eh ANN Mig 5 Oe Nis la Big AE a 0A. citi ig LE aN eR AP _ <a Don't Neglect Your Watch THE DAILY EXAMINER, HEART DISEASE | la Toronto Physician Says it Never | Exists Without the Presence of Some Kidney Disease. If you allow your watch to run too | 1 without cleaning, or with damag- | ' . parts it may be worn so badly as to | ; ¢ distroy its usefulness asa timepiece}; Torerte, Juve 11.—The | pum e 0 ; . : , , : ndiathe due sease 18 ap~ wetter have it examined by your; evden di athe due to heart dis k Watch Doct 1 if in need of re- | p y. The medical profession 18 devol atch Doctor anc tj heart and is ; = - fing more aetiention to the hear : fairs he will advise you according!) l ailments at the present time than ever be and p: rhaps save your watch. lf , and wauy pbysiciaus are makipdg & WE BOAST on our repair depart- ment turning out first-class work only. Wp GUARANTEE ALL oUR Work; if you have pot given us a trial it will pay sou to do so and we will be pleased to ee ,ou at Great GEORGE STREET. WwW N TANTON veweler Sion OF THE Bie WATCH. Qrbec Steamship Co. Sir “CAMPANA.” —— epecialty of diseases Of this organ. Toronto dector, who devotes much atten- tion to this branch of bis practice, cays t your reporter to-day, “I have yet to Jearn of a sinele case where heart direase Caused death, ip which a post mortem examines tion did not show tne existence of Bright’s 7 Divease, Diabetes, or some other kidney disease.” Dodd’s Kidney Pills will cure ali disease of the kidneys and thus ward of he cancer of beart disease’ ,dvertisers——Have an ad.in the July P & Island Magezire. It will reach first +the tourists, and many people inieod- ing to come to the Island during the sums mer, besides its regular city and Islard circulation. Ninard’s Liniment Lumberman’s Friend, el When you are tempted to ccmplaip on F-or Montreal From Cb’town evday 220d May Monday 28th May 4*h June « 1th June i ' “e “ 25th se Ind July « Mth July 6th + Le.” 4 Oth “* 6th Aug. | 13: “a *' 7 eb 7 “ 3rd Sept. 10th Sept. °° 24th - “« Ist Oct. th Oct « im .* a « Qh 5ib Nov. “ 12th Nov. ©. ight handled carefally and at cur feu! “ws ¢s, : Pp... +ogers will find the accomodation the vr Lest, and the trip up and down | the &: Lawrence the most delightful. ; CARVELL BROS, Ci town, May 14th,1900. Agents. | dv°uw wed & sat. Plant Line BOS TON } ; ' Co mcNe ing May 8h, the favorite | “HALIFAX.” o > er leave Charlottetown for Bes. | #i.+\-ry Taesday at noon (Standard } Hawkesbury and | ti: calling at ...2 I ‘ning willleave Boston every fets cay at noon. ] ngers leaving Cherlottetown Vie ‘day morning via Pictou, mage gh > nnection at Halifax wich 8. S. i) in © «ts for sale at Stations P. E. I, z ; ; , + » tickets, rates and all infor- Jill nu, apply to— W. W. CLARKE, Agent Charlottetow n ¥. L. CAIPMAN, Su. crintendent,. Apl 24tf. silverware Cleaning Made easy for. As a rule, with ordinary wders and polishes, it’s a hard job to keep your silver looking nice. Try & Bottle of Silver Brilliant Cream Use it as directed, and if you don’t think it the best you have ever used "we'll refund your money. G. F. HUTCHESON, Watchmaker & Jeweler, dilt Edge Th famous Laundry Soap unequalled in cleansing pro- perties, harmless to the fines fabric. Groceries. McKINNON & McNEYIN WHOLESALE AGENTS. | The Great Fire at For sale by all leading your lotin life visit hospital full of ne led children. CG ww Zue. DR. A. W. CHASE'S CATARRH CURE... is sent ditect to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the air passages, stops droppings in the throat and permanantly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower free, A}! dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Toronto and Buffalo. er} Cr "Fs Imagination is thet faculiy which en- ' »bles us to believe that the things we want nnd can’t baye we are a greatdeal better off without. When It Hurts to Cough. The cough that hurts, the conghthat gets ight in thechest, is daily getting deeper and leeper into the bronchial tubes and is making direety for the lungs, to become pncumonia, infammation of ihe lungs cr corsumption. Sucn coughs yield only tu the wonderful effi- ciency of Dr. Chase’s Syrupof Linseed and ‘Turpentine which loosens the tightness and cures cough and cold tcgether. 25 cents a bottle. Family size 60 certs, sola everj- where. One of the herdest things to forgive in this world is the euccees of your cqual. a -- To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Qujnine Jablets. All Lesete.ENIE ike Dovey it fails to cure te, EF. W. Grove’t surasiuie igcn cach box To more than one young coujle ma- trimonia) ties become ja very knoity protlem. “> e ' Minard’s Liniment is used by Physiciars What Is Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food? In appearance Dr. ( base’s Nerve Fccd is an ovel; chceclate coated pill. Inthe condeLtxd erm it contains a] of natures Most strenthen- ing and invigorating tcnic aud resiezatives and forthis reason itis unapproached as a blood builder and nerve Jesturalive. It cures all diseases caused by thin bluod and exbeust- ed nerves abd makes pale, weak Deryous Men, women and chilpren strong and healthy’ 50 cents a box. a ee Ask for Minard’s and teke no other. To Hotel and Boarding House Keepers If all those who are desirous of sccommo- dating summer tourists and others during the coming season will send their address to Tue Examiver office we will be happy to compile @ list and forward to the different avencies which make a business of fur- nishivg such informaticn to the travelling public. Particulars regarding rates, dis- tance from Charlottetown, surroundings of hotel, mails, nearness to railway and batbing,etc., should be mentioned when writipg ue, nae, tes Was an awful calamity, but cannot be remedied. Now Catarrhozone can remedy and is a positive cure for Catarrh and kindred diseases, This statement is backed up by bushels of testimonials which we have and can produce. If you wish to get cured of Catarrb, Bronchitisjor Asthmaand stay cured, use Catarrhozone. It curee by inhalation aud is a guaranteed ,cure. Foreale atall druggiets or sent | direct by mail on receipt ot price of $1.00. For sample botile and inhaler send !0c¢ to N.C. POLSON & CO., manufacturing cheniirts, Kisgston, Ont. Tenders For Debentures SEALED TENDERS marked ‘Tender for Debentures,’’ will be received by the board of School Trustees of ( harlolie'own, through tne undersigncd, up to twelve o’clock noon, Juve 20th inst. tor Sckcol Vebeni ures of $200 each amounting to Two Thonsand and ‘l'wo Hundred Dollars, issued by the Board for a period of twenty years, and beuring irterest at three and one-balf per cent, per annumn, payable half-yearly, under the previsions of the Publse Schools Act 1877, and an Amend ing the same, in 1890, ‘Lhe payment of the Interest on these Debentures is guaranteed by the Prouvincifl Government, and isa first c eon the revenue of the city of Char- eon Ka enders will be received for the whol part of said Debentures. = EWEN STEWART, any 19. ddi. Secretary of Ch’town, June 8 eodgtd. a ; your early moral training. é ae FOR YOUNG MEN. _—-——— (Continued from 3rd Page) what will deal the severest blow to your moral integrity of character. You are, of course, well aware that the dictates of natural wisdom, as well as of Christian discipline, are largely neglected by mankind; but you are strong in the conviction that some at least — some marked, out by their office and calling — can always by relied upon as becoming examples of righteousness. This assurance 1s security for the endurance of your good dispesitions, and a refuge from misgivings as to the practical value of What then must be your chagrin and dismay when,as you advance through life, those towers of refuge and pillars of strength, not unfrequently dwindle away as you draw nearer to them, and are found to be. only weak and wavering if not broken reeds. Briefly, therefore, the question of your first danger resolves ‘itself into this: a time shall come when, owing to ex- periences at first disheartening, a change shall be wrought in your way of thinking. Shall you act the part of the patient and strong, and whilst modifying your views, retain as firmly as ever. your grasp of their essential nature ; or will you, like the impatient and weak, shirk labour and responsi- bilities by abandoning them altogether ? Intolerance of the opinions of others is productive of evil chiefly in a nega- tive sense. It prevents us from dis- cerning the strata of good that every- where underlies human nature ; it con- tracts the limits of our sympathy which should be as far-reaching as the utter- most human ills ; it disposes to pessim- istic views of life, and closes out from us the light of other minds, often so valuable for the development of truth within our own. Hence from the outset you should be persuaded that the truths which define your duties as reasonable and Christian men, and elevate you to the highest possible standard of life, are neither discredited nor overthrown because you have had an inadequate concept of the modifications they bear when applied in actual life. ‘“ When I was a child,” (wrote St. Paul, I. Cor. XIII.) ‘*] spoke as a child, I understvod as a child, I thought as a child. But when I became a man, I put away the things of a child.” St. Paul’s mind was de- veloping, and viewing the same truths in clearer light and under truer images than those of his childhood. Your minds are deveioping too. But it is no disparagement to say they have not yet developed to the full. You are in respect to many things theorists still, and the theorist, whilst his calculations may be correct relatively to the data on which he works, can never reach ail the elements that are going to influerce the practical resultant of his principles Hence when you shall have wider ex- perience of man as he is in this wide world of pleasure and pain, you need not think it strange if your opinions will require readjustment in many de- tails. If, however, the world will not appear to you what you think it should, the unexpected discovery will not prove disagreeable, for, I am persuaded, you will meet as much good in it as you had expected ;—i shall make bold to say, even more, although, like the gold that winds in buried veins around the base of the mountain instead of glint- ing on its naked summit, invisible to gazers from a distance. You will learn that man is human, even at his best ; but his virtue will appreciate in your sight, when seen lifting him heaven- ward amid the numerous counter-forces of animal passions and spirit-deadening pleasures. It will be cherished as something nearer to yourselves than the fictitious and almost repellant sanctity enthroned above the turmoil in which we move and have our feel- ings moored. But perhaps the great- est compensation fer the discount of yeur cherished opinions will be the gradual discevery that goodness ex- tends wider and deeper into the mass of manhind than many, besides the pessimists, are willing to acknowledge. However, the overthrow of your ideals —though of course only partial—is, I admit, afreal danger to your intellect- ual and moral well-being. Must I maintain the struggle for a higher standard of life whilst so many who, I theught, should inspire me most by their example have lapsed into the way of the great multitude? Is it not some specious fallacy that holds me to the precepts or my early training, since numerous men of recognized ability live presperous and contented without them? These are questions which may some day agitate your minds. Here, then, is where you must be strong; here is where you must brand deep in- to your souls the doctrine that the dominating motive of action should not be the example of others. Cer- tain things are good and vital, how many soever may ignore them ; certain things are wicked and deadly, however CHARLOTTETOWN JUNE 16 1900. warmly the them. ideals, are necessarily rare, and their rarity is only proof or their superior value. For you it should be enough to know what things are the best and attainable. You are not to take your cue for conduct from the many who have failed, but-—if example is to im- pel you—from the few who have stretched out to the goal and secured it. An order has been established in Creation which imposes on intelligent minds a law of conduct. <A_ super- natural sanction has been given to this law, a supernatural light cast upon it to make its existence and limits un- mistakable, and supernatural means, answering the end to be obtained, fur- nished to mankind. Look about you into the heavens and to the earth, and everywhere you will discover law and the evidence of infinite intelligence dominating all things. Study mere carefully, and you will see that each element has functions and limits defined for it by a Jaw that suffers neither failure nor trespass, except at the price of prompt punishment suited to the nature of the offender. Then turn within yourselves and enquire what part have you in this great world. The answer will not be far to seek; you are no exception to the general law of duty and reward. You must live according to what is best in you—according to the dictates of the spiritand the promptings of your nobler instincts, otherwise, like every other creature, animate and in- animate, you shall pay tbe penalty of (Contirued on pege 8 .) YEARS OF AGONY. Rusulting from Sciatica in an Aggravated Form, Many Nights the Sufferer Could Not | Lie In Bed, and His Leg was Fre- quently Swollen to Twice its Natural Size. From the Journal, St. Catharines. Mr. John T. Benson, stationary en- gineer at the Ridley College St. Cathar- ines, is known by most of the residents of the city. For years Mr. Benson suffered acute agony from sciatica, and not with- standing numerous forms of treatment, found little or no relief, until he began the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. These pillsspeedidly restored his health, as they have done that of thousands of others who have given them a fair trial, To the reporter who interviewed him, Mr. Ben- son said: “‘I certainly owe a debt of grati- tule to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, for they bavo released me from aform of torture that had afflicted me almost continuously for twenty years, The pain began first in my back, then shifted to my hip, and thence down my leg. It becameso se- vere thit it seemed as though the very marrow in my bones was_being scalded, aidat times I could scarcely ing aloud from the agony I tried all sorts of liniments and lotions, but gotno relief, I doctored with several physicians, even going to Buffalo for treatment by a specialist there; but in no case did I ever receive more than tempor- ary relief. It may-be easily imagined that the pain I endured,told upon me in other ways andi became almost a physical wreck. At timesmy right leg would swell to nearly twice its normal size.Then the pain and swelling would shift to my left leg, and the agony was something awful. I suppose that during the period I was afflicted I have hundreds of times laid on my back on the floor with my foot and leg elevated ona chair in order to obtain slight ease from the pain Ien- dured. The musclesaed sinews in my legs looked as though they had _ twisted and tied in knots. The trouble went on this way until finally no- thing but opiatos would deaden the pain. Afew years agol read of a cure in asimilar case through the use of Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills and decided to try them. For some _ time after I began their use. I could not see that they were helping me. but I de- cided that I would give thema fair trial. By the time I had used a half dozen boxes, there was a decided improvement in my case, and I continued the use of the pills until I had taken twelve boxes, when I felt my cure was complete. Several years have since passed and I have had _ no re- turn of the trouble, sol feel safe in say- ing that the cure has been permanent. I may also add that my wife has used the pills for indigestion, headaches and dizziness, and has found great benefit from yheffi. Words cannot express the great benefit Dr. Williams Pink Fills have been to me, and I hope similar suf- erers will profit by my experience.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills cure by go- ing to the root of the They renew and build and strengthen the nerves, thus driving disease from the system. If your deaJer does not keep them, they will be sent postpaid at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, by arene ' disease. up the blood, the Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont, repress cry- ! endured, I ; ay cherish | te sabe ik chsh Now Is The Time <rtee eae men a D DOS QDeas I9 Give Baby An Airing and of course you,will want!a BABY CARRI AGE e® eee oF We have good Carriages Ve have COMFORTABLE carriages— CHEAP carriages. Carriages Wee We are «lways glad to show goods. Call and see them. John Newson £4 BO e& 664,57. SOD 6M 1 4S4%,94, €CQDBOD DOS. 2 2 | TODOS ISOS eae 2@Oea ©4625 | | MMA LL LLL LOC ia ee or fee = THE —~ Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation, Ltd OF LONDON. Special Travelling Accident & Sickness Coupon Policy, The above policy has just been issued by the greatest and mst progressi Accident Company in the world to-day. The policy is issued by the agent in Charlottetown at a moment’s notice an@ enclosed in a substantial pocket book. The indeminities are as follows:— Death caused by accident in passenger Riilway conveyance $1500.06, Temporary Disablement caused by accident in Railway conveyance $10.00 per week. Temporary Disablement caused by Smallpox, Varioloid Diphtheria, Meas les, Asiatic, Cholera, Erysipilas, Appendicitis, Diabetes, Peritonitis, Pleurisy, Pneumonia, Meningitis or Tetanus, $10.00 per week. PRICE OFSPOLICY—$3.00 per annum. JAMES J. JOHNSTON, Stamper Block, ORARLOTTETOWN AGay In the spring a young man’s fancy turos towards a “New Suit of Clothes” If you would be with the crowd just visit out Clothing Department of a Saturday night and see the immense trade done in this line. The Goops are alright because we buy only best makes, widely known and highly recommended. The Price is alright because we make it so. The tit is faultless because we keep a full range ot sizes and because the head of this department has had 15 years experience in the Clothing business ‘ All customers are fully convinced when making a purchase that the “Tailors Efforts are Surpassed and his Prices cut in Two.” Mies Suits , Mcn's Tweed Suitsin Plaids and mix- tures, g:«d nobby make, $4.00 to &.00. Men’s Tweed Suits in Browns and Greys, made bv Saxes $3.99 to 7 50 Ba: gainsat much higter figures. Blue serve Suits, just the thing for sum; mer wear, light and di able $4.50 to 10.00. Separate cvat, ves. or pants in either Tweeds or Serges. Boy’s Suits Boys 2 Piece Sailor Suits made of Blue Serge, and suitable for summer wear $1.25 Boy’s 3 Piece Suits, mixed or plain $2.25 to 6.00. Special line 2 Piece Brany Suits Scarlet or Blue trimming, very nobby £2.50) A fu'l range of cloths in Serge, Tweed or Worsted Pantingsin a number of different pat terns. All of which cannot be duplicated out-de Matthew & McLean’s at prices above quoted. Customers who appreciate oui cesire tO p e's» come back to us because our clothing gives :a - | isfaction and is the best obteinable for the mney. § if oie fi Y ey k ¥ r 2 ; \ 7h ‘ ( SOURIS, P. E. L . A %eoee DOW SO S- rs