P wt -_ net Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment ’ i mee ai Tt I it ‘ use, It nC y othe It olde on ¢ i i sup yr to all othe I t reat vital d muscle nervine i ternai much , i Se ia 1 ‘ ed I y ‘ cs i $a roth » penetra Anody j what e. ier st kd} e in the hx ] sed 1 v phy ins everywhere. I 1edy from infancy to old age. 1e€cai § nm att — ition. yn of as 1 old family physician. t will quickly relieve, heal and cure. oO l ses a Ca of Sick Room,” Mailed Free, 5 i s. jo ON & CO., a2 Custom House Street, Boston, Mass. WOMEN’S FEET GROWING. THES ARE EXACTLY WHAT 'S ALWAYS NEELDEO IN ALL Casts of CONSTIPATION, SICK” HEADACHE, BiticuS ATTACKS ane DYSPEPSIA. SOLO CVERYWHERE AT 25c. acox. DODD'S MEDICINE COMPANY, Pacrnicrons, TORONTO, OnT. we can sell you Dodi’s Kidney Pills a the following prices, viz.:—50c. per box six boxes for $2.50. Tothe trade—$4.00 rdozen, or three dozen at $3.75 p=» doses. Seut by mai! to any address po-‘ aid. GEORGE E. HUGHES, may 2° Sharlottetow r child You note the differen esas : a children. Some have nearly every > , 7 } * = the best orf care. : ailment, even with Others tar 1 more exposed pass througn unharmed. Weak c! ren 1? Will have continuous coics in winter, poor digestion in summer. They are with- out power to resist disease, they have no_ reserve strength. Scott’s Emuision of cod-liver oil, with hypo- phosphites, is cod-liver oil vartly digested andadapted to the weaker digestions of children. : Bcorr & Bowxs, Beeville, Cat goc. and $1.08 C » — onG KV) ena SS A Thread *. That Wont Snar!.. What woman has not sighed for it—and felt happy—if by chance she got -+ A SPOOL OF.. CLAPPERTON’S There is no chance of its snarling, break- being uneven—it is made t ved : aery wi i prevents @ny possil ot SEC THE TRADE MARK ON THE SPOO!. THE MUTUAL LIFE . ee . ’ Y . Insurance Company OF NEW YoRK. RICHARD A. McCURDY, PRESIDENT. Flatter and Broader and Evidently Some- what Larger. journal recently :— large?. They are Says a Chicago Women's feet There is no doubt about this. gradually lengthening and broadening, and if they keep on developing at the present rate the dainty No. 1 and No. 2 shoes will probably be unheard of in ten They will go the way of the No, So the men about are growing years, 17 and No. town who always look at a woman’s face her feet will have to They are destined 18 corsets, first and then at change their tactics. to receive severe shocks if they don't—that {s, those who have a liking for a smal! foot with a very high, arched The men who pretend to admire some instep. a broad flat foot of ample proportions, and they are few and far between, can keep up their old plan of looking first up, and will seldom be disappointed. ‘Women growing larger,’’ said the manager of a shoe store which supplies swell people and actresses with footgear. ‘‘Many of our customers have been coming here for years, and I know plenty of grown women whose feet have increased in breadth and length by ac- tual measurement within the last five Some people think that the in- apparent, and that be larger on s feet are years. crease in size is only women’s feet seem only to account of the very pointed shoes which have been fashionable for the last two seasons. The shoe men know better, but they Jet it go at that and say ‘nothing. ‘There are several reasons for women's feet growing larger. Mothers are largely to blame if their daughters have big feet. It doesn’t come through heredity, either, because in nine out of ten the daughters of to-day have larger feet than Cases their mothers. ‘Of late years American women have been following one of the customs of French mothers, that of trying to keep their children as children as long as pos- sible. They keep a great big overgrown girl in skirts upto her knees, and, of would not dream of permitting wear anything so grown-up look- ing as boots with heels on them. Little do these women dream that by keeping their girls in spring-heel during the period the child’s foot is developing into the woman’s foot, they are bringing & great misfortune on their daughters. It is a misfortune for a woman to have unshapely feet ‘“‘A child should not wear a spring- heel shoe after she is twelve years old, and certainly not later than fourteen, for it allows the instep to drop dow# and has a tendency to flatten the foot. There is absolutely nothing to support the nat- ural arch. God provided everybody with an instep—a hinge, as it wem—to give that springy, graceful motion in walk- ing so much desired and if we allow it to drop down and become utterly useless by wearing a spring-heel shoe until the foot has attained its full growth, we sim- ply can't walk with a spring, but will find ourselves shuffling along. **Did you ever hear that expression, ‘She walks like a cow,’ applied to a woman with a high-arched instep? No, and neither did any The next time you hear that a girl or woman look at her feet closely; you will find that they are spread out over a good deal of real estate and that instead of being curved on top they are perfectly flat. Cows, if you will notice, are perfectly flat-footed, but horses are pot. Who ever saw hoof that lay perfectiy flat on the ground as it walked along? And a horse that is well treated, no matter how common its blood, will walk along with that springy motion which it was intended that human be- ings should have.’’ course, her to shoes one else, a horse’s “But aren’t people naturally flat- footed?’’ asked a customer. ‘‘Didn’t the Creator intend our feet to rest flat on the weight of the body should be equally distributed over them? It doesn’t seem to me right that the entire weight, say «. 200-pound wom- an, should be thrown entirely on the heel and the ball of the foot. Now, I thought that the habit of wearing shoes for thousands of years had produced the arch of the instep, and that it was ab- normal.’’ “*My dear lady,’’ exclaimed the man- ager, ‘‘your ideas are altogether mis- taken. It is no more natural for a wom- an to be flat-footed than it is for a horse. In nine cases out of ten splay-foot is caused by wearing epring-heel shoes too long, or by wearing ill-fitting shoes, You say that when a woman wears a shoe with no heel, her weight is distributed evenly over her foot. That's where you are wrong. It falls on the heel and ball, and the instep catches not one bit of it. Why? Because you put a foot into a shoe with a perfectly flat sole. The heel has a rest and the ball of the foot has a rest, but the natural up-curve of the part be- the ground so that Sia nt for the year ending December Me - Sc. DG gan Assets $221,213,721.33 Lia i394 347,157.5* eae —_a ~ ity 6 $26,366,563.76 Total Income......... --$ 48,597 430.51 f 4 it $10, fi ‘ + ia ie of Caua Lotai a P a 1895 i $23,1 26,728.45 I e a Annuities $899 074,453.78 N 4 1 iso = ; 045 »b ‘ 7 N ar this S 48 ‘ apd ra actually i anu Aid s ided, ; "1 Paid to Policy-ho lera Sir eu $411,567,625.79 organizaliot Robert A. Gra 10188, V ice- Presid Walter A. Gillette, General Manager I«aac F. Liovd, 2d Vice-President Frederic Cromwell, Treasurer Emory McClintock, Actnary JOHN MACEACHERN, Resident Agent, Charlottetown, P. E. I J. A. JOHNSON, General Agent, “7 Hollis Street, Ha fax, N. 8. may S d&w tf LANCASHIRE FIRE ASSURANCE CO, OF ENGLAND Capital: Fifteen Million Dollars ESTABLISHED 1845 DESBRISAY & STEWART - - AGENTS - . tween these two points has absolutely ne support, because it cannot yet reach the sole of the shoe. But very soon it does, you may be sure. The instep is gradually pushed down by the weight of the body, and begins to spread out to- ward the toes as the fore part of the foot is more pliable than the heel. What is the result? “Very soon the foot begins to grow broader and broader and flatter and flat- ver, and then you begin to make your poor girl uncomfortable by constantly reminding her of her large, unshapely feet, and saying, ‘Where you get them from is a mystery to me, They must from your father’s side of the house, for none of my people ever had such feet. Why, your grandmother, the lay she died, wore a No. 1, and to-day I wear only a 2 B last.’ Now, isn’t that true?’ ‘Yes, it is’’ admitted the customer. ‘Only yesterday I said just about those same words to my 15-year-old daughter. Here she comes now. Her feet are a dis- grace to me, and I want you to see if the proper shoes can make them look any more presentable.’’ A jolly schoolgirl bounded in and took her seat, throwing one foot up on 4 stool, She was not very tall for her age and welghed not more than 120 pounds, The manager removed a boct that might comhe College Books— Stujent’s Hume, Swett Methods of Teaching, Smith’s Histor of Rome, Beachet’s French Gramm ry Spiers and Surenne’s French Dictior a-y, Liddell and Seott’s Greek Lexicon, Dr. Office: Next Bank Nova Scotia, Ch’town Smith’s Latin-English Dictionary, and everything in college books, at Cartrr’s boukstore. Prices always the lowest. 4 remark made about we THE DAILY EXAMINER - - sts centring around St. Albans was nearly 31,000, 000, Great Landslide In Norway. Perhaps the greatest landslide of Northern Europe occurred at Vaordalen, Norway, in May, 1893. A few miles north of Trondhjom a large mountain rises precipitately above the Lovanger Valley, then a fertile plain, dotted with prosperous farms, surrounding a lake. The slide measured three miles across and followed a pathway down the mountain slopes more than six miles in length. The mighty mass gave notice of its coming by fearful thunderings far up on the mountain, but so rapid was its downward flight and so broad the swath it cut that few had time to make good their escape. Twenty-two homesteads, on as many great and fertile farms, and fifty cot- tages lay in the course of the great slide between the base of the mountain and the lake. All of these were utterly de stroyed. The frightful momentum gain- edinthedescent of the mountain car- ried the mass straight across the valley and into the lake, sweeping in front of it farms and houses and men and herds. The lake was changed in a twinkling into a sea of mud, in whose depths were buried hundreds of human beings and thousands of domestic animals, while the prosperous valley of farms was left heaped with the rocky rubbish of the mountain The records of landslides contain no other recital of a horror equal to this. Other Great Landslides. In 1872 a landslide in Arragon, near Froga, Spain, killed twenty persons, and was the means of drowning forty others, through the land filling the river and backing the water into a flood This was caused by the great rains. It was less than two years after this that the town of Alarra, in the province of Navarre, was utterly destroyed by the sliding down of a huge mass of rocks that overhung it. More than two hun- dred persons were kilied in that catas trophe In 1877 a large landslide occurred on the banks of the River Veillet, in the parish of St. Genovieve, in Champlain ‘ounty, Quebec In this slide an enor nous area of woodland plunged eighty feet down the mountain slide and buried several sawmills anda house. T 1 fen per ' L alive soys were eutombed The new was a week in reaching Montreal only 100 nnules away REMARKABLE CASES Chronic Invalids Raised from Their Siek Beds After Giviog Up Hope. London, Ont.—Henry R. Nicholls, 176 Rectory street, catarrh; recovered. De. Chase's catarrh cure. 25¢. Markdale—Geo. Crowe's child, itching eczema; cured. Chase’s Ointment. Truro, N.—H. H. Sutherland, travel- ler, pilee—very bad case ; cured ; Chaeec’s Ointment. 60c, Lucan—WVm. Branton, gardener, worms; all gone. Chase’s Pills. L’Amable—Peter Van Allan, eczema for three years. Cured. Chase's Oiutment. Gower Point—Robano Bartard, dread- ful itching piles, 30 years, Well agaiu; Chase’s Ointment. 60c. Meyersburg—Nelson Simmons, itching piles: cured. ‘Chase’s Ointment. Malone—Geo. Richardson, kidney and liver sufferer; better. One box Chase's Pills. 25c. Chesley—H. Will’s son, crippled with rheumatism and suffering from diabetes, completely recovered. Chase’s Pills. Matchard Township—Peter Taylor, kid- ney trouble, 30 years; cured. Chase’s Pile. 25. Toronto—Miss Hattie Delaney, Crawford street, subject of per eolds. Cured by Chase’s Syrup o seed and Turpentine. 25 cents. pip 174 tual L'a- Dr. Chase’s remedies are sold by all dealers. Edmanson, Bates & Co., mane- fecturers, Toronto The Seattle banks “have determined, as anatter of retaliation, 10 charge two per cent. on Canadian bills, while fifty cent pieces will be taken for forty pents and wenty-five cent pieces for twenty cents. Complete:y Loocked Out, “7 was so much rnn down I had togive up work, and [ felt-as if life was not worth living,” writes Wm. W. Thompson. Zepbyr, Ont. “I tcok Seott’s Sarsaparilla snd am now feeling as I did years ago.” Scott’s Sarsaparilla tones upthe entire system, purifies the blood, and eracicates rheumatic and escrofulous poisons, Ask for Scott’s and get it. The temperature fell below the frost line in Minnesota and the Dakotas on Wednes- day night, but the iowest temperature re- corded in Manitoba was 36 degrees. Build Up. When the system is run down a person becomes an ¢asy prey to Consumption or Scrofula. Many valuable lives are saved by using Scotv’s E-nulsion as soon as a de- cline in health is observed. It is stated that some prospectors have gone so far inland in British Columbia that wnless help is organized they are like- ly to be overtaken by winter and perish of cold and starvation. 400,000 Free Samples Given Away in Eight Months, Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills are jthe only kidney pills krown with sufficient merit to guarantee the proprietors in giving away hundreds of thousands of sample packages free. Ask your druggist for a sample if your kidneys or liver is deranged. A loquacious telegraph operator griev- ously misled a crowd of loyal Britishers tbe other day and made them ridiculous. It seems that the son of the Marquis of Salisbury raises bees, and being in need of a queen bee he sent to the nearest town for one, receiving, at Hatfield House, in rep'yv to his meseage,a telegram tothe effect that “the Queen will arrive by 3.40 this afternoon.” The operator, supposing it to referto Her Majesty, was uuable to kecp such important news to himself and an immense crowd had assembled at the sta- tion when the bee arrived. The fate of the operator is unknown, but the bee reached its destination in safety. A Prominent Londoner, Loxpon, Ont. Chase’s Ointment is an invaluable rem- edy for Itching Piles, and in my own case I would pay $50 per box for it if it could not be had otherwise. Jouyx Peppicoms, 160 Sydeaham St. - - GLASS - - PRESERVE * JARS We have a large stock of porcelain top preserve jars, in pint, quart and half gallon sizes, which we are offering very cheap by the dozen this season. We have also im- ported a few extra wide mouthed jars for preserving large sized fruit whole. Those are much stronger than the ordinary jar. Beer & Goff’s. Charlottetown, Aug.25, 1896. «i Mystery to Competitors sf The ratification of the FRENCH TREATY has enabled us to open sat} up large cellars in Montreal, for the purpose of supplying the Can adian people with PURE WINES RIGHT FROM THE VINE- -«if} YARDS OF FRANCE AND SPAIN, at half the usual prices, -atf} Thousands of the best families throughout the country who have been paying exorbitant prices, because they fancied some particular «tf label, are pow sending their orders to us, ail | atl ~a «ttf -«(i{ all mT sil sail See af this paper, and write at once fc (2h rge quart hotties’. ait wif -t{| 17 «il will Borveatx Ovrice: Auierk De Bourarr. WATCHES CLOCKS AND JEWELRY Are the best and cheapest in town. Try him for barga‘ns, NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE, OPPOSITE P. O. aug2i—dy & wky. P. E. |. Commercial College ard Shorihand Institute. The rndersigned, having purchased from S. F. Hodgson, all his interest in this institution, is now prepared to carry on its work in the commodious premises occupied during the past pear, oyer the Bank of Nova Scotia, Queen Square Cauurlottetown. } Being a graduate of, and hav-| been for some time a teacher in the Montreal Business College, after a full! course at that Institution, le now cif rs to students, both ladies and Gentlemen, a business education second to noue. Our business course will embrace Bock | Keeping, Commercial Arithmetic, Com- | mercial Law, Business and Legal Yorme, | Business Penmanship, Business Corr. s- | pondence, English Grammar and Compo sition. As we have had an experience of over twenty years as a Practical Reporter in| the Ben Pitman System, we will give Shorthand very careful attention. Our students will also be instructed in the use of the Remington Typewriter. uBd sjuapmig paouper Ajayeels 8a,By enter at avy time, but our Autumn course begins Sept, lst. Apply at once In person ur by mail for prospectus ISAAC OXENHAYM, Principal & Manager. | P. O. Box 242. if You Are — ql Going to e A BOSTON Or any part of the United States, The Cheapest and Best Route is via the PLANT LINE, The Popular Summer Route. Direct Service From Charlottetown The 8S. 8. HALIFAX wil! leave Char- lottetown for Boston every Friday at 1 p. m., arriving at Boston ondays am., returning leave Boston Tuesdays at noon, calling at Hawkesburyand Hal) fax each way. a Via Pictou and Halifax. Passengers leaving Charlottetown on Saturday, Monday and Thursday morn- ings via Pictou, make close connection at Halifax withS. S. Halifax sailing Satur- day miduight and with SS OLIVETTE sailing every Tuesday and Friday at 8 a.m. For further particulars apply to Char- lottetown Navigation Co., Charlottetown or to H. L. CHIPMAN, Can. Agt., may7 Halitax, N.S. STEAMER FASTNET. The steamer Fastnet commeuces her season’s work, sailing from Halifax TUESDAY, May 5th, and will continue to sail weekly, leaving Halifax every Tuesday, calling at the following ports Spry Bay, Sheet Harbor, Salmon River, Isaac’s Harbor, Canso, Arichat, Port Hawkesbury Port Hocd, Souris, Charlottetown and Summerside. Freight solicited. Low rates, W. W. CLARKE, Agent. Ch’town, Apr.] 20, 1896—dy —_— Robb-Armstrong Engines, Cuirect Design, Kest Workm n:hip Amherst Ueligni to Consumers— ure Ciaret al $3 and $4 per case A mos} delightful wine, equal to any for- mecly sold in this country at double these prices. our lst cf principal brands and {prices in Saturdays issue of “l BORDEAUX CLARET: CO, 2 furtber particulars. 30 HOSPITAL STREET, MONTREAL, BOSTON FAST LINE ? Buy your tickets by the SS HALIFAX, leaving Charlottetown every Friday at . > in. WOW. CLARKE, Ticket Agent. May 29—d&w STEAMER Pohl (usbec Steamship Company. HIS fine steamship is now running regularly between Montreal and Charlouetown, calling at Quebec, Father Point, Gaspe and Perce. Elegantly FPurnished for the Passenger Trade—Electric Lights throughout. Freight carried at reasonable rates, and handled with Great care. Special rates made for Dry Goods, or any large quantity or merchandize, Eggs Carried Very Cheap. The sailing dates are:— From Montreal. From Ch’town. 8th June ist. June 22nd * a “ 6th July 2th © ah 13th July 3rd Aug. 2ith * 17th“ 10th Aug — 243t “ 14th Sept. 4th Sept. CARVELL BROS., Agents. _ May 28th —2aw (1 4), 2m FOR PICKLING. 3 bbls. Pickling Spice. 30 “ Malt Vinegar, full proof, 39 bbls. White Wine, full proof. 20 bbls English Malt. ‘0 Demijohns White Wine, XX, Wholesale only. CARVELL BROS. TIRED EVES. Expecially when reading or working by artifical light are nearly always @ sure iu dieation of defective vision. It is poor economy to refrain from wear ing glasses when permanent injury to the eyes may result. Jt dosen’t cost anything to find out the condition of your eyes. Examination by correct methods free at the Queen Street Store, opposite J. D. Mcieod’s. G. F. Hutcheson, late with E. W. Taylor. dy A why. CHURCH SCHOOL FOR GIRLS Agcehil)l. Winde- Edgehill, ux INCSor, Michaelmas Term Begins Sept 5, 1896 BISHOP OF NOVA SCOTIA - CHAIRMAN BOARD OF TRUSTEES; LADY PRINCIPAL—MISS MACHIN; ViCE PRINCIPAL—MISS PAINTER With Eight Resident Governesses, Four Iustructors, Matron and Trained Nurse, Housekeeper, etc., The New Assembly Hall, Art Rocm; ten additional Music Roome, and the En- larged School Room, wili be ready for oc - cupation in September. Special Senior Students admitted. Dip- lomnas gravted. The situation of Edgehill ig remarkably attractive and healthy. The grounds include Lawns, Tennis Courts, Skating Rink, Gardens, ete., and cover eight acres. For calendar containg full information apply to DR. HIND, Windsor, N. S. y21-246 tl 15th Sep. DR. Hl. D. JOHNSON EYE AND EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Office --= Kent Street Aug 16, 94 ly The Canada Accident ASSURANCE CO, FRED. W. HYNDMAN, AGENT FOR P. F. L, ROBB ENGINEERING CO. Ltd Accepts Plate Glass Instrance alse. May 23, 1896—law (6) = TH EXHIBITION ASSOCIATION + WILL HOLD Its FOURTH ANNUAL FAIR ON ITS EXHIBITION GROUNDS, Opening Sept. 224 and Casing Oc. 24,1896, Exhibits of Machinery and Manuf a auufactures Farm and Dairy Produc 2 Sheep, Swine, &c. * a Products of the Forest, Mines and Ww Paintings, Sculpture, &., Fancy — The Provinciai Government herd of Lives st purchased, will be exhibited and sold an ie n senneaedlin Large Prizes in all the Usual Departments. Attractions.— Fireworks . . eve suitable evening, Band Music, afternoons aon a 5 ee lerformances in the JSEMENT HALL, Varicd Attracti the Parape Grounns i SPECIAL PASSENGER RATES O08 ‘71. LINES OF TRAVEL PRIZE LisTs = s iis \iBUTED AFTER j 1 An. @ITRY FORMS AND ALL DESIKED INFORMATION WILL BK FURNISHED ON APPLICATION TO CHAS. A. EVER etr® @. C PITFIELD, Manager aud Sec’y. President. Rolled Oats, Oatmeal POT BARLEY, &c., AGENCY, Having been appointed Agent for Walt: Thompson’s Mills, Seaforth, Ont., I am prepared to receive orders fur the above Guaranteed the best quality. Please get quotations before purchasing elsewhere. W.W. CLARKE agent wkynl Wants, Lost, Found, &e Advertisements under this heading charge five cents per line. W4ntep.—-s cook, Nowashing Apply to Mrs Jas DesBrisay, or to Mrs Fitzgerald Mt Edward Road septi—dyéwky OST—A Silver, Carriage Door-handle, key- 4 sha Any one bringing it t> thi: Office will be suitably rewarded se pti—tf AGENTS MAKE $I8 A WEEK EASY ANI sure. Sendus your address and we wil show you how todo it [Imperial Silver- ware Co, Box P.L, Windsor Unt, YES, WE HAVE THE BEST PAYING bus'mess ever offered azeats. $18 a week can surely be made by any man or wom sn, No possible doubt abovt it. Imperial Sil- verware (o., Box P.L , Windsor, Unt. REVMEVBER WE POSITIVELY @UARAN- tee $i8aveek. Dont fail to write at once. We will surprise you. Imperial Silverware Co., Box P, L,, Windsor,Ont, aug2}—lImo ANTED.—A Double-Barrel Shot Gun, Breach Loader,10 bore. Must be in good order.—Address P.O. Box 697, City sept4—tr ANTED _Several Bright young men % “~~do work for us in this vicinity they have Bicycles all the better Address, “Advertiser,” Brantford Ont. ANTED.—A loan of about $990 at 6 per cent, on freehold property; convenient situation, Present rent of dwelling about 380 perannum. App'y to J, H. Redd’n, Attorney Victoria Row, Queen tquare, septj-dyéin on LET—The Shep on Grafton St opposite Law Courts, now occupied by W A Hut- cheson as a Fruit and ( onlectionery Store Possession given early in Nov Apply to D May septl—dyawky-tf O LET—A Cottage situated on Pleasant St containing 7 rooms in good order, with a first class cellar under the whole pouse Ais» inclosed yard with stabic, and is at present occupied by Mrs John A. McInnis, who is about to leave the Island Apply to Mr Thomas McQuaid, Lower Queen Sireet, or to the owner at Southport LpWarp KELLY june 19, 1896 E Several first-class cle: ksto at ~~tend to our business in thi apd adjvining Counties. wih re f. rences. THE BRADLEY-GARRETSON (Co,, Urp,, 49 Richmond 8t, W , Toronto Unt Apply O LET.~—A three story dwelling house on Prince St, containing eight rooms and e try, Possession given Oct, Ist, Apply to « W. Weliner- septs TO LET—A comfortable cottage situated on Richmond Street West; a vood yard, stable, ei, and ground suitable for a garden Im- mediate possession given. Kent moderate. Apply to J D Mason, 6i3—aplil © LET.—The store and printing office now occupied . Hasza & Morrie in the Brown Biock. Possession giyen Ist Novem- ber. Apply to James Paton. june 1) 2 i 6. TO LET- The pieasantly situated dwelling house jacing south on Milford Street, near Brighton Road, adjoining the residence of Mr \ J Bullman. Five minutes’ walk from bathing house and lawn tennis grounds in Victoria t ark. nine minutes from Post Office. Drawing room, dining room, large verandah, square hall, pantry, kitchen and back poreh on ground floor. Four bedrooms and ba'h room on first floor, two bedrooms in attic. Ample yard and shed inr ar, grass plot and shade trees in front, Renet moderate. we. RIS, Architect, 246 1— App HORRIBLE PUNISHMENT. iiiidnintnnonen _6: Ds Ae Ae ee KS A A ek ek Exiles Suffer Fearful Tortures in Siberia. S25. 2552525... 5.255252 555= A correspondent, who has _ recently <i} been released from three years’ impris- -aff! onment in Russia for a crime of which he does not even know the name, sends a «tl horrible account of the brutal severity -«}{l with which he was treated, TRY Among other things he writes: ‘‘On -| ee ee entering the prison of Vetropawlovsk! -«tl| one feels as if one was in a cemotery. The sight of St. Peter on the threshold, -alff for which one looks involuntarily, is all «| i & that is lacking. When I entered my cell I could see nothing, so complete was the -«t{{ darkness; indeed, there is nothing to ail} see, for if there were, the j risoners would assuredly kill themselves with it. «lf “It was here tboat I underwent the af punishinent of the ‘tomb.’ I was detected in tapping the walls of my cel! as I tried «|| . to attract the prisoner’s attention next anil C door. ‘Chen I was carried away to the t a rette ‘tomb.’ aff 2 ‘This is a damp, poisonoas pit dug s(t out in the ground, in which it is impos- sible either to stand upright, to lie or -ai{{| even to sit down. One remains, in short, ° shopping oo king o ope's imptimmont | Retail liverywhere (0 GC. per Package lasts. Stooping —that is to say, aching. at{{l ' ws ‘*Here J remained for almost 4 month fed on dry bread and water, while the “al guards jeered at me ceaselessly through aa er — a little caging above. ‘Lhen, when very nearly dead, I was taken to my cell «all Li again, aft WW S i. b l&C yor ree his Satanic majesty shonkd Ml . ‘ im a O ; cite riens tt: the man whoinwente? thic ’’ «ijl A Generons Answer. -«{{} S 7 Touching this subject of servants, | -dj! ROCHESTER, N. z. why on earth do so many ti inds of 4 our women at home slave in factories “all or worse, When here they would be like «| ! ‘ ICTR PDDTTD x ( angels in the house? (Mosiiy!) And ] { I IRS] | iZ7k \j | ), vee nk i age 3 i AUP \ sa8 2 4 ‘ then again, the want of wives in Cana -t{| 4 4 da is a real blight to the laud of sun alli light and room. These lines I jotted ' down from the Pall Mall Gazette last ait year: «(| A voice comes from the Colonies So ee ane _—— Fine = a a lives, oh, send us wiv. s,” ee SES FS > FS SS STS ESESTS=E A voice then back responsive flies ; F a ee 7 Fy y=3T+TVTFIFSTT eS “Ob, by the Setheoa. tales ure. take ours.” : ; . 7 9 4 —tne Canadian Gazette. a Commercial Travellers, a Wm. Golding, commercial traveller, $OOOO0bs Cee COSCSEe8 130 Esther St., Toronto, says: For fifteen years I suffered untold misery from Itching Piles, sometimes called pin worms. Mary HEAVY 4 ard many weeks have I hal to lay off the road from thistrouble. I tried eight other ee en ee an = pile ointments and so called reme lies with STEEL PLATE @e- no permanent relief to the in‘cns+ itching and stinging, which irritated by scratching —oooee would bleed and ulcerate. One box of ; For ; Chase’s Ointment cured me con pletely. ein « John R. Gentry won in the b'g free-for- Coal or Wood all pacing race here yesterd>y; Frank Agan, 7 second: Robert J., third. mee ‘ Made in various styles, from the ordinary family to the largest hotel size, >0e> 2 five constructed in the most substan- tial manner and after the most approved patteras. ARE STRICTLY UP To DATE { EVERY PARTICULAR ” 2 _—— It will pay you to investigate the good points of these ranges before purchasing others. The McClary Mfg. .Co., iorosto Minne TORONTO, WINNIPEG VANCOUVER... .,. e* — For asle by S. W. Crabbe, Charlottetown. 7 ‘id > 4 OW ONE GIVES RELIEF. = ee H. STANWAY & Co Wholesale Wine & Liquor Merchants ————— ce IFALIAN WAREHOUSE 243 Hollis and 48 Upper Water Street HALIFAX, N.S. P.O Box 475. y 14) —————— ——— The St. Lawrece Sugar Refiigco., Ltd, Montreal a Laboratory of Inland Revenue, Office of Official Analyst, i ’ Montreal, April 8th, 1898. = hereby certify that I have drawn, by my own hand, ten samples of the 8T. LAW RENCE SUGAR REFINING CO’S EXTRA STANDARD GRANULATED SUGAR, indiscriminately taken from ten lots of about 150 barrels each. I have anilyced same, and find them uniformly to contain : 99 Yo to 100 per cent. of Pure Cane Sugar. with no impurities whatever.” (Signed) JOHN BAKER EDWARDS, Ph D., C. L. Prof. of Chemistery and Pub. A nalyst, Montrea N RATTENBURY, AGENT —_ ~ _ - — oer Highland Ranges — — Made in Boston {| —SOLD ONLY BY— Fennel & Chandler. Charlottetown, July 22, 1896—246 & wy W00d’S Phosphodine,—7%e Crea Fugiish Remedi Is the result of over 35 years treating thousands of cases with ail know® drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment-® combination that w'll effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stagesot Sexual Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Me Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tedacco, or Alcoholic § timulants, ail of which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave, Wood's Before Taking. Phosphodine has been used iaventaiatie by hundreds of col that almost hopeless—cases that had been treated by the most talented physi Cians—cases that were on the verge of despair and insanit y—cases that were tottering over the grave—but with the continued and persevering use of Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were restored to man!y vigor and health— Reader you need not despair—no mat- ter who has given you up as incurable~—the remedy is now within your reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness. Price, one package, $1; six packages, $5; by mail free of postage. One will please, s#x guaranteed to cure. Pamphlet free to any address. The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont -, Canada, Wood's Phosphodine is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominiom og ite