TN P. E, Island Railway On and after FRIDAY, 4th June, 1897, the rains of this Railway wili run daily, (Sun- lays excepted,) as under. . Srains Out- , 7 Trains In- ward: Read} STATIONS. (yard Read aown, up. . MIA. Mi P.M "p. M 3 30) 6 30} Charlottetown .../ 4) 1512 10 3 521 6 44)..Royalty Junction.) 9 0111 48 + 42) 7 18)..North Wiltshire. 8 2810 58 4 58) 7 28].. Hunter River... | ¢ 18 10 48 5 34) 7 59)..Bradallane.... 7 54/10 07 > 44) 7 58)..Emerald....... 7 48\ 9 57 5 SY) 8 O8).. Freetown ...... 738, 9 42 6G WD) & 29)..Kensington .... 7 23) 9 20 6 55) § 45)Ar. ~rosy | -++ 700) 8 45 7 30.10 Oo} Ly \ ey a 6 05) 8 10 7 45:10 22)..Miscouche ..... 5 42, 7 56 8 02110 49).. Wellington ...... 518738 S Di) Soi.. Port Hill .....% isi7n 9 2119 50}..O’Leary......... 2 15 6 2 9 36] 1 15).. Bloomfield ..... |S 50| 6 O4 10 00) 2 03)..Alberton....... 1413) 5 40 20 40) 3 OO}..Tignish .... ... 1} 05! 5 00 P. M.jp. M.} ae ». M.JA. M. A. lp, M,| M.A. M. 6 45 3 00)..Charlottetown . 915 5 40 7 05) 3 14)..Royalty Junctio:| 9 Q]/ 5 20 7 — 3 37) . Bedford mae | 8 37) 4 47 O 4 OAT. Lay cu LEY) 8 15] 4 15 20) 4 05) Lv. J MrStew't } Ar 8 10} 4 00 00! 4 33)..Moreil......... | z gol 8 20 9 2) 4. 54)..St. Peters ..... 7 20] 2 50 10 16, 5 28)..Bear River ..... | g 46) 2 038 Li 00) 6 00; Ee 6 15! 1 20 a. Mp. M.) { . MAP. M. 8 2, 4 O5)..Mt. Stewart ....; 8 10} 3 50 9°87) 4 58) ..Cardigan....... | 717} 238 * Ol S 15;..Georgetown ... | 7 00) 2 15 __ MiP. M.| jA. M.IP. M. jp. M.| 4 ML 17GB. .Emeredi ...... 17 45 8 45).:Cape ‘‘raverse ..| 6 35 uM M. la. M. “traiasarerun by Kastern Standard Time. ‘Seen, CROTON Charlottetewn. Wonton NB. Raiway @flee, June 1, 1897 Time Table Rockey Point Feriy, 1897. The Steamer “Elfin” will leave Prince St. Wharf daily, Sundays ex- cepted, as follows. — — : At 6.30am, 8am, 9.30am, tla m, 1 pm, 2 p m, 4 p m, 6.30 p m. Will leave Rockey Point as follows: At 7am, &30a m, 10am, 11.30 am, 1.30 pm,spm,dpm,7 p m, SUNDAYS. From Charlottetown at: At 9am, 12.45p m, 2 p m, 4p m. From Recky Point : At l0am, 1,30pm, 3p m, 5.30 pm. SOUTHPORT FERRY, Hillsborough will ply on the South- port ferry till further notice as fol- lows :—~ Sundays excepted, leaving Ch’town dailyat 6.30 am and every half hour up tol0 pm. faving Southport at 6.45 a m, making half hourly trips np to 10.05 p m. Sunday trips: Boat leaves Ch’town at 7 am, making half hourly trips up to 8.35 pm. Steamer daid off from 11.05 to 12 o'clock noon. ‘On Tuesday and Friday of each week steamer will run off tame to accom- modate the travelling public. Wants, Lost, Found &e W ANTED— Immediately, a cook; no wash- ing. Apply to Mrs. Fitzgerald. 123— LOST.— Yesterday morning at the market. & purse containing six dollars Finder will «onfera great favor by re'urning same to Mrs. McKinnon, Chestnut St, or to this office. WANTED,—A housemaid, Edward Bayfie!d. W ANTED,—A Cook; wages 310.00; no wash- ang: gcod references required. app!y to Mrs E, Bayfield. Charlottetown dy end wky guar. 8’side journal. Apply to 5M s, AMERICAN GLADSTONE CARRIAGE For Sale, butlt by French of Boston Gond as mew. Sell for half cost. Apply at Larges “arriage Factory. 130 tf. TO LET—An office in Bank Building with “S-sprocf vault, edjoining the offices of Messrs Davies & Haszard. Apply toJ. M. avison, Cashier, 106 SALESMEN WANTED. tn ‘every district to bandie reliable coods, new season, samples Tree, salary from the start. For particulars write Luke Bros, Co Monireal. 95 4 _ TO LET—The dwelling bonse containing seven rooms,on Hillsborough St, adjoining @he residence of Lemuel Poole, Esq Also «table therewith For particulars as to rent, etc_apply to George Alley 4 TO LET—A house containing six rooms sit- mata on King St. back of Merchants Bank, of P.‘£. I. Possession given Ist of June apply % Miss. Lowden, Dundas Esplanade. Pasture to let-—Persons wanting Pasture for “ows duringthe season, near the city, had thetter apply to’the undersigned at once, as he “an wily take .a limited number’— Arthur Peters 114 Imo wANTED.—Chiel Agent for P E.1. to sup- efimtend the business of the Manufacturers’ fiite Insurapce Company. ‘Ihe business is mow «0 extensive as to require a resident man ager. District Agents also wanted in every awerrepresented district Applyte J. R Paton Mox 202 Charlottetown. 123—Guar UEEN VICTORIA: HER LIFE AND REIGN; ereat historic work,sells on sightto thousands. Lord Dufferin in- aroduces it to Canadians in glewing words Easy to make $20.00 a week. some make twice hat. Many make morein spare time than during day at regular employment. This +ar’a Great Sexagenary Celebrations are oming it. Bookson time. Prospectus free io canvaesers, Territory coing fast. THu BRavusy GARBETSON Co Lid Toronte- Can “ ee - eae emcetiin Ai THE--- DENTAL PARLORS. North Side Queen Square. You can have your te-! acracted free ot pain by the meane ot cither general or local anssthesia, All kinds of work done satisfactorily. OR. J. HW. AVERS Tenders for Book Lebts The undersigned assignee of the eatat of Joseph B. McDonald. will, unt: Tne-- day, the 15th June instant. receive tend r- for purchase en bloc of all hock debis due the estate of Mr. Joseph 6. McDonald. A list of the debts can be seen, and al] other 'nformation obtained, at my office, Queen St eet, Ch’town. : WALTER MATH ESON 133—3i A-signee. Better T Fen Gold Ruby Rim Bievele. fmm AT $50 00 A. HORNE & €0, AGENTS 102— IF YOU CAN'T COME Write for an appointment, and have your work done by us; guaran- teed Painless Dentistry and modern methods appliances. and 3 erlin Dental Parlors. Over store of Prowse Bros. Office Hours:—8 a. mto 3 p, m. CANADA so Province of Prince Edward Island In Chancery. “In the ROMls Court. William Henry Aitken, Frederick Parker Carvell, and John Albert Messervey, Complainants, and Elisha N. Wright and Isaac Newton Schurman, Defendants. Pursuant to the order of the Court of Chancery, bearing date the 4th day of May, A.D., 1897, notice is hereby given that all creditors having claims against the late firm of Wright, Schur- man & Co., of Summerside, Prince County, in Prince Edward Island, do fyle their accounts before me at my office, in. Brown’s Block, in Charlotte- town, P. E. Island, on or before the 17th day of June, A .D., 1897. Dated this 26th day of May, A. D., 1897. i E. R. BROW, Master Extraordinary in Chancery. 123—eodtl17th. Liberal -Conser vativel Eect- ors of Wards 2. 3, 4, 5 and Royalty. A meeting of the’ Libera) Conservative Electors of Wards two, three, four, five and Charlottetown Royalty, gwill ve held in the Kindergarten Hall,(Old Athenaeum ) on Saturday evening next, the 12th June, inst., at 7.30 o’clock, for the purpose of selecting delegates to attend a convention of the Liberal Conservative Electors of Charlottetown and Royalty, to be called shortly to select Candidates to represent the city at the forthcoming Flection. A full attendance is requested. W. D. McKAY, Ch’town, June 9—97 Conyener 134—td— guar. AWANTED.— A girl as general servent’ pply to Mra. D. B. Stewart. £vston Street. FOR SALE OR TO LET.--A dwelling house and shop at Southport. Good stand for either blacksmith or‘carpenter. Apply to Robert Bovyer, Southrort. 106—8i wk». WANTED.—Carrige Horse wanted. Must te sound, gentle «nd pot more than 6 years old. apply to W. N. TANTON, JEWELER. STALL AND TIE. Model on Which There Is No Patent or Private Right. Mr. A. D. Baker of New York fur- nishes to Hoard’s Dairyman the follow- ing drawings of a dairy cow stall and tie which he finds more convenient than any other he ever tried. Mr. Baker describes the arrangement as. follows: A A are two pieces of 2 by 4 (wider stuff may be used if a wider stall is de- sired) 8 feet 8 inches long, fastened to the floor. Bis a board 8 inches wide, nailed to uprights to make back side of manger. CC are two pieces, made by cutting a 13 inch board diagonally, fas- tened to the edges of the uprights to hold them rigidly in place and form a V shaped opening intotbe manger. DD are two three-eighths inch iron reds, 2 feet long, with holes through the flat- tened ends to receive one-quarter inch bolts and set out one-half inch by blocks. E isa light, tough piece of wood fastened to D and D by heavy band iron bent in DAIRY COW STALL. the shape of a long U, with two holes for rivets to fasten same to ends of wooden rod. Instead of this band iran one may use the irons that go in the heads of harness traces next to the hames, heat, spread and rivet to the rod. F is a swivel connecting the chain or rope, H, that encircles the cow's neck, with a ring on the rod, E. GG are the partitions running back from the up- rights, A A, as shown, bracing them and separating the cows, so that they cannot injure cach other’s teats or ud- ders. The floor can be made any length re- quired. I use two thicknesses of inch boards instead of 2 inch plank and lay them so as to break joints, thus pre- venting any leakage of liquids, There is no patent on this tie or stall. The editor of Hoard’s Dairyman says: We have taken the liberty to add to Mr. Baker’s sketch and directions the piece, K in front of the uprights, to still further brace them and to prevent the cows from stealing hay or grain from each other. This piece should be made, like the pieces C C, by ripping a 12 inch board or plank diagonally from corner to corner. The dotted lines in the cut represent the parts which are supposed to be hid- den from view by the partitions. Epidemic Abortion. We found ourselves struggling with this dread epidemic, for at that time it was prevalent in numerous herds throughout this section of the country. The first premonition of impending evil was when, on Noy, 19, one of our most valuable cows gave premature birth to a calf that lived for a few hours. From that time symptoms of the disease de- veloped rapidly until nearly every ani- mal in the herd was affected. The situ- ation was serious, for we had never be- fore keen troubled by even a single case and were unprepared to wrestle with it. However, ‘‘a drowning man will catch at straws.’’ To each afflicted cow 114 teaspoonfuls of chemically pure carbolic acid was given daily. The acid was diluted with water until when a drop was touched to the human tongue it wou'd not burn. As some difficulty was experienced in trying to give it asa drench, it was mixed with the regular grain feed and that way taken readily. The hind quar- ters of each cow were carefully bathed daily with carbolic acid wash and the barn thoroughly disinfected. Although we had provided ourselves with a large bottle of laudanum and black haw to use in urgent cases, we had no occasion to resort to the latter treatment, for by faithfully following the other we be- lieve we have stamped out the disease, as all symptoms have disappeured, and one of the cows that at one time was expected hourly to abort has just drop- ped a vigorous, full time calf.—J. E. K. in Breeder’s Gazette. Fiavor I: Butter. In my capacity asa buyer of butter and judge of butter manufactured at our company’s creameries, extending over the last six years, I have discovered to my satisfaction that with few excep- tions the foreign flavors found in butter are caused from off flavored milk. The exceptions are: From leaky cream vats, which allow foul water to pollute the cream. From an unclean churn. From tainted salt. From improperly prepared butter color. From foul well water used for soak- ing tubs and washing butter. In some instances the milk has be- come tainted from the food consumed by the cows. However, I have conclud- ed from careful comparison of my many discoveries of foreign flavor of butter, that by far the Jarger number of foreign flavors found in fresh made*butter is due to the milk becoming tainted after it has been drawn from the cow.— George D. Mansfield. THE DAIL) EXAMINER. CHAELOTTETOWN JUNE 11, 1897 THE FUTURE OF SPOILED CHILD- DREN. The observer who has seen a generation pass appreciates better than younger peo- ple can, what it corts a child to spoil it. lt is ail very well for a child to be a iui-auce—that is, for the child—as Jong ar there is an adoring parent to fail back upon,‘ ard @ bome to tyrannize over. {bus shielded and surreunded, every ten- éency of selfishness, egotiem and pride can be fully developed unt the spoiling of the whole character is succes+tully accom plish- ed. and the uneortrolled cnild becomes an uncontrolled adult, But than the world teps in—the grea’, wide, careless inexora bevo 'd, which Cares nuihiog fir anv one persur’s whims and passion, which requirer eerta n qualities worthy of Admiration he - f re it will admire, and which is, in the main, » just world ip awarding its sppre- ta oncr iadulgence. Ino its strugy e- a isxtresesthe self-willed, pampered ms cer woman must plunge untrained, 1i§ z rmed, vfien tataliy bandicay-p et he shock of the diecovery that nu ove Caren particularly what they think, thet no one admires, or even notices, their pet qualities, that every ove re-ents their #e'f-indulgencea and contrarities, is a tremendous one, and muny of them are soured permanently at the outaet, They become people who Lave a grudge against the world, who preclaim themrelves misunderstood and tne ppreciat rd by a], who criticize others bitterly and continusily, and who qvarrel constantly with those ¢ hose unhappy fate it ix to be counected with them. a spoi'ed girl who ij: not a succe-8 in soc'e'y,a spoiled wife who is dissapointed in her selfi-b a bition, a spoiled spinster in a boarding house, a spoiled man whose failures, well-deserved, have embittered every thought, a sporled valetudinarian who-e claims on publie sympathy have worn it out—we al) know envh neaple, and we can-vot help pitying the helpless, bitter revolt of their u dis- cip) ned rouls against the inevitable neglect tue unshaken justice of the world. Surelv the parents that | eaves his child, as aresult ot falae Kindness, unfit for the battle that mnt come, aud “ naked to his enemies” ix either blind or cruel beyond bolief.. True parents] love is not indulg n e but guidance, and the children of a weak mother will never rise up and call her blessed —The Interior. Mackerel Fishing In the Isle of Man. Although schools of mackerel are of- ten caught in nets in the bays and in- lets of the isle of Man, yet the common way of fishing is with lines trolled over the stern of an open boat. These boats are about 16 feet long and are sled with a jib and mainsail. The fishermen go ont alone in the stormiest weather and manage their little boats splendidly. They use a piece of shiny mackerel skin for bait, and, standing up in the stern, take the tiller between their knees and handle the lines at the same time. Fre- quently the fisherman will pull in 200 fish on the same tack, By using two lines, if they run into a school, they keep one fish always on the line and the rest follow until all are hauled in. Be- sides being sach hardy seamen, the Manx iishermen are God fearing men. Even in a bad season, if a school of fish comes into the bay on Sunday, the fish- ermen will not cast a net or throw a line until after miduight.—New York bun. Sovereign Cocoa Wine is pleasant to take, is certain and gratifying in its effect ‘n cases of loss of sleep and enervation. Black Diamond Line Fe ee ee ie” a ie ) i \ a , ” Ef ee ae The S. iS... ‘*Bonavesta” sailing from Montreal Thursday Ev’g, June 11th will be due at Ch’town, Monday morning June 14th, and will sail for St, John’s Nfld.. via. North Sydney, C, B., carrying horses, cattle ond sheep on deck and produce under deck at lowest possible rates. For further particulars as to freight and passage, apply to ‘ PEAKE BROS & CO. Ch’town, Junel, 97, 3i eod, KOKANIE GREEK 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 Well defied ledges onal', Cap tal only $250,000 in 25 cent shares, Tirst isane for development 3 cents, non assessable. Next isene not leas than 10 cents. Reliable management. Nothing less than 560 shares sold. Order through bank. GEO. D. SCOTT Agent 42 Fort St., Victoria, B.C, TO LET. The house on Richmond Si. west, at wreseut occupied by Mr. J. M. McLeod. his house is beautifully situated on th- barbor front, with splendid view. Is fite ted with all the modern improvements. Apply te Mr, Thos Campbell. 2008940 000004006 NOW thigs for the coming season. our prices. JOHN MACLEOD &C0 MERCHANT TAILORS. i coinematiemeertanteniamescndicneaaal Advertisers ! ww, 4 } a 5 a mation, its wonderful work, b Oe = melt i 004000000000000000000: 33 => EVERY idea that long experience in ow stovemaking could devise is embodied ia these Ranges. i Bit 1) en oN > Fie mdm, 9OOO9O 906000505 66660605 6000000006 One fire-pot of coal. eee ennin an enmecemencae men peste _As Good as Gold \ Is the friend that stands. oy us in an emergency. ““EAMOUS ACTIVE” Ranges leg tne Pre bre ish lg’ ASP SAP Et im th a +. 8: fan Oe | os ei a eT 400 aie fom, fe GPR T. : od Ede day Cut shows 8 hours’ work by ome woman, using omby The McClary Mfg. Co., "= If your local dealer cannot supply, write our nearest house. 9999999909 090060000 000900000004 OOOO HOOS OH O0O008 TASSE W000 & CO Monrecat. SE mn . i y " Pa ** QUICKCURE’” is. o The Great Emergency Remedy Many of the best known people im the land testify to its efficiency. Jt promptly cures Toothache and all pain. Quickly allays inflam- Wherever the skin is cut, bruised, burned, inflammed or diseased in any form ** Quickcure ”’’ will do Dr. E. B. Ibbotson, Major Royai Scots, Montreal, and Com- mandant of Disley Team in 1894, writes: ‘ ‘ Quickcure * is/a treasure, and does just what you say for it; when it is known every household viilhave it. J¢is worth ts weight in gold to parents, who should keep it in the house for emergencies such as toothache, burns, cuts, etc, et oo oan QVEN ts VENTILATED 3 and CEMENTED on TOPand BOT1OM_this ensures EVEN COOK- ING, while a THERMO- @ METER indoorSHows 3 EXACT HEAT—NOe GUESSING as to how $ yourBAKINGorROAS- @ TING WILL? TURN OUT. Every house- wife knows what an ad- vantage this fees Quick Working ! Easily Handled ! Sparing on Fuel! ° ° ws CIGAR RR Marine Insurance. 444448 ‘Hulls, cargoes and freights insured at lowest rates. Sterl- ing certificates issued at office here when required. HORACE HASZARD. Ch’town, 17th May, 1 mo. 135. eenemenets ——— eo —_—-+- sD OPENING. ee We have just opened five lines of the following:—Eng- lish and American Hats & Caps, OVERCOATINGS SUITINGS TROUSERINGS The latest styles, popular makes and shades, The +): We give the best values. ‘The home circulation is the most valuable fcr advertisers. Tue Examiner reaches the homes of our citizens every evening. That a counts for our large advertising patronage. THE EXAMINER PUB. COMPANY Sicnéniolsncsbeestind ooo0 . - ° sia ~ eee ~ «+ Pewee’ oe J