On and after FRIDAY, 4th June, 1897, the trains of this Railway will run daily, (Sun- days excepted,) as under, frains Out- ; ; wand, Reed]. STATION Coe’ po down. | up. r. M.JA. yy. ew i 3 30) 6 20| Charlottetown pe 9 1512 10 3 521 6 44|--Royalty Junction.) 9 9] 11 48 4 42! 7 19|.-North Wiltshire.) ¢ 9810 58 4 58) 7 og|-+Hunter River... | ¢ 18/10 43 5 347 be .. Bradai vane... . 7 S410 07 5 441 7 gg]..Emerald....... | 7 48! 9 57 5 59) g ggj.. Freetown ....... 7 38) 9 42 6 20) g 99|.. Kensington . 7 23) 9 20 6 55) 8 5 Ar. woes {i Ly.) 7 oo} 8 45 7 30)10 Ly } S'Side \ ar.! 6 05] 8 10 7 45/10 29!..Miscouche ..... | 5 42, 7 56 8 02)19 49}-. Wellington...... +5 16 738 S 309/11 ag|-.Port Hill .......) 4 33} 7 11 9 20/12 5p). -O’Leary......... | 3 25) 7 20 9 6) 1 15]-. Bloomfield ...... | 2 5O 6 O04 10 00; 2 03}.-Alberton........ | 2 13) 5 40 10 401 3 00} -- Tignish seus eves 1 05) 5 00 P. M.| wi A i 80. Tee ae A. M.ip. M. la. M.JA. M. 6 5 8 0g;.. Charlottetown ...| 9 15.5 40 7 05) 3 14|.. Royalty Junctior! g op! 5 2O 7 38) 3 37 ae eee 8 37| 4 47 8S 10) 4 Oo) 4". Stow’ | LY.) § 15) 4 15 8 2 4 05 Lay} MtStew ‘J Aw! 8 10) 4 00 % OO} 4 Ba!..Morell......... | 7 42) 3 20 9 WW 4 54).-St. Peters seeeee| 7 20 2 50 10 16) 5 28)|.- Bear River ......) 6 46) 2 03 BO CE OOM Once ccccss 6 15! 1 20 A. M.)P. M. iA. M./P. M. $ 25) 4 05)..Mt. Stewart ....; 8 10) 3 50 9 57] 4 58)..Cardigan........ 7 17) 2°38 Ie (0) 5 15|..Georgetown ....| 7 00) 21 mle. M. lA. M.[P. M. P.M. a 7 55) .Emerald ..... 7 45 8 45)..Cape Traverse ..| 6 55 jr. BM. — Traiesare run by Kastern Standard Time. SEIT ALD 7 RISTO w Onarlotistew ee roncton, KB. Railway Cffice, June 1, 1307 Wants, Lost, Found &¢ W ANTED—Immediately, a cook; no wash- ing. Apply to Mrs. Fitzgerald. 128— W ANTED—A gir fer Apply to Mrs Thos Camp WANTED—A good general servant. No washing. Apply to Mies Dawson, Malpeque Road, 1 eneral housework ll, Richmend St _FOR SALE-— A newly caived cow, part wersey. Apply to James Trainor, Lower Spring Park Road. 1%—2i Mon & Wed aW ANTED—To purchase a scond-hard v's- -vis Wagon. Apply atthe office of J. H. Reddin. 120—3i eod LOST OR MISLAID.—A Bicycle Rain Cape. ‘The finder will be rewarded by leaving it at this office. = PULOST —A pair of cold skeleton rimmed eve- glasses incase. Piease Jeave at G F. Hut- cheson’s Jewelry St. 135—3i WANTED—A servant man who under- stands the management of Horses and has some knowledge of farm werk. Aprly at once at this office- 128-31 WANTED.—A housemsid: waces seven dollarsamonth. Apply with refercnces to Miss Margaret L. Fairweather, Rothesay, King’s County, New Brunswick. 119 TO LET—An office in Bank Ruildirg with 4->-promf vauld. sdjoining the offices of Meesrs Davies & Haszard. Apply tos M. »paviaon, Cashier, 106 FALESMEN WANTED. in every district to handle reliable coods, new season, samples free. salary from the start. For particulars write Lake Bros, Co Montreal. 95 TO LET—The dwelling honse containing seven rooms, on Hilisborongh St. adjoining *he residence ot Lemuel Poole, Faq Also stable the For particulars as to rent, etc, apply to George Alley 14 TO LET—A house containing %x rooms sit- wated on King St. bark of Merchants Bank. of P. E. I. Possession given ist of June apply to Miss. Lowden, Dundas Fsplanade. Pasture to let-—Persons wanting Pasture for Cows during the season, near the city, had better apply to the undersigned at once, as he can only take a limited number’ Arthur Peters 114 Imo WANTED — Chief Agent for P E.1. to sun- erintend the business of the Manufacturer’ Lite Inusurapce Company. ‘The business is pow so extensive as to require a resident man ager. District Agents also wanted in every unrepresented district Applyte J RB Paton Box 202 Charlottetown. 123—Guar * Qn VICTORIA: HER LIFE AND REIGN; great historic work,sells on sightto thousands, Lord Dofferin in- troduaces it to Canadians in glewing words Easy to make $20.00 a week.some make twice hat. Many make more in spare time than daring day at regular employment. Th's ear’a Great Sexagenary Celebrations are ~woming it. Booksontime. Prospectus free tocanvassers. Territory coing fasi. Tue BRADLEY GARRETSON Co Ltd Toronto- Can ° Bicycles, Bicycles, Bicycles. ONE QUALITY—THE BEST BRANTFORD RED BIRD Most up-to-date. Runs tke easiest. Lasts the longest. A. HORNE & CO, 102— AGENTS P. E Island Railway] sn, a * These two cases led me to pre- scribe Tutti-Frutti Gum chewing in a ¢ {number of cases of Atonic Dyspepsia that came _ under > my care. have a not kept notes of these cases, but in @™ nearly all @ cure was effected, and in the few that did not progress to a complete re- covery the benefit from the pro- =’ cedure was marked, CYRUS EDSON, M.D., Health Commissioner of New York City, and President of the Board of Pharmacy of New York City and Counly. See that the trade mark name TUTTI FRUTTI is on each 5c, package. 134 QODRGSOOSDY One loaf of bread may be light, sweet and digestible. You may use the same ma- terials for another and have it heavy, sour and soggy. The knack is in putting the in- gredients together just right. A substitute for Scott’s Emul- sion may have the same in- gredients and yet nct be a perfect substitute, for no one knows how to put the parts togethcr zs we do. The se- cret of “how”’ is our busi- ness—twenty-five years of experience has taught us the best way. Two sizes, 50 cts. and $1.00 SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville, Ont. +1 aa a <3 @ i CHARLOTTETOWN —TO— 3uy your tickets for Boston by the fast Steamer Halifax. 5 W.W. CLARK, Ticket Agent 116— a SHERIFP’S SALE, Atthe suit of Edward Jaryis Hodgson, Plaintiff, and Charles E. Rowe, and Frederick Rowe,De- fendanta, By virtue of a writ of fi fa excention to me directed, issued ont of Her Majesty’s Su- preme Court of Judicature, at the suit of Kdward Jarvis Hodgson, against Charles E. Rowe and Frederick E. Rowe. I have takeu and seized asthe property, goods and chattels of the above named defend- ants, tne following articles, that is to say : 1 Heintzman Piano. AndIdo (hereby give Public Notice that I will on Friday, the 4th day of June, A.D., 1897, at12 o’elock noon, at the Music Store of D. McMillan,on Great George St, in Queen’s County, set up and sell by Public Auction, the said goode aud chatvels to satisty the levy marked on the said writ of execution,being ($90.32) ninety dollars and thirty two cent, be- sides Sherift’s fees and all legal incidental expenses, WALTER B. ROBERTSON, W.S. STEWART, Sherift Plaintitt’s Attorney. Sheriff’s Office, Ch’town. 28th May, A.D., 1897—sat tue thur FOR SALE A Lot of balfan acre of Jand in Pownal Village. Excellent site for dwelling house, business stand or summer residence. Beautiful situation ; good bathing, shoot- ing and fishing. For further particuiars apply at the law office of undersigned, London House Building, Charlottetown JOHN T. MELLISH. liwy4i 123 We Dont. Claim. To be able te suit all who are suffering’ with their eyes, but we know of a good many people who have sfiffered in- vessant headache, pain in the eyes. etc,who attribute their relief to the wearing of prop- erly fitted glasses. We aie here to help you if possible. G.. FAYEOR Jeweler and Optician. North Side Queen Square. DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JUNE 3, 15897 SLOTH AND SCIENCE. BONES OF THIS ANIMAL AID IN ARN IMPORTANT DISCOVERY. A First Link In Evolution—At First I Existed In North America and Ther Emigrated to South America—Ancient Isthimus of Panama. One ef the greatest mysteries of science, re perplexity that has harassed the mind: of the foremost scientists, stands explained | by a discovery recently mado by Dr. S. L. Wortmen of the department of paleontol agy in the American Museum of Natura) History. By it geographers must change theories thas have prevailed as unchange- ally aril alter thelr rrekon'=zs Im c= > ja stance Ly 430,000 years. In ancthcr do main of science, that which deals with the monster animals of prebistoric times and ‘heir hfe, some interesting conjectures, ac : tas a “xed belief, must be aismisced when corfronted ly the clear wtets set forth with indisputable evidence vy Dr. Wortman. It proves, eo Dr. Wortman reasons, that there was an isthmusef Panama half a million years ago—not the neck of the present Gay, but a predtcessor, which in the lepse of timecame and disappeared. Geographers have contended that the thin satrinof land which connects Nerth and south America is nbouf 50,000 years old, nd that before thet tin.e tLere flowel a -heot of water 70 wiles wide hetween the two eceontinenta, Tc nhows thut those huge siuggards, thé pigeuntic sicths, as large uaaun clophant, catue from what are row the southwestern puttong of the Uvi.rl Statos, and net trom South America. But all traces of these animals were confired almost ex- clusively to South America. Now and then a skeletcn hes heen found elsewnere —u few remains in this coumtry and some fragments of sloth teeth at Exverkingen, Prussia. How these great beasts were bred has been unknown, ‘That lack cf Frowledge was a serious defocé inthe chain ef ovl- dence proving the doctrine of evolution. As geologista resolutely held that during the whole ef the eocene period, which-end- ed several hundred thousand years ago, there was absolutely no land cormection between North and Scuth America, Sow could animals emigrate from one cuatinent to the other? Some geologists have enter- tained the belief that they originated in Nort&% America, which thes was tropical, and marched te Alaska, then over the an- elent land bridge which connected that country with Asia, then strode into EKu- rope, Jeter visiting Africa, and finally marched across a sunken antarctic conti- nent to South America. The true solutien of this profound prob- lem was discovered in the San Juan basin, in the northwestern part of New Mexico, by Dr. Wortman. He gavea brief technical acoount in a memoir, and it has excited inuch interest ameng scientists all over the world, upsetting, as it docs, many theories and throwing a strong flashlight upon the origin of things. In another memoir, en- titled ‘*‘The Ganodonta and Their Rela- tionship to the Edentata,’’ Dr. Wortman describes his find more fully. In a canyon 1,000 feet high in the San Juan basiv, which is part of the Bad Lands of New Mexico, he hit upon skulls and fragmentary remains which in an in- stant, as it were, revealed the tale of the sloth and armadillo tribe, how they grad- ually evoluted from simaliness to mon- strous proportions and how they emigrat- ed. This discovery clears the long obscured pointof the origin and descent Jf the en- tire sloth group and brings it back into the closest relationship with other orders of mammals. Deep down in that canyon he disinterred ene skull and a foot, lying in the lowest eovene stratum in North America. Now, es this particular layer of sediment, which later turned into stone, was deposited not less than 500,000 years ago, Dr. Wortman reckons the original sloth to whom that skwil belonged lived that many years in the past. All the region thereabout was covered by a great lake, which gradually, through the lapse of countless ages, be- came filled by mud, stone and other matter washed into it. The lowest cocene stratum surface of the earth. This skull is not that of the cicantio The undersigned will receive Tenders up to 12 o’elock, noon, of Thursday, the 2rd day of June, for the entire stoek io trade, consisting of Dry Goods, Groceries, etc..and the Book Debte of the firm of McLeod & Jardine, of Mount Stewart, as- Signed tome. An inventory of the tame may be seen at the store lately occapied by the said firm at Mount Stewart. The highest or any tender not necessar- ily aecepted. A certified cheque amounting to 25 per cent of the tender, must accompany each tender, which will be forfeited if the per- son tendering fails to carry out the purchase JCHN McQUAID. Assignee, Pisquid. dee ee Well Print You Red. Blue, Brown Yei- low, | Or any color you wish, for the same price as Black. OR we will prmt you any job any color for less money than any other firm in this city. J, D. TAYLOR PrintEK & BooKBINDER is a mile and a half below the present J2seH, DUI GE His Mest Primitivo, crenrry defined ancestor, whose girth was about that of a bulldog—certuinly not larger. Here, then, was the sloth’s original hame, and here it first flourished. When this moderate sizod fellow died, its corpse be- came imbedded in the muddy bottom of the lake. Tens of thousands of years after this another sloth passed away, and its body tumbled into the lakeandsank. This one was larger than the other, and, as the jake kept rising all the time, its bones are found hundreds of feet higher up in the canyon. But there came a time when the lake had risen so high that it overflowed and disappeared. The mud that had ac- cumulated in its bottom gradually turned into sandstone. In this, water through an almost endless procession of years cut its way, and so formed the canyon in the depths of which Dr. Wortman was enabled to grasp the evidence scientists so long have sought. Thus the first known ancestor of the sloth has been placed and indisputably had his origin here and nowhere else. Through the whole of the vast eocene period, which ended 500,000 years ago, the sloth flourished and eyoluted until it became, as other re- mains found by Dr. Wortman in higher eocene deposits show, as large asa yearling stcer. Then came a sudden and most startling change. At the close of the eocene period Ceposits all traces of the sloth in North America disappear abruptly and reappear in South America. This fact is ful] of the deepest significance. 1t means, says Dr. Wortman, that, not- withstanding the theories of geographers, there was an isthmus between North and South America 500,000 years ago. Vol- canie disturbances all of a sudden closed the watery gap between the continents, and over this land bridge the animals from the United States and Mexico made gradually a grand emigration. The sloths went into South America in great hordes. They found things more congenial there, as the ¢limate in this country was changing rap- fily trom the tropical to the temperate. This isthmus, Dr. Wortman reasons, was temporary and doubtless existed fora few hundred years. Then, due to volcanic disturbances again, it disappeared and an oceanic stretch intervened until about 50,- OVO yeurs ago, when the isthmus of the present uprese from the water.—New York Herald. Shady. ‘I hear you were mixed up im a rather shady transaction last week.’’ ‘I cannot tell a lic—I was. I bought a couple of blinds for the kitchen windows.”’ —Strand Magazine. IF YOU CAN'T COME AG for an appointment, and have your work done by us; guaran- teed Painless Dentistry and modern methods appliances. and Berlin Dental Parlors, Over store of Prowse Bros. , Office Hours:—8 a. m to 8 p. m. New Crop Molasses Now landing at Connolly’s Wharf, ex Schooner Brudenell from West Indies. 200 puncheons 25 tierces Porto Rizo 20 barrels Molasses For sale low white landing. N. RATTENBURY. 125—3weod. PEAKE’S WHARF. NO DANGER. Choice Wharf storage and yardage. WAREHOUSES TO LET By month or year. Apply to ARTHUR G. PEAKE, Office in scale house on wharf. No ovuection with any shop around the cor- er. 135 --AT THE--- DENTAL PARLORS North Side Queen Square. You can have your teeth extracted free of in by the means of either general or ] adzesthesia. All kindsof work done eatiefactorily. DR. J. H. AYERS Dont Asi | for Credi« AT THE — 5 ( 3 + | i } uJ U i. Doing business. all for-cash with small ex , But buy cheap for cash, 4a sinall profit; consequently you. can buy cheap for eash we can do wit R. 8. NORTON & b9,, J. F. NORTON, PROPRIETOR. i RET RLL DONT ttn ps ea ee 8 Ps dite ES ORL Le Gulline Metal Stitched Air Collars Mace sy THE CULLIME PAEUMATIC COLLAR CO., Craney, PQ No sweat peds.. The: strongest, most curable, lightest, coolest, easiest and best: fitting Horse Collans on earth. Heavier loads drawn with léss exertion than with any other. collars. Sure cure forsore necks and shoulders... The stitoh: ing is rust-proof metal, is not affected by Moisture, and will notrip. All collars, from the lightest buggy to the heaviest dray, are made of the very best Jeathcs, and tested bya pressure equal to fifteen: tons pull, and are so guaranteed, THE GULLINE STRAW COLLARS, are also metal stitched and challenge all others for duvabiltay and beautyof'finish (the Gulline Pneumatic Collarsexcepted.) THE AMES HOLDEN COMPANY, OF MONTREAL; Lro.. Sole Selling Agents for Canada, with fui stocks at Montreal, Toronto, St: John, N.B., Winnipeg, Vietoria & Vancouver, B.C. Pac asais i eitit | a yer Li, Re . ee aA LT . Wall Papers! Wall Pape AAAS STF A fine assortment of American and Canadian Wall Papers § now in stock. For Prices and quality we will not be beaten, Have a lock at our stock before purchasing elsewhere, McMILLAN & HORNSBY QUEEN STREET The Mutual Life Insurane Co N.S. Bettas (GORE) x « .. svcene ntcespee vie.n sj ocetlaast Maman TRO RUIO,. 6:6. 5) ..00ccccsecvcensescesssccns «dsc ceacenmses ., ae Paid to Policy holders sinee organization... 437.005.195.293: Tmsurance im force. .. oo... oc .cce ce ccceecee cece we 92S,698,338,55, This Company issues the most liberal policies, and pays larger profits than any other Company, Policies payable in Canadian currency. JOHN MACHACHERN, A SEX’ Smooth as Velvet Your lawn if properly look after and kept cut with one of our Laurn Morrers Will be smooth as velvet. ata at we ee ee ———$——— HARES ee See ee in town. Oxblood, Chocolate, Just received, 238 pairs from 59c up- COFF BROS. The nicest little shoes Oilive.