn eens raiment dk i are tie GON EE EE SEES ERS ses FINE Pe Se AE Er * Cree) Tie oN GOVERNMENTS RECORD, . } “ They promised to greatly reduce the publ ct xpend ture, Lhey have largely i atit “] ve strongest language they con-, jen 1 provincial debt. In five years , they e added over a quarter of a million | of ¢ irs to our debt. solemniy professed that they | cou ‘nage our affairs without taxation. | Int years they have taken from the pe ver on® hundred and thirty-eight the i dollars in taxes. pretested against the practice of ber z money atthe banks. [here has Sch y been a year since they attained pow that the Province has not owed ver¥ ‘urge amounts to One or more of the}; Vv preauged themseives not to impose | taxa 1 without consulting the people. No - erwas the promise «nade than it] wa ilessly broken by the introduction | and passage into law of four separate tax | acts ‘They seriously engaged, in 1891, to; le V about 15,000 dollars of the money to by raised by debenturesto the repair | of tue Provincial building. This has not} hee: Ione. The bu Iding has receive I no repairs loudly proclaimed, in opposition, | the ere was no necessity for a Commis—} sik of Public Lands. That official still] ex.-t-, although thev have been in power | for over six years. . eydenounced, with one voice, Pro vwincial deficits. There has not been a} Sipgie vear Of their administration that} ] ther jas NOt been @ Jarge vel their deficits aggregate over $255,000, and if the | taxe= ihev collected be added, the as- toundiug result of over $393,000: will be Teacbeu PROPLES’ PARTY'S MOTTO: VICTORY WITH HONOR. Platform ** The Provincial executive will be re- duced from nine to seven.” “No public money will be expended in excess of legislative appropriations, unless lu case Of unavuidable necessity, such as caused by flood or sudden disaster.” ‘Provision wili be made for a quarterly publication of revenue and expenditure.” “ve office of Commissioner of Public Peeples’ Party's Lo ~?s will be abolished and the duties aesigued to the Attorney General.” “ She present ferry system will be re— fore-=d with a view t greater economy of expenditure without dimiaishing efficiency of accommodation. “A reform in the administration cf the Surrogate aod Probate court will be effected. “A radical change, will be made in the admiuistration of the Public Works department, so that tne mouey now wasted can be saved to the Province. “The present system of taxation will be so changed that it will operate with even- handed justice, and not bear oppressively apd untairly on any clase of taxpayers. “Economy will be practised in every de- partment, and taxation will be kept down to the lowest possible limit. “T be efficiency of the Public Service will be maintained, aud revenue and expendi- ture will be made to square as nearly as po: sible, “Nu further increase of the public debt wil! be permitted. “There will be considerable reductions in the expenditure of the public money, and the resources of the Province will : be safe- guarded and husbanded by every legitimate meéaus that can be devised.” Peeples’ Party’s Candidates, QUEEN’S COUNTY. CHARLOTTETOWN AND Royazty :-PATRICK BLAKE AND JAMES PATON. Secon» District:-ALEXANDER HORNE AND RONALD McMILLAN. Tarp Districr:—PETER McCOURT AND THOMAS A. McLEAN. Fovurts Distraicr:—A. A. McLEAN AND HENRY WOOD. KING’S COUNTY. GeorceTowN And Royatre: — HON. VANIELGORDON ANDHON. A. J. McDONALD. District: — JOHN McLEAN AND JOHN KICKHAM. Secoxp Districr:—MORSON AND Mc- ISAAC, Tarzp District: — JAMES E. MAC- DONALD AND CYRUS SHAW. Fovrru District :—PROWSE AND Mc- KINNON,. PRINCE COUNTY. Scmmersive anv Lot 17:—GILBERT DeEs- ROCHES AND A. A. LEFURGBY. THIRD DISTRICT: — J. A. MACDONALD AND J. F. ARSENAULT. a= — = Ea A Special Sal pee Skirts and Waists. Magnificent collars, the latest styles and patterns, the king skirt, Also big bargains in Gentlemen’s Wear of all kinds. Big bargains to-night. Call to os : see me before ghing elsewhere. P GOODSTEIN. First —— euable the pacer to travel more rapidly i with reduced etfort. Phe idea grows out of the attempts of wheelmento utilize a i the | } | j ' j THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN JULY 7, 1897 THE TWO- MINUTE MARK, (Chicago Chronicle.) Some time during the present season John R. Gentry, king of sidewheelers, will be sent after the two-minute mark. He will not only actempt to lower all pacing records, bat will make a strong effort to sjeb a mile well withing 120 seconds. To secure the best results a sulky having a large sereen behind it will be dragged along by ateam of swift racers. It is hoped this singular device will eaable the horse to accomplish the feat, The advantage claimed for the ecreened ) sulky is that it will cut off the wind, and also, by the formation of a partial vacuum, similar device to increase the speed of cycling racers It has been learned that following a tandem or quad is a decided benefit to the racer. The bodies of the pacers shield the racer from the resistance of the air, and he pedal faster with The St. Louis effort to follow an engine screened as Genctry’s sulky will be made the proposed trial a certainty. unsettled. The | be badly handicapped by the Sau } 7 » iess eftort. There is ore rul question mers Will resistance OI the svcreeno Can they, with the difference in in their fay or, pull the screen away as rapidly as Gentry } records Tewkesbury will prove reen wil up to Lewis G t ) . : . Bdaent the e e IS COnnaent the echeme Cab Come a anc- not reduce This would give them ample allowance to pull nder the wir than two Gentry has a record very close He says the x Cess.,. the runners’ speed twenty seconds. the pacer u 2 in less minutes, ‘ ‘ L- > to the mark, andit the runners keep out f his way the screen should pull him over dividing line. The project does not meet with approval on the part of many sportsmen. They maintain thatan athlete should only win by his own unaided efforts They o! pct so accessories Which reduce the resistances of fiature. Horses, they assert, should come underthe same rule. The aniimal snould not gei any record that is made be- }cause it would be the result of the com- bined efforts of the three horses. In a race this rule would apply, tut as an exhibition of speeding it is diflicuit to find satis- )factorv reasoningon which io base any criticism. The tal will probably come ett some time in August, and is awaited with interest. So many things heve combined to re- duce trotting and pacing records since Dexter’s 2.17 was the mark that it is doffi- cult to fix the limit of perfection in tbe horse. Breeding has been so successfnlly carried on that American trotters and paces lead the world both in records and races won; 2.40 in a roadster now would be held a moderate performance. Light shoes bave stopped lameness and the pneumatic eulky has revolutionized the speed ring. Now all that remains is to prevent the interference ofthe wind. This is the purpose of the screen Gentry will trail. NOVA SCOTIA EXHIBITION. : Large Premium List Still Further Su; plemented. (Halifax Chronicle.) To the largest prize list ever offered at avy Exhibition in tbe Maritime Provin- ¢ex, some important additions have beea made, On page 57 of the published prize list has been added the following: CLASS 38 A-—GR&DE GUERNSEYS, Section 1—Cow, four years old and up- wards; 1, $15; 2, $10; 3, $8. Section Z—Cow, three years old; 1, $12; 2, $8; 3, $6. Section 3—Heifer, two years old; 1, $10; 2, $6; 3, $4. Section 4—Heifer, one year old; 1, $8; 2, $5; 3, $3. Section 5—Heifer calf under one year; 1, $6; 2, $4; 3, $2. FRUITS. On page 115 of the prize list in section 1, ‘special county prizes,” exhibitors may show their fruite or berries on plates, or The ment crop reports, which are even exceed- ed by the sanguine tenor of the advices from railroad oflicials and men of business on tours of Inspection in the West and the South. Men of busivess are turning their attention from the still fretful agitations of politics, in the conviction that two years remain to them before there can be any absorption of public attention by fractional agitators, and with tbe hope that during that interval, public opinion wiil frown down violent and support only safe and whalesome policies. The revival of business will powerfully contri- bute towards that tendency, issues NEWS NOTES. There is no accounting in mankind. for the play of A Parisian banker of immense wealth died of grief upon jearning that he had lost all but 100,000 france. A pauper relative, upon learning that he had inherited that the banker died of sheer JOY. emotions kum of Japanese oflicia! newspapers threaten war with Hawaii if that litcle republic re- fuses to allow the Japs to Jana and work on the islands. Already a Japanese gan- boat is anchored at Honolulu, and there may be a change of Government before American annexation can take place. A ca-e either of democrati¢ spirit or rare conscience occurred recently in Windsor, ting., in the bequest of 50 ‘guineas by a cabman to a gentleman who had frequeni- ly been his fare, allege ty of the re spect with whi bly been 1 | treated by b j A Constantinople despatch to the Stan durd says that Edhem Pasha, the »ecom mander-in-chief of the Turkish terees ip Thessaly. has tendered his resignation of command to the Sultan on the gfound that under the proposed peace ae Was given, 1 to show the cabby’s it was \ appreciation eh he had invaria~- is bene figiary. itions he of the army. The thanks of the eolonies are ‘due to the London Daily Mail fer the efforts it has made to stir up the lymphatic British officials who were not at first incliner to extend the “glad hand” the colonial visitors in England, whether military or journalistic. ‘The Mail devoted itself to baving this corrected, with the result that the officials saw thatit was advisable to thaw a little and be friendly. to Silver is said to have gained a victory by a promise of the opening of the Indian wints and an increase in the silver legal tender minimum in Britain. As the Indian coinage is virtually on a silver basis, and as it is rare for the present silver maximum to be reached ina finan- cial transactior, the changes if made could not visibly affect the price of the white metal, Leon Lecestre, curator of the French a*chives, will issue, during the present week, the first volume of 300 letters which were suppressed ‘by the editors of Napol- eon’s correspondence, issned in 1869, as not calculated to increase the glory of the great French Emperor. The volume in- cludes come bested family letters and some v'gorously worded epistles to Fouche and D::bois, the ministers of police and war. A Vancouver despatch reports that “Jack Woods, of Nelson, who is to hang in six weeks, killed an old man also named Woods. The murderer broke into the old man’s house. The old man jumped out of bed, caught the intruder by the arm, and asked him what was wanted. The murder- er replied by shooting him dead. The con- demped man was no sooner incarcerated in jail than he escaped, but was recaptured, brought before a judge,tried and found gnilty in five minutes. After the trial, and when the death sentence was announced, the condemned man said: ‘That’s all right gimme a chew of tebecco, ” An imposing service was held this even- ing at Westminster Abbey in connection with the Pan-Anglican or Lambeth con- ference, at which most of the delegates were present. The latter arrived in # pro cession, the bishops wearing their fuli episcopal robes and taking their places in the procession attended by their chaplaing, preserved in jars. Qo page 121 of the prize list after section 109 the following is addecd ; Grapes (under glass) best 2 bunches. BLACK, Section 109 (a)—Black Hamburg; 1 $2 50; 2, $2; 3, $1. (b)—Black Prince $2 50 $2; $1. (c)—Any other variety, $2.50, $2, $1. 3 RED. Section £09 (d)—Grizzly Fontignap; 1, $2.50; 2, $2; 3, 81. (e)—Red Uhasselas, $2.50, $2 $1. (f)—Any other variety, $2.50, $2, $1. WHITE, (g)—Duchess Bucchleugh; 1, $2.50; 2, $2; 3, $1. (b)—Golden Chasselas, $2.50, $2, $1. (i)—Royal Muscadine, $2.50, $2, $1. (k)—Any other variety, $2.50, $2, $1. _—-—- — scntienaasgiet IN THE STATES. The general business outlook, says Henry Clews, grows increasingly hopeful. Many manutacturers arealready sufficiently satisfied with the probable details of the new tarifito begin operations upon an extended scale, and in the larger industries the resumption of full work is becoming comparatively general. In city mercantile circles also a marked improvement of tone begins toappear. It comes too lave to materially increase the volume of the Summer business; but it is having a wholesome effect upon the confidence and expectations ef distributers in respect to the falltrade. The reports and orders sent by commercial travelers show such an improvement that they are receiving instructions to prolong tieir stay in the interior; all of which goes to strengthen mercantile expectations as to the yolume of trade during the second half of the year. New York Cheap Store according to the date of their consecration, the Archbishop of Canterbury coming last. Large crowds witnessed the unusual and gorgeous scene at both the arrival and departure of the procession, which went to and fro between the cathedral and the church house, where the robing and dis- robing took place. es 9009606909009 6000 Wrapper Competition for every month of the year 1897 $1,625, SA WAY 7 MONTH: : In Bicycles g Watches. FOR SWUNLIGHT so, WRAPPERS ¢ =—oo 2 ¥ For full particulars see advts. aor apply to 3 7 @ 23 scorTr sT., TORONTO 09990000 09000669695.9003955000500080600005608 0060 Chiming with this improvement comes ae generally hopeful character of the Govern- 36 seeeeeoocooooesoooeoes will be unable to guarantee the discipline | PHOTOGRAPHING A SHOT. Wonderful Experiments In Determining the Time of a Flash of Electricity. Recent achievements in the moving photography that has produced the ani- matograph, biograph, cinematograph and other representations of motion are not more wonderful than the lately per- fected photography of the flying bullet. Professor C. Vernon Boys, F. R. 8., has worked on this seemingly unsolvable problem with great success, as have also two Italian artillery officers. In the course of a lecture on the sub- ject, Mr. Boys demonstrated that the ordinary notion that an electric spark is instantaneous Was quite erroneous and gtated that the light of the two ends of the ordinary electric spark lasted a lit- tle less than the one-hundred thousandth part of a second. It was, of course, in- stantaneous to our senses, but to tests which could measure accurately to the one-hundred millionth part of a second the electric spark was anything but in- stantaneous. This spark wus no good for taking the photograph of a flying bullet, as the lecturer showed by exhib- iting one of his attempts, which made quite a blurred picture. Mr. Boys then proceeded to explain the steps which he took in order to re- duce the length of time of the electric spark. To this end it was essential that the terminais should be made of copper, platinum or some metal which did not produce readily an ignitible vapor, and the electric current must not be driven through wires at all. He used a very thick, brcad band of copper, not more than two inches leng, which reached around the edge of the plate, so that the electric current had not more than three or four inches to go altogether. He explained by diagrams how he had effected his object and shortened the time of the spark to about one-thirteen millionth of a second, or about 100 times quicker than the ordinary flash. To give the audieuce some idea of the inifinitesimal fraction of time, he said the time occupied by the spark as re- duced by his apparatus was proportion- ately as much less than a second asa second was less than five months, and during that time a bullet fired from a magazine rifle could not travel more than one five hundredth part of an inch. By this simple contrivance he was able to get a brighter and shorter spark and all that was necessary to make a good and sharp picture.—New York World BLANC-MANGE BENSON’S - CANADA PREPARED Is an exquisite dish for the table and invaluable for invalids. RECIPE. 2 ef 3 Burners, Burns with a clear blue flame without smoke, and a hest of the greatest intensity, er. ars brass, and so made th: of can be replaced in’a few Mines } as in an ordinary lamp. Wicks are 10 inches in Circumference and should last one Patent Wick Adj keeps the wicks from being turn. ed teo high or too low. Oil Tanks situated away from burners, connected thereto with small tubes ; the oil is thus con- tinually cool and prevents odor, Frames and Tops are made of steel and cannot be No perforated plates or soakage, thus preventing odor Boils one quart of water in four minutes. surround the burners to retain any char or oil THE McCLARY MFG. CO. N N VBBSSSVVSEsvessesesestsessetes e LONDON, TORONTO, MONTRBUAL, WINKIPEC, VANCOUVER © If your local Gealer cannot supply, write our mearest forer. 2O0- YOOOYVIYY VY YY OOO YO ane Yourm y be busy are we, and hare been all the Spm Just a Minute So busy that we did not have time to advertise and telf all the fine things we have for this season and thé lo we are selling for, but the people find us out, for it takag forty people to keep .the orders we get made ap, 30 it kee us moving to keep everything going right, But for thosey do not know, we might say that we keep all the old rely cloths such as Bellwarp Coating and Serges, Tyke and heim Serges, Fashionable Trouserings to no end. Ccmea see us and see our stock and the fine clothes we make, JOHN MACLEOD &¢ MERCHANT TAILORS. | roe i ee bs hat , LEY RET Cood Will | grows slowly ; when secured, it is a treasure without price, to be car fully guarded and judiciously fostered; therefore we keep constart guard on goods and prices, and see to it that our ads are always ie accordance with facts, ASK TO SEE our high back cane seat and brace armhaire for 75c. JOHN NEWSON BLANC-MANGE. Four or five tablespoonsful of Pre- yared Coru to oue quart of milk; dis- solve the Prepared Curn in some of the milk ; heat the remainder of the milk, uid when boiling add the dissolved Prepared Corn; boil fifteen minutes, lavor to taste, and allow it to ceolina uould. Serve with milk sud jeily or uilk and sugar. The Edwardsburg Starch Co., Ltd. WORKS: CARDINAL, ONT. OFFICES: MONTREAL, P.Q. The S. S. ‘‘ COBAN,” sailing faom Montreal Friday morning, July 9th, will be due at Ch’town, Monday morning July 12th, and will sail for St, John’s Nfld.. via. North Sydney, C, B., carrying horses, cattle and sheep on deck and produce under deck at lowest possible rates. For further particulars as to freight and pissage, apply to PEAKE BROS & CO. Ch’town, July6,’97, 3i eod, KOKANIE CREEK SHARES NO FAKE"! But legitimate mining. FOUR CLAIMS. One being on the famous Molly Gibson vein. Two above Enterprise, which sold $300,000 cash, and another one half mile from Slocan River. High grade ore out cropping on threes Weil defined ledges ona.}. Capital only $250,000 in 25 cent shares, First issue for development 3 cents, nou assessable. Next issue not less than 10 cents. Reliable management. Nothing less than 500 shares sold. Order through bank. GEO. U. SCOTT Agent . : SIPS dededsdedede dededeate alute the colors. | We make it comfortable for our are that kind. Snug, as cur sales show, Men's Tines of Colored Shoes for Summer wear Our Ladies, Oxfords are marvels of beauty and good value, Misses’ anf Children’s in all styles. Men’s Bicycle Shoes, a complete assortment ofl staple lines. Great variety. Low prices. Weeks & Warren Sunnyside Shoe Store. re SPECTACLES. | — ee eee oe f patrons by selling them cheerful shoes, Out trim looking attractive shapes that are liked i Over twenty-five years I have been in the Spectacle bus inoss and during that time have fitted hundreds and hundred of persons. Some had put off getting glasses so long that they could not see a large 4 inch letter A without going within 20 3 feet of it, and might have gone blind if they had put off getting glasses much longer. Others have been fitted of rather wisfitted, with Wrong glasses by travellers, and charg: 2d a great deal more than they ought to have Lees! yar our traveller, Mr. C. H. White, intends calling on pat ties at their homes in the country, to test eyes and show sal ples of our goods. Should he eail on you I bespeak for him your favorable con him will be fille¢ Glasses can also be exchanged City, > wish, sideration, and any order you may give as £00n as possible and guaranteed hy mé , at the store, CamEron BLOCK, if after a trial they do not prove as satisfactory ss Yo! 42, Fort St. Victoria, B. C, EW. TAYLOR, City: