The Hal Famer cemerans ISSUEZX E. ERY AF TER iw N THE OFFIC®@ OF The Examiner r Publishing Company —- RATES OF SLBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) @ne Year ine 7 tials .... 84.00 “ix Meonths.... ey shes eeceks Gee Pearow Te is che cau nes aebbecice Seuso> ae Gee TGs cc dncecnae coos QS sent post paid to any part of Canada or the O uited States. THE WEEKLY EXAMINER iasned every Friday morning. It is made up of watter which has appeared in the Daily and is a firstciasss newspaper containing alithe latest news Subscription $1.00 a year DEATH OF LINCOLN. Oa the 14th of April, 1855, just thirty. Abrabam Lincoln, Presi- dent of the United States, was shot by Johan Wilkies Booth in Ford’s Theatre, Washington. After committing this most foul murder, the assassin leaped to the staze from the box in which the Presid:nt and others were sitting. Iu doing so the spar on his boot caught in the drapery and he fell breaking one of the bones of his instep. On rising he was identified by one of the actors, who was repeating some lines from the play of the evening called “Ou- American Cousin.” Were it not for this accident the assas- @o of one of America’s greatest men might have remained undiscovered and un uanished. The President died on the f Jlowing day and Booth was pursued and shot on the moring of tne 26th by Sergeant Corbett, iv a byrning barn, whilst threat- ening to shoot the first mag who would attem pt to arrest him. T :e nation went wild with anger as the new: of the murderous deed fell upon the people’s ears; and the death of Booth two years ago, Ma pot half satisfy the universal desire for vengeance. The name of the martyred President was op every lip and the account of the horrid deed was everywhere told with mistened ex? aad bated breath, Pew men have ever ved who have been so loved by a peopie as Lincoln bas been loved by the people of the United States. In the long rol! of the names of the illustrious eons of that country, there is no brighter or more glorious name then that of Abraham Lincoin. —— ITEMS OF INTEREST. Scatter sassafras bark among dried frvit to keep it from becoming wormy. Brazil is a Portuguese word signify- ang “‘a live coal.’’ It was given in al- lusion to the abundance of red dyewood in the forests. It has been estimated that over 2, 000,- 000 acres are devoted to the maintenance ef deer in Scotland, and that about 5,000 stags are annually killed. Two Kentuckians in a contest for the championship of the Cumberland moun- tains at horseshoe pitching continued play for three days and were tied then. The oyster grows from the inside by throwing out every year rings or circles of a.caleareous substance, and experts can tell where the growth begins and exds for the year. Christian Kliervend and Anna Poffen- roth called upon a Colfax, Wash., jus- tice of the peace and asked him to con. duct the ceremony of marriage in the German tongne. He procured a tutor, stucied for an hour to memorize the service and fulfilled their wish. The London Telegraph tells a curious story about a young curate of evangelic- al views who recently committed the indiscretion of smoking in the street. A woman, one of his parishioners, who aw him, was so shocked that she im- mec liately renounced her belief in the ‘hirty-nine Articles. Magdalen college, Oxford, has refused to zecept a tablet to Gibbon, the his- torian, who was a student there. Gib- bon had a very low opinion of his col- lege, and left on record 140 years ago that life there *‘stagnated in a round of college business, Tory politics, personal stories and private scandal.’’ = Dyspepsiais } completely banished from the sys- tem by the use of Adams Tutti Frutti. Save coupons inside of wrappers for latest books and prizes. Allow > palmed offon you. noimitations= to be palmec 2 an tl ee La a Man Lh THE NATURE AS AN ARTIST. Stone Formations on Which Were Found Some Wonderful Pictures, Pliny, a well known writer of about the time of Christ, mentions having seen an agate the lines and markings of which formed a perfect picture ef Apollo and the nine muses, Pliny says that the little children recognized it on sight. In this wonderful natural picture, as well as the artificial drawings, Apollo was represented seated in the midst of the muses, harp in hand. Majolus, another writer of high stand- ing, saw an agate in the collection of a jeweler at Venice which, when polish- ed, showed a perfect picture of 2 shep- herd with acrook in hand and cloak | thrown loosely over his shoulders, In the church of St. John, at Pisa, Italy, there is a piece of stone heavily marked with red, blue and yellow spar, the lines representing an old man wth heavy white beard, with a bell in his hand, seated beside a small stream. To the worshipers at St. Jchn’s it is known as the St. Anthony stone, the picture upon it being a perfe ct likeness of that saint, even to the minor details of tunic and bell. In 1605 some quarrymen in Italy burst open a slab of marble, both sides of which contained ar image of St. John the Baptist covered with the skin of a camel. Everything was true to nature —a single exception, the saint had only been provided with one leg and foot. How, when or upon what pretext the Turks were allowed to gain possession of the wonderful relic the writer’s au- thority fails to state. It only adds that the miraculous production is now'in the temple of St. Sophia at Constantinople. eens after the great Johnstown flood D. S. Wingrove, superintendent of the sicitts yard at the penitentiary at Baltimore, found a slab cf marble with lines and veins which made a perfect picture of the fated city cf Johnstown and the surrounding countrr. The sky is plainly marked, as are also the hills end mornteizg surtocn Ging the town Piles upon fis of fees. marked, with an cecasional stceple or toppling wall overhanging the ecere of awful de- struction. Takch all in all, the ecien- tists consider it ene cf the most wender- ful natural formations ever found in Amcrica.—Brocklyn Eagle. ~e*? LLL Futat6o Patehes Thirteen American cities have now éxperimenied with the system of vacant lot farming which the mayor of Detroit invented three years ago as a means of helping destitute citizens to help them- selves. The cities are, besides Detroit, New York, Buffalo, Seattle, St. Louis, Toledo, Boston, Brooklyn, Cincinnati, Duluth, East Orange, St. Paul and Min- neapolis, and in every one of them enough of benefit has been derived from the innovation to warrant a continua- tion of it. Next summer it is believed that the plan will be adopted in many other places. Its chief advantages are that it gives a ready means of distin- guishing the worthy poor who are will- ing to work from those to whom any form of industry is distasteful and that it is a form of charity which tends little or not at all toward pauperizing those tc whom it is extended.—New York Times. ER rere Cripple The iron grasp of scrofula has no mercy upon its victims. This demon of the blood is often not satisfied with causing dreadful sores, but racks the body with the pains of rheumatism until Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures. ‘‘Nearly four years ago I became af- flicted with scrofila and rheumatism. Viade Running sores broke out on my thighs. Pieces of bone came out and an operation was contemplated. I had rheumatism in my legs, drawn up out of shape. I lost ap- petite, could not sleep. I was a perfect wreck. I continued to grow worse and finally gave up the doctor’s treatment to Well take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Soon appetite came back; the sores commenced to heal, My limbs straightened out and I threw away my crutches. I am now stout and hearty and am farming, whereas four years agoI was a cripple. I gladiv rec- ommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla.”” URBAN HAMMOND, Table Grove, Illinois. Hoods Sarsaparilia Isthe One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. ——— — cure live ar «ills, easy to Hood’s Pills take, eas easy to 0 oper ite. 2Qhe. TO LET. —_— The western halfofthe house on King Sf., formerly owned by Wiliam Dodd. contain ing eight large room, at present occupied by Mrs. Koughar. ‘the house is in gooi order. Possession given the fifth of May vext. Apply to Joun ‘Trainer on the premises or to Thornes. DAILY M4 alo sid ULawaer .¢ UP eS bees merase EXAMINER, ___ JAPANESE MOTHERS. They Thoroughly Understand the Tender Care of Children. It sometimes happens that one sees a young American mother so utterly unfit for the training of children and for the duties of motherhood that one cannot but wonder why it pleased Providence ever to give her the care of little ones, This happens sometimes in the case of really estimable women, and I have beard a young mother say sadly that she never qrite knew what todo with baby, it was such a queer little thing, and she was half afraid to touch it. Other young things in the shape of puppies, kittens, or even colts, she knew all about and was quite at home with, but her own thild remained a sort of curious and un- canny little being to her till his baby ays were over and he began to share in his mother’s hobbies in a boyish sort of way. Now, in Japan a mother like this is an impossibility,, She is got interested in politics or in social reforms, neither is she bent on being a social success, nor deyoted to any scientific philanthropic work, as are somany of her western sis- ters. She is par excellence a mother, and cne who cannot be rivaled in any other country. No children are so well and carefully tended as hers, and she is patient and gentle with them, never threatening them, if they are unruly, with corporal punishment, nor raising her voice and scolding them in the un- pleasant way one so often hears in other countries. The Japanese mother is a born kindergaertnerin and enters into the lives of her little ones just as easily as the westery kindergarten teacher who has undergose a long period of study and ‘raining. To her the+duties of motherhood come naturally, for among her nation women whe will make good mothers are chosen as wives, and thus in the course of nature the quality of motherliness is intensified as time gocs on, and the race of mothers becomes very euperior, Nowhe-e is motherhood as nenpeoted as in Japan, and nowhere does the mother receive more attention from both her husband and her children. She is regarded as the maker of the race, and her maternal dutics are considered to be exceedingly honorable and to entitle her to the utn:oct ccusideration and affec- tion. —Pittsburg Dispatch. ONE OF THE MEAN ONES. Might Have Been Mean Enough to Have Stolen Lis Inheritance. Four or five preachers, at a preachers’ meeting, or, rather, after the meeting was over, were discussing some of the peculiar people they had been brought into contact with during their various pastorates. ‘‘The very meanest man I ever knew,”’’ said a pastor, whose nasal twang be- trayed his Yankee origin, ‘“was a mar- ried man, though, asa rule, the really mennest men are bachelors fcr obvious reasons. “This party was fairly well to do and expected to be enriched by the death of an old uncle to the extent of at least $106,600. Hewas a man of about 45 and was, on the surface, an extremely pious kind of a man, with strict ideas of biblical interpretations. At this time the rich old uncle—a millicnaire, by the way—was approaching the scrip- tural limit of human existence—three score and ten—and his pious nephew had begun to figure on what he was go- ing to do with his share of the old man’s fortune. The latter, however, did not hold to scriptural interpretations, but” held en until he was 91 yearsold. Then he departed, and as per expectation, when the estate was settled up the pious nephew received $100,000, more or less. ‘*Hoe ought to have been satisfied, of course, but he wasn’t, and after mouth- ing around about his hard luck, he finally capped the climax by suing the trustees of the residue of the estate, which had been willed to charity, for the interest on $100,000 at 6 per cent for the time that elapsed between the three score and ten limit and the date of the ae of his uncle, a peried of 21 years 3 months, the whole amount of interest bes ing $127,500. He even went so far as to swear that 6 per cent was too low, and that he could have got 8 right along for the whole time if the old man had ie da when the Bible said he ought to d Being in the fam- ily sawever, he was willing to discount the rate of interest 25 per cent. Now, aid you ever hear of anything worse than that?’’ And not a man there did.—Wash- ington’ Star. SOS Ginieay pees e Break Up a Gold in Time BY USING PYRY-PEGTORE The Quick Cure for COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, BRON- CHITIS, HCARSENESS, etc. Mrs. JoszrH Norwick of 6S Sorauren Ave. +» Loren ‘to , Writes: **Pyny-Pectoral has never failed to cure my childre n of croup after s doses. It cured myself of a long-stand gh after several other remedies had ‘fai aa it has aiso proved an excellent cough cure for my family. I prefer it to anv other medicine fur coughs, croup or hoarseness.” H. O. Barzovr, of Litt] e Rocher, N.B., writes: ‘As a cure Sk rw coughs Pyny-Pectoral is the best selling medic ine T ‘have; my cus- tomers w {i have we other. Large Bottle, 25 Cts. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CoO., Lrp. Proprietors,- MonTREaL ‘ HORSE TALK. George Parberry has located at one of the Baltimere tracks. F. E. Wilson, Punxsutawncy, Pa., has bought Acolyte, 2:21. "rainer John Kinney may go to Point Breeze course this spring. Binge n (3), 2:124, now shades over 15.2 hands without plates. It is reported that Mr. C. W. Williams will buy the track at Galesburg, Ils. Ruby, 2:1934, a sister to Stamboul, 2:0744, has been booked to Alcantara. Budd Doble is at the head of a com- pany which is to manufacture pneumatic tires. Sheridan, 2:20%, the old time trot- ter, who secured his record in 1880, is dead. Allerton was shipped to Lexington recently. Brook Curry will have him in charge. The dam of Colonel Kuser, 2:1114, has been bred to the Electioneer stal- lion Hugo, 2:24. Orrin Hickok, the California trainer, is to move east in April with the Stokes string of trotters. A. H. Moore of thé Cloverdell stock farm may start his fast mare, Vinette, 2:0914, this spring. C. N. Payne is jogging Agnus, 2:19, by Sherman, on the road. She will soon be given track work. A suitable headstone has been erected to mark the grave of Charley B, 2:25, who died last November. John Kinney will train Miss Carroll, 2:2234, by Santa Claus; Amboise, 2:2614, and some youngsters of great promise. The fast 8-year-old Leavitt, by Mo- quette, 2:10, owned by E. H. Greeley, Ellsworth, Me., will be trained by E. i Fishen ARE YOU A VICTIM (f Terrible Kidney Troubles ? Or Have You Any Symptoms of the Disease ? Paine’s Celery Compound Will Quickly Banish Them. The Only tm GH Cure for tig Awful Affliction. This most insidious and deceptive of all diseases is on the increase, and is cutting down its thousands every year. It works for many months on its victims before they are aware of their true condition. Thea there is fear and a dread alarm, and some physician is hurriedly consulted. Experimenting on the suffering une is then proceeded with, but scon—too soon—tbe verdict of “incurable” is rendered and the | victim is left to die. Medical scence, up to the present, can boast of but one positive cure for kidney ailments such as Bright’s Disease and Dia- betes; itis Paine’s Celery Compound, a medicine that goes right to the seat of the awful and dreaded malady’. After a short trial of Paine’s Celery Compound the sufferer from kidney trou- bles get rid of backache, headache, con- stipations, bloating, and that constant cal] to urinate. The wonderful Compound acts gently on the kidneys, the Jiver, the stomach and all the organs of digestion. | and brogs them into perfect and harmon- | ious relationship with each other. Paine’s Celery Compound will cure you, as it as cured others; no case i+ too difficult for i's life-giving virtues if yon desire a cure and ‘freedom from. all surely } | fatal results pnt your trust at once in Paine’s Celery Compound, the only relia- | | ble kidney cure in the wsrld. Avoid al] | substitutes. = | | i ERR Ee soe a ‘'~ “ OPO AT - ots $ AINSI Ra 2mps, - han 4 . “exis, \came\ rif : * "> \, & Vein” bet Te F 4 A ke Colds, ache Je ae tae: ee ce DPIARRHGA, DYSENTERY, nS i + 2 ' andail LOW EL Coo OMP Lod AINT S, +3 ‘ 4 Sure, Safe, Quick Cure fortheso 43, trou ies 1S we ® “3 fe’ s “Pain rR Nove et -+3- at Ke af 2 we o' io “> “s a t (PERRY DAvis’.) ane. Used Internally and External=z. 43- Tio Sices, 25e. and 50c. hotties. 3 (Sete tenets tot Jeg nS ; — ey tala hes “iv ee See ww ww -o CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 24, 1897. Johnson’s Anodyne_ Linimenti the original. it is the best in use. It is unlike any other. It is the oldest on earth. It is superior to all others. It is the great vital and muscle nervine. It is for internal as much as externai usc. “i is used and endorsed by ali athletes. t is a soothing, healing, penetrat é It is wk 3% ev re cecther choul uld wa ea isthe tocen: It is used and recommended by ma ny physicians everywhere. It is the Universal Houschol: a Re medy from infancy to old age. It is safe to trust that which has satisfied gencration after ge ovata It is made from the favorite prescription of a good old fami < Itis marvellous how many ailments it will quickly relieve, heal and cure, Our Book “Treatment for Diseases and Care of Si ck -” Sold by all Druggists. 1. S. JOIZNSON & CO., 22 Custom House Street, Soe Man, : Sa ns CARD OF THANKS. a es at 1S ly phy Sician, ~ For the many favors received from ny numerous friends customers during the year 1896, and would wish them a = py and‘ Prosperous New Year, and that they may all continge to buy and drink the celebrated Special Blend of Empire Tea, that I sell. Also as many more, invited to participate jn the pleasures of drinking Empire Blend during 1897, T. 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EE WNED MEAN a ueen -Street GENZ SOOO 90000806 S969 YY We have opened up a Seed and Farm Implement ® Store on the corner of (Jueen ai id Kent Streets, opp osite City’ I ht’gere you can purchase fresh and pure SHED, and true * name, as this is our opening year, we can be depe1 nded sell at the right prices. IN STOCK AND TO ABRIVE - Harrows, Se« ed Sowel ; Ploughs, Road Carts, Carriages, . Daisy Churns, wWringet @) Washers. _ a Double Seed Boxes, (Grain and Seed), at bargain, gaa We guarantee rej airs for all Ploughs solid hs us. . FINLAYSON & MCKINNON TERLIZZIGK'S CORNEA = ? &.