ST >: Seno A 6 oe NS ge nee em ns ee nonce sengntttg ee Ge RR Sh i ee ee * we il ll A APC ll tll et NY-AS-SAN CUE ER YSPIEL AS.) Trahey of, FOR Miers ee : Psrrsvo pra N. F the year S bed with Erysipelas, len out ofall human skape fast sinking and given up todie, At this risis Nyassan was used and I was cured in a few days, S., says :-— ‘tle 1892 | was iin swol GAVE UP DOCTORS HER Wawied.-The Address of every sufferer in America. THE NYASSAN MEDECINE CO., TRURO N.S. Mention the paper when you write. -_— -~ CRAMND ORANGE TEA ——AND—-— - DEMONSTRATION. | The usual Urange Tea ane Demenstra- tion will be held in the fourishing and pre- gressive settlement of North Wiltshire righ: near the Railway Station, oa Tuesday, duly 12th 1898, Vader the Auspices of King William Lodge, No. 1166. Gamesand amesements will be provided. A brass band will be in atrendance. The coenmittee are determined to spare no paine to make thie Tea a decided euccess. No intoxicating lquors or objectionable games of any kind allowed in or near the tea grounds. All the sister lodges and the public generally are cordi- ally invited to ati end, Bev. Scott F. Hershey of Boston is ex- pected to give an address. A special traia will leave Alberton for North Wiltshire on the following schedule standard time: Alber: on. depot 5.00 A M Bloon feld ” 4.27 © O’ Leary “ 544 * Coleman ef §55 “ Devon es 6.02 * Portage 66 6.18. ¢ Conway = 6.23 * Ellerslie “" 6.36 « Port Hil - 6.42 © Northam nm 6.49 “ Richmond - 658 “ Wellington 66 7.13 6 Mi-couche “ 7.32 St Eleanor’s “ 7.42 % Summerside “ 7.483 « Ken-ingston “ &.95 * Freetown " 8.22 * menern id “ 832 Bradsalbane “ 8.38 * Hunier River“ 902 “ Leave North Wiltshire for return 5 p. m. tandard time. j ‘icke ts will be issued good for retu:n on same day in special train at the following rates, All on to Pinsville inclusive $1.15c Rlo mifieid to West Devon * 95 Portage to Northam ” 85c Richmond to Miseouche 6 T5c St Eleanors to Barbara Weit * .60c Kensington to Albany “6 AS Ca,e Trayere 06 60¢ tlliots to Br wal bane sé B5¢ Fredericton ‘ 25¢ Clee ‘“ Ws Paste Ri ver - l0c A epecial train will leave Charlottetown at 1.00 P.M Rovalty Junction at La." Milton at Loa Colville at lao: * Leave for Charlo'tetows about 6 p. 0 sta rd. : _ ets will be iasued on morning train from Charlottetown at one single first~ ‘ la ~ fare lea tickets 26 cents Children 13 cents. REUBEN BARETT, Sec of Committee dune 30 798, w 1 of llth. i St. John’s, - - THE DASLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 11, 1898 AN ELEPHANT'S CUNNING. By This is agvetd-story of an elephamt’e intelligence. ‘The animal in question ‘was a mere: bale when he was sent by ‘an Indian prince to England as a pres- -ent for Queen \Victoria, He was shipped asa deck passeteger ‘by one of the Indian mai! steamers from Bombay, and .a he had but attained the height of a.well grown calf and was miways most docile and tractable he was yermitted to bawe the run of the decks tfor an hour or two every moraing wien tthe state of the.weather permitted. By tthe sailors he was dubbed the ‘‘bos'm’s mnate,’’ owing to the penchant he had for carefully picking up every loose coil eaf rope that he could find and then tthrowing it over the side, being, 26 ack said, ‘‘as badsas a naval lieutenant or keeping the decks tidy. ”’ Among other acquaintances that be ‘farmed was that .cf the ship’s baker, whose address he seon discovered to be tthe place of origin of all the sweet dain- ities with which he was petted. Here he ‘took to making a:regular morning call ‘for something sweet for tiffin and was generally regaled with a stale tart or piece of caae, but upon calling one morning and extending his trunk, as usual, he found that bis visit was un- welcome, as something had occurred to irritate the baker, and instead of the cake &e received a blow on his trunk with the rolling pin. The blow was not .eevere, but the ’* turned tail and went trumpet- ing up the deck, where Se tcok a post that would enable him to watch for his **bos'n assailant. Before long he saw the baker leave bis ‘‘shop,’’ and mischief being his object rather than malice he prompt- ly marched down, and with several vig- orous sweeps of his trunk the swept all the shelves in the bakery clear, until loaves, tarta, cakes, patty pans and cake tins lay in confusion on the deck. This achieved, the bolted like any schoolboy and was locked up in disgrac ‘e, but up- on the circumstances being kmo«wn the popular verdict was in his favor, and he was allowed his liberty as before. ‘*Bos'n’’ marched down instanter to the baker, and never failed from that day to exact tribute, which was regularly paid, and from that time he and his op- ponent became fast friends.—Goldex Penny. — ae Delicate children! What a source of anxiety theyare! The parents wish them hearty and strong, but they keep thin and pale. To all these delicate chil- dren Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- phosphites comes with the best of news. It brings rich blood, strong bones, healthy nerves, and sound digestion. It 1s growth and prosperity to them. No matter how delicate the child, it is readily taken. soc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists. Torontde ene IMPORTANT TO BATRYMEN wo 20} —— am, 15 to 20 gallon milk cans madev the very best m ater! al obt ia! inable. Prices right: | The J. B, Bell Manufacturing Co Stove and Hard ware Merchants, Motitugue, June 7—1lm CABLE ADDR¢SS “* ALGERNON”’ Algernon H. Prowse, Ship & General Broker, Com- mission Merchant, Chart- ering & General Agent Newfoundiand A.B. Cc. CORI SCOTT'S CODE, Fiigh-grade Art Rocms | For General Bus 1siness, a S F. TarBush, for the High Grade Art Co., has opened an office.4 doors up from | T. MeKenzie’s store on | west side of Jueen street, and is of- fering to en.arge photos, tin-ty p’ s or group pictures cheap tor that everybody may have a their w rk, He has in the very months, Sar | le of past 10 mo iths delivered the highest ie woirk ever aided oon P. Ej Beware of unauthorized agents. Al] work guaranteed, and no deposit required, 138 B.D. McConwe.i. J. A. MARION Memb. Can. Soc. C. E. A Memb Can Soc. C_ B D. and P. L. 8. Memb. Amer. W.W. Assoc. MCCONNELL & MARION CIVIL ENGINEERS ROOMS 308 TO 3! NEW YORK LIFE 8L0C., MONTREAL Water Powers and Water Sup pply Systems {pro posed or existing) examined an reported on. r ainage and Municipal Werks generally. Surveys of every description andertaken. three | Skirts, P, 0. Box 832 For Shipping worth money to any - iv, to a imental reductione in the famous King Di amene We have them in Jatest style and pattern, from $1.50 to $5 00. —P. Good- stein, New York Cherp Store. ess, will sell balance of my rtock at a great sacrifice. Shirts, Clothing, Hats, Skirts, Wrep- pere, ete., will te sold without reserve Phillip Goodstein one Parliament House, Grafton St. | Man -Waated. Apply at Large’s Livery oms 8 in g repair. Hav ing decided to close out my busin- } rooms and shop, all in good repair ETYMOLOGY OF “HURRAH.” _—_ — =". J. Spratley, to usethi plain E~ +- 'Zish:mame, has favored .usevith a copy fa iletter he has addressed tto The In- stitute and Lecturers’ Gazette on the etymology of the worl “‘Hurrah!’’ which Mr. Spratley spelis “‘Hoorah!’’ Wethave been vaguely chenishing the idea that it had a Russian origin, but Mr. ‘Ff pratley takes us to azoient Egypt “there can be no doubt that the Egyptian soldiers went into battle torthe inspirit- and.’ the average questioning man asks why, he staggers him with:this: ‘‘Be- cause HooRa (in the tongue of the Thothmes and Ramesses) means ‘The king, the king, the king!’ Yea, more. As and:msan, the concentrated meaning of the ery would be, ‘For God, ‘king and country?’ What more loyal, what more patriotic, what more devyout?'’ What, indeed! But Jest we should haply sti doubt, Mr. Spratley clinches the matter Sy cit- ing, in corroboration, the fact that his name, ‘ip Egypitian roots, is Sa-pa-Ra- ta-y, or Sa-pa-Hoo-Ra-ta-y, which means “‘Son of heaven, king of the two hemispheres,’’ and if the authority of a gentleman of this descent is not good enougk for the mere doubter, ewen Mr. convincing ®im. More than this, if Mr. Spratley’s Egyptian name means ay- also signifies “* King of lower Egypt and. king of upper Egypt,”’ or ‘‘Emperar of the World.’’ But what we chiefly like it for is that it seems to settle an- other point that may well have bafiled the philologist—namely, the genesis of the once familiar refrain ‘‘Ta-ra-ra- boom-de-ay.’’ Is it possible that Miss Lottie Collins and the street urchin have been singing ancient Egyptian, as Mr. Jourdain spoke prose, without knowing it?—London Chronicle. Speaker Reed‘« Autograph. The Kennebec( Me.) Journal says that when antograph hunters ask Speaker Reed for his signature he writes it rather hastily, and it is simply T. B. Reed. If the pen does not mark plainly, the speaker does not always take pains to dip it anew, provided there is a scrawl and all the letters are visible. Not so when the oblong forms of parchment are handed to him froin the committee on eurolled bills, of which Representative Hager of Iowa is chair mau. Mr. Hinds, the clerk to the speak- er’s desk, bands up the pile of parch- ment, and the speaker carefully look: over each. Taking them down one by) one, be writes his name slowly and care- fully. lt dces not appear as T. B. Reed, but as Thorras B, Reed. The ink is dipped from a bottle that zits within a silver tray, which has come down from the time when Henry Clay was speaker of the house of repre- sentatives. Then the signature is care- fully blotted, the precious parchment is carried to the senate and eventually finds its way to the state de eaters nt, where it is stored among the archives. ED Music, Mr. Canner (of Chicago)—Are you fond of music, Miss Tremello? Miss Tremello (of Boston)—Music, Mr. Canner? Could any cultivated con- sciousness possessed of delicate suscepti- dilities help being devoted to so divine n art? Music? Music is my passion. Mr. Canner—I am so glad. May I have the pleasure of your company this evening to the minstrels?~-New York Weekly. WOoOdD'’s PHOS?PHODIN E. The Great English Remedy. oe enor s Guaranteed ta promptly, and pe rmaue ontly cure all for: as of Nervous Weakness, Eriissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Ems votency and all . effects of « e or Excesscs, o Pare Aes e ntal Worry, ewecs:ivée use ‘obacco, Opiumor Stimu Defvieiat After.° 3 dn echt can teihie Pie firmity, Insanity, Consumption and ax early jrare, Fas been prescribed over 859 yeara in thousands of cases; is the only Meliabie a wa Ifonest Medicine known. Ask druggistfor Wood's Phosphodine; it he offers some worthless mecicine im place of this, inclose price in letter, and we Will send by retura mail, Price, one paekage, £1; six, £9, One will please, six wil! cure. Pamphiets free to ay oe dress, The Wood Compa Windscr, O: ‘aaa, 1ad Sold in Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggist- « cationeNes You cnepsuriet FOR SALE OR TO LET. That well known business Hotel on Richmond Street, near the market. This Hotel conta‘ns about twenty good Good stabling for thirty horses, with large yard in coanection, 4»ply to THOMAS CAMPBELL WILLIAM H. FRANKLIN, —BROKER AND— Commission Merchant, O’Dwyer’s Cove, St. John’s, Newfoundland. P. O. BOX 634. Stable. 151 tf 150 d&w tf in:init etymological search. He thinks | ing cheer of ‘HooRa! HooRa! HooRa!’’’ ; ‘Ra’ means not only king, butalso God . Sa-pa, etc., may’ well despair of | thing—and this is an open question—t , SHEATHING | A ‘SHIP. ~>Ahts MHuilt ee “weet are :shesthed with copper, and so.are many tugboats. Merchant ships are sometimes sheathed with cgpper, but nowadays the material most commonly used is a composition metal which in appearance resembles | brass. Ut «does not wear so.long.es cop- per, ‘butiit costs less. The composition metal comes in sheets about 8 feat by 1 foot 4 inches. They are fastened on the ship with mails of the same material. Sometimes the sheathing is nailed di- rectly on to the hull of the ship. Seme- | times it.ismailed over another sheathing | of felt, which helps to preserve the calking in the seams. When the ship has been placed im a drydock or zaised out of wateron a floating dock, the old metal is stripped off, and if she is to have a felt sheath- ing the bottom of the ship is first paint- ' ed with a coatof pitch, and the sheets | of felt are laid mpon that, and then the sheets of metal are nailed on over them. The work is dane very rapidly and at the same time with great nicety. Every ‘nail head is sunk so that itis flush | with the plate. If the hand were passed ' over the sheathing anywhere, it would be found smooth. If the nail heads were ‘ permitted to project, they would of course interfere with the speed of the vessel. Seventy-five men can sheathe an 1,800 ‘ton ship in two days. The cost of ' sheathing such a ship with composition metal over felt, ineluding material, dock charges, labor and everything, would be about $4,000, or a little less, and such a sheathing world last about two long voyages. —New York Sun. ee | ee Her Face on the Plates, | A new industry, first put forward un- der the patronage of Mrs. John Jacob Astor, has blossomed forth. This rich young woman, one of the most promi- nent and beautiful of New York’s fash- ionable matrons, has had her own face painted with most exquisite art om six very choice Sevres plates that are only used for her smallest and most select luncheon parties. The plates show Mrs. Astor in evening dress, tailor dress, re- ception gown, skating furs, in a delicate summer muslin and in her bridal gown. The table of measures says that three barleycorns make one inch, and so éhey do. When the standards of measures were first established, three barleycorns, well dried, were taken and laid end to end, three being understood to make an inch in oo. Restore © regular action of the bowels, do not irri- A tate or inflame, but leave 4 bi all the delicate digeative or- ganism in perfect condition. Try them. 25 cents. Prepared only by C. L Hood & Uo., Lowell. Mase t = § f } treats CHrro~wtc DISZASES by the Salisburr method of per-istent sell-heip in removing Cali-es trom the bleod (ontipunous, intel- ji.cnttreatement in person or by letter in- suresMinimum of suffering und Maaimum of cure, possibile in each care, VICROSCOTIC4yT, BLOGDL,SPU! ‘EXAMINATION OF A, URINE, &c. Avoid Attempts Unaided. Graduate of New York University Andthe NEW YORK HOSPITAL Twent? veers practice in &. Y.Ci't. Diploma reg- isteredin U.S and Canada. Address: Charlottetown, P.E.1,, Can. j OFFICE: VICTORIA ROW. * ccommecdat' ons reservedefor pa tients. Ky, ferences on application: es Newfoundland. | The most picturesque summer resortin America The Sportsman’s Paradise Every Riverand Lake along the line of Newfoundland Kailway abounds with Salmon & Trout The Shortest Sea Voyage. Quickest and safest route to any partis via tlre:---Royal Mail Steamer "“Paucz” Classed A 1 at Lioyds. Leaves Norton Sydney every Tuesday and Friday evening, on arrival of the I. C.R. express. Returning, leaves Placentia every Monday and Thursday morning on on arrival of St. John’s express. FARE: —Charlottetown to St. John’s, Nfld. first $19 95, second $10,30. Through ticketsop sale atall stations onthe I.C. RK. aud S. Nav. Co. Commencing about July Ist, isteamer will make three trips per week each way, betweeo North Sydney and Port-aux- Basques, Nawfound!and. The sea trip wil] only be 6 hours. For all information apply to R.G.REID, St. Jobn’s, Nfld or ARCHIBALD & CO,, Agents, North Sydney, C.B — pageeememengenrnaee a : = ee premmnrtetene POWs (PTE TAILORISM v A SENTIMENTAL FOLLY a fa Rich men must burn 2 their money somehow, and are the natural prey of high class tailors. But,—:nen of moderate means, reflective minds, and business sense, should query why their hats and shoes are ready made before paying a custom tailor twice the price of “Fit-Reforr~” garments. As carefully made—as perfect fitting—as shape retainin. Brand and size and makers’ price in left My breast pocket. rl = $12, $15, $36, Si $20 per suit. Ft Catalogue fro: Fi-Reform Cleti:nq Co., Montrezl. IPRS eo — ee $10, sOLF LOCAL AGENCY PRO Ws BROTHERS. A LT A TT RE A ee When the natual teetr have been lost, the comfort, the health, the speech, and the personal appearance will be greatly enhanced by the substitution of Artificial Teeth skillfully made. Good health, good appearance and comfort depend upon the dentists skill in making an Artificial set knowingly and perfectly fitted. Art- ificial teeth can be made to present a very natural ap- pearance an occasional dark tooth, an irregular arrange- ment, or a tasty filiings will break the porcelain monot- ouy so often noticesbie. Tbe sunken condition of a persons chee ‘ks and lips due to the loss of the natural teeth, is changed completely by the insertion of proper- ly made Artificial teeth. We make Arcificial teeth that will fill out hollow cheeks and add youth and tone to the countenence. If you are troubled with bad fitting Artificial teeth that do no‘ stay in their place as they should, we can, by use of a new method, make your old eet over ata smail expense and give you a perfect fit. We guaragtee our work tu be satisfactory inali respects. You can call in, in the morning Jand have your teeth same aay. ta Painless DPentistry—Moderate Charges. o 5 SERLIN DENTAL PARLORS. Over Store of Prowse Bros. inte slam. Tto 8. “HARDWARE - on ae STORE Keep out the flies with our wire, Buy General Hardware, Store:, Paints, Oils. Glass, Paper, Fence Wire, Farming Tools and lots of other lines in the Hardw:re Trade. Don't forget the Que- bec Heater, but, and a great big but, you must buy for cash. CITY es THE GFAND SOUVENIR Stoves, Paints, Hardware, Oils, Good Goods, Low Prices, Courteous Treat ment, Prompt Attention . . Aleo a full line of steel and Full line of Ox'ord Stoves Ranges. iron stoves and ranges. R. B. NORTON & CO LTD