fhe Daly Examiner! 1) LNT ee — eR ee ~ EAS NR Rey SE MARNE, A RENE Se om I RT AT OLE ORR IEEE. BRP" IRON ONC NO OE ARCs ORION He BA i EOE ELLIO N BIE LEA LD IE ILENE RA ORR APA PE AS ARS OLS THE DAILY EXAMINER. The shrewd advertiser is the one how, wh w ho knows n and Where to advertise, he Soma Suceaa) v FE ner t ublishin : Com ’nYV Lid MA ‘ ‘ aut bitin, 1 h i . | Ne The merchants who advertise in RATES OF SURSCRIPTION sam Examen ses are not the men sii Slee anes a ee eee a ee niocenieeeiesenencesinepsineweseiioaseinbnaaheniieieatali snail $e | to make mistakes, six Months t.00 oa as you can see for yourself, Where Months 1.00 TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “ : ” ae But you may get the benefit oe oo os This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. Single Oopies Two Cents | of their experience ~ y parto anada or the I hi Ce | | by watching ; Wein ink asa laisse tetera lake wea obec mre peed. ee ————_————— = pre nantes | how, when and where they advertise, THE WEEKLY EXAMI ent — ee advertisers, y mo ng. Iv s@aete / L > N ry 7 ™ YY y ‘ ) Some do n rt, morning te vegete VOL 36. CHARLOTTETOWN P. E. ISLAND, THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1896. NO 19, |mary dom. ; i sal vss week ly newspaper -™* | Only a few pay ‘ atest new? Js icW pay, as i they can be picked out _ . . “ — e | by the large amountof advertising they do < ‘VAR FOR JULY, 1896, , ~~ ye . — 5 A We —_—_ eee ™ a nee 2 ~~ ito st For Sale or To Rent, (COS See ne iu . i ie a X y How 'Manda Kesponded to Little Acts of x ur 1+} lay 9° ‘ . mae 7 he Brick House on Prince Street, op » Kindness, . . i ‘v. “— Mu ’ ta Ne Darl? ‘ . } : F cst low ith 5iOe o pe ae ." aul's ( _ h, Heated by hot | The author of ‘‘How Marcus Ward > | By» &5 ‘om . water, Jlectric light, ete. Apply to | Saved Oregon” tells pretty sto of : ; ifti f 2ith day, | 2.6m. p.m S. R — nia’ | V aa 7 a ae oe 2 b a It is often difficult to convince peo- : 8S. R. JENKINS f is mule that “subered & Change | ple their blood is impure, until dread- | i ee of heart. Manda, as the mule was ful carbt ‘les, abscesses, boils, scr | } - . i ia ee ae named, was the off-leader of a team of Se ne ee _ Week. {| Sau | Sun | High we aes A Ds WE |S 2 Oe ee = —_ oy ee ee sig hu ula or salt rheum, are painful proof of : < ia ets water ARE YOu GING 10 | ° e six animals, and was as beautiful as the fact It is wisdom now > whe — J } a picture. She would pull and stand ee ee ee a ee at ld tl z - bedi ly ever there is any indication of ' | . and hold the wagon, as obediently as i ‘ - = ' a | possible, but by nature she was wild i iW ‘ (18) 7 49 2 30 | and vicious, and an inveterate kicker. . ‘ ; Pu ” io a ° a ~ . x ° . ° S} : allow d herse o be s od. scem- 7 Bl as It isa fact that we have the best assortment of Midsummer Readymade Clothing in the City ae ete sing am peta : * $9 j ‘ - i sa ; T his stor nN has been selec ted from nice new pat ter ns of tweeds. made up In the latest styles, and her cSsity , DUL EXCE pt on such occasions blood to take Hood's Sarsaparilla and ei M 7 al al. & a any TN... | iO are being sold at pricas that leave hard times out of the question. “4 ome ventured within range of her | prevent such eruptions and suffering. 7 \ 2 47 | 8 23] i ST L| N 3 9 pie voit = es One —_— “I had a dreadful carbuncle abscess, gs: ¥ 2 @iees A ' 5 & stampede, Manda was struc red, fiery, fierce and sore. The doctor at- 7 \ VY é ing pic af i é ‘ -eceived ¢ — : : : ‘ ’ 10 1 | ” a flying = 7 . le and received a | tended me over seven weeks. When the i 7 i - . 7 + - * j 4 c “The z ty naan . as ier ad abscess broke, the pains were terrible, and ris Y iS | 28 | ! q — a6 GO SUVEE™ GEM ‘© | I thought I should not live through it. I . } | nor Buy your tickets by » SS j ,AX ies became gs i wing thi: r¢ : 8 r i: a so | I ey o ) Seneteat oe, ™ SS won AX, : J oS oe A\A N pp, we ue : bv “4 ' oO manage 5 that Ww heard and read so much about Hood's i3 |) M y ; 3] 4 : - fk : nd harl a every Friday at | i > sfae o . = . ok _ the ee an Sarsaparilla, that I decided to take it, and 4 | od i ; 13 | | KK aa a oa 4 ok oe ; "a yong “8 my husband, who was suffering with lay . 3) 1 22 , . _— 10t attempt to pu 1e foot to the | pois took it . is | 7 die | | a2] 24 W : W : CLARKE, . ann. boils, toc also. It soon purified our H j Frida ” | 253 Ticket Agent ; ' It was my duty that morning te 5; 5a ay | | 40{ 3 53) May 29-—d&. | bring on the ] e +k, and see th: ves , May 29 —d&w | : : ad st s. ; . ‘ é . go he loose stock, and see that i | Sunday | x | 3 sted That we have these goods also in youth’s and boys’ sizes. Prices corresponding to size —and nothing of value was overlooked in } v 2 is 6 " aeeneenninne ai . rorwu a oe . . . = a . vs ay — . } 01s 1 Ses | size 7 everyone. Our advice would be to see these goods, We are satisfied that for design and a yao oan. a ; o | J 7 oo 1 7 ‘ 7 ane yr 2y are - , a 3 : * ’ wentuptothe mwe that had come ‘ = | 7 et 7} STEAMER FASTNET. price they are not equaled in the city. ; with ws oll the lone jooruur a8 000 built me up and restored my health so 23 | sy : 31 3] 9 47 ith us ¢ % journey of 3, : ; rae | a st 10 = silat 1 | miles, and had been a faithful servant. thet, although the ester eat & wane 34/1 i ; = 03 Sie etenind X tae stien herand extmeedad ' | not be able to work hard, I have since 25/8 9 | 10 57 Steamer Fastnet commences her gan petting herand expressing MY | done the work for 20 people. Hood’s Sar- 6/8 oe ; 1 4! eeason’s work, sailing from Halifax we regret that we must leave her for the | saparilla cured my husband of the boils a Ue | SL | aft 14] TUESDAY, May 6th, and will continue | N Indians aud wolves. and we regard & @ wentertal medicine.’® 38 y | 43] 30 4g [2 oot weekly, leaving Holifax every | \ 1S ae SO ew aC ite Never before had the famous six- | “S* A¥#4 Sareneom, Latimer, Kansas, 29 \ \ lay $3 28 1 16 tu ‘sday, calling at the following ports: mule team gone out without "Manda ag 3 is : 27 1 49 | Spry Bay, prancing off as the leader. She rubbed Li} a4 726] 32 26 Sheet Harbor, me with her nose and laid iton my , 7a River, 8 shoulder, and seemed to beg as elo- saac’s Harbor quently asa dumb beast could, **Don’t 4 i. ® . , > ‘h. pe : i : jUentiy asa TRO HCAs coun, ‘ on o P fF. is ann hallway Canto, That if Readymades are not good enough for you we can turn out to your crder, the leading leave mo behind.” and with it all Sarsaparilla = & richat, | ' . : ca ‘re was a kindly look in her eye that —. a custom made goods of the city. Our custom department excells all others in the newness and raha ee aaa ‘ a Nar e76 (nt | eaoOns Fientheetinentn ADIN uninan c aw kesbur} \ ‘ P ag - : had never seen there betore, > One True Blood Purifier, ruggists. dint anak Dasma ae ek eon 1d, umount of cloths shown, and in the class of workmen employed said ‘ncitiie Sina hi Mie . . th sins of this Railway will run daily Souris : _— J oe ee ee ee wee H A Pi a tammie aaa Sendays exces ted) as foliows.— ~ time, then I patted her neck and 00d0’s Pills casy w operate. ‘2 ceuts: 3 f Charlottetown and RX / walked a little back, but c antly Q ee sie Sentinea | Y y a daiittie back, DU Comanams y on > . ; st ~ . guard. It was then that the mule GX f = oan ive - I Freight solicited, Low rates. he Fashionable ailors turned and looked at me, and at the ' BALE AU ward. I 3 | T I same time held up the wounded leg. bf ; W. W. CLARKE, Agent. \ X Cautiously then I ventured te take AT 2 e . cece Ch’town, April 20, 1896—dy | / hold of the wounded leg. I rubbed it BEAUTIF OTs PT é 9 1D12 10 | and fondled it withouwt her showing WH ENESS oa oe ..! 9 O11] 48 nS any symptom of resentment. I got IT : 7 1@..N \ 8 28/10 58 instruments, sewed the wound up,| @ W#lCw vou 6O MUCH DESIRE 5 mS 2S ..H 8 18/10 43 BOARDING & TRAINING STABLES sewed bandages tightly about the leg, *_ =1O SEB AFTER THE 5 34 7 52 7 54110 07 : : a CLOTHES HAVE BEEN 5 44 7 5S) fr 7 49) a Grafton Street, Opposite Court House. made a capital dressing, and we WASHED, CAN BEST BE Emer 7 48) 9 57 pr \ e& started. leadia ‘Manda. Sl n SECURED BY USING 5 ww 8 OS FF reetow 7 381 9 42 —_— . . ee ae ee a ae sa Soa) see et JOUN M. NICHOLSON, Prop’r. | = began to bear her weight upon the SUNLIGHT 6 SS 8 MAr.\ g f Lv. 7 00} 8 45 guest opened a public Stable on Gratton | wounded limb, and had no ditticulty 7 sh10- O17 } SSie { Ar | 6-06) 8 10] Sees dad Coles te et ttattr ns eee: | | in kooping, wp with the toxin. i + MW) 22). . M ” 2 7 Pr peas. tr: r break or keepin road condition yi When the bandages became mis- : = n iy ao aa , 16 13 os led ta a ee also at bs placed anyone of us could stop in the G , 1) my Pere . i Q | ; Novii—dy&w 3m { : ee eens road and without assistance readjust ) 36 I 13 ' ; 501 6 oe : DP ES EY SD them, the mule standing patient!y the 10 00, 2 o8! LA 2131540] = — 3 = - _ : ——= : ——— Ee $$ ee while. ‘She finished the journey with SOAP 1 4 “~) . 05) 5 0D { a ‘ 2 3 - 1s, and no handsomer animal ever or _~. bb eo ik oe ee ee eee HELLO IN THE ROCKIES. __ Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report ‘emeeetd. gcvees the whieh She Wee Itis alsowellto | Books for : ae Weat22 £2£22222242 22522252525 5255E38 | Ce ees ot aaa sd remember that |'Weagpers. Pet A Pp. M. ay | Dimecuttios Eupesionced in Rénntan & Wise | = never known to kick afterward, and clothes washed with every 12 “Sunlight” al a» onl ; 2 Be = | Uxpe « re ee a ee ee aa a } this Soap are save ’ rs sent to : = = “4 2 = Po = = | Over Kock-Ribbed Mountains. | erg . change : 7 _ = — a injury; 80 Lever Bros., weg 1% 3 | { 5 Xx = let stock expression.—Galveston News, ands, T aus 7 2 387 .} 8 37) 4 47 > A description by J. W. Dickerson of the ; ship " sania . ea - ae This Soa cannot Liven LL wf S10 4 WAr.1,, I 8 15 4 15 = = srunning of a telephone line from Lead- | . a : . hurt anything, will be sent, or a $l 466 ; Mts } Ar! 8 101 400 ville to Aspen shows that telephone come The Relation of pate ont ner te the Spread a er for 50 9 OF 4 331.. Mor 7 42:3 0 struction in the Rockies is not all plain Prof. Abl wre ae : ot a 9 2 4 54)|..St. Peters ..... 7 20, 2 3 sailing It took two months to cover the rof. Abbe says that however it may 10 16) 3 28\.. Bear River ...es 6 46 2 08 entire length, ‘forty-eight miles. In or- | VERB clash with accepted theories, the fact 11 G0. 6 90! . Souris 6 r 1 20 dinary construction the poles would be | has been established that the windsand | , oN sub “% as ~— 1} ° eo — : set forty-two to the mile, but at certain AB LUTELY PURE ‘ai : ‘egar or Dove Bevtes, aac F- Ss t. a a “ i oe : ’ eo the rain must not be regarded asthe | ou Ss & 3 40; .Mt. S r $10 358 M: . | 1 } c (| ] r t} } f ong! — ee CReNe WEEe NOP: 1 $s ‘ means by which diseases are spread ar 4 8) 7 171 2 3 MLV De Dal JY ite pure 1ase 0 sary, the number would sometimes be t np between places that are any consider- € T vi bes 16 UO 5 Wi. “ q on 2 10 paeonene = seventy-five to the mile. The ! HISTORICAL CRYPTOGRAMS. eae a 1 ; ij — a tg Prof Al i Nes EA E . : ‘® ca - ’ ‘ | CY members of the construction gang had ' . A south side architect has a sma able distance apart. ro A. ODE a. M A. M.iP. M. one of our K ASY Cc OUC HES to be as expert as axemen as they were | =Mforts of Various People to Communicate | 4, whois very bright. The young- points out that there was an excellent | ¢f % 33 a A. : . linemen, for when timber was encoun- | Messages in a Secret Manner. ster’s latest fad is punching colored opportunity to study the subject in ; ; Al @ a) ‘ s os The bring with them a te el- tered a path of 200 feet on each side of The discovery of the key of the paper with the fancy steel punches 1889-90, when the influenza spread ; | lr 7 OO a> the line had to be cleared in order that j he cide rthat secret message sent by the conspirators | conductors use. ‘The architect had | over the whole civilized world. Its ; the wires might not be broken when the progress was so regular that for a long Trainsare ran by Eastern Standard Time A. McDONALD, D. POTTINGER, superintendent, Gen Mgr Govt. Rys, Charlottetown. Moncton, N B. Raiway Office, June 3u, 1396. =e TIME TAN rOR FERRY STEAMERS 7 ' r *cuthport will ply on the Extn West Rivers until farther notice 4 i hai EAST RIVER. x bp : Wr . ’ 4 Prince Street Wharf on every uw i ; 2a | : ‘i iver @t 0 OCIOCK, Pp. m., ret ng I ay for Charlottetown, ea 7 fl aya n’s Wharf at 730 a. m, cu Gg H ggarty’s and H ckey’s W barves aviog Charlottetown for East river al 3 p.m., and making return trip. I steamer v also leave Prince Stree Ue ' © VY ra I r on Saturday at ws a aving Hayden’s Wharf for Cuar 7.30 a.m, calling at Haggar ty’sand Hickey’s Wharves— making re turn tri p at 3 p. m. from Prince Street. The steamer will run to Mount Stewar e ¥y Giternate week as t Lilies may suit WEST RIVER. Will leave Charlottetown for West River Brid m., calling at ge, Thursday, at 4 p We when required. Friday morn- ng 'eaving West River Bridge for Cher- : at 7.30, calling at Westville ma y return trip from Charlottetown to West River Br ROCKY ige at 4 o’clo tk, p.m. POINT. T steamer E fin will leave Prince St. Ww f y (St ndays excepted ), as fol- lows :—At 6.30 a. m., 8.00 a. m., 9.20 a. m, Illa. m., 2 p. m., 4 p. m., and 6.00 ~ Will leave Rocky Point as follows :—At 830 a.m., 10.00 a.m., 12.€0 m., 5.00 p. m., 7.00 p. m. From Charlottetown at 9.00 ” 7.00 a. m., noon, 3.00 p j Sucdavs a.m. 12.45 p.m., 200 p.m. and 4,00 p.m. From Rocky Point—10.00 a. m., i Pp. ™ 3.00 p- ™ and 5.30 p-. ™. Sé LHPORT FERRY. Tie steamer Hillsborough will ply on the Southport Ferry till further sotice as f., Sw Sundays excepted, leaving Charlotte- laily at 6.30 a.m., and every half rup to 10 p.m. Leaving Southport at © 45 a. m., making half hourly trips up io 10.05 p. m. Sunday trips :—Boat eaves Charlottetown at 7 a.m., making half rly trips upto 8.35 p. m. Steamer iia foc feat oe p-tolyl tal «|| “ «il ing of “money well spent,’— Contentment. | QQ O = = z mr = ~ O Z fpf fq gf al ea afte taf a = =: a es —— eee ee ee ee PaVaQ____C_oqJ_oo_n eee ee ees et Se SS SS ——— — > {> i — i — i i i oS Se Se ee ee ——- SS Ta uae eerie hUSOPrhlCUCOChCUCOC—CUC VOCUcC OCU ODMCTOCUCUr TO TO OCU SCrlCUC _ = oe a = = = a _ a = oe = = = ~ - — = - - = ~ ; ; ’ v ’ ; ° ° ’ ’ * - ae “TQ PAINT THE LILY,” USE BURRELL'S Prepared Zinc White, FOR SALE BY FENNELL & CHANDLER. Charlottetown, June 4, 1896. Aes LY & 60. i. STANW Wholesale Wine & Liouor Merchan iTALIAN WAREHOUSE, Hollis & 48 Upper Water St HALIFAX, N. 5. laid off from 11.15 to 12 o’clock, noon ‘ ly (l4)oct On Tuesday and Friday of each week the d. 0. BOX. 476. , . steamer will run off time to accommodate the travelling public. ——""s 7 Come to Our Yard And examine the contents. We can supply you with all kiads of lum It Will Pay You. Boards, Shingles, Scantling, Stud ding, etc. A lot of la.bs just landed. JAMES BARRETT, Washes, clothes ; ish than Connolly’s, Wharf, mays one to five minutes. Craloitetowa, Juaz 5, 1396 PLUMBING AND HEATING Now is the time to have your house heated and plumbel, for in the fs!1 it will be too late, as everybody will be in a rush t So if you are contemplating having any 0 give satis t own work, and can afford to do it cheaper than any others in the business. oughly understand every detail of our business. mowers and other machinery repaired. hen and it will cost you a great deal more. f the above work done, we are prepared to Remember we do all our We thoru Jobbing done at short notice. Law- We also handle the National Dish Washer. rinses and dries the dishes perfectly of either large or small family in from No labour, no mess, noslop, no wetting of hands or spoiling of Will produce a finer pol- galvanized faction in all its branches at a very low figure. no broken or chipped dishes, no wiping necessary. can be done by band. It is well and durably made of sheet steel, making it stroag and substantial. Best of references. McINNIS & THORNE; PHILHARMONIC BUILDING trees were blown over by the terrific blasts which at times prevail in that re- gion. A great deal of the comparative slowness of the installation was owing to the inability of the workmen to labor in such a rarified atmosphere. At one point the wires were strung at an eleva- ticn of 12,060 feet above the sea level. In such an altitude the lineman soon be- came completely tired; after he has climbed two or three poles he has to take along rest to recuperate his energies. The preparation of the holes for the , poles, which would have been tedious in | similar ground even in an mosphere, was an_ especially fatiguing operation. It was eften neces- sary to blast a hole for the pole by the use of giant powder, and an ex-miner, who had had an extensive experience with explosives, was assigned to the job. The digging of one pole hole would sometimes occupy him a whole day, working honestly. powder were used on the line for this purpose. When the Continental divide was reached, the poles had to be abandoned, and the wires were placed in a subd-mar- ine cable, which was buried in a two- foot trench for a distance of 7,600 feet. The advisability of abandoning the aerial construction at this point was demon- strated by the experience of the company that maintain the Denver and Leadville line. At that point on that line, Mos- quito Pass, the peles were originally set 100 feet apart. As soon as the wires were covered with sleet they promptly snapped, and the line was useless. Double the number of poles was then used, with the same result. The space between the poles was then reduced to fifteen feet, but as soon as the sleet came the line was swept down flat. Eventually «n underground cable was laid for two and one-half miles, and there has been no trouble The rapidity and size of these ice almost incredible to those who have had no experience with mountain telephone lines. The foreman of the construction gang remarked, when questioned about this difficulty: ‘*Why, man, the sleet comes down Mosquito Pass in such a way that a telephone wire would be as big around as your body in no time.’’ In winter the linemen detailed to make repairs travel on snowshoes. If they are overtaken by a storm or find they must remain out over night, they push on for the nearest refuge, which is ordi ‘ted cabin formerly oc- sipie d hy some vrespector miner, All the ss’ tis, 2 tand the linemen are urgisaed maps, which tindic:.te vhere suclter is to be obtained.—£t. Louis Globe-Deiaocrat. since. accumulations are iarily a des ve dw.l A Ways Out. “So you called at Mr. Blank’s about that littie bill?’ said the merchant to me i Kn. tiie ¢ 7 : 3, 5S 7. Su did you find out?” “Mr. Elsa lik. HOTEL ACADIA. Grand Tracadie Beach, P.E.!. OPENS JUNG 15 1896 Unrivalled as a health and pleasure re sort. Terms, $2.00 per day ; $8 to $10 pe week, I C. HALL, Manager. Charlottetown, June 4, 1896—3 mos dy ordinary at- | slow and | Over 300 pounds of | CSD cee eeweneneeeeee oeeeoae ce ee cower meme ——— John son Charlottetown and Svuris ] in the Transvaal previous to the Jame- son raid, and the effect it may have in the trials, has led James Payn to tell about other famous cryptegrams in an article in the London Illustrated News. Que of the earliest methods of secret writing was to shave the head of the messenger and write the message on the scalp. After the hair had grown the messenger was sent to his destina- tion, where the hair was again removed and the message brought to light. The Spartans wound a strip of paper around a staff, wrote lengthwise the staff, and when removed the message on the paper could not be read until it was wound on another staff the same shape and size’ as the first one. Charles I. was beheaded through the evidence afforded by cryptograms that were too simple. Sympathetic ink has been much used, but it has always been danger- ous. Mr. Paynsaysthatthe only thorough- ly undecipherable cryptogram is the simplest. To use it the two persons must have bo@ks exactly alike. Any book will do. In writing a message the first letter on the first page is a, the first on the second page is b, and so on. The second message wiil begin where the first Jeeves aff in the beok. ‘ For Weak Backs, Lame Backs, Painful Backs or any kind of Bad Backs, Manley’s Celery-Nerve Compound is the Great Back Strengthener, Wm. R » 5 Seve Street, sori Be, ee ears troubled with. - i enough to try ey’s Celery-Nerve Compound, and, afer taking two or three bottles, the ~ entirely left me, and I have no return of it for 8 months For: sale by Geo, E,Hughes and Johns on and —_——- We Recommeni anyone having trouble with their eyes to get them properly tested, and if needing glasses, have them fitted to suit. No expense incurred to find ovt if you need them. Evenings by s)«cial ment. G.H. TAYLOR, Graduate Optician. North Side Queen Square, Ch’town. COTTAGE TO LET. appoint just finished a series of blue-paper drawings which represented many days’ labor, and the next morning went cheerfully to get them from his study. He never got farther than the door, for on the floor sat his son and heir ina floating pape stars, crosses and crescents. ‘*Ain’t they pretty?” calmly remarked sea of blue the infant. ‘‘I’se just finishing the last sheet. Want some more.” He did not get more. He received something else.—-Chicago Daily News. Wren’s Nestin His Caffs, Over in Montrose there is a foreman of a printing office who has a series of ‘pigeon holes” back of his desk. One day he pulled off his cuffs, rolled them up and placed them in the aforesaid pigeon holes. Soon a little wren flew through the window of the office and decided that inside the rolled cuffs would be a good nesting place. She was not disturbed, and is now sitting on her little eggs, the little window being left open for her. No one is al- lowed to molest the bird or disturb its rest.—New York Press. Collecting Kent. Commend me to the old lady in Roch- ester who sought a novel and successful means of coJlecting her house rent Inst week. She was an old lady of ideas and a knowledge of human nature gleaned from a lifetime of experience with the world. She owned a house and lot in Rochester, and the income from it was the substance upon which she depended for life’s necessities. It was rather an ostentatious house and lot, and the ten- ants were persons with a reputation to sustain, although apparently embarrassed for ready money. Two months’ rent was due, and the agent was not able to col- lect. The old lady said it was simple enough. She would collect it herself. Now, she wasn’t a stylish nor an artistic old lady, but she was sturdy and imper- turbable, and he: jroportions were ample and her spirit unfaltering. She rang the door bell at an early hour the other morning and inquired for the head of the family. The servant glowered at her and said he was not to be seen yet for two hours, because the family had not yet risen. ‘Tle carly caller was cheerful, and said she'd sit on the doorsteps and wait. Finally she was granted an audience with her tenant, who put her off with smooth promises. ‘‘I’ll just sit here and wait till you can pay it,’’ replied the righteous collector, and she settled her- self once more on the doorstep, took some knitting from her basket and prepared to spend the day. She made a quaint-lock- ing picture, and all the neighbors won- dered. When anyone came within con- versing distance and stared rudely at her she explained in a friendly way that she was waiting till the tenants paid their rent. She looked truthful, and no ore doubted her, and her plan worked like a time there was a general belief that the active germs of influenza were carried as dust in the air by the winds, or per- haps by the upper currents. This idea was dissipated by several memcirs that went to show that the wind and weather were entirely subordinate factors, and that the spread of the disease followed the line of travel, especially the principal steamboat and routes, and that, therefore, the germs were carried by diseased individuals, or by articles that had been used by or had come into contact with them, and not by the winds. It is quite possible that germs may be carried on the air for a few feet or rods from one individual to another, but not for many ! A great railroad miles. number of epidemics, such as yellow fever, smallpox and cholera, have been traced back to the direct importation of their contagia (whether animate or inanimate) by human agencies. The strongest confirmation of Prof. Abbe’s deduction is found in the fact that ex- perimental data show that few disease germs can maintain their vitality more than a few hours when freely exposed to the air and sunshine, as they pr »b- ably would be if they were carried in the atmosphere as minute particles of dust, Lost His Pedals on the Hill, Last Sunday a fat man, new to wheeling, set forth upon his wheel to perspire and be happy. In of events he cameto Troost avenue. He turned into it from Fourteenth street, and a worried look crossed his face, because a new wheelman is gen- erally afraid of a runaway on an asphalted hill. His worry was not groundless, for before he had gone half way down the hill his pedals escaped him and he sailed away. As it the church at the i of the hill were over, and the poured forth. The wheelman saw death or a broken the course : . ‘ chanced, services in the congregation staring him in the face, and yelled like a man witha bumble bee in his pocket. The crowd scattered like chaff before him, and he sailed over the Fifteenth street railway scared rabbit. hills he flew, aster several times, until a hole in the pavement in Nineteenth street tossed him off, andthe wheel went on alone for half a block.—Kansas City Star. collar bons tracks like a Down the succeeding ~~ narrowly missing dis- New Prices in Watches We have lately received a nice assortment of charm. ‘The rent was paid long before sun-down and she ambled home more than ever convinced that nothing is im- possible. —Philagelphia Press. OOD’S Sarsaparilla has over and over again proved by its cures, when all other preparations failed, that it is the One True BLOOD Purifier. Twelve dollars will buy you a nice Tweed Suit, made from your measure in A nice cottage on pipvey Seed East, now decupied hy Rey D H ige. Possession given 15th July, Applytod D Taylor, Book. binder, July3 tf b any style asked for, See them before they are all gone.—S, A, McDonald, jy l6—3i Silver Watches for Ladie’s and Gentlemen, which were bought right, and can- not fail to please in price. | Ca}! and inspect them. i ' W. N. TANTON'S Great George Street, NEAR QUEEN SQUARE, ee fine steamship is now running regularly between Montreal and Charlottetown, calling at Quebec, Father Point, Gaspe and Perce. Elegantly Furnished for the *assenger >Trade—kieciric Lights throughont. Freight carried at reasonable rates, and handled Great care. Special rates made for Dry Goods, or any large quantity or merchandize. with Eggs Carried Very Cheap. The sailing dates are:— From Ch’town, lst. June . ™s ‘ , From Montreal. &th June ead | * lSth 6th JInly 29h « 2h 6 13th July 3rd Ang, 27th ” ith 10:h Ang = 24:t « 14th Sept. 4th Sept. CARVELL BROS., Ag nts. May 28th—2aw (1 4), 2m “Pare ldauitea U FLOUR Makes the Best Bread, Takes the Most Water. Ceeeeeeerne j seeeeee For sale in half barrel hags at all the principal grocery stores in the city. —eod DR. H. D. JOHNSON EYE AND EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Office -- Bent Street Aug 16,°94 ly nly 2. °06 Farm jor Sale, HE subscriber offers for sale the farm situated one mile west of Mount Stewart on St Peter's Road, containing in all 75 acres of land, 17 acres dyked mareh, and the balance with the exception of five acres, cleared jand, Two springs of water on the premises, good house and new barn 45 ft x 22 ft. and other outhouses; also a good garden. Close to shipring, and to schools and railway statiOn, Property is frec of incambrance. Apply te MRS, PETER McKENZIE, uy 10—1m F |