4 — S25eeeeereezerse de == 1909006 6 ee HORS COUR eRe ee eee sees OE mpo-O- > . = Ni jttalpelatannahamename s S DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS, the | only positive, never-failing cure, on earth, for all Kidney diseases, Take No Other. Get the Genuine. Pl Refuse Imitations. There's Only One Dodd'a ( The Examiner Calendar. weKFOR MAY... MOONS CHANGES. Last Quarter, 2na New Moon, 9th. First Quarter, 1 /th. Full Moon, 25th Last Quarter, 3lst. NW | 3 : Sun | Days | High 9! ‘Day of We’k| D| y ian s Dek | length) Water Fico Monday 448 7 6 (14 18 even’g » Tuesday ss 21 |451 }Wednesday} 45 | 8 | 4 | 540 }, Thursday 43 10 | 27 |628 | Friday 4a} ul 30 #717 » Saturday 40 | 12 32 | 8 06 Sunday 39 | 13 | 4% | 855 4Mondzy | 38 | 15 | 37 | 9 44 YTuesday | 37 | 16 | 39 (10 33 10\Wednesday} 35 | 17 | 41 (11 22 1 U Thursday 34 | 18 | #44 | morn 12 Friday 33 19 47 100 13 Saturday 32 | 20 49 149 14 Sunday 31 22 51 | 2 38 1 3,Monday 29 | 23 54 13% 16, Tuesday 2% | 24 | 56 1/414 .7\Wednesday| 27 | 25 (1458 | 5 03 18 Thursday { 26 | 2% (150 | § $2 19 Friday 24 Se ean) 20) Saturday 23 : 29 | 4 |730 21)Sunday 23 30 6 | 8 18 Monday | 22 | 31 | 8 | 907 '3, Tuesday Si 2@iwiss v4 Wednesday} 20 | 33 | 12 (10 45 25/Thursday | 20 | 34 | 14 (11 34 6| Friday 19 35 16 even °7|Saturday 18 %;Wi1LV glSunday [18 | 37 | 19 | 200 Monday 7 | de) 2 128 0} Tuesday a7 | 38 | 2 | 337 i|Wednesday 416 ‘7 39 ‘1523 | 4 26 gute —_ Wants, Lost, Found, &¢ PLEASANT HOME WORK FOR MEN mR WOMEN—Day or evening. No canvacrs- ng or experienee needed; viain instruction and work mailed on appli-ation for + osition Address Memorial Co.. London, Ont. FOR SALE—-A row boat. Apply at this fice. 120 WANTED IMMEDIATELY.—A general servant, must understand plain coking. Apply to Mra Richardson. King Sq. 120 WANTED AT ONCE.-— A good horse and wagecn for the season, also a good live agent to canvass for life size photograpbs. Applr toS. F. TarBush. High Grade art Co, Ck- town. Address box 474. 120 ae BOY WANTED.—A smart steady boy about 16 years of age. who understands look ing efter a cow and horse, and who would be generally useful about a house. Avplv at this office. 115 dy tf PRESSMAN WANTED.~—at once, employment. J. T. MeKenzie. TO LET,- One halfthe large double hou oa Brighton Road, at present ocenpied by D Gahan, hot water heating, electric light, etc. Apply tc J. J. MeKinnon. 109 steady 112 TU LET.—A houre on Bayfield St. heated by hot water,bath. Imm diate possession given. Apply to Charles Hermans. tf TO LET.— House on Brighton Road, heat- ed with hot water, Bath Rooms etc, at present ecupied ne T J. Dillon Possession given May.apply to J. J. McKinnon 69 FIRST CLASS BILLIARD AND POO. TABLES.—I have for sale two monarch pool tables and one billiard table—ivory balis with cues, racks, etc. complete, all in good order, will be sold very cheap, Apply at the Hub Billiard Hall or to P, Burke P. O, Box Charlottetown 81 lmo i i i i i i ¢ “He is Put Together —LIKE A— Waltham Watch So said Ralph Waldo Emerson in speaking of a man whom he describ edasa godsend to his town. In point of quality Waltham Watches are unsurpassed. The price is astonishingly low. Do you know what you ean gct a Waltham Watch for. Call, and we'll tell you. | lighter doors the panels may be of solid | of the fine wood, so that the entire door * WASHINGTON RELICS. 6. F. HUTCHESON Watchmsker etc. >=] 6646066408 = 74 St SO @=2.2. 4 42222 404% 234044060088 THE DAiwY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 25, 18S9 te oe D-O-D-D’S DOORS OF VENEER. | @Wew Doors, Not Even the More Coste ly, Made of Solid Wood. The very finest of doors are mado nowadays of veneer on a body of pine. Even when made of mahogany or some | other costly wood doors have to be ve- neered. The body of the door is made | of a plain, straight grained mahogany while the surfaces are veneers of fine i For d. In the finest doors the body is made of selected white pine, free from sap and perfectly seas mned, which is cut in- to narrow strips and then glued to- gether. The outer edges of this door are faced with what is called a veneer, but which is really a strip of the fine wood half an inch or more in thickness. The inner edges of the frame, by the panels, are covered in the same manner with thick strips, in which the ornamental moldings or carvings are made and which are grooved to receive the panels. This built up frame of white pine, with edges of the fine wood, is then veneered with the fine wood. In some mahogany, bet «in the finer, Jarger and heavier doors the panels alsc are made of sheets of white pine with a veneering is veneered, It would be difficult, if not impossi- ble, to procure at any cost mahogany luxpber in fine and beautiful woods of sufficient size for the larger doors. The built up and veneered door of pine wood, however, has every appearance of a solid door, und, made of selected veneers, it may be more beautiful than a solid door would be. It is more serv- iceable and remains longer perfect. Tis cost is about half what a solid door would cost. — Articles of Priceless Worth Kept In the National Museum. One of the most interesting relics in the National museum at Washington is the camp chest used by Washington throughout the Revolution. It isa com- pact affair about the size of a tourist’s wicker chest for cooking of the present day, 2% feet long, 2 feet wide, 1 foot high, and it contains an outfit consist- ing of t,nder box, pepper and salt boxes, bottles, knives, forks, gridiron and plates. Every bit of the outfit save one bottle, which is broken at the shoulder, looks strong enough to stand another campaign. : Near by are the tents used by Wash- ington—three in number. One is a sleeping tent, 28 feet long, with walis 6 feet high and a roof with a6 foot pitch. It is made of linen. The other two ure marquee tents of smaller size, one with walls, the other a shelter tent open on the sides. That the tenting ma- terial of Revolutionary days was good stuff is proved by the excellent condi- tion of these tents, which sheltered the great commander through all his severe campaigns. Here also is Washington’s uniform, worn by him when he gave up his com- mission as commander in chief of the army, at Annapolis in 1783. It consists of a big shadbelly coat of blue broad- cloth, lined and trimmed with soft buckskin and ornamented with broad, flat brass buttons; buckskin waistcoat and breeches. The size of the garments (which are in a state of excellent pres- ervation) testify to the big stature of the Father of His Country and sug- gest that he had an eye to a fine ap- pearance in his dress. - ee GO Oy rr A Guaranteed Catarrh Cure. Japanese Catarrh Cure—use six buxes— buy them at one time—apply exactiy ac-, cording to the directions—and if you are not eured see your druggist; he will arrange to pay you your money back. There's 4 ositive guarantee with every box that apanese Catarrh Cure will cure. No cure, you get your money back. Guarantee In every package. 50 cents at ail druggists. 115 Sli by Geo. E. Hughes a re —— ~e ee eoe2829237°74 8% © mae $3.00 PER DAY. : We desire to engage a bustling rep- resentative in every town to secure rub scriptions for The National Magazine We have many persons througbout the conntrv doing this work and making fr »m $3.00 co $6.00 per day. Send for sample copies, subscription blanks, ete. You have nothing to risk and every- thing to gain. The National Magazine, 91 Bedford St., Boston Masa sene-—-—— eae ' ¢ ; ¢ ; _—_— Brown's Lawn & Garden At Auction Wesnesday Ti June at 12 o'clock That most desirable Building Lot with fruit garden and glass house, w th a front age of eighty feet on Fitzroy Street and about oce hundred and seventy feet back The best available bu:lding lot in the city, wide enough for two cottuges ora large double heuse,and ashort distance from Post Office, churches and schools. Terms made known at sale. @2e@ 624278086 Gt E28 May 23—eod td iP. << a3 —" ‘is at a Crisis. not cure. will be the woman of to-morrow. cerhaps her mother does not fully understand it, but between the “to-day” when she is 2 girl and the morrow” when she will be a woman, her life's for nearly two years. She lost flesh, was very pale, subject to headaches, and had a poor appetite. alarmed and doctored for some time, but with litte or no benefit. young girl whose symptoms were similar, who was cured by the use of Dr Williams’ Pink Pills. cided us to give them a trial in my daughter’s case, and the result was beyond our most sanguine expecta- tions, Before more than a few boxes were used Lena was rapidly looking better and gained sixteen She is now as healthy as any girl in Sawyerville, and 1 am quite willing this statement pounds in weight. should be published, that our experience may prove an equal blessing to some other similar su..crer. happiness and health are in the balance. she is to be a full-breasted, strong, healthy woman, she must develope rightly now. She mi She needs more strength, more ™ blood to tide it over. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People ——_a~, is the only medicine that will give her the strength and make new, rich blood. She does not know it, se to- If timely use of this medicine—but you must get the genuine. A YOUNG GIRL’S HEALTH. he Mas” Ree Sah ee [et a SHOSOOSRSSHEOSHHSS DE Te vesey OzS> ( LORD > WeSeEcsuseeuu aia?) aT if . | } \ Thousands of healthy, happy girls and young women have been made so by the Substitutes will Mr. F. H. !ibbard, of Sawyerville, Que., says: “‘ My daughter Lena kept gradually failing in health She was studying hard at school and this may have been the origin of the trouble. We became very much Finally we read the testimonial of a There are numerous pink colored imitations against which the public is cautioned. The genuine are only sold in boxes with wrapper re- sembling the engraving on the left, but printed in RED ink. If your dealer does not have the genuine, send direct to the Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, and they will be mailed post-paid at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, , BsSSor vk Sader seeresas This de- eo a a ora aa \ ~- os - DPB DP SDDEO FD VDVODSVODOS WP Hew WEeoewse -_————- GLEANINGS. Chinese coinage in the shape of a knife has been traced back as far as 2240 B. C. The loftiest cli.2 on the coast of Eng land is Beachy head, the height of which is 564 feet. The use of cocaine to produce loca) in- sensibility is forbidden in Turkey on re ligious groands. ‘‘Are there not some things worse than the bad dollar?’’ suggests a significant trend of thought, Boothbay Harbor, Me., reports ‘‘anoth- er 4ca serpent,’’ with head as big as a fish barrel and of size and shape and motion that puzzled the experts. No fins, flipper er tail had this latest roarine monster. The bulletin board in front of a Cleve- jand church the other Sunday contained this rather ambiguous announcement: “Evening Service 7 o’Glock. ‘Hell Is Paved With Good Intenticna.’ All Are Welcome. eats Free.’’ Aristocrate @ la ‘anterne would be na meaningless cry #% a revolution were ta break out in Paris, as the city still keeps up 266 oj} lamps, suspended by rcpes to gallowstike posts, such #8 were found con- yenient in 1793. The Armenians claim to be the most ancient nation on the earth and are doubt- less like other Ayran races, of the line of Japhet. They have often been compared with the Hebrews, and they exhibit Sem ‘tic characteristics, The water which will allay our burning thirst augments it when congealed inte snow, so that it is stated by explorers of the arctic regions that the natives *‘prefer enduring the utmost extremity of thirst rather than attempt to remove it by eat-. ing snow.”’ Received today by the Boston steamer, strawberries, cucumbers, tomatoer, bans anus, pine apples, orunges, lemons and rhubarb.— Sanderson & Co. Rhubarb, pineapple, oranges, bananas and lemons at W. F. Carter's. 121 Sin. EE Ay Sunlight and Lifebuoy Soaps at 5 cents per twin var, is lixe buy- ing silk at the price of cotton. I \ | The war corresponcents need not go out of business. ‘The football season is about te open.—St. Paul Globe. The ushers in one of the New York the- aters have struck against being obliged t» wear powdered wig: and we don’t blame ‘em a little bit.—BRoston Herald. Taiking of a coaling station in the Fg cific, that important coaling station, the gellar, is becoming a burning question in the househo)d.—Philadeiphia Times. A bicycle century club offers a hand- some prize for the most appropriate ode ta be sung at their coming annual meeting. What’s the matter with ‘‘Old Hundred?’ -—Denver Post. - If these stirring international questions are not soon settled, the annual chrysan themum shows willconie alcng and divert public attention from everything else, Baltimore News. Those people out in Oklahoma hr turned out argl lynched a judge of the cult must be very fastidious concerning éhe quality of justicé in that territory.— ‘Washington Post. Of course it is an Ohio baby that enjoys the proud distinction of being bern ing Pullman car. Wonder if the porter re Jeived an extra quarter for the additional birth.—Roston Transcript. A San Francisco girl now takes a four mile swim in the Pacific every morning. But as likely as not some other girl will be mean enough to charter a tug in order to kiss Dewey first.—Chicago ‘Times-Her ald. A jeckey boy, 17 years old, has signed « ccntract which calls for $10,000 a year salary. In view of this, why shonld am. bitious yeung men strive to be basepal) pitchws ay professional bicycle riders or evan college presidents?—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Mrs. Matilda B. Carse still has hope of saving the W. C. T. U. temple in Chi- ¢ago and also hasa plan. She wants 10¢ persons to give each $1,000 and 100 other persons to give each $100 toward liftin, the debt from the building. The plan t simple, and if Mrs. Carse can cnly fing the persons she wants the temp) wili or saved.—Bloomington Pantagraph. ter’s, Strawberries and cream at W. F. Car~ 121 Gin, A CITY NIGHT. Come. let us forth and wandey the rich the murmuring night, The sky blue dusk of summers trembles above the street, Ou either side uprising glimmer houses pale, But me the turbulent bubble and Voice of erowds delight, For me the wheels make music, mingled cries are sweet. Motion and laughter call; will not fail. the we hear, we For see, in secret vista, with soft, retiring stars, With clustered suns, the throng below. With pendant dazzling moons, that cast a noonday white, The full streets beckon, Come, for toi! has burst his bars, And idle eyes rejoice, anc feet unhasting that state upon £0, ‘ Oh, let us out and wander the gay and golden night. Lawrence Binyon in New York Tribune See anata meme 5 Ao 2 me ly> 3 ll» 3 Bargains. Or WTS You want real targains, not com mon goods at low prices. The greac— est vargains you can obtain in SOAPS are the world renowmed. Sunlight & Lifebuoy Brands, just try them, and you con net help but acknowledge that they are the best bargains you ever had. A b> a> 5 aly 3 yo | Sunlight and Lifebuoy Soaps are absolutely pure, «equally good for tae toss or the laundry, They will not injure Be” tenderest skin, oz most delicate Fd hem warren “NOTICE — The Commissioners of Sewers and Walet Supply are now prepared to receive plications for convections with sewers Any information required will be furt= — ished upon application to ee D. MeLEAN, Sec’y Board of Commi Office of Con missioners of Sewers and Water Supply City Hell, May 18- -? 99,6i cod Prepare for the | em We wll the fullest live of all the packs of canned meate, fish and fraile™ feel that we can sort up soy bodys basket to tbe best advantage. Canned Corned Beef Ox Tongue Lunch Tongue Potted Ham Potted Chicken Potted Turkey Potted H+m and Chickea. Poited Tongue Arc vovy Pase Sardines Maccaroine and Cheese, Baked Best™ (with Tomato Catsup. Sanderson & U@ PURE FOOD SELLERS.