¢ + ‘ : e j t 3 *. “ ‘ } ; ! ; o : ile Tiieiiltiaie: tite niinenimeniaeie as Pe “~~ = a > te EXAMiLer core nm «44% shad w/a A Ata The Daily rowrrer . LID mee , Ihe Examiner Publisuing Go : moany RATES tf 'sCRIP ree: One tener 4.00 Six Wonths 7.00 Three Months 1.00 | @ne Nonth 0.35 | Sent post paid the ! Cn <i Stat THE WEEK. LAAT — «8a ; of matter which hins e Daily and is a first. per wniry | all sl ves | HONOKS. ww —— —— - SIR WILPRID'S Sir Chares Tupper Remarks' Upon i vei. In the Course of His Great Spsech at Winnipeg. In the course vi recent very sable speech at Winnipeg Sir Charies Lupper bit off admirabiy We poriliow and Claim of Sir Wiltred Laurer aw the bonors re- cently conterred upou iim. “No person,” Sir Charles cud, “woud desire iu envy bim iu the slightes. «gree bis coming back to Canavaa> » Ku.yut Grand Cross of the Order of St. Micuoel and St. George, but a great mauy of bis triends read with no littie astoni-hment the announcement that be bad accejyt-d inet important diss tinction. And why? Because be had pre~ viously forgotten bimeeif so far as to go through this country declaring that he was a Democrat to the bilt, and tuat be wouid treat with contempt any of those orders of fiis the Crown. When he made those statements he ougbt io have koown that the conferring upon Bri- tish eubjects by Her Majesty of these orders of distinction ia oue of the leading features of Bri:ish institutions. (Cheers.) Every person knows that for mavy long years tne policy bas been ad- opted by the sovereign of that great coun- try of recognizing any warked service performed by any subject, no matter whether that subject be # distinguished man inthe British Isles ora resident in the 1emotest colony cf the Empire, by a distinction from the crown. I say, there- fore, that the man who throws contempt upon that action of the Crown shows that he ba: failed to grasp one of the distingiye features of British instructions. (Cheers.) My. !'*W on that questiou is this, that every British Clonist within the bounds of the Empire has a right to demand that any services to the Qrown, whetuer performed by the most distinguished man in the British Isles, or in the most remo.e dependency, is equally Entitled to distinction at the bards ofthe Cromn, (Oheere.) Ji is quite true that the GGsés are vety few and far betwee, when the highest distinc:ion, that of the peerage, can he conferred upon celobial subjects, for the reason that pot Only the service must be ad+quate that obtains euch a distinction, but we all know that the in- dividual himself must be possessed of the means of maintaining a position of such dignity, but I do say that, brcadly, one of the things that 1s calculated to maintain m the outlying portions of this great Em- pire the same devoted loyalty to the sovereign is the recognition by the sover- C Dipper Dropper ? There are cough medicines that are taken as freely as a drink of water from a dipper. They are cheap medicines. Quantity does not nmke up for quality. It’s the qual- ity that cures. There’s one medi- ‘cine that’s dropped, not dipped— Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral.’ There’s more power in drops of this remedy | whe ’ 9 | St. George? han: ne apoogy for acceptirg it. The | first is that he found iton the tanle whep ne went to the Cecil hotel. (Langhter.) Now, what Mephistopheles can it have been that adopted this mode of s+ducing this poor Marguerite? (Loud jaughier.) THR DATLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JANUARY 22 cee to the State or the Crown i fo the same consideration W performed by colenists as when pere formed by those living im the heart of the Kmpire. (Cheers.) Now, no one envies Sir Wilfrid Laurier for one momert, but we have @& right to complain that he ipologise for having accepted the ferred upom him, that having u he shoud pretend to b having done (Cheers ) i dignity that was ccon-erred upon him, one of which any man might be proud, but, unfcrtanately for him, he udtalked too much. (Laughter.) And ag Ww hai Should ' a epred ar hamed of 50. {t was abigi 1@ Tresuil wa said to himseit, will my triends say afier my a-turing them iat Iwasa Democrat to the nilt, whe: uey find medecked out acd bedizened with this brilitant order of St. Michaei au *(Laughter.) So he has more But Sir Wilfrid Learner achieved an other great mark of distinction, and that a Doctor of Luwe- by | of Jambridge, hai , iulion tliat was, he wa~ made the Univer-ity grea | storic Briti-b | -ubject throughout the world is proud of Weil, I dare say you know that on these occasions there is a great Latino ora'or, Mr. Sandys, who presenis the candidates to receive the degree of Doctor of Laws, and who, in a brilliant Latin oration, in magnificent rounded | Latin periods, expoueds the ground o1 claim of the candidate to receive this great distinction. Aud what did Mr. Sandys say when he presented Mr, Laurier to receive the degree? Iwill not give you the Latin, although you would find it ve ry interesting reading—(iaughter) — but | wil give youa free translation, bat a liberal one. Mr. Sandys had evidently searched the history of Sir Wiltrid very carefully in orderto find some reasonable ground for conferring the degree, andas a result of his research, he seid: “He is the head of the liberal party, and he speaks elo- iis every qently in two languages.” (Lond laughter.) Now, if Rapbael or Michaei Angelo hed come _ back to this ephere for the purpcse of giving you a statue ora paintiog that would exhibit to the life and character and claims of Sir Wilfrid Laurier they could not do it better than Mr. Sandys did in those few words—(cheers)—because that is the only claim he can make or his {riend« can make for him for the distiactions that were conferreion him. He can speak eloquently in two languages, so eloquently that it is his greatest misfortune —(laugh- ter and cheers) —for he has the audacity te go from town to town, trom one place to another, on both sides of the Atlantic, making eloquent speeches, ro two of which agree. (Cheers.) e+eore OUR HONEST FARMERS, Sir,—While visiting the Pork Packing Houce of Mecsre. B. & M. Ratteobury a few dayaago, the manager, Mr. George Lees, had eloged down the killing of some few hundred hogs that foreroon,> Mar; uf the said hogs having been boaght from the farmers sicighs and weighed and killed. Seeing the stomachs of a num- her of them bulged almost to bursting he open-d some <f them. The contents were Fs) caten barley, oat, and ole? grain in an undigested state tle picked up two others aod weighed them. 24 lbs was the weight of the raw grain this honest farmer soid at 44c per |b., which is pot worth, in the market, le per !b. Tie gain in cash to the farmer on 10 hegs was $3.76. The loss to the baver was $4.76. Now vho loses ths money? The men who toiled and risked their money in an expensive plant that wil] tend tothe benefit cf this country andenvrich the farmers eome of whom are stoopingto robbery of the meanest kind and who will bold up the'r bands and thank God they are not like other men nor like those practical pork packers, nor those burly bullying beef buyers whom they accuse of false weights and measures. Come farmers, give the men @ equaie) deal, VISITOR. Theater Going In Japan. It will interest many to hear that the Japanese laws prohibit a theatrical per- formance lasting more than eight hours. The piays in the first class theaters be- MASK AGAINST MASK. The White Ones Scared the Barglars and Saved the Silverware. We were telling ghost stories one rainy evening at a house party in a Maine town, says a Youth's Companion contributor, when a young lady remarked. with a laugh, ‘‘ Mine is not exactly a ghost story, but is something like one, and it is, be- sides, a personal experience. “I was spending a week with a friend, Frances Livermore, a few years ago, dur- ing the absence of her father and mother. The housemaid was called home by illness in her family, and my friend and I were left alone but for the company of a big hound. We were not at all timid, for Tige was an excellent watchdog. ‘*On the last day of my stay we went to a picnic, from which we returned very tired and with faces sadly sunburned. We applied buttermilk and then covered them with white linen masks, with holes cut for eyes and mouth. We had great merriment over our comical appearance. ‘*Frances expected her father and moth- er to return that evening, and we sat up rather late awaiting them. At last, how- ever, we gave them up and retired to bed and were soon asleep, with our masks still on. ‘*Along in the night we were awakened by a noise in the rooms below stairs. ‘**They’ve come!’ whispered Frances. ‘T’ll run down and see if they’re all right,’ saying which she rose, lighted a candle and started dow® stairs. ‘‘As soon as she had left the room I de- cided to follow her, and lighting another candle I threw on a white wrapper and hurried after her. “The sounds came from the dining room, and we proceeded in that direction. Frances opened the door, expecting to see her mother and father. Instead we be- held two masked men hurriedly putting the silverware into a bag. ‘The burglars looked up as we appear- ed, then hastily dropped bag and silver and fled to the kitchen and out of an open window. ‘We did not scream, but stood fer a mo- ment petrified with astonishment and terror. ‘Then we looked at each other and did not wonder that our appearance had frightened the burglars. We were in white from head to foot, and with those masks, by the weird light of the candles, we must have looked like veritable ghosts. **Tige, it appeared, had been lured into the stable and shut up, making it apparent that the burglars were men whom the dog knew. Mr. and Mrs. Livermore had becn detained a few miles from home by a broken bridge. ‘Frances and I rallied from our fright, hunted up Tige and sat up the remainder of the night, but nothing further occur- red. The burglars had carvied off noth- ing.” —_—__-39 008 — -————— Centuyies ago, people used to fear what they owfled the plague. “Black death” wae the most terrible thing in the world to them. They feared it as people now fear the Cholera aud Yellow Fever. And yet there is a thing that causes more misery and more deaths thun any of these. It is so common that ninc-tenths of all the ricknesa in the world is traceable to it. Ir is merely that si:nple, common thing, constipation. It makes people listless, c2uses dizziness, headaches, lors of apne- te loss of sleep, foul breath, and distress after eating. The little help needful is curni-bed »y Dr, Pierce's pleasant Pellets. One piil 3 2 gentle Iix tive and two mild eethertic, Crce used, always in faycr, If you ave Gavelk-¢ crevgh wileton un- scrupulous druggist s:]] you Something on which he makcs more mover, tt is your own faultif youdo notget well. Be sure and get Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. Send 31 cents in one-cent stamps te World’s Dienensary Medical Association. Buffalo, N.Y, and receive Dr. Pierce’s 1008 page “Common Sen-e Medical Ad- viser,” profusely illustrated, Nothing Like Method. “Shall we shoot or hang him?’’ asked the vigilantes. ‘The methodical man of business paused to think. ‘Let us not be basty,’’ he said, ‘‘for hurry begets crim- inal waste and extravagance. The first thing to do is to learn the price of rope and compare it with the cost of ammuni- tion.’’—Philadelphia North Americaa. DEATH’s HAND PINIONED, Kidney Deaths Grow Fewer asthe World Awakes tothe Glad Fact that South American Uidney Cure Never Falts, gin at 10 or 11 and are not ended until after sunset. There are irtervals, of course, for refreshment, and a recent ins | novation is a theater yard for exercise, lined with eating booths and fancy stalls. Boxes are secured three or your days beforehand from a neighboring tea- house, whére arrangements are made ! for attendance and refreshments during the day. Full dress is never worn. The following articles, unless other- wise ordered, are brought to each patrdh: A programme, a cushion, a tobacco fife box, a pot of tea, cakes, fruit and sushi, | a sort of rice dumpling flavored with vinegar and topped with a piece of fish. Valuables may be left at tho teahouse, and the inclusive charge (excepting the than in dippersful of cheap cough syrups and elixirs. It cures Bron- | chitis, Asthma, Croup, Whooping ) Cough, and all Colds, Coughs, and affections of the Throat and Lungs. Ayer’s Ciherry Pectoral Write to om, Setes on any disease in nee. reas, Medical Department, ‘J.C. AYER CO., Lowell Mass, | cratic place, but the space unreserved, | occupied by the Japanese ‘‘gods,’’ is quaintly called ‘‘the deaf gallery.’”’— waiter’s tip) is not more than 1.80 yen ahead. The gallery is the most aristo- Westminster Gazette. = Explaining His Delinquencies, Papa—-James, they tell ms you are at the foot of your class. James—Yes, sir. To secure a full knowledge of any subject one must get down to the root of things, you know. Chicago Journal. <i> &> Those two snap lines of gentlemen’s lined kid gloves for tomorrow. See ad.— Moore & McLecd. ‘sicians of the day, and not The unsuspected presente, the insidious | character, and the alarming suddenness of collapse and death from kidney diseares healt bas beiiiad the most etninént phy- until South American Kidney Cure was intredluced to suffiering huwanity could it be truthfuily ; Said that medical science had conquered | this dreadfal devourer of the buman race. A thousand teetimonials tell of its efficiency as anever-failing kidney epeeific. Sold by Dr.S. W. Dood and Geo. E. Hughes. We thank those who so promptly paid their accounts rendered this menth. There are hundreds still unpaid: these represent thousands otf dollars, which we require this month. We again request a generous response: receipts ‘giveneach day fromsS a. m, to6 pm, Staniey Bros HENRY R, LORDLY C. E A.M Can. Soc. ©. E. Graduate College of Civil Engine ering Cornell University. Consulting Engineer for General Work, Specialties: Hydraulic, Sanitary Enzineer- ng and Bridge Designing. Ufficee at Charlottetcwn and St. John Isjauu correspondents acdress io Charlottetown. oct 14 d&w ! Hood’s Pills of so many ten and and apparently good | The Oasis In the Desert. “No,” said Percy de Goncourt, ‘‘I can- not modify my declaration. You are my pole star. Around you I must revolve. Without you i must become motionless, inert! Darling, you believe me, don’t you?” Sylvia McAllister looked up at him, witha mist in her great, fawnlike eyes, and, suddenly catching sight of his Ad- am’s apple, cried out: **Oh, heavens, Percy, what is that on your neck?’”’ ‘*Where?’’ he exclaimed, a wild fear tak- ing possession of him. ‘here,’’ the beautiful girl said, ‘‘right above your collar—that big lump there. Percy-—tell me—you haven’t swallowed your false teeth, have you?”’ With a gay laugh the handsome young man explained what it was that had frightened his sweet companion and beg- ged her to calm herself. Sylvia McAllister was only 25; she had no brothers; her father and mother had been divorced while she was still in her teens, and it is little wonder that the sweet, innocent girl had been frightened, for Percy de Goncourt had an Adam’s ap- ple on him that steod out in bold relief and was calculated to attract attention al- most anywhere. **Ah, Sylvia,’’ he resumed, after quiet had been restored, ‘‘tell me that you will be mine. I cannot exist without you. My life, as 1 look back upen it now, has been a dreary desert. Now I have found in you a fair oasis, where, instead of the lifeless waste of the past, all is sweet, fruitful and heavenly.’”’ She put her soft, white arms around his neck, raised her rich red lips to his, and after a long, long, blissful kiss, mur- mured: **And tell me, Percy, am I the first lit- tle oasis you’ve ever had?’’ ‘‘Yes, darling,’ he replied, ‘‘I swear “.”* With a glad cry she flung herself into | his arms, and then when she kad become ' calm again said: “*T wish I could have gone into the oasis business years ago.’’—Cleveland Leader. A BAD SYMPTOM | Every One Who Has It is Glad When It Disappears. ST. MARGARET’S BAY, N. 8S.—“ My whole system was run down and I felt tired all over my body. I was sleepless at night and my appetite was poor. I did not obtain relief until I was advised to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. That tired feeling is now all gone and I have a good appetite and feel well and strong.”’ CHARLES HUBLEY. Get HOOD’S. cure nausea, indigestion, biliousness. 25 cents, Italian Ware House Beals’ Corner Cor. Grafton and Ct. Geo. Sts North side Queen Squarre ame Opening To-day jules Robin rOdicinal Brandy JOY & DAVIES, Wholesale Wine Merchants. Klondike. Start from Vanecuver Because 1. VANCOUVER is the best outfitting t point on the coast, goods heing consider- ] ably cheaper than in the United States. 2. VANCOUVER isthe nearest port of departure to the Yukon district. 3. VANCOUVER is the termiaus fof the C. P. Railwav, whose steamers will start from VANCOUVER this spring. — 4. All .orth-bound steamers call at VANCOUVER. 5. Direct steamers to Yrkon ports have new commenced to run from VAN- COUVER. 6. VANCOUVER is the only Canadian port where passengers ciransfer direct trora train to steamer, 7. KLONDYKE is in Canada, outfit in VANCOUVER, and save 30 per cent. Customs Duty. W. GODFREY, esident Board cf Trade, V anconver,B.C LEGAL CARD WARBURTON & McKINKON Barristers, Attorney’s, Notarys Public. Com missioners for State of Massacrk usetts, «c., & ¢, OFFICES —~“""™=2. Cameron Block, Charlottetown Brenneo Building, Summerside 1 Kent Street, Georgetown, A. B. WARBURTON, B, A., D, C. L., Q. C. D. A. MCKINNON, L. L. B. Ch’town Dec, 1, 1897—law & w8m , 1898 USBERS & OVERSHOES RIGHT UP TO DATE 7 in style, quality, fit and popularity are the well known goods of THE CANADIAN RUBBER CO. ---OF MONTREAL... Standard Never Lowered. Ris yr ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM: — SoS -SeaneGeaies one-caneaenpes a REMOVAL. Miller Brothers, the P. E. Island Music hous, have removed their business to Owen Connolly’s Old Stand, Queen Street Where we have more ruom and better facilities thon ever for he carrying on of our large and Ever Increasing Business Come in and see us. Statue oflate Owen C j . top of the building. wea Connolly on You Cannot Miss It. YY YY. > /00nF BROS. The P. E. slant Music House. Sole Agents for P. E. I. 200 Bicycles Wanted To be stored (free of charge) for the winter, and cleaned repaired, nickeled or enameled, thoroughly renewed, ready for spring. ENAMELING We use the highest grade Enamel (black or colors) that money can buy in New York, and dee it on in a manner that the most fastidiovs cannot criticize, and the cost is the same as others charge for ordinary paint, See sample at shop. W P. DOULL, Kent Steet Ra ee enol i p j | u For tke Holiday Season with a complete stock of nics lines of Footwear. We have all kinds of Shoes; low Shoes, honest Shoe dancing Shoes ana Temperance Shoes (that don’t g» tight). Slippers in great variety, Rubbers, Ovetsho- Gaiters, ete. eeer—- de Big Values, Low Prices, Honest Goods, Best Style Will make almost any one Fapyy. We are more than happy to think that we have pleased you in the past, and know that we can do so now better than ever: Weeks & Warren | THANKS) To our many friends, who helped vs do such an excellent trade during the past weeks. VERY LOW PRICES still continue on nearly 2] lines, for a few days. §. F, HUTGHESON Opp. J. D. McLeod’s.