- i 4 7 a cAt —— FOR JULY 1894. New Moon, 3rd day, lh 32.0m., a. m. be- + first Quar %th day,6h 2.5m, p.m, S Full Moon, 17th day, Gh 603m p. n t he} Ww yor > Last Quar 25th day, 4h 545m p. m., N Day of Week. | Sun | High . vets water eciie —— a ht h m | after’n l ~ lay i 7 49 9 38 21M AN 49; 10 22 31 T. lay 19} M1 4; W eday 19 | 4 | AY Z 45 | morn $8] Friday | } 0 42 ® | Sa lay | 47 ir | l 24 & Sunday | } ae So 9 Mo iday 24 oe 2 52 s@ | r eslay »* fi 3 46 11 Ww ee ‘ 4 50 12; Thursday 26 15 | 6 @ 13 Friday 44 3 ae 4 Saturday 5 i) 8 12 618 4y t: | - o i6 | M ‘ 42} 8 45 7 I $14 10 25 l* W ‘iy j ti li 12 1¢ ‘y . of. oe 20 I lay : } $ aft 2 ~ a ay | 0 41 ? ~ } : » Mf | | lL 4 941 i as. 2 , \ lay | 3 3 1 2 Ay om os a7 | | ; . 31] 5 34 34. Sa ‘Vv 5 3 7 ‘ y s a¥ 44 ee 8 ly M Ay i 15 | i Zi sday 46572 | p15 AIL) EMAMIMR DatLy NewepaPer E. ISLAND, Ik Tue LeapiIne or P. « issued every afternoon, from the office of the EXAMINER PUBLISHING COMPANY, In the Loodon House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. UN ADVANCE) Jue VEAR .. 94.6 Sx Monres -- 300 | Tuser Moewntits weceee Bae Ons Monru coos ODS ; Sant U nite post paid to any part of Canada or the States ADVE RTISING RATES For smal! advertisements which are ordered for only one or two weeks the charge ix 5 cents per inch for the first insertion, and 26 | for each continuation. Rate cards are | furnished on application at the office. Special fontract prices at a reduced rate are quoted | for mivertisements four inches in size or larger, which are to ran for three months or longer. ' No special notices inserted unless paid for | ai the rate of 10 cents per line, and ander no | circumstances will such paid notices appear | in the local column. éxeeial discounts mace op all ‘sr cents | reate connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Pientcs, ete. No notices will be inserted with the same Unless the regular rate of 10 cents per | line ls paid. | qat Tag Examiner ts considered by our | Merchants and Manufactarers to be the lead- | ing newspaper in P. E. Isiand, and conse- | quently the most valuable advertising medium threagh which to make their announcements | public, is abundantly proved by the ‘fact that in order to accommodate Our auvertisers we have been compelled to enlarge the paper to ite present size. Tue Datiy Examrver bs for sale by the fol- touts agents :— Mason, Post Otice, ual iNiower tering Park Reed, =“ w M. Colfin, Grafton Street, = | ? Charlot tetow n &. (irey, cor. Water and Printe St. ” D. Chappell, Prince Street, ” Kazaar Store, aces Street, Geo, Carter & Co., Queen Street. oy “ &. Gray, News Stall, P. E. 1. Railway and aye M. & T. J. Walsh, Eelectic Bookstore, Sum- merside. i), Sutherland, Souris. Hon. D. Gordon, Georgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. Gi. M. Clarke, Alberton A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge ais 85 5 The Weekly Examiner % issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. [It is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and full of the latest news. The subseription for Taz Weexiy Exam. twen, post pall to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertiaag rates on the same scale as given bove for Toe DaiLy EXAMINER. DOCTOR DORSEY, Surgeon. Physician and Graduate of the Medical Departme nt of the University of the City of New York, late Member of the Resident Staff of Belle- vue ——— and the New York Lylog-in Hospital, New York City. UFFICE. North Side Queen Square OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Residence—Near Corner of King and Queen Streets, Charlottetown. “TO LET. Phe Store and Offices situated on Water Street, formerly occupies by F. T. New hery. Daq., and now by M Trainor, Esq. Possession given Ist July next. Apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO. TINWARE sie DDD ice Creameries and Cheese Factories. The very best work guaranteed on a'l yo the for Crearseries and Cheese Factories. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY GF THIS KIND OF WORK M. STEVENSON, MANUFACTURER OF Tinware, Stove Pipe, 53 QUEEV STREET. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. &¢., A}l orders promptly attended to, } have removed my Book- binry to the Shoop next to A. E MeEachen’s Boot Store, iwo below Weeks & Beer's Old Stand, Queen St., doors where I will be pleased to see all my customers. J. BD. TAYLOR, apo tf bib hb bb bbb bp bb tp bp tp bp by bp te by bp pt dp dp de be dn be be de di bt be i he he de ie be de be lp i te Le ty te tt te THE DAILY EXAMINER. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” buripides. TERMS : Four Dollars a Year NEW SERIES ee ——e = — > —s eee Ee, oS tf i J = ZF EH} ties oe Les Ze: = oe we 72 » Zz Vp - <<% Zi Z My / + “ Go RES Y i 7 THE SERIES WOW COMPLETE ! (x) CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. dg) i Fie >> ‘ ofr 0 Ls / x ee Eee Sample Portfulios, containing Sixteen Photographs, “10 cents each. TUE EXAMINER PUBLISHING COHPANY. } ’ : Ul 2 : : ' ; ; ’ What a cemfort it is to walk down all dry and comfortable, friends shiver and endure the old style ment. But people are rapidly becoming things, and the cold, clammy, is fast disappearing. vrvvwewveeeeererrrrrrrrrrrwrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrvrrvrvrvrvrvrerw “The Rain it Raineth Every Day. morning wrapped in the luxurious embrace of a RIGBY POROUS WATERPROOF COAT, while those of one’s less fortunate of waterproof gar- educated to better air-tight rubber waterproof town in the dy & wky—june? il NEW FLOUR JUST RECEIVED AT 8, B. ENMAN & COS. —_— —— —— (x) BEAVER and FAMOUS cheap for Cash at brands of Flour very S. B. ENMAN & CO’S., Charlottetown, April 30, 1894—mon wed fri In ROBERT PALMER & U0., Charlottetown Sash and — Factory: READ THIS We are now better prepared than ever to supply (St tors with PANEL | DOOKS and FRAMES, SASHES and FRAMES, MOULDINGS and FINISH SPOUTING and CONDUCTORS, STAIR RAILS, STAIR BAL USTERS, NEWEL POSTS, which are always kept constantly in stock. We are also prepared to do all kinds of JOBBING in Planing, Jointing, Mor ticing, Tennoning, Jig and Fret Sawing. All kinds of ‘GOTHIC WINDOWS made at shortest notice. Our Machinery is new and of the very best description, and we manufacture | of the best Quebec pine. Give us a call, ROBT. PALMER & CO., Ch’town, Nov, 3, 1893 —wkv PEAKR’S_-NO. WH sae SWE) CATAR ROT Tp URE’ saF eu helt RH, COLD IN THE eS CATARRHAL HEAD- EFFECTUALLE ones oonee Se ae Tn 3 Sold everywhere. eens ‘se aan ee. py THE H .WKEK a ECOy.. L'td., St. John, N -B. 5 GHO. HH. COOK. PHOTOGRAPHER, Calls special attention to the marked superiority of his Photos. They are not mere Photographs, they are Like- nesses, and make invaluable mementoes of absent friends. Call and see specimens. CHILDREN’S PORTRAITS a Pewee for which no extra charge will be made. Studio—Corner of Queen and wines Streets. Charlotietown, May 19, 1894—3m dy J. D. MeLeod’s Old Corner Building. THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. CAPITAL STOCK, - A & ciety $100,000. established with a view to | disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage | and help artists. Incorporated by Letters Patent of the | Government of Canada, the 27th February, 893. | GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Nos. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., Montreni. ‘One of the hichest Galleries of Painti ngs in Canada. ADMISSION FREE, from 10 o’clock & m., to 4 p. tm. All the Paintings are originals, mostly from the French school, the leading mod- | ern school. Eminent Artists, such as Francais Rochegrosse, Aublet, Barau, Pesant, Petit sean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a en many Others, are members of this | soci “ag of Paintings at easy distribution of P: aintings Society and Scripholders on Prive of Scripta 25cts. Ask for Catalogue and Circular. H. A. A. BRAULT, janl 7—mwef tf : _Director. WE ARE Showing our new stock of Spring & Summer Tweeds, Worsted & Fancy Overcoatings. Also, a beautiful assortment of Panting. Our goods are all new, and our prices just right. We can dress a man far a moder- ate sum. It will cost nothing to look through our stock and name your price. We Will Guarantee Satisfaction. A. J.MURFHY, Merchant_Tailor, June 1 1894,—tu fs tf Next the terms, between July 18, o00@ nenererrnnnn ISLAND | THURSDAY, Down the street through the busy way A lady passed on marketing day. Who, pausing at a grocery store, Stepped quickly in at the open door. With bated breath and anxious mien She queried ; ‘Shave you COTTOLENE?" The grocer, leaving off his work, interrogated every clerk ; But none up to that time had seen An article called “* COTTOLENE.” “What is it?”’ said he to the dame, “That answers to this curious name. What is it made of? What's its use? My ignorance you'll please excuse.” “You're not the merchant for my dimes, I see you’re quite behind the times. For COTTOLENE, I’d have you know, Is now the thing that’s all the go, An article of high regard ; A healthful substitute for lard. Its composition pure and clean ; For cooking give me COTTOLENE.” As from his store th lady fled, The grocer gently scratched his heaad— Cn his next ordsy, first was seen, “One doses cases COTTOLENE.” Ask Your Grocer for it, Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., Wellington and Ann Streets, MONTREAL, CAMPBELL’S I! Just wHat It will tone up your You NEED .. system, and restore the | Tus SPRING. appetite. The best cure pt Debdility. unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies --OR— ES Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’ see which is absolutely pure and soludle, ‘yt h is morethan three times strength of Cocoa mixe t witht Starch, Arrowroot oc Sugar, and is far more eco- homical, costing less than one cent @ cup - Kt is delicious, nourishing, auc DAsili DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers irocers everywhers. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass What's the time? ZI’ von have a Cough it is time you were taking GRAY’S ,, RED SYRUP — SPRUCE GUM $ THF “11D STANDARD CURE FOR CuouUG:?! COLDS, Adi...i+ and ali iL NU AFFECTIONS, Gray's 5)rup has been on trial for more than 60 years and the verdict of the people is that it is the best remedy known. 25c. and 30¢, per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Propnicrens MONTREAL. CAVEATS, TRADE MARKs COPYRIGHTS. CAN I OBTAIN 4 onaeiae wise d an UNN & 2C0. rho have had nearly fifty yeses’ e patent Commun ness. tions strictly ¥ conttientia i A <> ‘ot, tn 3 ts formation concerning a eae of tain them sent free. Also a cata Patents taken aro ugk Munn & Co. receive ical and scientific books sent free. mple copies Edition Lege year. edhe copies, ‘25 cents, ery nm ms begu- tiful plates, in colors, and oben coon a of ne. houses, with Pte enabling uilders to show the latest design ure contracts, Address MUNN et co. New York, 361 Broapway. Dominion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appeinted sole selling Agents in the Province of Prine e Edward Island for the above Com- pany’s Mines in Cape Breton, are uow pre- pared to issue orders for Round, Slack and Run of. Mines, and will keep a stock of each kind of Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents. Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—tf Sherwood Cemetery. Situate at Junction ef Royalty and Brack ley Point Roads, three miles from Charlotte- town Morning trains ran by local time to Ceme- tery as follows:—At 7 and 7,30, returning at 10.20 and 10.39, Afternoon trains leave at 3.40 and 4 o’clock, returning at 6.35 and 7.29. Fare to go return, 15 cen's. Funeral Trains may be had whenever re- quired, and interments may be made by regu- lar trains at passenger rates. Prices of Plots are as follows: Family Plots, 20x15 feet, sold at recuced i ee es ey eee Serre ee Plots half above size, in youn localities Bingic Glave. ... 6.2 0. cccsc.cecce . The Cemotery is sustained by "Free a from plot holders of not less than $2.00 pay- able ist June in each year, andali plots of subscribers are kept in order during the season, Subscriptions may be paid to any of the Directors, or to the undersigned, and ee for any extra work to be done by the Kee office of the Clerk of the 00 4 po must be left at the County Court, HENRY SMITH, Secretary Sherwood Cemetery. juncii—2m (mon sat) enon ~ = a = a JULY 19, 1894. ‘LAST 0 OF AN OLD RACE. “THE COCOPAH. INDIANS OF THE LOWER CALIFORNIA. Evidences That What Is Now an Arid Re- gion Was in the Dim Pasta Maguificent- ly Fertile Country—Buios of a Temple Buried in Sand. It's: s'vange, wild region, that strip of dese.t, {0% niles wide by 500 long, | lying between the Sierre Madre Moun- | tains on the west and the Colorade river and Galf of California on the east, and locked in the granite bosoms of the sun baked hills or buried in its un- fathomable sands is the history of a | certain stage of civilization that flour- | ished there before the Pilgrims gained | a foothold on Plymouth Rock. Now it | is nothing but a treeless, trackless, waterless waste of sand and barren monntains, a grewsome level of gray death, whose mysteries are being slowly solved by a few hardy prospectors. Not many weeks since, two prospect- ors arrived in San Diego, Cal., from an isolated part of the Cocopah Desert, says a correspondent of the St. Louis Globe- Democrat, an-l reperied having found a ruined temple haif bnried in the sand. To support their story they brought in pieces of ancient pottery ‘and stone carvings, on which the tracings followed no pattern known to man. According to their statement, the ruins above the sand consisted of immense cylindrical stone columns arranged in the fori of a parallelegram, covering an area of 265 by 400 feet. On the east side was a group of columns, which they concluded must have been the entrance. Here they shoveled away the sand and uncoy- ered a broad flight of stone steps. The columns at the entrance were in a modi- fied forin of a ietter S, and carved to represent huge rattlesnakes. The entire inclosure was filled with drifting sand, only the ends of the coinimns showing above the surface. Near by was a huge stone image of aturtle. Two exploring parties have tried to reach the find, but each has been driven back; once by the intolerable heat and thirst, and again by a terrivle sandstorm, ‘There arrived in San Diego recently three prospectors. Two were Mexicans —Jose Rodriguez and Juan Romero. The name of the third was not learned. He remained in the city but two days and then returned to the desert. His name is not known to his two compan- ions, but they know that he i#an Ameri- can. From the two Mexicans, who are above the average of their class in intel- ligence, it was learned that he is a man with a history, conversant with the traditions of the Cocopah Indians, who are probably the remnants of the lost civilization which once inhabited that desolate region, and to which their des- cendants still cling, in preference to the fruitful country on this side of the mountains. The Mexicans knew that he had been with the Indians for years, but had not inquired into his history. He was not the first American witha past who was trying to forget it among the naked, unlettered children of the desert that they had known. On this trip they had been ree by the strang- er, who volunteered to show them some valuable mineral property with the understanding that they were to share equally in the results, he to accompany them to this city, where they were to conduct negotiations for the sale of the property or enlist capital in its develop- ment. It wason this trip that he told them his history. Hie said that he had iived among the Cocopah Indians for nearly thirty years. When a good-sized boy he crossed the plains with his parents in an immigrant train. While stopping at Fort Yuma he had gone bathing in the river and had been seized by the Indians. carried away and held captive by them for years. It was years before he learned why they held him. He was never ill. treated, and was always given the best in the camp, and on long marches his captors would deny themselves food and water in order that he might not suffer. As he grew to manhood, he learned that some tattoo marks, which had been pricked upon his breast and arms by his father, corresponded with a tradition of the Cocopahs that a great calamity would befall them if he was allowed to depart before a certain time. Finally, as he became reconciled, the surveil- lance was somewhat relaxed, though he always understood that any attempt on his part td leave the tribe would be met with violence. When he had grown to be a man he had no desire to go away; in fact he had become one of them in dress, manner and speech. The chief men were greatly pleased at this and chose for him a wife from one of the highest families in the tribe. It was from his wife's great-grandmother, who had been nearly 100 years ago the wife of a renowned chief, that he learned more of the tradition. She told him that many years ago, long before she or her father or her grandfather was born, there was a tra- dition thataman marked as he was had come from the south and visited them. Then they had fields, orchards, cattle and cities. This was long before the coming of the padres, ages before. The stranger, after learning all about them, had departed, but returved with a great many warriors, laid waste their fields. orchards and gardens, destroyed their cities, killed all the men who did not escape into the mountains and car- ried off the women and girls. Then one of the wisest old men cautioned the small remnant of the tribe to watch for a man with marks on his skin similar to thse of the chief from the south, and when found he should be held captive for so many moons; then the dead Co- copahs would rest easy and the living prosper. If allowed to depart the lands of the tribe would again be invaded and no one left to tell the story. This tradition hud been handed down for generations and when the little white boy, bathing in the yellow waters of the Colorado nearly thirty years before, was seep by several Cocopahs to bear the marks, for which they had been watching and waiting for centuries, they carried him to their desert fast- nesses. The old squaw said there was a big stone turtle in the Santa Catarina Valley with the whole history of the in- vasion, massacre and the wise man’s warning written on the rock on which the turtle rests. Less than a year ago old Jose, chief of the Cocopahs, told him that the period of danger had been passed and that he might go. But the white man bada family, and did not care to leave. Since that time he has been over the greater part of the desert prospecting. The Mexicans ae, ae in some very rich specimens of gold ore and various crystals, iuclads..g° topaz, garnet and HE BLOOD is the source ot health. Take Hood's Sarsaparilla to keepit pure and rich. Be sure to get HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. A Graduate of Torento University Says “My children have been treated with Scott’s Emulsion from their earliest years Our phvsician first recommended it and now whenever a child takes cold my wife immediately resorts to this remedy, which always effects a cure, steel a Single Copies Two Cents | VO L 34.—NQO. 15 | carnelian, which they claimed to have i discovered, probably with the aid of their strange partner, about twenty | miles heluw the American line, and evi- | &-a.iy in the vicinity of the foothills of the Cocopah Mountains. In fact, all | evidence tending to show an ancient | civilization has been found in that lo- | cality. They also say that at or near where the gold rock was discovered they found several old tools of a very cruce and ancient pattern concealed among the rocks. Near by were the ruins ofan old adobe »nuildiffg and inside, under- neath the rubbish, they unearthed an old, musty, Latin prayer book. In the opinion of the prospectors the old bnild- ing is the remains of an early mission or a branch of the Santa Catarina Mis- sion, posted in a section more accessible to the Indian settlements of that day and near the spot where the Indians mined gold for the padres. They also say that not far from the mines and ruined adobe, in asheltered little valley, is a large spring surrounded by pome- granate sal olive trees, grape vines and other fruits, growitlg wild, but evidently the growth of former planting. Ne one now living knows when the orchard was started. as the stranger said the Indians of his tribe, many of them over 100 years old, said that the trees had always been there and that their fathers before them had said the same. Those who have heard the Mexicans’ story generally believe it. They aretwo unlettered prospectors, incapable of romancing, except as toa possible gold find. A tale like that of the tattoo marks is beyond the scope of their im- aginativn. Then, again, other pros- ctors have met the stranger and. while Cowes he was a white man did not question him as to his strange life. There is a stone image of a huge tur- tle in the Canta Catarina Valley. It weighs many tons, but whether carved by human hands or nature has never been fully established, though the pre- ponderance of the testimony of those who have seen it is that it is the work of man. There is said to be another near the ruined temple, discovered by the two,prospectors months ago. They say the latter must weigh several hun- dred tons, and isa finely carved image of the ‘‘genus chelonia.” This, taken with the fact that the columns of the ruined temple were carved to represent rattlesnakes, would indicate that the lost race that once inhabited those now arid and sterile plains and mountains deified reptiles. Again, it is said that —s are palm trees in the Canyada de las Palmas beside which the famous old mission palins of San Diego would ap- pear as shrubs. The Cocopah Indians have many tra- ditions as to the origin of these orchards and stone images; too many, in fact, for newspaper story; but they have no records, nothing beyond legends, which are like old nursery tales. The Coco. pahs may be descendants of that buried race. ‘The few remaining are tall, clean- limbed, thin-flanked, deep-chested and broad-shouldered; as a rule, generous and superstitions to an unusual degree, but absolutely without physical fear of anything earthly. They have their rancherias and a few cattle. After the oie overflow of the Colorado into ew River they follow the receding waters of the latter stream, planting corn and mesquite beans, and in six months their crop is fit for harvesting. This is practical evidence of the fertility of that soil and is additional confirma. tion of the belief that what is now a scene of desolation was “once a magnifi- emt reach of orchards and gardens densely populated. Scientists and arch- reologists bees never penetrated that region. It is many weary, trackless miles off a palace car route ana the only maps of the locality are seared on the brains of a few hardy prospectors, the videttes of modern civilization. E pigrames of History. The Leisure Hour offered prizes for wise sayings connected with historical eventa. The editor awards the first and second prizes, both of which are won by women, He says: ‘‘A careful analysis proves beyond all doubt that the most popular instances of wise sayings connected with history are the followin “Oliver Cromwell’s—‘Put your trust in God, but keep your powder dry.’ “Cardinal Wolsey’s dying words— ‘Had I but served my God as diligently asI have served my king, he would not have given me over in my gray hairs!’ ‘Latimer to Ridley at the stake—‘We shall this day light such a candle, by God's grace, in England as, I trust, shall never be put out.’ “Sir Robert Walpole in the declara- tion of the war with Gein ‘They may ring their bells now, but they will soon be wringing their hands.’ “‘Nelson's—‘England expects every man to do his duty. “Wolfe at the Heights of Abraham, repeating the stanzas of Gray's Elegy— ‘I had rather be the author of that poem than take Quebec.’ ‘Sir Walter Raleigh at his execution ‘What matter how the dead lie, so that the heart be right? ” A Lawyer's Wi. Sir James Fitzjames Stephen was a _— lawyer, but he has left a very ittle will. The exact text of it is this: “This is my last will) I give all my property to my wife, whom I «appoint my sole executrix.” How the family solicitor would have embellished this simple statement of a simple testa- mentary intention most of us can easily conjecture. “Win would have become “will and testament;” property would have become “‘real and personal estate” at least; and there would have been a long rigmarole about rev oking “‘all pre- vious wills and codicils.” It is gratify- ing to have such conclusive evidence of the true value of the elaborate legal phraseology which is engrossed at a charge of so much a folio to thelawyer’s client.—London Daily Graphic. The Advantages of Church-Going. ‘TI have found during my stay here,” said a sojourner in the city, ‘great en- joyment in my church-going. They are all new tome, and i go toa different one every Sunday, and sometimes to twoa day. I see a great variety of churches, many of those more recently built novel in architecture and beanti- ful, too. I hear a wide variety of dis- courses from all sorts of men, old and young. I find the music and singing almost always good, and sometimes of a high degree of excellence. I have found no feature of the city’s life more inter- Se eae its churches.”"—New York un. How to Strike a Fair Average. ~ Expect every man to do his duty and with all your expectations expect to be disappointed. —Galveston News. Fatal Result of Delay. Sickness generally follows in the path of reglect. Don’t be reckless! but pru- dently take a few doses of Scott’s Emulsion immediately following exposure to cold. It willsave you many painful days and sleepless nights. For cramps in the stomach take a few drops of Dr. Manning’s german remedy, dilated in either warm or cold water. The effectis instantaneous, Sold by all drug- S & ) ea ee . USE SKOvA’S DISCOVERY, the great Blood and Nerve Remedy. | ; } | FRANK EAKE Pains in the Joints Seating A Perfect Cure by Hood's Sarsa- parilla. “It affords me much pleasure to recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla. My son was afflicted with great pain in the joints, accompanied with swelling so bad that he could not get up stairs to bed without crawling or hands and knees. I was very anxious about him, and having read Hood’s*Cures so much about Hood’s Sarsaparilla, I deter- mined to try it, and got a half<iozen bottles, four of which entirely cured him.” Mrs. G. A. Lake, Oshawa, Ontario. N. B. Be sure to io get Hood's Sersaperiis. Hood's Pills act easily, ‘ot promptly and efficiently, on the liver and bowe,s. 25c. Ua Parl Below will be found a Combination Coupon, which, when cut out and sent to this office with ten cents, will entitle sender to any one Part of whichever Port- folio is desired. Sample copies of all the books may be seen at this office or R. H. Mason’s News Stand. The Examiner Publishing Comp’y, CHARLOTTETOWN. STODDARD'S PHOTOGRAPHS. & Parts I to 1g Now Ready! 2 This Coupon and Ten Cents will procure any Part. OUR OWN COUNTRY, The King of Portfolios. A PICTURESQUE AMERICA. Part Noe Ite 2 Now Ready This Coupon and Ten Cents will , procure any Part, | | Watch your Weight If you are losing flesh your system is drawing on your latent strength. Something is wrong. Take Scott’s “ Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil, to give your system its need— ed strength and restore your healthy weight. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. Row't be deceived by Substitutes! ®ott & Bowne, Belleville. All Druggiste, 600. £@1, DR. J. P. MURRAY, DENTIST, Queen Street, may30 --~- Charlottetown Take my Advice Pg ist on Gettin / ie n geting Rev. F. J. H. Axford, Recror St. Joun's EPiscoPan Cuvren, Couwallis,N.S.says: Mr. Borden is a neighbor of mine anc I know that his statement is true. Rheumatism & Paralysis CaN BE CURED. Mr. Borden says: Have had Rheu- matism for 15 years. In the autumn of 1890 [had asev-re attack. I could not sleep, my feet and legs swelled and life was almost unbearable. Physi- cians, patent medicines and electric batteries gave me no relief. Skoda’s Cures. I was treated four months in the Hospital, but after being at home ene week was as badas ever. Have tak- en 6 bottles of Skoda’s Discovery and feel like a new man. Skoda‘s Little Tablets cure constipation, sick headache and dyspepsia. 35 cts. MEDICAL ADVICE FREE. SKODA DISCOVERY CO., LTO., WOLFVILLE, N.&. Forfsale ‘ druggists. Trede sap 4s “7 WR iWoteeee Charlottetowa