ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of fica Feod See Fac-Simile Wrapper Below. cee Very small and as easy to take as sv gar. >, | FOR HEADACHE. CARTERS |ror nizziness. FOR BILIOUSMESS. IVER FOR TORPID LIVER. PILLS. |FOR CONSTIPATION. * }POR SALLOW SKIN. _|FOR THE COMPLEXION Pr MN UENEE wusT nave MATURE, pt He0._ | parcty Bares, Cen TOs CURE SICK HEADACHE. a Hillsborough agp Bridge The New Bridge is com- ing and so are the dry streets and roads, Theti you will need some- thing nice in footwear. We Have a fine Selection Selling Very Low J.B. BELL The Bargain Boot and Shoe Store. WITATION IS THE SINCEREST FORM OF FLATTERY.” The best proof that WANARD’S LINIMENT has extraordinary merits, and is in good repute with the public, is, that IT IS EXTENSIVELY IMITAT- ED, The imitations resemble the genuine article in ap PASTEURIZ*D MILK. A New Commodity to be Made here The Process, The Pasteurized milk induetry, which Mr. John C. Macdonald is about to open, |promises to have much success. rhe | factory is on Water Street, bei ween Queen | and Great George streets. The machinery- | consists Of a Potts Pasteurizer, osaufactar led by the Creamery Package Manufactar- ing Co., of Chicago, and boiler and engine made and set up by Bruce Stewart & Co | Everything will be ready fo ie delivery ‘of milk on Tuesday next. : | The principle of pa-teurization is rapid heating and cooling. The milk is pu through @ process as follows: Immediately after milking tt is toor ougbly strained, to extract al! impurities The milk is again strained intoan ser tor and cooled, an apparatus designed ¢s pecially to cool warm milk as it come- from the cow toa temperature necessary to prevent souring. While the milk is passing through ithe airin fine eprays the oxygen seizes all foul odors and leaves it in the purest aud best condition. The milk or cream is now | Pasteurized, all the disease germs being destroyed. The keeping qualities are greatly enhanced, and the milk remains sweet and pare for from five to eight days with care and much longer if kept in sealed vessele on ice, No chemicals of any na- ture are used in the process. The milk or cream to be Pasteurized is placed in an air-tight apparatus and heated to 156 degrees F’. and held at that temperature from 16 to 20 minutes. The machire hss & special automatic ventilating attachment through which obnoxious gases or odcrs are continually expelled. The milk is then very rapidly cooled to 46 degrees, at which temperature it remains till delivered. It yis put in clean, sweet glass bottles, which have been acalded and sterilized, and is then sealed air-tight with a new pulp cap made of wood pulp which wil] not affect the milk. The milk is now in aplace where it cannot be contaminated Sy impure air. It ie secured against the dust, dirt, flies and other impurities of street and alley It becomes a perfect substitute for that nourishment which obature gives to in- fants. Its consistency is vot altered in any way nor is it deprived of its richnees. Another great excellence that this milk has is the greater security it gives against that dread disease consumptione The milk is obtained from herds near the city, and pone is accepted under four per cent. butter fat. Ice cream is'aleo Patesurized milk. The manager of thie new business, Mr. | Macdona!d,is @ youog man who has come 'to Charlottetown from Summerside. We | (rust that his enterprise will be rewarded | with success, | | 1 | to be made from the ADDRESS AND PRESENTATION. ae One of the most enjoyable afternoon ever spent by thechbildren of Fair View was passed on July |] 8ch,at **Hazeiwood,” the beautifal home ot John Macmillan, Esq., where they were invited to meei (in @ farewel! visit, their teacher, Mise Lizzie M. Dickieson. After enjoying |themselvyes, as oaly children can, for {several hours, they were served with ice- |cream, cake, ete. Then Miss Dickieson was presented with a beauttful corsage boquet of pink rosebuds and maiden- ; bair fern by Master Allie McIsaac, and 6 | magnificent hand boquet of one hundred crimson roses by Master Louis Ross Mc |Fadyep. Miss Florence Currie here read (the following address and Mize Murie! |Macmillan prea@ntedy in behaif of the | To pearance only. | *cbool, a hand mirror mounted in ebory ‘They lack the generai excellence of |and silver. Genuine This ‘notice is necessary, as injurious and imito'ions, called Wuire Lint ., liable to produce chronic inflam ; of the skin, are often sn stituted fo AINAKD’ LINI MENT by Dealers, because hey pay a larger profit. They all Sell on the Merits and Advertising of MINARD’S. in particulas claiming to be made by a mer proprietor of MINARD’s LINIMENT, bich simply is a lie. INSIST UPON HAVING MINARI’S LINIMENT C, RICHARDS & CO.. Yarmouth, N.S8., . oe Mies Dickieson replied in a few appropri- ate remarks, making reference to the many pleasant days spent in the school, the loving obedience, and diligence of the pupile, and the many kindnesses re- ceived from the parents, and said she would ever look back with delight and pleasure tothe years epent among them. It was with very great sorrow’. she missed for the first time one of their number. She looked in vain for the bright face of young Willie Burdette, who so suddenly passed away a few days ago. The children then gave three cheers acd a tiger for their kind hostess, Mre Macmillan. They were driven to their homes to carry with them for many days the memory of such a joyous outing. ADDRESS: Ovr Dear Miss Dickie30n,—On the eve of your departure we wish to thank you very much for the kindly care you have exercised over us, the many useful lessons 0900446004 00 CO88 900800" ; Because ; : we .do not i ; Select some few articles and tell how low we sell them, ; don’t think that our goods are high priced. If your office or store is in need of ink, pens, mucilage, or any- thing in our line, call in. We will supply you. MITCHELL'S BOOKSTORE SORE ACLS SESS BOSE OODF Queen St. “WO OCS ©f SF CeO COGR EEE! Opp. Prowse’s.{ ¥ ; taught and the good example always shown us. The beautiful life which we have Jived with fyou for four years, during which there has never beeu a clash. never any trouble between teacher and pupil, will always be remembefed very sweetly by ug. We wish to show our gratitude for your | kindness by presenting to you this token of our lasting affection, which we hope you will accept wiih our best wishes for your health and happiness. From your loving pupils Annie, Lcuisa, Maggie, Kenneth and Tom MeNeill, Florence Currie, Estella, May, Sadie and Frank Currie, John McPhee, Louis Mc~ Fadyen, Nettie Shaw, Allie and Florrie MeIsaac, Sara, Carrie and Mabel Mc- Dougal, John Cahill, Henry and Frank Burdett, Louie St. Clair, J. Cecil and Muriel Macmillan. Gee NEWS comes from those who take Hood’s Sarsaparilla for scrofula, dyspepsia and rheumatism. Reportsagree that HOOD’S CURES — THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY A HORRIBLE MURDER. Batter$ His Wife’s Head and Shoot Himself, Caruga, Jot.y July 16~-The people of this community were startled yesterday morning when they heard of the horrible death of James Swick and his wife, aa old couple about seventy years of age. (he old man firet killed his wife and then vut an end his owm existence. The ‘cene of the tragedy is at a farm house im ‘ast Seneca, about four miles from the ge of Canfield, and ten miles from ig. ae aes ne volt meso had ected strangely for ue tine past, but the family thought teofit On Fridsy at noon their son Jarvey went to the field to cut wheat, eaving the old ec uple alone in the house. Vheo he re uroed at vight a dreadful pectecle was presented to him. The o\ber was living dead with ber head horribly bruised, apparently by a hammer, sod the father was lying with his head almost shot off by means ofa shot gun ia bisown hands, Death must have come almost instantly to him. There were signe of a struggle between the old man and woman, as her throat showed finger- prints. He evidently tried to strangle her first, then completed his work by means of a hammer, as her head was badly bat- tered. The hammer was found hidden under the house, where the old man had put it after doing his terrible work. Then he “completed bie own destruction gas already described. Lo Vv 4 y 1° -_ NOTES AND COMMENTS, - atin ina, o> ste OO Ge i A a a =—The royal aud imperial houses of Greece, Denmark and Russia converse to- gether in English. The Queen invariably epeaks German in her home circle, while ber grandson, the Emperor of Germany, speaks English to his wife and family and German elsewhere. --Though the United States Govern~ ment has been sending troops to Chiua its course has been cautious, perhaps to a political fault. Kempff’s course in declin- ing to join the other admirals inthe bom- bardment ofthe Taku forts, though it first displeased the Washington authori- tiee, has since been approved by them as probably it deserved to be. The pains taken by President McKinlee to announce to the world the distinctness of the United States’ attitude and its hesitation to apply coercion to the Caivese will not im~ probably cost him some votes in the November elections. His purpose appears to be to show that he does not want a slice of China, and that therefore he is not the Imperialist the Democrats allege. It is thought that if he does sot energeticaily aid in revenging the elaugbtered Euro- peans, Americans and Japanese, he will lose some ballots. —Scme people cannot be male to bel'eve that their dwelling or their shop or their towu will ever bura. And therefore they laugh at the conflagration riek and say they won't need to insure their premises, because they are well built and isolated. There were many persons of this way of thinking in Bloomington, a thrivisg litie city im the ceatre ot] Ilinoi-, four acres of which were barned in the month of June last. Tke fierce con- flagration lasted for seven hours, and in ibat time forty-five buildings were de- Stroyed, resulting in two maillion dollars’ lose, causing the death of one persoa, and the injury of six,and throwing toree hun dred out ofewployment. Just after the fire, Chief Mayers,of the Fire Depart- wentof Bloomington, esid: “There is one thing that l regret very much, and that is that the busines men had sv much confidence in the Fire Department that they were only insured for Ove half. They had come to believe thata fire of the kind could not bappen in this city. Tuey are now the heaviest losere. —Thbe Montreal Gazette cal!s the atten- tion of all Liberal and independent journals to the following quotation from a recent article by Rev. Dr. Grant :— “The moral life of the country suffers from attempts at whitewashing Mr, Lemieux; but what language is too strong 'o apply to the emergency food scandal ? It was bad enough to send our soldier lads to Kingston in the depth of winter miserably sbod; bad enough to keep others at Torouto without rifle practice, the rifles having been sent on to Halifax ; but to give them as emergency food what was no better than pea meal cakes was like giving drowning men sham life-pre- servers. The offence deserves the peni- tentiary, as the premier said, but though the offence has been proved, will anyone be sent to prison? Mr. Devlin has pro- nounced judgment on himeelf ; but what of those whore duty it was to guard the public and care for the welfare ot soldiers * insubordinate ; ’ bably warned others against the crime of overnzeal.”” TT —— a A No other medicine has cures a8 Hood’s Sar-:~ Remember this : such a record of parilia, get Hood’s. LO OO — i I LOS OT A | tee Ore that aesays $20 to the ton is what Rory and Donald Chisholm, two Glengari- ane from Dunvegan, are said to have found northof the Ottawariver The men are keeping the lacality of their mines a secret until they complete negotiations now in progress with some capitalists. —_ — MARRIED At the manse, Mt. Stewart, on July 18th, by Rev. A. C. Craise, John H. Simons, Fortune Head, to Margaret, daughter of the? late Benjamin Webster; Morell, Prices for 180 yds English Flannelette 8¢ Saturday 3c. All Ladies and Childrens Hats sailors and uatrimmed Saturday } Price, Ail Muslins and Crash Skirtings Saturday } Price. 6 pieces Black Brocade Dress Goods 28¢ Saturday l6c. 10 pieces Dress Linings all colors Saturday dc. 5 White Counterpanes 2 pieces Dark Fancy Cretonnes 12c Saturday 6c. 25 doz Crepe Towels 44 x 24 15c Saturday 10c. 2 pieces Honeycom b Towelling Saturday 3c. 20 doz Handkerchiets for Children Saturday lc each, 2 pieces White Cotton yd wide 10c Saturday 6c, 9 doz Men’s Sox 15c Saturday 8c. 100 Rough Crash Towelling 12c Saturday 6c. 10 doz Braces for Men 20c Saturday 10c. 9 95 Saturday $1.00. HOW TO KEEP COOL AND WELL Don’t eat much meat. Don’t fret about the weather. Don’t think about the heat. Don’t worry. Don’t drink impure or eour milk Don’t experiment with mixed drinks that are calculated to upset your stomach. Don’t indulge in alcoholic drinks. Drind pleuty of lemonade, iced tea and the like, Don’t wear heavy clothing, especially woolens, Don’t neglect to bathe freely, Don’t overwork yourself. Don’t walk in the eun, anddon’t walk too live'y en av oppressively hot day. who represent Canada? General Huiton at iu such acase would probably have been | and his fate bas pro | When you want a good m2dicine, [nt let your temper get the better of ud overturn your system. Usou't allow yourself to be become ex~ Cl «€a* Don't drink too much ice water in the | beat of the day. Don’t exasperate your neighbor by ask~ ing: “Is it hot enough for you ?”’ Dou’t rit in a heavy draught to cool off ile your body is full of perspiration. e 0+9-+o — ‘~w Jpsect Lesson.—A tarmer steppea inio spriuting office and said to the edi- mine, andif she wants to set, let her, and next fall bring her andthe produce from thathen Ili send you the paper,’ ’ When fall came he found he was paying the price of two papers. After that he was never too poor too take a paper. Officials of the Milwaukee Publie Mu- seum report the theft from that institution of a large collection of rare coins, esti- in value at between $5,000 and 2 sg © mated $10,000. tor: “I’d like totake your paper, buat I’m too poor.” “Gobome,” said the | editor, “pick out ahen, and call her AUSTRALIA’S CAPITAL. Lonpon, July 15.—Though Australian federation is an established fact owing to the Queen’s signature being affixed to the bill and though the governor-General hae been appointed, the location of the Aus. tralian capital has not been decided upon. By the terms of thenew constitution it is to be distant no less than one hundred miles from Sydney. The inter city rivalry makes the fina) selection a matter of grave import. When the matter ie decided a hundred square miles be taken from New South Wales,becoming the property of the Commonwealth, on the same plan as Washingten and the di-trict of lum bia. In the meanwhile, Melbourne » | oe the temporary seat of the Legislature. Li Hung Chang. Much in Earnest Saturday You need no practice to be economical when you buy your PROWSE BRO What trade we have we’ll hoid, and what we haven’t we’re after. New York, July 17.—The New York | Journal’s London correspondent “In the lobby of the Commons Ja+t night it was declared that the Government bad issued Orders for the ee:zure of Li Hung Chang aod his imprisonment at Hong Kong, pending tbe deportation to India, ‘nthe event of his carrying oui the project of proceeding northward by sea, in com- pliance with the summons received from Pekin. English gunboats and cruisers are hovering off the coast of Kwan Tang with ordere to iutercept any vessel, no matter what flay it flies, havimg the Vices rey on board, andtosecure his person. It is resolved to hold Li Hung Chang as a species: of hostage. Sir Henry Blake, Governor of Hong Kong, has obtained strong proof that the old Viceroy of Can« ton, im spite of hie professions of friend- ship for foreigners, is in thorough eym- pathy aed league with Tuan.”, bays : | “" JI. OOF BA SS Pl; w oe os es oo 2 pieces Fawn Dress Goods all wool 28¢ Saturday 15c, goods at these figures, —_ The Examiner Calendat eee FO R J U i, V eves MOON’S CHANGES. First Quarter, 4¢h. Full Moon, 12th. Last Quarter, 18th New Moor, 26th. aT Waa ae High Water 8 anni naa _ Day of We’k Morn Afi’n | Rises.| 5 weet die] 1! Sunday 55 11840 78 2|IMonday | 135 156 21 | # 3\Tuesday | 215, 236 2) # : Wednesday | 255| 3 16 2} a S Thursday 340 42 2 l 6 Friday 136 450) & 4 7 Saturday 552, 616 2 % 8 Sunday 7 5 7311 618 9 Monday | 812) g 30) 2 45 10 Tuesday 9 5 933 6) | \l Wednesday| 923 9 52 28 | @ 2 Thursday 10 56,1; 4 2 43 13 Fricay 11 17 11 45 30 | @& | 14Saturday | 1151, 918 31 | # [5 Sunday 033 1 9 32/4 \6 Monday 111) 135, 3 | 17 Tuesday 150; 216 # / 3 — 18 Wednesday! 230 3 61 35 | ‘9 Thursday 351 418 6 |% \ 20 Friday 525 548 397 | Se 21 Saturday 650 718 8 ue 22) Sunday 754, 822, 39 | # 23 Monday 85; 918 40 | 8 24 Tuesday 93610 2 41 | # 25) Wednesday | 10 16,10 41, 42 | # SF aeeraisy 10 4011 0} 43 | : 27| Friday Li 14 11 36 4 | @ @ 0 28/Saturday = 11 25, 11 47, #6 | Bey 29; Sunday 00 O21 47) 4 30! Monday 031, 052 48 | 2 31|Tuesday 1 3 1 26450 12am C