. 'Il lllberry at xoc. per Ib, V 1- ~T!v Eureka Blend Ten, qepas lb. ` F- lalkliiu 5 xii f ` "5 " ' .1 ,~ '._.'.- _ » .' " . -' . `- ‘K i _“<1 1 , ~ _ ~ .,. A ' ; '~‘-""f ffl- ""'~?.<'~'='i`~f?- " " _.1 "1",-*.2 `- .L -. ., _-_ f . ~ " -' ~ ,.5 2 .?2,_f""'»"l,.~". ~t.» , . .e V _ ' . _ _ . - ~ f _- ~» ' _ 3,; ._ " f ~ f-Fi _';~* -- .gs ,.,»-,$115 ._;;e ._ -_.wk ,_ ~, ., ., P » -' >_, ,PQ .' .- _,_ H i J ~ ' f . =' -. ` -. ~ : _-‘ “-L ~.':.,;“=' f ”‘< - '_ ~-`,`._t<'~~-'=. 'f,"= ff" »' -U .. " .“-L: " _"‘ - - -. .2 "f_ ...f _ -_ . s _ ._ ,. - f ~ -, . as tt _ »- ~ . _ ._ .. ._. -l ,y V ,__ 1, ,`,.,__.:`.,_¢_,‘i_.%`,»fv;._,_t:;§,, -_,.=-§"x_,T_`_jV,.J"xg’;v,t,,jv 5%.-.-~,_..-T-_,_;;a ,,;,_,>;;1_ , »'~'/_,'~ ,' V . L .i,. , 1 . THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, JUNE 5, 1901 _ -fx $2 IAPAN Q - ,L T Q ...metric fi vfevle “ 'll Sh°"‘Y "~‘°°"“’- ‘f _______________________________ -. f_,,__ ° ` '1»~ ~ ff .tis ` -. - » i Japan is §:oing'throu_gh a marked period 0 E _»\'\.,_D€ .p - f % ‘».._f_-it . of commercial depressioii. paitiy due. to J »'.‘."t1l ff-3‘.7 "`*’ Ehfjll _` ,\ '~f-jff' _ distiirbed condition of Lhiiia. But .so - ,To _ ~ In - - ~ the . _- __ - ` ` Y A Y Y T A A A A ` ` ` A Y ` ` ` ` _ ‘A lgijjim V given half a ehaiice.-Buffalo Courier. J M `\_-5_5-,N --¢--- ° ° % Great Victory B,\ir.\'.».sv Rivi-:ii, N. B. Mar.-Few cases 0( illness and recovery have excited the interest in this community, _ as has the kidney trouble of Mr. Cornelius Crottie. Mr. Crottie’s treatment by the doctors at home and in the hospital, arid the fact that they absolutely gave him up as a = “se beyond all hope. is well known. His ,ubsequi-iit restoration by the use of Dodds Kidney Pills reads like a miracle. “For tive years I have suffered off and on with kidney Trouble. Last fall I_liad in attack, for vliich the doctors had little hope of my recovery. I was obliged to £0 tothe hospital for tre:it.ment,_ but it ld me no good, so I came home given up by the doctors. A friend suggested Dodds Kidney Pills. From the first box I im- proved. Now I am at my W0I`k €V€l`y day’ » & I Cheap Light ~ B for the v Long Evenings) T Call and get some Maytlowsr oraod of Kerosene vii, the nest oil ., imported to harlit tetown, which ,,» F I will sell in four gallon lots at 21 fl, wits a gallon. snnrd Lobeters, one lb Bats, ,pl My pack, 23 cents. 1" - Libby M:Neil’s Sliced Bacon, 1:' 25 cents. ’ \‘ f _V, §eoton’s Chow-Chow, 22c; air ‘ ti ttop. _ ‘ 'K '-‘ gdalf dos bars Surprise Soap, `» Q7 cents. , ;" No Tea can beat Has1.ard’s up L_ Brahmin. We sell the genuine (M ; `-_ sticle, ` _ ii" Those are cash prices. -“ir (fill Goods delivered free ir City. 1 -"L Phone 208. ;_ _ R. ar. vvooa itll JI? Cor. Euston and Hillsboro' Sts. Sept. l eod&w. Accurate Time And Durability at Moderate Cost is the goal we aim at in buyin Watches for our customers. as hund- reds of purchasers can testify. _ Every watch is tested and regulated b efore being sold. Our guarantee GUARANTEES W.N.TANTON Jeweler, Great Gt. St. 3 doors from Grafuot . sr' . | , 5 lik_es to wait very long to have re- pairs attended tio. O eu great in- ~ oonveniencean seriousdamage or loss is sustained by not havingw work attended to at the proper time. We not only do our work gromptlygut we do it propeiéleyi ur wor men are experien _ and we guarantee satisfaction. lj' For Bell Hanging, Gas Fit- ting, Sheet Iron and Tin Plate work we are unexcelled. H0812 B. SMALL. Great George Street, Milluers Old EEE Mmllld. u 14 d & w 1 stalks of the dandelion and from links to gnsssncanmnnear-9 “International S. 8- Go. F03 BAQSTON The Pan American Exposi- tion Buffalo N. Y. o ` Comm-:z~Ci:vG MAY ~ 13TH the Steamers of _ ‘this Company will leave , ,_ St. John eveiy Morin.-iv, : wnnivsspav and Fai- ;'Z\l<;!& -_ nav at 7.30 a. rn.. for ; ` 1 Eastport, Lubee, Port- ’ land and Boston. _ Rf turning leaves Bos- `-__"“ Fil* K ton same day, at 8.15 a.m. 'C _ NOi`E. Inn Bi'-_:sr " - - - PAN il ROL In _ 0 THE AMERICA '.5 VIA THE I. S. S. C0., BOSTON' .»\_\'D ALBANY R R. AND THE GREAT I-‘OUR TRACK NEW YORK CENTRAL AND HUDSONRIVFR R. ll. Passengers arriving in St. john in the evening Q11 gxo direct to the Steamer and take Cabin BC" h ' o oi Stateroom fort etnp. For rates and information apply to nearest 'Hcket Agent, or to WILLIAM G. LEE. Afent. 2! d&w. se. John. N. B ` I Nat in Be“‘Beaten` A farm t ‘ t ° t d h'b'- ted to ther wesn fin o atgrocery s oreaéi ex i :_ e eye o an a mixing erow an eno m°\l5 egg about six inches long, which he avowed to have been laid by one of his own hens. He had it packed in cotton and would not allow anyone to handle it, for fear of breaking the dhenomenon. The grocer examined it with the rest, and, in- tepggplg to 'chaff the Countryman said: 11 aw _ `ve ot somethin in the 'ne um win bear ing: " g egg I °‘l’llbet you a dcllar you haven’t," said the °°_\}¥\§rymen, getting excited. _Right !_" rei lied the grinning grocer; and N188 behind the counter, he brought out a wire ¢3¥~beate T- "There’s somethin in the C gliue that will 5312;; Ithink," sail? he, reaching out for the ‘-noili , ii »» - . . ,OE tziegtigpxyt W ere, said the farmer, ‘ let's see ll e handed the e g to the grocer. “The latter held out h§s hand for it,bnt dropped ‘U 3“fl>f1Se on the counter, where it broke two '°‘!P Plates _and a platter. It was of solid ii on Pfmitd wéhite. `S°me o ks think the 're ni' ht Clever,” ml?-tered the farmer, as hgpocketlgd the iucney lDd_walked out; “but 'taint no use baclzizig 'Q9-U18! the solid fact,"- adigiut no use hacking against the fact that .R *Y the qllalitymiaor prices of our Groceries gghieebeatem accounts. for our increas- 5M- IS YNY Wick of 'running low? We 1*" 1 Qlntity of tg' pure home made O s “Forth in the Pleasing Spring The beauty walks-thy tenderness and love." We all hail the gentle Spring, so delight ful to every one .whose heart is not callous to all those nobler impulses which make the Boer feelings of our nature. Spring breathes of goodness and mercy; it calls forth our gratitude, and affords us thought for contemplation in the power of an Almighty Parent. In spring. tree and shrub, and flower are awakened to renew life and are clothed in vivid green and varigated hues, as with a garment. “From heaven descend the drops of dew, From heaven the gracious showers, Earth’s winter aspect to renew, And clothe the spring with Bowers.” Spring is a ty pe of that renewed state of man’s being, which, when the wintei-y storms, the buffettings, and the frosts of life are past, he hopes to enjoy, chothed in a new dress of immortality. If ,spring is pleasant and cheers every we1l»tuned heart, doubly so must it be to him who can examine minutely the vari- o-is processes that are now going ol; who can look with the eye of a philosophic naturalist on the face of -nature; and wh o can trace from a thousand things, which others have overloaded, the impress of a Divi-ne original. It is scarcely necessary to note here the changes which have taken place in the vegetable world; yet obvious as these changes are, they are often passed by unnoticed and without awakening attention. Our trees and shrubs, which a short time ago were bare of foliage, are now clothed with living verdure. Our fields and waysides are pro- fusely strewn with buttercup and daisy. Our gardens exhibit a profusion of frag- rant Bowers,our orchards are covered with showers of blossoms; and the -breezes, loaded with perfume, waft their odors afar to invite bee and butterfly to _par- take of the Bowers bounteous stores of nectar. These are the familiar and welcome signs of the promise, that seed- time and harvest,a/nd summer and winter shall not fail. We hail the Bowers as they come troop- ing along. What were our earth but a dull, cold, dreary, and cheerless waste, without itacarpet of green and variegated colors! We hail the humble wild Bowers. Soon as the chills and coldness of winter pass and the sun “deigns to smile once more upon t-he wild Bowers’ resting-place, it comes forth eagerly with its greeting. Hardly have the ravines in the woods lost traces of the winter snowdrifts, ere the trailing arbutus reveals its presence, and the wildflowers, swayed by gentle breezes, are nodding to one another, and to the world." - The children, “the youngest and tender- est of human-kiud," meet with and I welcome “the youngest and tender-* est of Bower-kind." Tiny-built 0 hands and delicately formed fingers pluck and carry home the dande- lion-the yellow pioneer of summer Bowers; the butte"cup, as it spnngles and throws its silky petals to the breeze, is pl ucked, by the little girls' dainty hands and placed under the chin of a compan- ion, with the child-like question.-“May I see if you love butter T’ Or as they walk together and rob the daisies of their milk- white petals, they tremuously and softly whisper, each to herself, as one by one the petals fall-“He loves me, he loves me not; helovee me-” Or as they take the make chains wherewith to encircle their waists as with a girdle,_ and twine them about their necks with as much child- like pride as their seniors do theirs with chains of gold, they would count the hours as they speed only too quickly, and tell the time of day by gently ' blowing away the ripened down, while they re- peat,-“one o`clock, two o’clock, three o’clock; now it’s about time for us to stop.” Boys on the other hand, select such Bowers as the modest and quiet violet, which they set against each other, and force them to contend in mortal com- bat. Fastening these Bowers .together at the crooks near the top ofthe stem, they pull till the head of one or bqth 'comes off. There are many things which give pleasure toage, but which impart no en- joyment to the young; there are others which afford gratification to the young, which the aged cannot share. The rich _ _ . ' a' URUHKENNESS I8 A DISEASE - AND GRN I , IS YOUR HUSBAND, BROTHER FATHER, any _cf ytur relatives afBiCted wo the Disease of Drunken- ness- ?Withhave a sure cure which can be gwen wrrn or wi'rnou‘r_the know- ledg° of the patent. Read the follow- ing which speaks for itself :- SAN FRANCISCO, Car.. Dec. i. rgoo_ DR. W H SAUNDERS &CO., Chlcagolll. Dear Sirs~- Kindly accegt my thanks for the wonderful an permanent , cures you have wrought on nasty members of my congregation. I ve ` organized a sfciety among mia mem- bers to promote and adverti.¢e_ t most safe and speedy cure _for this dreaded ‘ curse and disease-' whichso man_y are afflicted with. You will learn in th_e very near future of the result of their labors! sincerely hopethat God w_i1l ble_ss fhis great and good work in savin our fellow mortals rom the scene of de- struction. and place them on the road to live a sober and righteous life. Only wishingloould do more to assist you lnthisnoble and worth work, I am, ._ i C§ "°.;‘§'.. }‘. ...““*s__- ou and allow you to st.i!!_ continue in can procure pleasures which the poor can- not obtain; the poor man enjoys gdvan- taires which the rleh cannot buy; but some things appear equally to delight the old and the young. the rich and the poor, and the feeble, the robust in health ‘and the invalid. One of these ls Bowers Whether these Bourish in the garden, bloom in the green-house, are scattered In °\1l' with-Way, sprinkled on the verdant banks, or strewn over the hills and the valesz they never fail to please; they Bll the air with their sweetness, and delight the GW Wit-h .their exquisite beauty. Old 9-Hd y0I1ng alike love Bowers. In the damp Sand! Woods, or in the shady pine groves` YNY Search among the leaves in early "°5°'°°l°1`°d f\°W¢l'. which so cheerfully exhues its TMI, Spicy fragrance, and known as the Mayflower-a treasure 8111005! the spring wild Bowers. The gay brightness of these Bowers is refiecgeq in the faces of those who bea r them. In this WB? Our wild Bowers,symbols of humility, have their days of triumph. How many are the gratification we may enjoy? The balmy gale breathes health around us; the babbling brook and gh; crystal spring pour forth their refreshing and invigorating streams; the skies above our heads. and the earth beneath our feet are beautifully adorned with heavenly hands; by day, the sun glids the creation with his golden beams; and,by night, the pale-eyed silvery moon and the glittering stars shed their grateful lustre. We feel aethrill of delight as we view these things but we instinctively tum to the iowa,-s_ Sweet it is to walk through the green house filled with elegant Bowers. where- the night-blooming cereus, the geraniums, fuchias, lobelies, japonicas, and China roses, are intermingled with a thousand other beautiful Bowers and ferns. Sweet- er still is it to walk in the garden, where in their appropriate seasons one may see the lovely rose, the gaudy tulip, the stately hollyhock, the gorgeous peony,the 3W¢€l5 D28, the pansy, the dahlias, carna- tions, stocks, and marigolds. But one in the sunlit fields and sequestered delle, where the modest violet, the golden butterciip, the sweet-scented wax-myrtle, Bower are profusively scattered! Did the reader ever lie at length, at mid-day, green, -or sit on a shady bank, gazing' on the earliest Bower of the season with ad- miring wonderl or bend, in a retired clusters of “wild mignonette T’ If not sure, the joy, and the delight that may be excited by a Bower. mighty and majestic oak excite our as- spmpathy and love If we think as we wander over thc quiet glen, silent but for us, every fact observed, ever] truth learned will suprise and delight us. “Gre ations of boundless extent, displaying un limited power, matchless wisdom and surround us. The infinitely great and admiration the statelist rocm of the statellest man “Though all around be rich and rare The Bowers are fairest of the fair; And, voiceless as they are impart Sweet music to the eye an-i heart.” ever and anon a glance at the moss-ros 1 though while his hand was thus employe might be the only thorn he should eve the ignorant and the learned, thelstrong S Spring for that little prostrate or trailing on the side of some liill,covered with living nook, with intensity of interest, over the theuto snah a one are unknown the plea- While the vastness and strength of the toniahment and admiration, the littleness of the delicate myrtle, the fragile violet. and the modest forget-me-not excite our d thp sweet voices of the songsters of Spring knowledge will spread out before overBowing beneBcence will at every step the infinitely little will compete for our Were our earth to be deprived of its Bowers, a blank would be left in the ore- _ The new made izrave, tiiatis filled up in - -,_ , ii arte are -‘ '- T ` ' » »- , , theniorning is in t e rnoon s wn _ _T *_ , _ 2 * ` ation. What imagination can suggest a » substitute for Bowers? Were we to enter sion; were we to see it decorated with carvings and srildings, with paintings and sculpture, with China vase -_ ornament and drapery; fair though these might be, yet fairer still would be the Bowers in the wicker basket on the stand. This youthful, blushing maiden, ,eleg- antly attired, who trips along yonder with blooming on her breast. One may not en quire who gathered and placed it there' anemumanemanwma "5 " »-`__ was 'U lisa elicit (ent ’ . eiieci Fitting Shirt ‘ are cheapest though they cost more than the ill-fitting kind, because a_. perfect fitting shirt has no extra strain where it should not be, and is solidly reinforced where the extra strain comes. With bad Btting shirt no maker can tell where the most strainfcomes. i Wo' sell the best hitting white and colored shirt in Canada at $1.00. - ,_ We have opened some elegant neglige shirts for warm weather. Youll' need one or two. Theyire very comfortable indeed and so pretty and cool to, Cost 50J.to $1.50 at ' ' , ` 'U ‘ \ _ The Wonderful Cheap Men. Y pri) __ _ ,.., s. -vc ¢\,... ' °,*£‘f1i' _~I!f$' ' 5 ` _G -1* 1 2:-;-is ' ‘ s _ 1 _ -3 :Sf t _~` ;\ -_ , could tell if she woul of calm delight and peaceful pleasure may ti u .i 3. D1 in the window, and looks upon them with guided the plough; but now whose wrink ‘ with iti-:swallow-tail and big buttons, and with Bowers that attest the respect and affection of the living for the one who “Sweet nurslings of the vernal skies, Memorials prompt and true The beauties of the Bowers should make ° ' l . . aught heart and a Sparkl"-Ig eye’ stea Z us glad and grateful; their frailty should on *NRE DA"_Y. excite reflection. As we gaze on a with- t as aflower of the Beld so he Bourisheth, elf- I . ' edits ._.,.. iHMnh@§ ease was ir- curablew I ` Dodd’s§£dloy _ gired R. Doctors, themselves _/e' ,dial thou! Bla I Pills the Brat U' ° that 5;' cured Imitation;-box, namemd theupdkina that loo X eine _liahetes ielii No. A su; onile V To-mm-ww win be <1, ing." sizes up to 46_ We orchids, the eyebright, and the twin ~ i » f 4 ' ,, M0, a, Light Weight Underélothing . l happy face and you may know how much M T be crowded into the petals ofa Bower! In gottgn, light, gmgqth ,_gpd"gof|; ~ I The poor and aged widow in the alms . 50 cents per suit. house_must alsohave her Bower. Old and Nicely Finished Balbdgpn ine. .3 silk . _ T ' poor, and lonely as she is the time w en T _ A ' f she had a garden of her own is not forgot- p . ' M . gn Casin' pet suit' ten by her; and now, deprived of this, she Beanmfnl soft “mo $1 00 t ° V _ , il goes tto th fewwild Bowers, _ _ _ ° _ _ S cks°‘;em tfzereggken -u Menhem omething extra fine in .light weight natural woo‘, moely satisfaction. Wiiy anemia she new For ‘ \ $2.00 per suit l e . her, whoever she is, we breathethe pray- i » ' 1 ` ers,-May her Bowers bloom, and her hope ‘ ` i - l 31 , L V A _. v _ of heaven grow brighter! ' f " __ ‘ ~ fp ‘I .T X . ' The aged laborer who, when in boyhood ' -Mews ` 4 '* ' h 1. ‘ led forehead and furrowed brow and with v s Y I - , I t , _ _ ,T _ . a ered cheek and failing voice and kindly m L manner betoken his nee-rap preach to the e T ‘ S Te _ _, . T 1. __ , 1, _,fb f,,__.,;,- Bar; when he puts on his Sunday coat, ~ ""A -' ‘ -~ wishes to go to the place .where he expects ` = _ f _ _ t to find strength for the few remaining If your “mi or ¢i°¢i¢_a°¢s me nor figin, amps in mamma mme;-_i mi. ='wea;ui 1 h has' 8 8 ri it. Having engaged the services of Mr. B. W. Cameron, Jeweler. we are-in a polidol.U'k years, he can notgoun ess e pg g ha ._ h mind ~- of 'sweet-william and old-man in the Y" ve “pam” en pm . ~w,¢¢g,m,u, ,mg-3,,-,¢|,,_l . giétlxaghggexerlioth gentle andgsimllle de . ‘ Kg Corner Grafton andsreatoeorgiestiee _ ‘ \ as BAROUCHES. OPEN WAGGONS, ,._~:: g<;\_ 4* '§ '»¢`¢"` ` slee beneath. There they bloomawhile . ‘X ' *g 'Q _ 5- ' 0 , ,_ _ _ ‘lt = ' ` / §,.» \ PS ss _f _ and there they wither. _ _.gf r .lf ‘ z /` » ,~.. ~ Good turnouts of every del- Bathed in soft airs, and fed with dew. _ `**‘~» ‘».i=»=- ' _ _ _ - - what more than msgicin yeuiies KENT STREET criprwn an good horses. vel! i To B1! the heart’s fond view! , . In childhood's sports companions gay, p K LIVERY STABLES’ cared for, always. In sorrow, or life’s downward way, cha~fl0tt6t0Wf\» P- Es If § ~ _ ’ How soothing! in our last decay, 5 1§§_;§I?;i»§; I 1 S no Livery _ ' ,r*_- ‘ _, ... f _-J. fit: '..~. .- ..M -_ .lic #-- ,, ».»_4 ,,. .t as ` iii “ is "iff A.-A . » 1 ...far ~ ~ ig- 1- s, .¢_ --.;._e.‘ on - _ ._ . i.` 'iff' .ig e .ff ,_ : `;-; >- _.'1- 4~..,: . ‘**`~` ’ _ 7 .,._.. ;1».'.;,-.T f r. ~- » e:. 1 t-'. . AVE .jg .. _ ir. . *V “: _,.3 . -I Ei, ,-"f .'»_' . f"‘ .; ' ».2.._ a. _ L_, ‘ - 'fri _ /,».. iv‘»¢f.=» »- 7 ;“ "L-of-.'»'. ;. Personal . attention to a"‘l R eredroseor fading lily we should do sop Ter ’ with sad, yet with salutary remembrance, T ms Reasonable oliéehm 30 , 1 _-rs that “as for man, hisdays are as grass; eIePh°n° N0 171' one _‘ - - '_ - if his heart breathed the prayer, that i _ _ . _ s , L - _fi r for the wind passeth over it, and it is gone w F V R I N S ~ yggpgn;-T-ogg, I 9 . ' ._ i o o - plant In her bosom' who he was' she and the place thereof knoweth it no more.” 5.,3d3m _ pkgplug-1-0R_ E , ' The shrubs and Bowers which lately we I kg &&"°'&~ 0 “mi aid. “"2."1:~.fi.f.“‘..;';:. *“““‘ "““‘“‘_` sacoiiiiaiiiii miie watere w p easu , i y , 5 7 perhaps, when our hands lie cold andlife- , ' 0 _ ____i less, and will soon be forgotten. So will TI-IBPLAGUECBN LONDON. For sale ‘ Eecohd_h_md‘ Pi* T “"°"‘"’ °"’ iz.-ora we iii one i is "ie "The W°1`ld i3 853' 9-nd fail' t° “sv as °°" LONDON. June 1.-At Willesden an ( ' . Hman), ’ I W¢-l°“m°Y ‘mf outlying suburb of London, a man hop- g°°d °°°d't‘°°° will be wld *WI Yet still 'tis sad to think ’twill be the posed wbe “germs fl-0m the light form , for cash. Call and See it at my S°~m° when We “T9 3°“*`i , of bubonic plague has been discovered. i l'00m» GW” G¢°\'§° S"'°°°.' f ' v Some few perchance, may mourn for uS,` Persons with wlmm he had come in mn, E MA _ , b\1\"3°°° the if’-lnsiem 31°°m~ itact were detained, but have now been M,” 23 dd , _ Aaaahqsa , .J ` Like Sb°1¢».mtB»iy.c.B. , Heist Supp’-:gd mw_b9 1r°°df.‘il°lll , , Ill IUIDW SDN 'ith _ BO $£lHliEADACHE The 10,931; or ‘gy fgudQt W. 1 lwreu , y eadachesarlsinz from . ° ,o°,P¢,¢|_ . _ sleenleassess. #113 051,, - _ _ `Bo'm‘n,. ml U x » _ Rezlm. ental _ :rg _. _, 1 -in ._ is; ..i I ‘E ._n -1