pare res cae ee eA wt, ee et a] THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN MARCH 29 1898 Wants, Lost, Found & ym lower Prince 35’. } LEI—A cottage os D. Chappell. 53 possession Ist of April. TO LEV.~ One half 9% ihe three story dwel Kng bouse, -ontaining @) ght jarge rooms, on Prince St. Possession given on 2ndMay nex! » Ww. W. Wellner 42 TO LET —The house aud premises Know. as the “Old London Hous, ’situateon water St., next*> Government Warebouse No 1 A ppl r to Pe ake mros & Co. jan2s--tf WANTED.—A house contsvininz abnrut eeven or eight rooms in adesirable localty. Apply to this office. FOR SALE —One tenement ofa house on Upper Queen Street, containing 6 roms Lt has a coodce Jar. App'y 1o Wm. Pri t 69—2f TO LET.—That } leasantls ~iuateu and comfortable cottage on Water St, at pre «nt oceupied by Mra Bruce Siewert Possessi on given about middle may. Apply to Peake Bros, & fo hiown > %1 -augmutin Sr — ee LOST. ! ) reward will be paid by Edv- ard Bayfield to any merson retarp ng “a double gold eye g/ass, ° 1leong gold cha’n @ tached, €6 eod Te easemiensimnaniasecaitapeeire senatishalibliand TT) LET.—That com fortaiie and ple santiy St.. being the situated house on upper teen southern half of the res dence of the iate Chief Justice Palmer, now in eccupation ' f Commander Cheyne Hot and cold wate! in sam, rent moderate, possession g yen Ist May uext. Apply to H, JAMES PALMER, Ch’town, > ROOMS TO LET.—Wi'h or without Enquire at Mrs. Wilson's} > borrd hestaut ot wn te YOUNG WOMEN LOVE The D & A Corset, it fits so comfortably, supporting the figure, while yielding easily to every movement. It lasts well, and sells at popular prices. —MORAL : YOUNG WOMEN WEAR tHe D & A CORSET. (5) _— — Fat is absolutely neces- sary as an article of diet. If it is not of the right kind it may not be digested. Then the body will not get enough of it. In this event there is fat-starvation. Scott’s Emulsion supplies this needed fat, of the right kind, in the right quantity, pand in the form already j partly digested. As a result all the organs and tissues take on activity. _ Sox. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & ROWNE, CC} VALUABLE BUSINESS STAND FOR SALE —- eae MONTAGUE BRIDGE This property consists of a commo- dious store and dwetling, heated with hot water, and said to be the best business stand in Montague. Titie Guaranteed. ° Possession immediately. Apply to E. H. BEER, Ch’town, 65 2awdwtf, emi sts, T< sta ———— Prowse Bros... fave notified us to mova fom our old stand, till they build us + new brick etore: We will on the lst of April move to Great George Street, opposite Job Joy’s Restaurant, and forthe net thirty days, we will give the bizyest bargaing in the history of the Jewel - lery trade of Charlottetown, to ciear out our stock of Clocks, watches and Jewellery. Repairing of Clocks, Watches snd Jewellery, given special attention. c. 6. JOURS —_—— Dyspepsia one of the Most Terrible Rvils of Kedern Civilization os Paine’s Celery Compound is the only Medicine that Works a ~ure and Permanent Cure. A Quyon Lady Given New Life and Strength After Fifteen Years of Suffering, She Says: “T Am Astonished at the Result as My Trouble Was an Old and Chronic One.” The man or women who does nct use Paine’s Ceiery Compound to banish the tortures and miseries of dyspepsia and in- ligestion at this season is certainly des- tined to go into the summer months a nervous, weakened, despondent and miser- able wreck. The ga'ling bonds of dys>oepsia reduce nerve force and power, promote heart difficulties, and the blood becomes stag~ nanitand impure. Paine’s Celery Com- pound works speedily a sure and permanent cure, builds up the body, and gives a store Gf health and health and strength that makes living a pleasure, Misa Lizzie Muir eaye: Weis & Ricuarpson Co, Dean Sins:—For the benefit of sufferers I g'adly give my exper eace with Paines Celery Compound. After suffering from dyspepsia for fitteen years, and meeting with many failures with other medicines, I deci ed to use Paine’s Celery Compound having heard of so many cares by its use. The Compound, after I had used it fora time, produced miraculous results and banished all my troubles. From a condi- tion of he!lplessness— being unable to rleep or eat—{ now feel well and strong. I am now astonished at the result, as my trouble was au old en! chronic cne. Yours faithfully, Lizziz Muir, Quyon, P Q. = 2 : — r tm FOR SALE AT POINT PRIM. 70 acres of land, 20 acres under heavy ock maple and birch, about 40 under ultivation, and 10 ready for stumping, th good new baildings, farm ruaning rom shore to shore, ( lots of mussel mud and seeweed on both shores, good place for Jobster factory, good deal of farming gear which goes with farm, } mile from school, store, etc; 14 miles from Shipping. Also 7 acres warsh, } mile from farm. Terms easy, apply to A. A. McLean, or John Murchison Esq., Point Prim. JOHN J. MURCHISON, wky 3 mos P. R. Island Railway On and after MONDAY, 27th Dee., 1804, trains of this Railway will run daily, (Suny jays excepted,} as under. | ' : Trains Out-; o- ‘Trains Im vard. Read/ STATIONS, ward. R down, up. e. MIA M.} Trains are run by Eastra Standard Tim2 (BANISH THE MONSTER) “ fYS% INCIDENT. ' { , M.A. My 3 10, 6 20) _ Charlottetown ... 3 36 10 oe 8 Hu) G 35). . Royalty Tunction.| 2 16 9 4@ 417) 7 12). North Wiltshire. | 1 49 8 B@ 4 31) 7 21). Hunter River. ../ 1 99) 8 4 ' 05, 7 51)... Bradalhane...... 100 8 a | 13, 7 58). Emerald.. ....../72 33] 7 58 }& 27} 8 02}, . Freetown ....... 12 42) 7 3$ 1G 43| 8 25). .Kensington...... 112 94| 7 38 S 2) S WiAr.) Lv. |j2 00) 6 48 |®. MIP. M* ; S’Side ; A, Me 12 50\Ly. | Lar. 'y9 1 11)..Miscouche ...... 10 1 1 37), ,Wellington...... a ; 2 19)... Port SORE aud ou 9 0 3 SA. .O’Learv.....c000) 8 3 58}... Bloomfield ......| 7 4 34). Alberton........| 6 > Tan. We skda bnee A. M _— 12 30; |. Charlottetown ... 10 % 50, ..Royalty Junction 10 1¢ 2m _. Bedford or °s i ar v 410 ie} Mt Stewart 44, 8 i6 22 ae eeveeeee 7 ‘6 45 ..Georgetown .... 74 a MM, A.M P. M. A. ' 4 05),,Mt. Stewart ....) 8 € 5 --orell........-+ 8 . St. Petere seve] 7 6 57|,. Bear River ,.eses) 7 | . . +@ eee eeecee 6 : > . A. Pp. M. ee , 6 15 o-Bangsald § cccces ; | 6 08) .. Cape Traverse oe ‘a wy. tae , ing eleven roome. A FRAGMENT OF HISTORY THAT {8 FULL OF HUMOR, Colonel Horn’s Letter to General Logan Explaining an Attack on Grant — Shan- His Associate, Was an Ambitious Fried Chicken Eater. Mrs. John A. Logan once gave to a newspaper reporter in this city a letter from a southern editor that created a Jot ot talk. It was immediately after the death of General Grant. The re- porter had gone to the Logan residence to interview the general about matter then before congress. The gen- eral was in bed, and the reporter was shown to his room. In the course of the I rat) ONYtoroeda ? non, some * TS. evening 2} zan tered the bed- chamber and teok part in the conversa- tion. In her hand she held a letter, the sontents of which her husband knew about. She wanted to give it to the re- porter, but the general objected. But as the newspaper man started to leave Mrs. Logan slipped the envelope into his hand. The next morning nearly every newspaper in the country printed a copy of it. It was arare and racy document. Colonel Alexander G. Horn of Meridi- an, Miss., then the editor of The Daily Mercury, was its authcr. The letter was intended as an explanation of editorial that had appeared a few weeks befora in The Meretrry. Celonel Horn and J. J. Shannon were associates in the publication of the aforesaid journal. On the morning following the death of the hero of Appomattox The Mercury contained one of the most cruel articles about General Grant ever printed by a press. It dared any true southerner to grieve or show signs of sorrow over his demise. It called upon the people of Dixie land to exult and rejoice at the “sath of the man who had slain their sons and burned their homes. The peo- ple of. Meridian were astounded. Thev — OCEAN WAVE, What a life it is to some of us! A peculiar sickness and utter wretchedness and prostration ex- perienced by many wheu at sea and others when on compar- atively calm water. It comes first with a feeling that you are going to die. As it gets worse comes a fear that you will not die. The sensible traveller always carries witit him a supply of Abbey’s Effervescent Salt It settles the stomach, banishes that depressed and wretched feel- ing, keeps the appetite good, the organs of digestion in perfect order, and purifies the blood, When its value is known, no traveller gocs without it. Promi- nent physicians have testified to its efficiency iu casesof Sleepless~ ness, Loss of Appetite, Bilious- ness, Sick Headache,Constipation, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Spleen Affections, Nervous Depression, Indigestion, Sea Sickness, Flatu- lency, Gout, Fever. Skinand Kid- ney Complaints. It purifiesthe Blood and clears the Complexion. Your address on the back ofa post card sent to us isall thatis necessary to get our little booklet “An Invitation to Health,” All Drnggists sell this great English Preparation, Price 2 6 or 60 cts. a botile. THE ABOEY CFFERVESCENT SALT CO., LiwiTeD, MONTREAL, CANADA, TO BE LET ee ee Honse on King St, near Queen, contain ' ' A'so shop adjoining, fied suitably for a grocery store. ouse ami shop let corjointly or separateiv. Apply on the premises to the undersigned. , MRS. JOHN McQUILLAN. 71—3ipd Old Stamps Wanted. Highest price paid for old New Bruns- wick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and eee Stamps; used or unused. R. H. MASON, Box 295, Charlottetown. of the undersigued Printing in all its branches at the Exax- INER office, ons of the best equip- ped Job Printing Establishment. , on P. E. Island, went td the editor, Colohel Horn, arfd | asxed him, in the name of peace, to write anotber article withdrawing it. He was obdurate and instead of doing as his neighbors wished dictated anoth- er cne equally as fierce as the first. At that moment the name of Colonel Shannon was before the senate awaiting confirmation as postmaster at Meridian. An enemy of his, knowing the love that General Logan had for General Grant, inclosed copies of the paper to him, ex- pecting that Logan would oppose Sbhan- 20n’s nomination. Shannon and Horn had a dispute over the editerial, and their relations became so strained that a street duel was only averted by the interference of mutual friends. Colonel Horn’s lietter to General Logan was to the effect that Colonel Shannon was in- nocent of the article and had known nothing about it until he saw it in the paper. I cannot quote tho jetter with literal exactness, but a part of it was as follows: “No; with it. In tho first place he hasn't sense enough to conceive such a senti- ment 23 Was ex} in the editorial and if he had he would be too cowardly to write it. He is my partner, I am sor- ry to say, but by making him postmaster will afford me the opportunity of getting rid of him. And why not take him, John? There rested you A is a mighty narrow strip between the radical republicanism that you repre- seut and the Cleveland Mugwumpery that Shannen tries to represent. He is not a Democrat, never was and never will be. 1 predict that you will soon have him over ou your side, and God speed the day! We Democrats down bere don’t want bim. ‘‘l am growing old, but I am still in possession of my mental faculties, and I hope to live many years longer to tell the truth from day to day about the desvised Yankees and their politics. I ani seriously afflicted with hemiplegia, else I would Lave mauled b——1 out of sShaunon long ago. ‘Logan, you ought to remember me as one of the fellows that figured some- what conspicuously in the Kemper county trials. I guess I can take the credit to myself of having had the Dem- ocrats who killed the Radicals there acquitted before the courts. I would like another job of the same kind. ‘‘You and I ought to be friends. Op- posites beget liking. You have been a broth of a boy in your party, and | have been a sheol of a fellow in mine.’’ General Logay replied good natured- ly to this epistle, after which a friend- ty correspondence sprang up butween the erratic genius at Meridian and the éenator. Logan read the Shannon letter in the committee room of the senate, and then laughingly said that inasmuch as his friend Colonel Horn wanted Shannon confirmed he didn’t see how be could oppose him. Colonel Horn, wureconstructed, has long siuce passed into silence, and a few years later Colo- nel Shannon was buried at his old home in Paulding, Miss., a town once made famous by the publication of The Weekly Clarion, many years ago, of which paper he was one of the founders. During the Sullivan-Kilrain trial at Purvis some years ago | sat at the break- fast table with Sullivan and Colonel Shannon. Sullivan ate three fried chick- ens, Shannon four. Charlie Rich, the great sportsman, got the two to enter a fried chicken eating match. Some one asked Sullivan bow many he thought he could get away with, and Sullivan said about eight. ‘*Bight!’’ spoke up Shannon, ‘* Well, you will have to do better than that. You may be the champion prizefighter, but you will have to whet up that ap- petite of yours before you can take away the chicken eating champion- ship. ’’ The chickens were bought and cleaned and were ready for the iron when the ‘colonel was taken violently ill. Before he conld recover Sullivan was out of the state. —James S. Evaua in Chicago Ti:ses- Herald. Artificial ice is made even in Juneau, Alaska, during the summer. Tae WHOLE system feels the effect of Hood's Sarsaparilla—stom- ach, liver, Kidneys, heart, nerves are strengthened and SUSTAINED. TENDERS. Sealed Tenders addressed to the under- signed wiil be received until Thursday, March 31st, 1898, from cheese makers , willing to engage to manautacture the seae eon’s output of cheese at the Wins loe Dairviag Station, Tenders 'o state price per 100 Ibs of cheese, finding all supplies and also for manufacturing only. Also sealed tenders addressed to the undersigne i will be received unti] Thurs- day, March 31st, 1898, from parties wil- ling to contract for hauling the seascn’s milk to the Wineloe Dairying Station. Each tender must be accompanied by the sum of $3.00 which will be returned in the event of non-sacceptance of tender, Plan of routes cau be seen at the residence > Cuas. Rrvyextox, Pres, Cuas. Taper, Sec’y. RAW FURS — Cash paid forall kinds of Raw Furs, at Harvie’s Sample Rooms Queen Street, Charlottetown. HENRY A. HARVIE, we —-Santereys } Shannon had nothing to do | ee te , SKILFUL DENTISTRY IVIGDERN DENTISTRY Dentistry by Specialists ~o & WK A All the*®above are found at our office. CQ SAVE THAT TOOTH 0) a j We always advise to have a tooth saved. We have ect lished our business on the fact that we save teetu "When it is necessary thata tooth must come Out, we ‘exte . without pain, by use of the famous ~s BERLIN METNOD Teeth filled absolutely without pain, by use of ELECTRICITY, Our Crown and Bripce Work is modem. epeciinenr, Our Arririca, Treers. them in every way. We use best materials, and have modern machivery to work Q Call and gee We make all kinds, and guarantee eee c BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS, @ Over Store of Prowse Bros. with. We put gold filling in Artifical teeth, everything to make them look natural. Our prices are low, and all work guaranteed, o Cpen evenings 7 to 8. © Pa2ee2eezeee SU can oo Sone Se a — Wouldn't sellit for $40 if he couldnt get an: other one. This is what a well known gentleman in the city says about” his Highland Range that has been in use for about 20 year We sell them. We MMe Me SME ME SE te ' ' 3 £18 AS SAS AS AEA DS ATES USA TE NTE AT era amd — ae ete ~<a Newson’s Furniture Some of its Characteristics It represents in a higher degree than any other eollection ‘The latest thoughts and creations in household + nishing and adornment. It abounds in original ideas; wk ed out with the utmost skill and taste. It comprises « u equal assortment, from medium to highest grades, 59 that 3! desires ean be satisfied both as to qzality ann cost. JOHN NEWSO;, — 7 of good Fuaniture trangers to poor Furniture. A Se Hats, Hats and Ha —_ Hard Hats, Soft Hats, Good Hats, Latest Styles and Colors, No manufacturer has a monopoly of making the bett Our hats give satisfaction. We think we give a8 for the price, as isto be ad. — This season we are prepared to do better tas @™™ our customers. : Don’t buy your spring hats or caps, till you our styles and prices. D. A. BRU High Class Tailoring. , «@ H. a hat have s@9 ra