Rares of BY SPECIAL ROYAL APPOINTMENT ea There’s Noth in g Like SUNLIBN\ SOAP iT DOES AWAY WITH BOILINC HARD RUBBING BACKACHES SORE HANDS Non’t 35" Sunlight Go BY WITHOUT TRYING REFUSE CHEAP IMITATIONS ‘ a ; i i Great Premium ! CHAMBERS ENCYCLOPEDIA BE GIVEN WITH THE DAILY EXAMINER For One Year For $6.00. When we a Dodd’s eT Orrw~— Kidney Pills : Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright's Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of all who have used them. THe? CURE TO STAY CURED. By af druggists or mail on receipt of price, gvents™ Dr. L. A. Sa ith & Co, Toronta FOR SALE. \ Dwelling House and Land on King &treet, yw i amd oecupied by the Rev 4. t-ordon The Dwelling House contains ten rooms, and th re stab eoach house and other out buildings on the premises. Possession given im mediately rerms easy. For further par ih Ts apy te ¢ R. SMALLWOOD dy tf Soll The Wealth of Health Is in Pure Rich Blood ; to enrich the blood is like putting money out at interest, SCOTT'S EMULSION Of Pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oj/ and Hypophosphites itor, Cameron Block posseses blood enriching properties in a remarkable degree. Are you ali run sown rake Scott's Emulsion. Almost as Palatable as Milk. Besure and get the vennine Prepared only by Scott & Bowne, Belleville Gratetul —Comiorting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST ‘ ty ' w ed ¢ Mr. } ‘ : tla ; ‘ } { it i use of tf ai ha ‘ } : bin " at r tw allach ‘ i a ‘ WwW. 1aY t fata) sha | | t ! ; ia | ‘ { Se ice G { ¥ with | va ' \MES EPPS & COQ.,, . Lond ARSON | PILLS Make New. Rich Blood! These pille were a wondertul diecovery Gike them in the world, Wil positively cure or reliew® Ji memmer of diease, The information around ten tunes the cost of a box of es Out alent thew acd you will always be thank? Lt, 4 pow. They expel all irapurities from the elleate womens find great benefit from using Hustraced pamjsod free. Secid everywhere, or sent ail for Sf cta m stomps; five boxes G10 DR L JHRSON & CO,, 2 Customs House St, Boston. Mam, MARINE INSURANCE, Sritixh and Foreign Marine ot Liverpeoo!. Reliance Marine ef Liverpool. Nova Scotia Marine of Halifax. Homew path C} England "4 . argo and Fretghts neured + pwest patos Sterling Certificates, payable in any part of ai world, issjed on shipments . FRED. W. HYNDMAN, lowt a ssert that ; «1 thoucht 1 } me THE DAILY WHEKE WOMEN KEIGN. AN ADAMLES EDEN NEAR THE GATES OF THE WORLD'S FAIR Amber Pays a Fiying Visit te the W» man’s Dormitory and Finds it Plessant- ly Different From Hotels Frequented by the Masculine Gender No Profanity Ne Cuspiiiores iriv sun down when I ‘‘drew It was ne up.” so to speak, at the story-and-a-hz'f DATTAC&S ' aoorway of whi was inscribed good Saxo! text tle two words that had proved the mira 4 ong after ons search r ¢ building vers an entire block ar. furnishes a ynmodations for 1000 w mer Not a man is allowed to flirt his at-tails within the doorways, unle.s uader convoy of femaie reiatives, wh spurn him from the place at the wit ing hour of bedtime What the en- chanted kingdom of Tennyson's Princess was, without a man to cast a blight up- nits beauty is the dormitory as it Enterit itthe porch stands g the place by way of a where some women in rock ing chairs were ng air, | found myself in an hotel office where women porters and women clerks ruled the day An indescribable chatt.r enjoying the sweet ever tilled the air It was unlike the bustie f any other hotel lobby in the world. There was a rustle rather than a roar and a chirp rather than a confusion. If can imagine Niagara Falls keyed to you the carol of a canary you can have an idea of the noise made by over a hun- dred women all talking together. Isatdown for a moment and took it all in before 1 announced myself as on a still-hunt for facts. There was one lack that tilled me witi: a wild desite to arise and nay, I will beat a drum say that there were three EXAMINER ‘WHat WOMEN WEAR, | Would you or sound a tom-tom— | lacks that filled 1 very soul with joy. The first was the lack of cuspidors or any occasion for vem. To stand inside | the lobby of a clean-smelling and ros- perous American hotel and see neither sn expectorator ner a cuspidor made the soul within me caper like a spring lami. Next, Lrejoiced at the absence of pro- tanity. ‘Tue at:nosphere is rare to find, indeed, where the sulphuric fumes of useless blasphemy cast no blight, in these lays of reckless speech and action, And lastly, I rejoiced in the luck of loafing. I | was pleased with the bri-k management f things atthe desk. There was no magniticently haughty clerk to bewilder the would-be guest with autocratic ways ind diamonds. The young ladies who dealt out the rooms and attended to busi- ness were modestly dressed and court- eous, They talked a great deal and eemed interested, but that is a delight- ful ehangs from the custom of the fresh young man in the majority of our hotels, who bestows your key as a condescen- | sion and makes you feel as though what little right you had held heretofore to cumber the earth was withdrawn like an outlawed license ora last month's railroad ticket | Everything in sight was clean and fra- | grant with fresh air ard soap. The floors were in a spotless condition and the windows bright and well curtuined. A fireplace offered a means of warmth | should the weather be cool, and easy | chairs drawn up to tables that were covered with newspapers invited the | guests to rest and recreation, | After a while I stepped up to the desk and announced my busipess to a pretty | woman ir a becoming brown silk dress, whose snapping black eyes denoted the | ability to wield, as she does, the man- agement of the concern, “Tam so glad that you have come,” |eaid she. “Just wait a half minute until I smooth out a little difficulty that | has arisen and I will join you for a nice, good, cosy talk.” Soi stepped out on the porch and watched the fading of the great red rose that sunset had set growing in the west, Against it the dese foliage of the trees rippled in a thousand emerald waves, and above it hung a silver star, like a lessening sail, bound for the viewless shores of dawn. The air was cool and | fragrant, and | said to myself, ‘Why go | to the restiess hurly-burly of a conglom- erate hotel, O, woman visitor to the fair, when such a cloister as this awaits you ?”’ **Well, how do you like it?’ was the | first question | asked. ‘‘Does your esti- mate of the average women rise or fall under close contact with then?” | “There is a pretty steady tendency to- | ward the up side, she answered, but I will confess to you that sometimes I get so tired of women that | never want to I love my sex, and -hould see another. | pretty trying. “Are your rooms ful'?’ I asked. ‘Oh, no; we have only alout seven | hundred with us at present; and we can accommodate a thousand, easily.” “What class of women are drawn to you mostly? Teachers and working- women, I suppose, for whom the low | rates prove a great attraction,” ‘You » ould be surprised,” replied Mrs. be ashamed if I didn’t, but they can be | Harrington, '‘to kna@w how few of the | women for whom the enterprise was designed come to us, Our roomera are largely made up of those who are in comfortable circumstances, while we have several who could easily afford to put up at expensive hotels.” ‘What are your rates?” | asked, “The primal design of the dormitory was to make it a stock concern, pure and simple," answered Mrs. H., **but we have many applications for transients, who pay 50 cents a day for a room, and take their meals at the restaurant attached to the building.” ‘Do you take comes along, at whatever makes application?” asked I. * Yes, iudeed,” was the reply, “‘and we have never been deceived yet.” ‘*Good!” cried I, * that is the way it should be. The restriction that have been hurled at woman so long have made a coward of her, I would no more dare to go to a Chicago hotel at 11 o'clock at mght and ask for a room, without an affidavit in one hand and a prayer book in the other than I would step up to a cage and toy with a Royal Bengalese.” * Would you like to look about a little?” asked Mrs. Harrington. So we strolled through the long corridor and looked into many of the neatly kept We found an abundance of in any woman that hour she rooms fresh linen, comfortabe beds and hygienic appliance, Everywhere there was a sweet, healthful smell to the air, which compared favourably with far more pretentious resorts The only irawback that presented itself to my discernmmg eve. was the absence of creens to the windows, but then, any clever woman could buy | avard of me quite netting and whip it the sash berself in half a minute Catarrh. There is no eon plaint a offensive, dis- agreeable and unhealthy as eatarrh. The offensive discharge from the disease poisons and v itiates the blood, disturb and | sicken the stomach and in many cases in duce fatal lung troubles. If afflicted do aot trifle with it, Hawker’s Catarrh Cure i# a perfect and positive cure Try it | Sold everywhere, Only 25 cents MJ. Henry, of Toronto, Ont., says: I | wave been g great sufferer for years with eatarrh, and haye tried every remedy I hear of withoyt oldgining relief, until I } tried Hawker’s Catarrh Cure, which gave immediate relief and made a per- | manent cure. I heartily recommend its | use to all who suffer from complaint. Geo. F. Baird, M. P. for Queen's County, N.B., saves: [have used Hawker’s Catarrh Cure for violent cold in the head and found it a perfect cure for attacks of this kind. USE &KODA’S DISCOVERY, the great Blood and Nerve Kemedy STAMINAL ig a valualde food and tonié for the warm It Supplies. the vital principles of BEEF and WHEAT with HY POPHOSPHITEa, Ch'town. | weather, Th€V 44s. WEAR BLOUSES OF WHICH Tm@@e ARE ENDLESS VARIETIES Mere Are three Very Elegant Oues—The Smeered Linen Bivuse for Traveling Weer--4 White Cambric for Hat July Daye avd « Striped Silk for Dress Oc- A blouse that. while it looks very fancy, yet depends upon its effect for the dainty needlework upon it, is pictured in this illustration. The material is lighit- weight unbleached linen, and the tu:i- ness is drawn up to the throat and suocked from there to the shoulder. a dead white threa: that looks satiny being weed. From under this smocking coms a full frill of the linen, about four inches deep bodice, after the ishion of an Empire cape. ‘Tha full si-eves are smocked im at the wrists to form cuffs, and have a frill like the cape for the finish. The beit worn with this 1s an undressed kid me fastened with straps and buckles THE SMOCKED BLOUSE. In almost any material such # blouse could be made, and it is certainly de- cidedly pretty, but one has to be an ex- pert in the art of smocking to give the desired effect, for unless such work is well done it had much better not be done at all. Linen blouses, laid in soft plaits, like che old-fashioned shirts worn by gentlemen, are much fa cied for travel- ing wear; when I say “linen” I mean the unbleached linen. When the blouses are done up and after the plaits have been ironed down, a paper-knife should be run under them so that they may stand quite loose. Sometimes it seems expensive to send one’s blouses to a regular laundry, but where they are soft and easily ironed ones itis much better to spend the few extra pennies, because then they come home retaining their shape. THE COOL BLOUSE, For wear in the house there is pro- bably no blouse so desirable as that of white lawn or of thin cambric, with a dainty figure upon it, These blouses are not made as elaborately as those that do not visit the laundry; they are made to look pretty. Tie typical one shown in illustration No, 3 has a yoke in the back, the fuliness gathered in at the neck in front, and just down the center on each side a full, wide ruffle of the material, cut so that the selvedge forms the edye, which gives the air of a jabot of lace. These are drawn ia slightly at the waist, 80 that while very wide at the shoulders and bust, they taper off and tend to make the waist look small. The sleeves are the regulation leg-of-mutton ones, absolutely untrimmed, and the collar is a turn-down one of the lawn, with a emall bow of white ribbon concealing its fastening. BLOUSE ‘OF WHITE CAMBRIC. In any cotton fabric, that 1s, in any light-weight cotton fabric, this blouse would be pretty, but it would not do to attempt to develop it in cheviot or in any of the heavier materials. Of course, if one wished it, lace could be substituted for the frills of lawn, but to my way of thinking the lawn seems in better taste. Any belt desired, and of any style, may be worn with such a blouse, and even a ribbon sash could be assumed with it if it were in harmony with the skirt. A MORE ELABORATE BLOUSE. I have said that decorations of all sorts seem to be permitted on blouses, and so it is not strange that the square, as well as the round jacket front, should be noticed. By-the-by, the jacket fronts will be found more becoming to women who are very broad across the bust, than the Empire revers which, of course, add | to the width. A blouse of striped silk, a fancy peculiar just now to the French eople, is pictured in illustration No. 2. he blouse itself is made of very dark blue and white striped silk, is quite simple, the fullness being gathered in at the neck, and later on confined, as is us- ual, by casings and strings at the waist- line, ‘It is just as well to say here, that in making a blouse one must allow a good jong skirt to it for nothing is more annoying or more ill-appearing than a blouse which has been eut too short. The blouse of to-day is almost invariably worn underneath, ratoer than outside the girdle Tne elaeorate air of this | striped silk blouse is given by the ’ | ’ } ; ; } Was a rich vein of sound healih to which ‘tried them this annoving | great for this wonderful remedy, His Found a Rich Gold Mine. Lower Jorpon Bay, N.S., July 3.— Mr. Samuel Locke, of this place, has just discovered a gold mine here that pans out which exte ds around the entire} Kite] . : + ; | ware, Kitchen Utensils. Silverware. Lamps, Japanese Goods, | Ladies’ and Childrefy’s Boots. ikke to go Shopping in MONTREAL COLONIAL HOUSE, PHILIPS SQUARE, MONTREAL, | Special Attention Given to Mail Orders 100 per cent, of pure metal to the tan. It he was restored, by the use of Dodd’s All last winter he suffered from kidney trouble which would not yield to the prescriptions of several doctors. A few | months ago Mr. Locke heard of the good work done by Dodd’s kidney pills and with the invariable result. To-day he i# well and thinks no PEAISE foo neighbors are much interested in what they deseribe as a marvelous gure, Take time by the forelock, and Putt- ner’s Emulsion by the spoonful, and your cough will vanish and your roay cheeks return. ' ‘ SHORTHAND, Instruction by Mail. Send for Circular. W. H. CROSSKIL Certificated Teacher Benn Pitman Phonogrephy Chariotietown, July 7, 18%--wy t Dry Goods, Carpets, Curtains, Furniture, China and Glass- ind Millinery. A full Stock in each department. Shoes and Trial orders solicited. HENRY MORGAN & Co.. MONTREAL. Slippers, Mantles ' PA AN NS | \ \ \ i ’ Yt AN er NN Mothers, Does the housework you? If so, ask yourself the reason why. Is there a means by which the WEARINESS and the wEAK- NESS and the DREAD can be removed ? Do the words of friends and the experience of others ‘influ- ence you? There is reason why they should. They are constituted as you are. to them is relief to you. ‘The case of Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton, of Milford, St. John, has many a parallel. Consider it. This lady, whose portrait ap- pears above these lines, suffer- ed four years from that com- tire Q-~~ ; 4) WW) iy y vy Relief Vf mon complaint, Dyspepsia— accompanied, of course, by its train of ill—flatulency, consti- pation, nervousness, loss of appetite. And she tried eight phy- sicians during that-time. Last autumn she was induc- ed to “experiment” with a popular local remedy—‘‘Groder Syrup.” Of this medicine she says: ‘It has helped me as nothing else ever did ; it made my work lighter and easier be- cause it regulated my stomach and GAVE ME NEW LIFE. Does such evidence appeal to vou? Itshould. There is health and healing in this remedy for Dyspepsia. 9 Dis- ordered stomachs are the direct cause of countless ills that kill. JEWEL STOVES FOR ARE E.H.NORTON&CO., SALE BY SOLE ACCENTS FOR P. E. ISLAND. GRAND SALE OF FURNITURE. Continued daily until the whole of our immense stock is disposed of. Good Work, New Styles, At Our Warerooms, Queen Square. Come one ! goods, Picture Framing, Looking Glasses, ete, John Newson. COGNAC. THE SECOND LARGEST SHIPPERS OF BRANDY FROME RAVCE, THEIR BRANDIES ARE UNSURPASSED IN AGE AND QUALITY, Ask Your Wine Merchant for Them. Bottom Prices, 7 FRIDAY, JULY 21, 189: | | | The Daily Examine The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in Size and CircvJation. ‘THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. | } ‘Six Months, - $2 One Month, - - 35 Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FREE DAILY subseribing ‘for THE month EXAMINER for 12 months at CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT TO US. . = Tue Exawrver Publishing Co., pi ao Charlottetown, P. E. Island e , . S You will please send to my address the D. AIL’ EXAMINER for 12 - : ; * months from date, for which I agree to pay 3 c@ ats a month, it being - = « understood that you are to have sent to my addres s for one year, without : ; ; e extra charge, McCLURE’S MAGAZINE, couse: icing with the current = - 2 = number. ~~ 8 NO ons 6s crs contain = Fe at pett....0... enenltiuel seoeduces bens Address... é Gillin = - nu “uu 1 uw tuna ¢ + i 7 ) nt ' yw rina } Sy So Sob SS Ln Sb nS Sb Sn Sb in Sin Sn Sb Sn Sb Slip Lo ll> Shs > i> > Lb> Inethbnd Lhe Sb Lon Sb Sb Sb Nn Siti Sip lin}. Sb ln Lie CALL AT OUR OFFICE and see the entertainvin - and finely Theodore Roosevelt, Joaquin Miller, Gilbert un n Burroughs, Hamlin ¢ ain i, Prof. E. S. Holden, Prof. C. A. Young, A. H. Ne: en, Robert Bar r, Henry Stanley, Archibald Forbes, Andrew Lang, and many other s. : _ Each number of MeCLURE’S MAGAZINE ec ontaim s two with famous people. Jules Verne, Frances Hodgso: » Bart French Balloonist, Archdeacon Farrar, Thomas A.. Ediso H. Boyesen, Alphonse Daudet, Camille Flammariot ., Edw Graham Bell and many others, have furnished mat erial f views, which Will appear fully illustrated in this m agazine HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, illustrated | mtervi ett, Tissandier, ard Everett Hale,, Profe especially prey axed it interviewer in England, from material furnished him bw Gi arl Hagentack, cf H the great animal importer and trainer. These artic-Jex de il with the Capture Beasts, the Training of Wild Beasts, the Transportatiomof Will Beas, the tures and Escapes of Carl Hagenbeck. iustrated, bw ars artist of great skill in drawing animals, a JOHN BURROUGHS, C. F. HOLDER, DR. C. C2 BBOTT, The series will be | , Come all! Save morfey and get the best) ; kidney pills, and which he would not ex- | 5 ye + . as | change for any other mine in America. | Bisquit DuBouchs & { 0 | a : 4 : ' : | \ i In Hunting or Open, Engraved or Piain, Silver and Go One Year, -- - $4'Three Months, - $1 | to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months .at THE subesc riber offi . <A _ a . 35 cents a month. By- special arrangernent with the publishers, we a1 ¢ | on th Mount ert, —_— wut enabled to make a most exceptional offer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZIN) 2] mile and a half from the wits, well FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone w ho till< out the following blank form ,; 35 cents $a TTT TTT Ce cence aQenqqqewccnne TEee aaa Ulnstrated 3 CLL RE’S MAGAZINE, which has among its contri tars the most { amous authors in America and England, inchading R. L. Stevenson, dad srd Kipling, A . Conan Doyle, Octave Thanet, William) Dean Howells, Bret Harte, (ar & Russell. Joel « Thandler Har- ris, Thomas Hardy, J. T. Trowbridze, Jerome K. Je row «&, Frances Hod rson Burnett, the famous n, F. Hopkinson Surith, H. of AFRICAN ADVENTURE. especially for young readeis, a story ; NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE. —Tip ‘re will be several articles written by Raymiind@\Blathwayt, who has been calk.d by Mr. W. T. Stead the best unburg, of Wild Adven- English be AT DEA’ #'S DOOR, NERVOUS PROSTRATION, EXTREME DEBILITY AFTER THE GRIP. ; hs ave: >., SAYS: ville, Queens Co., N. yint r I ha la Very gp me “Oct. A, 1992.—L vere attack of the Giri which let feeble and reduced in flesh. 1 had Bo ap petite, and was so nervows J could not was Under Doctors’ treatment for month x receifeu x0 benefit. My triend« though: egasupy'. on and I got so low that they : wopoottsy my death at any day. As & leat esor. they deckled to try HAWER'S 5 NERVE AND STOMACH TONIC, = 3 bottles of which Rapidly Restored Me To Health, vas restored and] Y aud more be ot Speak ar’. auuhe as I feel that I slept well, my appe’it became stronger, stow; ows than I hai been for oo highly of this m | Owe My Life to its Virtues, Mr. Isaac G. Stevens, Gate Keeper I, G . Depot, St. John, N. B. sav-: Iwas wi Lingley during his severe Ulness and wag Ee expecting to have to notity his relatives of i C 1 ; ; Sold by all Druggists and De for 50 cts, per bottle. 3 bottles $1 Manufactured by the BAWKERK MEDICINE CO., Lim St. John, N. B. “ HAWKER’S LIVER PILLS cure all Stomach Farm For “Welsh acres, favorably known as the Fara: The farm consists of sixty and tains a good Dwelling House and | Outbuildings, all in good condition. ' good orchard in conned Apply to C. BENOIT, Vater Street, ; 18 also a Terms easy. July 3, 1893. JUST OUTI MAVE YOU SEEN IT? THE BIG BOTTLE PAIN-KILLE bbbbbbbbbb bbb! Shih bbbbbb-® ; | i Me- yai- M. t ews aeor iter- . : ; and «iver = writers famous for their work in this field, will centribute to 1e@ Magazine. Of interest to both Young and Old will be PROF . RB. L. GARNER’S MICAN - ‘ sip arrures ee -R. L. GARNER’S AVA CAN Old Popular 25c. Price, EXPEDIT ION 7 0 I HE GORILL AS. Arrangemer te ave been made. wu ¢ onnec- Dp : fon with a leading English review, to publish Profess or Garner’s letters dese:ry tive of | ° his present expedition to Africa. Professor Garner is. noted the world overe & or the | “a —s and interesting mvestigations he is making | « the epecch of monkew He | Oca sailed for Africa last September for the purpose of fur ther parsuing his «tudes i 1 the | 1 5 ; a native haunts of the gorilla. The illustrations of the se articles wilf be fvonr 4 loto- U graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Afric a } ; at McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most int emesting artic'es under the du ds: | 1 lhe Edge of the Future,” « Neavest Knowledge,” “] [mawle igs of [mmediate Vel 1¢,” | *The Present Hoar,” “Stranger thar Fiction,” ete ? . ® in tt irtues of Prime Beefin a concentrated We are oflering this splendid | and'easily digested orm. Maguzine with T¥ DAILY EXAMINE’ for only $4.60 a year, payable i 0) advance or in monthly instalments of 35c. as desir et We make this exceptionsi offer in order that we yma y new subscribers, but all whe are already subsendhers 3 101 avail opportunity to secure practically free this great popwiar , Magazin secure themselves of Address : The Examiner Publishing Co, CHARILOTTI:TOWN, P. E. ISLA? q «a large numl» or ¢ 4] and easily digested torm Invaluable As =» Strength-giving Food. —_——— “MILK GRANULES: thi is the solids of pure Cow's Milk so treated! \ hat when lved in the requivite quant iG y of water it vields a prodact tha ‘ The perfect equivalent of MOTHER'S MILK XX and 3a ra ichle & Stout WATCHES AT LOW PRICES TO SUIT EVERY ‘3UISTOMER. eX Fa G H. TAYLOR, North Side of Queen Square, Charlottetow un. June 28, 1893. 15 CENTS PER POUND for FERGUSSON ALEXANDER’S PURE PARIS in One Poind Boxes: 14e in 25 |b. Irons. DODD &, ROGERS, GREE! Ch town, June 27, 1893 \ bottles, all sized Casks and . t» suit family n Kees, Go nds promptly a “ivereu | ' f 1 Gece: Counter ond =" eolicited : 8S. OLAND. SON & C.. Water Street, ¢ Sarlottetown Pe ve a "Te ARE HEADQUA. RTERS POR Wooden Butter Dis, tes and Kee Cases. We also carry a large stock of WAX W PAPERS for ring Butter and Lard WRAPPING PAPER, PAPER BAGS and TWINE of every description BROS., Paper Dealers, Cove i \ SCHOFIELD Importers and Wholesale ST. JOHN. N. B | PL Box 435 a | The Telephone Company # P. E. ISLAND. © Parties using the telephone would fin talkirg much more satisfactory if they wl! in observe the following rales :- Ist. Speak with the mouth about! i from the transmitter. 2nd. Speak in a moderate tone of | too load, and distinctly. rd. Place the tel phone so as to - on or oo i ear just as if you wished to shat out all Ob i sounds, Do hot press too hard on the eaty he : : » cari chen a NY} Tis possitie to talk and be b ard = 4 standing back two or three feet from t s Wren h. but it mot | ae | mitter, 'f you shout loud enough, » guirely | a pleasant mode of conversation, is “3 ad * waste of wi ber } unnecessary, and is a useless j and lungs, besides being very annoy within range of your yoice. nor ANGUL " i Manage oft ig wall