. 5 lin lly ti a ly eins: EE Mm oe Siete AES ie emi oo Che tenes a alia te gate eee atm eA apy. mae ti i ay tee ee > * a Over - Mm ao. 250d, 1599~—19.5i mon, wed, fri THE DAILY EXAMINER| lasned every afternoon from the office of the Examiner Publishing Co. RATES OF SU BSCRIPTION (iN ADVAN E) vne Y COT ccccccceee oo 6 C000 Coeereoooooooes S4 60 Bix Momths,..cccceces ceeeercae eneeeeeers $2.00 Three Monthe, EET One Munth,......- Dg. wales beewms 0.35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States. THE WEEKLY EXAMINER ‘a isaued every Friday morning It made up of the matter w hich has appear - ed in the Drily, and is firet-class news- paper, covtaining all the latest news Babscription $1.00 a year. MUNYON’S I will guarantee that my Rheumatism Cure will relieve lum- bag, sciatica and all rheumatic pains 1D two or three hours, and cure in a few day *. MUNYON. ‘Ac all druggists, 25c. a vial. Guide to Hlealth and medi- cal advice free. 1505 Arch st., Phila. as SPS es £2228 & 1-888 48806 ADVICE]A80UT Spice. When ordering » packr ge is Pepper, Ginger, A llspice, Cin namop or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you. can al- ways fee! sure of securing the best quality by asking for::: ] y 9) g Mott's O86 40086 FO 14O06€E 32486 22060 2% % = & S&S 40-8 =” §~S@eur ©64 + % * 4 4OO Canadian Paciic Railway. TRAVEL - IN - COMFORT ~-BY--- TOURIST SLEEPERS taving- Montreal every THURSDAY at Il a m. orthe PACIFIC COAST, accommo- datiag second ciass passengers for a)! points, algary and west. Berth Rates— Montreal to Calgary..... bi e\pandedsunl $7.00 Biontreal to Kevelstonue.. ..........cceese.s 700 Montreal to Vancouver....«+..........e9e2 800 GOOROE o nice. .cocccccnodoconcs 8 00 For Paesage Rates ‘o ali points in Ganapa, Western Univep Srares and to Javan, Coins, 'wpra, Hawartan Isianps, Avstratiaand Mania, and also for de vcriptive advertising matter and maps, ‘write to A. H. NOTMAN, Asst. Genl. Paes. Agi., 3 St, John, N. B. shoes Children’s Overshoes Misses Overshoes Ladies’ Overshoes Men’s Overshoes W. H. Stewart & Co. _— = oa ee ‘TENDERS Sealed tenders wil! be received by the yndersigned until Saturday the 18th day of February next, for the erection of # orick wing (96x40) ‘o St. Dunstan’s Col- eve, Chariottetown, P, E. I. Plans and specification may be «een at the College or at the office of C. B. Chappell, Eeq, Archi vect. Each tender must be accompanied by an accepted cheque for $200, which shall be forfeited by any tenderer who shall refuse to perform: the work after hie tender has been accepted. Envelopes must h» ve the word “Tender’ written on them. Tile lowest or any ten- der not necessarily accepted. REV. A. P. McLELLAN, Rector ‘be. Dunstan’s College, Ch’town, THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN JANUARY 28, 1899 ‘ For__i> 3 + Sunday Reading- At Low Tide. is purpose dead? Desire fallen asleep,? And is there naught will make This sluggish pulse of mine, Which scarce doth creep, A faster pace to keep ? For life seems only half awake ! That which was once a song divine, And set my heart a-throbbing to tts note, Is now a discord in a minor key, And lost its melody. Ambition is an art which lies supine. For like a boat Battered and beaten by the storms gone by,— Tossed high upon the beach, Beyond the grasping reach Of tortuous wave and cruel tide,— My shattered hopes and aspirations lie. Indifferent to whatever fate betideam I Perchance on some auspicious day A careless rover on Life’s restless sea Will anchor slip Anear my grounded ship ; Recaulk the seams, and set the sails ataut To catch weigh, And turn her port. Arthur D. F Randolph in Lippincott’s. the breeze—then anchor towards some friendly Give Time to Reading the Bible. Cannon Liddon, ina beautiful passage reminds us of the importance in the hurry of life of giving time to the read ing of the Bible, He says as we drift along the swift relentless current of time towards the end of life; as our days and weeks and months and years follow each other in breathless haste, and we reflect now and then for a mo- ment that, at any rate, for us, much of this earthly career has passed irrevoc- ably, whatare theinterests, thoughts, aye, the books, which really fecommand our attention? Whatdo we read and what do we leave unread? What time do we to the Bible? No other book, let us be sare of it, can equally availto prepare us for that which lies before us; for the unknown anxieties and sorrows which are sooner or later the portion of most men and women for tthe gradual approach of death, for the period, be it long or short, of waiting and preparation for the Throne and the face of the eternal Judge. Looking back from that world how shall we desire to have made the give most of our best guide to it. How shall we grudge the hours we have wasted on anything—be they thoughts or books or teacher—which only be long to the things of time! Basiness Temptations. If the devil should appear visibly to any of us if he should enter undisguised with visible horns and tail, and offer you millions for your soul, you would refuse and say: Getthee behind me Satan.” But when he comes in the form of a business, and says, “Do as other people do. It may not be quite right. but everyone else does. Do not be too puritancial. Be not righteous overmuch; why destroy yourself?’ Then perhaps, we sell our soul to him for a very paltry sum ; and perhaps he cheats us out of that small sum after all.— James Freeman Clarke. Jefferson's Ten Rules. Take things always by the smooth handle. Pride costs more than hunger, thirst and ‘cold. ree —_— #_—_———— -~ Se the Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets. It Positively Follows uss of — the iffects of Dy Spepsia, lund: i tT } , Lablets R-move Dodd’s Dyspepsia Dis ‘guring gestion and other Stomach Trou bles, by Removing the Troubles Themselves. The fiushof health is the constant come panion of beauty. No woman, be she maid, wife, or widow can be beautiful, if she is not health. Every woman naturally wishes to be beautiful. Hereis the starting-point from which all may reach the desired end.! If you would be beau:ifal you must get good health. Many of tueso-called “‘little ilis” of life are terr b y de=tructive of beauty. For iv-tance, Dyspepiia aad lodigestion cau-e pale ory: Howish face, dark circles under the eyes, wiinkles. crow’s feet, etc. e ‘do thecomplai't, the pale or too little. Nothing is troublesome that we do willingly. Never spend your money bofore you have earned it. Never buy what you don’t want be cause it is cheap. Never trouble another for what you can do yourself, Never put of till you can do to-day. ' How much pain the evils have cost us that have never happened. When angry, count ten before you speak ; if very angry count a hundred. tomorrow what Though We Repent. By Louise Chandler Moulton Though we repent, can any God give back The dear lost days we might have made so fair— Turn false to true, and carelessness to care, And let us find again what now we lack ? Oh, once once more to tread the old time track, The ftowers we more to wear— Though we repent, can any God give back The dear lost days we made so fair ? threw away once might have We can repulse a stealthy ghost’s attack— Silence a voice that doth the midnight dare Make fresh hopes spring from grave-sod of despair—— Set.free a tortured sou! from memory’s rack ? | Though we repent, can any God give back The dear, iost days we might have made so fair? —Scribners —Some of the devils best helpers sit close to the pulpit in church. —A mean man can get religion, but he can’t stay mean and keep it. —Too many men go to praying just as God wants them to go to paying. —There are too many people in Church who can’t be religious in cloudy weather. —Good conditions of life, however needful--$ ich as competence, health and healthy surroundings—do not make good men. —There is not a lot on earth so lone- ly, no trouble so unshared, no fidelity so divorced from human heip, but it may find its counterpart in the life of the Saviour. —There are many chinks at home that must be fliled with kindness, unselfishness, cheerfulness, and loving service. Are you doing your part to— ward filling them ?-—Canadian Church- man, —— eee — Sometimes the most careful women are the most carcless. Many & wonosan puodles herself up, to keep out sickness— when she is neglecting the very worst sickness that can come to @ woman. She allows a slight disorder to become worse, to slowly eap ber vitality. The little pain aod the other slight indications of trouble seetn toher unimportant. She goes on, with increasing suffering, until] life itself becomes a drag. Nervousness, “sink g } spell-,"¢ digeetive disturbances, and fifiy other compitcatious may arise from the derang ment of the organs distinctly feminine. Over thirty years ago, the need for @ reliable remedy for so-called “female cow plaints” was recognized by Dr. R. V. Pierce, then, as uow, chief consulting physician to the World’s Dispensary aod Invalids’ Hotel, at Buffalo,N. Y. He prepared Dr. Puerce’s Favorite Pre- scription, the most wonderfully effective remedy that has ever been used for such maladies. Send 31 centsin one-cent stamps and receive Dr Pierce’s 1008 page ‘Common Sense Medica] Adviser,” illustrated. “Sar =e BEAUTY IS EASILY ATTAINED. sallow complexion, wrinkles pimples, dark circles,and other hsteful disfigurati n will follow. Bot it may be asked: How can the main trouble, Dyspepsia orladigestion be got rid off ? Very easily, simply and quickly. All that is needful is to take one or two of Dodd’sa Dyspepsia Tablets after each meal, ann “they’li do the rest. Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets digest the food thus removing the case of Dyspepsia, Indi- gestion, Biliousness, Sour Stemach, Fiatu- lence, Heartburn, Boils, Pimples, Liver Complaint, Nervous Headache, and other stomach troubles. There is no certainty about the effects ot Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets, Clear pure skin, clear head, steadynerves, bright eyes red lips rod rosy cheeks are gtie positiue results. And theseare the chief elements in womanly beauty. Dodd’s Dyspepsis Tablets are sold by all druggists a: fity ceats » box,six boxes $2.50; or seat on receipt of price, by the Dodd’s Dyspeps.a Co, Limited, Torrcnto, Ont., , We seldom repent of having eaten + Baoynver7y% sar ssshsabbbabhasiadiadacibbasssaaisinie | << Of Special Interest =: + to our Farmers =: Husbanding Resources A few days since I accested a farmer who was ploughing in a field of five or six acres. ‘The field hada gentle slope to the North and was protected on the South by a mountain. I happened to say to him that this field was a_ desirabie one for an orchard. Said he, when I first came here, 15 years ago, the field was all set toapple trees. I then believed that it would cost too much to fertilize and cultivate the trees, and I took them up and sold them. Had he kept the orchard and looked after it at a trifling cost each year, it would have been bearing now, and yielding him a hand- some income. ‘The farmer was carried away with the idea that he would be necessitated to make a large outlay each year, for fertilizers, losing sight of the fact that the chief fertilizer a growing tree needs—other than those stored up in the soil—is nitrogen, which is more easily and cheaply obtained by the cultivation of clover or peas, and turn— ing them under when green, than in any other way. A young orchard may be cultivated for the first ten years without cultivating the whole field, four or five turrows ploughed on each side of the row of trees and sown every year to clover or peas and turned under about the first of August, and the land kept pulverised with cultivators or barrows, until about the middle of August, not later,will afford all the nitrogen and humus the young orchard needs. In an orchard of 5 acres, one ind a half acres ploughed in the whole field is a sufficient area of cultivation for the field. 750 Ibs. of genuine sround bone, or 8 bbis. of hardwood ashes, at a cost of $8 or $10 per year, would be sufficient to produce the leguminous crops, and for ten years the outlay for fertilizers would rot have exceeded $100. By this time certain varieties such as the Ribston Pippin and Ben Davis would have been in bearing, At the price realized for app!es this year the farmer would doubtless be recouped for the for the fertilizer used in the past ten years. While lam persuaded that the farmers and fruit growers of this country are outstripping the orchardists of many other countries in cultivating, pruning, fertilizing and combatting insecticides, there are de- tails to be attended to that will in the future bring about even better results, and I think I am@safe in saying that the tuining in of green crops such as store up nitrogen and return it to the soil is one of these, and not by any means to be lost sight of. By this way, or in any way that the former produces humus for the soil, he can continually and successfully use artificial fertilizers Where commercial fertilizers have been used continually for several years the farmer is often | eird to complain thatthe rseults obtained are not as good as for- merly, when, if we had proviced humus by the ploughing in of green crops or in some other way, he would not have been dissapointed. The idea of husbanding the resources of the soil is too often lost sight of. The term “lazy” has been applied to the farmer by those who know nothing ot farming. The farmer, asa rule, is not a lazy man, but too often there is indifference, he does not stop to think or consider the mighty forces in air and soil and how best to utilize and make them pay. There is no _ business, whether in commerce or inthe professions, but requires study and attention ; without due diligence, thought planning and srudy, there will be failure, and agricul- ture is by no means an exception to the rule. We live ina time when the ingenuity of the mechanic has done and. is doing much to lighten the toil and improve the method of cultivation of the soil. Shall not the husbandman do his part in finding out or discover ing the secrets that nature: is willing and ready to yield to his research, in— dustry aud intelligence? He who would pursue the calling of agriculture ' and be successful cannot be indifferent or lazy, he must know the difference between judicious and unscientific fer-— tilizing. He must know how to drain and when to drain his land, how to conserve moisture, how to spray, prune, to apply fertilizers, how and when to cultivate the soil, and know the reasons why, and be able to appreciate the silent forces of nature ever ready to minister | to his wants.—Dr. G. E. DeWitt. —— i <<a > en DR CLIFT cures Chroni Diseases and Rupture ic ch’town, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Call or send stamp for intormation. The best way toavoid sickness is to keep healthy by taking Hoow’s Srraave ril'., the great Wood 5 i Soe In accordance with our advertise- meuts to guarantee our workmanship to the fullest extent and in every particular, and as an evidence that the Guarantee Card, which you will find in the pockets of Shorey’s gar- ments, means what it says, if you are Shorey’s Ready-to-Wear Clothing to us, we will see that you are satisfied money refunded. H. SHOREY & CO., - MONTREAL. Mfgs. of ‘* Ready-to-Wear”? Clothing. RR rr ee ae i> <a Oe THE BRAND ———__—_— Come and Nee Us Premises Opposite Post QC ffice —-—- A A A me ca a ® Qe Satisfaction or Your Money Back. | nd do not find it perfectly satisfactory in every particular and will communicate your complaints . or your | | | | | | D. A. BRUCE Phe Clathter and Furnisher : | ! \ Jas. Paton & Co, Selling Agents for Ch'town im Our New Next door to Fennel & Chandler,