| THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 6, 1897 ML URRA‘ & LAN oa 2 SRE ee eT FLORIDA WA SWEETEST MOST FRAGRANT MOST f LESHING . Lt “ AND ENDU R! NG OF ALL. MS pane : é TE: ALJ. DRUGSISTS, PERFUMERS AND GERERAL_QEALERS, ev, 4 Y r AWiELY SHOU ne mre OW THAT er Is a very remarkable remedy, both for IN- TERNAL and EXTERNAL use, and won- Gerful in its quick action to relieve distress, - 1LLER is & sure cure for Sore PAIN RILLE} Deeeutery. Goampe, Mhotera, vd all Lowe! Complaints. PAIN-KILLER THE BEST rem. Sick _ Headache, in in the de, Rheumatism and Neuralgia, UNQUESTIONAMLY the PANTKILLER pire nines brings STFEDY AN tn alc vee of Bruises, Cuts, Sprains, Severe is the well tried and PADR KILLER Galler, sd i rmer. unter, Or, and in fact = —— a medicine sways at — eneque Te ver tmternally or externally wi of relief. Beware of imitations. Take none but the cenuine @PExRy Davis” Soild everywhere; 5c. tz butile Very large bottles 50 cents. Did You Ever See better value than we offer in our line of Ladies Boots at $1.59? Wecon- sider this the best value ever offered in new goods. We want your opinion about the matter. Call and give it to us. R. KH. JOST Stamper’s Corner. ——— Wants, Lest, Found KC ae sioadl tools Demaing ‘churgec ive cents per line. Me are H LOST.—Fetween two or thre ‘eke ago, kinder will piease leave same with G G Jury. 79—3 LET—(n Lower Queen St. shop and large cel'ar, suitadle tor all kinds « of pro- duce. Apply a. this office. ii pre DOG —Lost abont a werk ago @ pug doz. A reward will be paid by Dr, Mac yeod for its recovery. 74 tf. ANTED.—An active energetic agent to solicit business for a leuding Lile In- surance Co aAddiess P.O. B x 364. 12, dy 2 wks. \ AXTED.-A girl to dogeneral hou ewcerk r-ferences required. Apply to Mrs W. W. Wellner, Prince st. B?commoiaied few boarders can be ac- eomimotated at Mrs McGregor’ « Prince 68—tf. TANTED—An ‘experienced cook, also a housemaid, reterem ex required. Apply atthe resideuce of Mr. Thcs Alley. Prince eet. Gs- 246 AN'El).—Atonce a cook, references re- Y quired. Applyt> Mrs. Uv. B_ stewart, Kusten. 76-31 pd Oe f a AN!TED—A Girl for general housework, Givod wages. Apply te ars Fred Per- kins, Brighton Road. 76—2i To LET.— a comfortable dw lling contain- ing *ix rooms and kitchcn, situate on Dor- chester Street, ne tne residence of J. BR. McDonald E< For particulars of rent, Pou esion &c. ap ply to Thomas Alley. —e UEEN Viv) ORIA: HER LIFE AND REIGN; ereat historic work setis on signtto thousavds. Lord Defferin in- ih. coesit to Canadians in glowing words Exsy to make $20 00 a Week some make twice thet. Manv make wore in Spare time than tates day at reguiar employment. This vor Great ~e xagenary Celebratiors ere ooming it. Booksontime. Prospectus free canvarsers, Terrliory ring fast THE BRADLEY GARRETSON Co Ltd Toronéo, Can .- oe " LET — 4 ple. septly sitoriea dwelling k house facing south ard weston Brighton vell = present oecepied by Harrison (ar- aed = ae = poennes. and vy electricity, an aving hot and caida! fittings in bath room and kit hen. chen ar, %€ parior, dining roum, office, kit- hantry, On ground floor, four bed- bath 1oom Ou first tloor,and two coms, and hiving “awthorne bh dge one ha oe infont. ten minutes’ walk Fee ‘tive minutes from tennis ame an: athi ig house in Victoria Park— -C sarris, JR, septli--t eeec 6oes?e?eeeves © Lee LZ ef for Ung eTroubles fe, 6 In CONSUMPTION and all LUNG @ DISEASES, SPITTING OF BLOOD, COUGH, LOSS OF APPETITE, © DEBILITY, the benefits of this @ article are most manifest. By the aid of The “D. & 1." Emulsion, I have got @ rid ofa hacking cough which had troubled me for over @ year, and have gained ¢ wustds erably in 1 was glad veigh* [liked this Ernuision so welll e ewe u the thue came around to take it. o T. 11. WINGHAM, C.E., Montreal 50c. and $i per Bottle @ DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Lto., MONTREAL @ee@eeoaoeoedée) e @ ® @ 8 we © @ 6G @ ° EMULSION: 8 @ “ & Spectacies Just received another lot, selling at 50c and pair, case included. T0ca Also the newest in gold frames, OPERA GLASSES T9 LOAN. E. W TAYLO CAMERON 3LOCK. R CERTAIN a Aoeas8 GIT PAIN-KILLER THE GREAT Family Medicine of the Age. Taken Internally, It Cures Diarrhe1, Cramp, and Pain in the Stomach, Sore lhroat, Sudden Colds, Coughs, etc., etc. Used Externally, lt Cures Cuts, Bruises, Burns, Scalds, Sprains, Toothache, Pain in the Face, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Frosted Feet. No article ever attained to such unbounded popular- ity.— Salem Observer. We can bear testimony to the efficacy of the Pain- Killer. Wehave se-n its magic effects in seothing the severest pain, and know it to be a good article —Cinctn- nati ees yet surpassed the Pain-Eiller, which is the most ete family medicine now ix use.— Tennessee Organ. ot has real merit ; as a means of removing pain, no medicine has acquired a reputation equal to Perry Davis’ Pain-Killer.—Newport News. Beware ofimitations. Jovy only the genuine “PERRY Davis.” Sold everywhere: jarge bottles. 25c. nl OP large bottles 50 ceuis PITY iri, That we have added an up-to-to-date Job Printing Office to our Bookbinding busi- ness? Since doing so we have been so rushed that it has been necessary for us to work day and night SEE THE POINT? Patronize the men who can save you some money on your printing. J. D, TAYLOR Printer & BookpinDER Queen St.... @ Break Up a Cold in Time BY USING PYNY- PECTORAL The Quick Cure for COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, BRON- CHITIS, HOARSENESS, etc. Mrs. Josr2x Norwick, of 63 Sorauren Ave., Toronto, writes **Pyny-Pectoral has never failed to cure my children of croup after afew doses. It cured myself ofa long-standing cough after severai other remedies had failed. It has also proved an excellent cough cure for my fami:y. I prefer it to any other medicine fur cyughs, croup or hoarseness,” H, Barpour, “tt Little Rocher, N N_B., writes: “As a cuce for conghs Pynv-Pectoral is the best selling medic ine I ve; my cus- tomers will have no other.” Large Bottle, 25 Cts. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CoO., Lrp. Proprietors, MonTREAL PANE EMOE OG ee WANTED. A machine operator at once. pant and vest makers wanted. first-class workers need apply. J. T. McKENZIE, Alan, Nore but i of ne. * April 1, 97—8i sat, tu thur. THE KING OF MAN-KILEERS Fright’s Disease of the Kidneys; Baffled the World’s Most Emintnt Medical Au- thorities until DODD'S KID EY PILLS a Came to the Rescue and Deliv- ery of Mankind. stopping for- | ever the deadly assaults of Lilte’s most Insidious Foe. Men are dropping from the ranks every- where. Cut down in the flower of youth or the fruitage of mavhood by that ruth- destrover—Brighw’s Disease of the Kidneys. Ouly a few days ago Sir Hercules Rob- less insop, the doughty Governor cf Colony, that because of encreaching Brighi’s disease. Cape was forced to resiga post Hardly had his successor been eppointed when the wires brought tidings cf the death of William P. St Jobo, a New York banker, and remembered by everyone as the treasurer of the National Democratic party during the latest national campaiga. Bright's Disease carried vit off. Ic has killed manv better men than most So has Diabetes, its twin cur-e. Yet there is one cure (aod on!y one), that never failed in cases of D-abetes and Bright’s Disease. Let these testimonials bear witness: Mr. Frep Carsrens, Palmerston, Ont, says:-‘‘Ailer many years suffering with bright’s Disease, lam arew man, cured by usivg thre bexes of Dodd’s Kidney bills.” Mr. F. H. Grovrx, Ottawa, Ont., says: “Dodd’s Kidney Pills have been a godserd to me as they have cured me of Brigat’s Disease of the Kidneys.” S. G. Moore, King St, London, Ont., eays : “After taking a few boxes of Dodd’s Kidnev Pills I amas well as ever in mv life, despairing of recovery from Br.ght’s Disease.” Mr. Cuas. T. Bre, Garryowen P. O., Ont., says: “For the past three years have sufiered «f Diabetes, but noticing cures published [ have used Dodd’s Kidney Pills which have perfeetiy cured meg” DODD’S KIDNEY PILLS are for sale by druggists everywlere, and by the Dodd’s Medicine Cu , Toroate, Ont. Price 50 cents a box. ° ral in sk your Dealer j FOR _A SPOOL a OF THREAD— and he will give you the kind i he makes most profit on— For a spool of CLAPPERTON’S THREAD, and you’ll get the kind that will give you most profit J and smali blame to him. But ask him and satisfaction — and it costs no more than inferior kinds ere sold for. It pays you to get CLAPPERTON’S THREAD. Sa not break or snarl. Age Big Bargain Given For Thirty ‘Days I have decided to sell my stock of Clocks, ot atches, Jewelry. Spectacles, ., 26. & a big discount for cash for thirty days. All persons buying ten dollars wort th of goods in that time will receive a present worth one dol- Jar or have it deducted off the article they purchase. Any person having watches or clocks out of order will do weli to have them repaired and put in good running order by me, and regulated by Town Time. — The articles entrusted to me will receive my_ personal at tention. Store open from 8a. m, to 8 p. m. ‘ Y 1 G_ G. JURY, Noith Side Queen Square, Opposite ‘Post Offic e, 72 2aw &w Gm. Sherwood Cemetery Company Annual Meeting. The Annual Meeting of Sherwood Ceme- tery ! Ceres, will be heid in the parlor of the Y M.C. A Bulding.on WEUNFSDAY next, the 7th inst.. at4 ‘o'clock p, m., :for the eiection of Directors and the transaction of such other businessas may come before the meeting. By order, HENRY &MITH, secretary Trigham Young’s Business Genius, In studying Brigham Young I have n it sought to know the man as he lives in Mormon literature, with a glowing reli- gious halo about his eminently business- like brow. I have sought rather to find him through conversations with some of his favorite captains and through the letters he wrote them when they were engaged in perilous missions to wild districts in the unexplored west. These were the men who lived near to him and knew the thoughts that throbbed in his active brain. None of these men has told me of any striking religious thought which he uttered from the pulpit, but all have said that he insisted that it al- ways paid to plow deep and plant al- falfa. They have related with especial pride their talks with ‘‘the president’’ at evening camp fires, when he would plan, with wonderful accuracy, irriga- tion canals and village sites, to be made in connection with the conquest of some new valley they had explored. The plans which he traced on the ground ° with his cane by the firelight generally anticipated very closely the later results of surveys. His letters to these captains were full of instructions about provi- Flous, coming emigrant parties and the treatment of the Indians. They always closed with a devout reference to Divine Providence, but the underlying spirit was that of the sturdy industrial chief- tain aiming at the conquest of the waste places. This man’s dream was of empire. In every fiber cf his body, in every beat of his brain and heart, he was a material- ist. All his buildings, like all his phi- losophies, were fashioned on strong and fimple lines. They were made, not to lock beautiful, but to serve useful pur- poses and to last long. That he used the power of the church relentlessly to ac- complish his ends cannot be denied. But the church, however much it may have meant to others, was with him only one of the means, and not the great object of his ambition. His first act in Utah was to raise the American flag and pro- claim himself governor of ‘‘the state of Deseret’’—land of the working bee.—~ Atlantic. The Educational Ideal. Our present system of elementary ed- ucation does not rise to the moral re- quirements of the age. It stands too largely for the development of the mem- ory for the purpose of mere money mak- ing, to the neglect of the nobler spiritual qualities. It too often leaves out the cultivation of the heart and the training of the hand, the quickening of the con- science and the growth of the moral perception. Such a system is not educa- tion in any large sense; it is what Pes- talozzi called ‘‘mere instruction.’’ The education that makes character, indi- vidual and national, begins with the heart, the conscience and the imagina- tior. The storing of the memory with facts is a tool shop more essential to the meking of a living than the learning how to live, whichis life’s higher pur- pose. ‘‘We create life through ideals, ’’ taught Pestalozzi. ‘‘We learn by do- ing,’’ said Froebel. And both agreed that life must be taught from life or by examp!e} and that the individual gift of the pupil was ‘‘sacred to the teacher,’ and that each pupil must be developed after his own gift as though there were no other pupils like him or gift like his in the world. The old time New Eng- land schcol dame, whipping the dates of the reigns of Roman emperors intc 5-year-old brains, formed no part of the grand Pestalozzian vision. ‘‘Education stands for character,’’ said Pestalozzi. Our national education is defective in the power of this fundamental principle. A reconstruction ef education must come in this country, and the best methods of character education be made universal or else we must suffer deterioration. A heart that responds to jmstice is the first lesson of life, and the ideal or gift of the pupil must be studied by the teacher before the pupil is put to memorizing text books, which is instruction. —Re- view of Reviews. FURNITURE, PIANO &c. FO2 SALE BY AUCTION, { am instructed by Dennis Murpuy,Esq. to sell by auction at his reridence, Gratton Street, (opposite Prince of Wale~ College) on Wednesday, the 7th day of April, com- mencivg at Ll ocleck a. m., all his honsehold etfects, comprising Piano, Parivr, ny ning Room, Hall, Bed- room ard Kitchen Furniture. Also -l V-a-vie Wagon. Terms Cash. R. PEAIRSTO, suctioneer. Mt Eagecombe Farm FOR SALE. ee The subscriber offers for sale this valu- able farm, containing about 66 acres, which areall cleared and in a high state ot cultivation. On the premises there ina fine dwelling house and six out buildings, suitable for a!] farming purposes. This property is situated on Mt Edward Road, about 1} miles from the city, and 300 yds from St Dunstan’s College, and adapted for modern tarming. For fuller particulars apply to C. BENOIT, Eureka Hotel, Water St. Ch’town, P.E.1—75 25 w. ‘Sate SoorttS arisrvin Originated by an Old Family Physician in 1810. You can safely trust what time has indorsed for nearly a century. There is not a medicine in use tod ay which possesses the confidence of the public to so great = extent as Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment. For more than cight years it has stood up its own intrinsic merit, while g generation after generation have usedit. The best evidence 0 its value is the fact that in the state where it originated the sale of it is steadily increasing. Johnsons Anodyne Liniment S. Jonnson. Esq. My Dear Sir:—Fifty years ago this month, your father, Dr. Johnson, outed at my store and left me some Johnuson‘’s Anodyne Liniment on sale, I have sold it ever since. Ican most truly say that it has maintained its high standard and popularity from that time to this. JOHN B. RAND, North Waterford, Maine, Jan., 1891. ‘sBest Liver Pill Meade.” Parsons’ Pills Positively cure Biliousness and Sick Headache, liver | a3} Be, This certifies that Dr. A. Johuson, whose name is sie —, to every genuine bottle of Johnson’s nee Liniment, in the month of Jaz. 1540, eet le{tat my store some of the same I have supplied my customers with it ever since, (over fifty vears) with increasing sales. jJavez KNOWLTON, Newburg, Maine. , Onr Book “Treatment for Diseases” Mailed Free, All Druggists 1 S, Johnson & Co. Boston, Mass. and bowel complaints. They expel all impuritics from the blood, Detic ate women find relief from using them, Price 25c; liveZl. Sold everywhere. Mane By THE CULLINE PNEUMATIC COLLAR CO., Caancy, P.Q No sweat pads. The strongest, most durable, lightest, coolest, easiest and best fitting Horse Collars on earth. Heavicr loads drawn With less exertion than with any other collars. Sure cure for sore necks and shoulders. The stitch- ing is rust-proof metal, is not affected by moisture, and will 4 notrip. All collars, from ine lightest buggy to the heaviest dray, are made of the very best leather, and tested by a 44 pressure equal to fifteen tons pull, and are so guarentced, THE GULLINE STRAW COLLARS 4 are also metal stitched and challenge all others for durability and beauty of finish (the Gulline Pneumatic Coliarsexcepted.} 4A THE AMES HOLDEN COMPANY, oF MONTREAL, Lro. ff ” Sole Selling Agents for Canada, with full stocks at § Montreal, Torcnto, St. John, N.B., Winnipeg, Victoria & Vancouver, B.C, ree * ie er ee ea ee ———-—--——. —— 1 .-5 TONS - - Sheet Iron In 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26 gauge, Bik Sheet Iron, 12, 16, 18, 20, 24, guaze. Gal. Iron Rivets, in § lb. 7 lb, 6 Ib, 5 Ib, “4 lb, ete, ‘as Chane “em 2002000886 SLMON YW CRABSE Walker’s Corner 134 STOVES HARDWARE ARP op, A Special Perfect Milk Substi Hignly Recommended by D Farmars. 3 > as BFBIAAVVS Ss SSF SSISSAVABEA Ask your Dealer for it. Only Preparation Endorsed by Agricultural Experimental Stations. All far ners should sell*the milk aud raise fine calves more econom- ically and quickly on the Calf Meal. PREVENTS SCOURING MATURES THEM QUICKLY AULD BROS., Agents for P, E. Island. BGO OOO VSS OOF6GE 268 66868646448 4088 88 ¢ NEW SEED STORE OOO SF 0000930000030 We have opened up a Seed and Farm Implement Store on the corner of Queen and Kent Streets, opposite City Hall. [t’s here you can purchase fresb and pure SEED, and true to name, as this is our opening year, we can be depended on to sell at the right prices. IN STUCK AND-TO ABRIVE— Harrows, Seed Sowers Ploughs, Road Carts, Carriages, Daisy Churns, Wringers and Washers. Double Seed Boxes, (Grain and Seed), at bargain, $14.00 We guarantee repairs for all Ploughs sold by us. rINLAYSON & MOKINNON TERLIZZICK’S CORNER CARD OF THANKS. For the many favors received from n.y numerous friends and customers during the year 1896, and would wish them a hap- py and Prosperous New Year, and that they may all continue to buy and drink the celebrated Special Blend of Empire Tex. that 1 sell. Also as inany more, invited to participate in the pleasures of drinking}Empire Blend during 1897, T. J. MORRIS Grocer and Crockery Man W ” MR SS ORNS NE OOO Be