Rear ey ech ik A lS a aS Sd AN AGENT OF BEATS, ee Small, and Little HWeeded, but Dead- ly in the Extreme. Constipation a Fruitful Source of Death —But it Vanishes Wien Dodd's Dy-- They Crreatest pepeia Table‘s are used. the World’s Care for Constipation. are “Ob! “Constipation It cures it- People of.en 1 e<u’. amoun: eelf if you leave it alone.” But they make a terrible mistake. There is no more fruitful source of death than constipation. And the evils it ways brings, cause the most agonizing tortures. Constipation paralyzes the muscles of the bowels, which are then unable to per- form their duties. Foul, decaying waste matter lies in the bowels, instead of being expelled I causcesirritatior, inflammation and death Again, with such matter decaying in tne bowels, the liver and kidoevs become diseased, the blood is poisoned, heart dis- ease and death result. We see, therefore, how vitally import-~ ant itis tokeeep the bowels io proper order— most particularly in hot weather Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets are the only medicine on earth that does this effvc'- ively. ray: ty abylolng. | at The larze white Tablets ensure prompt, | thorough digestion, and a proper regular ! work of the digestive organs. The smal! brown Tablets reduce the waste matter, soothe and allay ail irrita- tion and inflammation, and stimulate the bowels to# regular and perfect working. ; . aa of stained g!ass on which may be seen acherab astride cf a hobby horse, cz, Perfect health often depends on a small matter. Keep the bowels in good order. There never was, and never witl be, a ease of constipation, no matter what its cause, bo matter how dangerons, in young or old, that Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets wou't cure, Bowel Complaints are doubly dangerous in this very hot weather. Dodd’s Dy#pepsia Tablets cure al! bowel disorders, and ensure perfect health. Dodd’s Dysvepsia Tablets are sold by all druggists at fifty cents » box, ax boxes $2.50, or sent, on receipt of price, by the Dodds Medicine Co., Limited, Toronto. You should try a box. Plant Ling. To Boston COMMENCING MAY (0th. rhe favorite S. S. “HALI- FAX” will leave Charloite- town for Roston Every Tuesday, at 1 p. m. calling at Hawkesbury ard Halifax. RETURNING leave Boston every Saturday at noon. Passengers leaveing Ch’*own Wednesday morning via- Pic- tou, can make close tion at Halifax with Ss. S. “HALIFAX.” Sailimg Wednesday evening 1] .™. Tickets for sale at stations P. E. I. Railway. For further rates and all informa- tion apply to H. L. Chipman, Canad- 1an Agent, at Halifax. or to W. W. CLARKE, Agent, Ch’town. at PICKFORD & BLACK * LINE Saas HALIFAX & CHARLOTTESOWN. SEASON OF 1898. §.8. CITY OF GHENT will sail from Charlot.etown every Friday at .10 a. m., luring the the season of 193, for Halifax, galling at Summerside, Port Hastings, Port Huwkesbary, Arichat, Canso, lsasc Harbor, Salmon River. Sheet Harbor; vcturning will-leave Halitaxevery Tues y at 6 p. m., makiog sane calls. The camer uas excellent passenger accom- elation. Saloon amidships. Special w freights will be giveo this season. Pur turther information apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent 14,1398 ee pas = Ch’iown, May ’ ' | | connec- i ecemnae THE DAILY EXAMI ORIGIN OF THE BICYCLE. Be Traced as Far Back as the Seventoeath Century. Ya St. Nicholas ‘rank H. Vizetelly kas told ‘‘The Story of the Wheel,’’ tracing tbe evolution of the bicycle. Mr. Vizetelly says: lt bas been often said that ‘‘to trace the origin of tke bicycle we must go back to the beginning of the century,” and as this has not been denied it is probably true. I sball try to show that the bicycle grew from experiments in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and that the celerifere, first invented in 1690, was the earliest form of the “safety’’ of today. ‘he first attempts to ride wheels date back as far as the fifteenth century. True, the machines then made were crude, clumsy and im- perfect, yet they deserve mention, for they were a distinct step in the history of the wheel. The first of these was a heavy carriage driven by means of ropes attached to and wound round its axle tree. To the other end of the ropesa pole was tied, and this pols was used as a lever in front of the vehicle, and by this means it was slowly drawn for- ward. Little was done in the century fol- lowing, yet in the ‘‘Momoirs of Henry Fetberstone”’ it is told that a Jesuit missionary named Ricius, who was traveling down the (Ganges, It May having missed a boat that plicd at regular in- tervals botween points he was to visit in his journey, made up for lost time by building a small oarrizge propelled by levers. Because so few details are told, the truth of the author’s account has been doubted or discredited by many. In one cf England's older churches— St. Giles’ at Stoke Pogis—is a window wooden ‘‘wheel.’’ At the sides, in sep- arate panels, as if to fix the date of the design, stand two young men attired in Puritan dress, one playing the violin, the other, with hands in his pockess, smoking a pipe. Is it from this desien that the first thonght of the hobby +I + Pave “7 +o)? horse of other Cays was taken? Before the Royal Academy of Sciences, in it€5, Czanaim read a paper describ- ing a vebicie driven by the pedaling of a footman, who stood in a box bebir~ and rested bis hands on a ber level wit’ bis chin attached to the back of an | awning ebeva the rider in the comver- ance. ‘This may prove that Petber- stone’s account was. not untrue. OZza- nam ’s veliclo was followed by ancthcr, built on a somewhat similar plan, by an Englishman named Ovenden about 1761, for a description of tie machine then appeared in The Universal Maya- zine. The vebicle was said to be ‘‘the best that has hitherto been invented.”’ The distance covered ‘‘with ease’’ by this rude vebicle is stated to bave been six miles au hour; with a ‘‘peculiar exertion,’’ nine or ten miles. The steer- ing was.done with a pair of reins. Perfectly Cured Weak and Low Spirited — Nervous Prostration—Appetite Poor and Could Not Rest. ‘*T take great pleasure in recommending Hood’s Sarsaparilla to others. It has been the means of restoring my wife to good health. She was stricken down with an attack of nervous prostration. She suf- fered with headaches and her nerves were under severe strain. She became very low spirited and so weak she could only do a little work without resting. Her appetite was poor, and being so weak she could not get the proper rest at nigbt. She decided to try Hood’s Sarsaparilia, as we had heard it highly praised, and I am giad to state that Hood’s Sarsaparilla has perfectly cured all her ailments.” G. BELLAMY, 321 Hannah St., West, Hamil- ton, Ontario. Remember I~ oarsa- re oods parilla Is the Best—in fact the One True Blood Puri- fier. Alldrugzists. $1, six for $5. Get Hood's, Hood’s Pills are tasteless. mild, effec. tive. All drnuawiste, 276 rns 'P. E. Island: ILLUSTRATED 2 slides ; A COPY At al! Booksellers ei oO C c Sot l ek. O42 S588 S988 eel ‘ee vr. aul / ee) and at this office. > ve 1 ok oe : or = wiaiied, post paid, was : on rcceipt ef price. = ; = » 2 ~. .ddress— : EXAMINER PUB. CO. > CHARLOTTETOWN. © “TP PRAM DORESPD' PUDSP SPANIAAPASDIBOLIALAPS 9» JMPORTANT TO DAIRYMEN 250. 15 to 20 gallon milk cans the very best material obtainabie. Prices right. The JD. Bell Manufacturing Co Stove and Hard ware Merchanis, Montague, June 7—lm aa, made vu! SP 2 08 tae” I yar er a tit a in lt aa wr TH OMAN, A TRICK THAT ENRAGED HER SLEEP- ING CAR COMPANIONS. YW SELFISH W Lu AS She Emerged the Pink of Perfection, While the Other Women Barely Man- aged to Get Their Hats on Straight Be- fore Leaving. A sleeping car which arrived in New York numbered eight women among its passengers, and cne of them displayed wisdom which made the other seven ber enemies. She was a prim looking, mid- dle aged woman, and she had attracted attention the previcus night by the busi- pesslike way in which she ordered ber aupper. It was evident that she had traveled on a sleeping car before and from their nervousness it was quite slear that the otber women were novices in night traveling and that they were anticipating great discomforts. It was not until the morning, however, that the wise woman proved her wisdom as well as her selfishness. Two hours before tha train was dne in New York she left ber berth and dis- appeared in the end of the car. This sleeping car, like others of its class, had fonr wash bowls for men with large mirrors over them and only one wash bowl] for women, in a room so small that two women could not stand in it at the same time. Half an hour after the wise woman arcee the other women in the car began to stir around and four of them went at the same time to com- plete their toilets. The wise woman still occupied tbe room and they sat down to wait. Half an hour passed and still the wiee woman didn’t appear. The men in the car had become inter- ested in the comedy, which promised to develop into a tragedy. They had al- ready completed their toilets without interfering with one another. ‘*This is an imposition,’’ said a big ywoiman whose hair was disorderly, ‘‘and fam going to investigate.’’ > be disepreared, and the other pas- senyzers beard ber voice, first mild and then loud am] angry, but the responses sf the wise woman could not be heard. ‘“What do you suppose that creature ig doing,’’ caid the big wowan, when sie returned. ‘‘Why, I never heard apytbhing like it. Here we are witbin an honr cf New York and not one of us bas had en opportunity to wash her face and that woman inside has a little alcohoi lamp going and sbe is deliber- ately curling ber bair. She should have some sense of devency. I'm sure she is old enough.’’ This information cast the other wom- eu into the deptbs of despair, and as the train eped cn one of them, the youngest woman in the car, began to cry. Her woe was greater than that of the others because a certain young man had prom- ised to meet her at the station, and she would not bave him see ber as sbe then looked for the whole railroad. The men in the car evidently thonght that she was good to look at just as she was, but nove of them knew her, and this in- formation could not be conveyed to her. A delegation of two women was sent to compromise with the wise one who was curling her bair, and they returned in disgust. ‘‘Sho says that sho is going to com- plete her toilet before she comes out,’’ said cnc of them. ‘‘Sbe is curling ber bair all over. I asked her if she wouldn’t please just curl itin front and then put ber hat op. The rest wouldn’t show, you know. She said she would attend tothe curling without any as- sistance from me. This is simply dread- ful. I’ll never ride in a slesping car again. It is an imposition te have only a little bit of a cubby hole reserved for women, while the men have all the room they need. I’m going to sue the road.’’ An indignant discussion followed, and just asthe train was pulling into New York the wise woman made her appearance. Conscious that not a single flaw could be found in her toilet, she ignored the angry glances of the other women. It was too late for them to make elaborate toilets, end the men withdrew from the smoking rogm, s0 that they might at least use the mirrors to set their hats on straight. They trailed after the wise woman as she left the car, and if angry glances could have stabbed ber she would bave become a coroner’s case right on the platform. ‘This isn’t the first time that I have geen such an exhibition,’’ said a com- mercial traveler who had been in the car, ‘‘and really I don’t blame the wise woman atall. Sbe simply showed her experience. The fault is in the con- struction of the car, and it is a short- sighted policy to make them so incon- venient for women. It takes a woman - longer to dress than a man, and I be- lieve that if the car builders would sac- rifice the space occupied by a section or two and put in wash bowls for women more women would be willing to ride in sleeping cars. As it is, the average woman would rather stay at home than make a trip that involved a night ride.”’ —New 107« Sana. ERIT is what has given Hood’s Sarsaparilla the largest sales in the world and enables it to accomplish thousands of wonderful CURES. “ust.—All goods soiled during the alteration in our store wil! be cleared out ats big bargain. J.B Macdova'd & Co. Freeh strawberries by exprees Llc per bex.—Sandereon & Ca, Se : DL EITTR DRTR RN SLT TI SPY”: NER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JUNE 25, 1898 - ed <S¢ Give Us a you Jook youll buy. The question ae “< 6s 98 nf 56 ce “ce 6s in a nice range ot colors. SHEGLBBLBBBSBBRELI St £ in a variety of co'ors; 5 ws able prints and sateers. Ls SEA © ws Strorg net. bones covered wi c . weather wear, at a very ¢ ol price. IIT KIEL - $i and fa: ey Lawn Bows. BBA » DFALERS IN WeEEss 6 bode tees A. O es “02 63 F2.F 2 9 Os os S29 Ss os 0% os 48 SES G savasas REBBGBRGBBAARAL It’s a modest way of asking you to buy you cool goods here, for we know if tine is easily solved. We can help yoa do it. | CRASH SUITING $6. inches wid@jOnleseciidtids 5.204. eeeeee ooeeesc0C per yard ees 06 € 8 0 @eaan.e 6686 6S O ee @099°90 .22¢ per yard 9864.40. 9.4.06080960 80 6.2 ee* @ena 8009399 15e per yard DUCK 28 inches wide, only Joc per yard. GRENADINE 28 inches wide, at only 15c per vard. Atso a nice line of Organdies,—Lappet Mills ~check and spot muslins, wash. SUMGER CORSETS WOMENS NECEWEAR : Hot days are collar wilters, but pever mind, we've got a variety of styles in those all linen collars to sell at 2 for 28ce. j Fancy Silk String ‘Ties, Fancy Silk Bows, Fancy Silk Ties with lace ends, WE ARE MILLINERY LEADERS Dod BCSt 604862020830 Perkins & Co. SUNNYSIDE. i FOE SSESESSSSSGGIETE SISSIES SHEMET a LOOK. of keeping cool and dvessed up at the same SUITING th French sateen, cool and shapely for hot ki. PICNIC AND HLETIC MEET. WILL BE HELD On the Beautiful Grounds of St. Dunstan's College, on DOMTN TON DAY, FRIDAY, IST JULY, i898, An *rition will be delivered in t e larg? rink on the grounds by M. J. F. QUINN :§$Q,Q, 0. M,P., OF MONTREAL, one «t C nada’s most prominens platform speakers. The following isthe program and Pr‘ze 1. One Mi'e Bicvcle Race (under 16)— Ist prize, siiver m+- dal, Geo. Gerdiner; 2nd, bicycle lemp (Miller Bro-,) Srd bicycle boots (A. E.McKachern) 2, Running Broad Jnomp—lst prize, silver welal, (Mr W. |. O’RiJey, of Sinzer Sewing Machine Co;) 2ud bex cigars, | J Bruce Payne, Granby, P. Q. 3. 100.Yard Dash—let prize, go'd medal Chard & Jeckson, Montreal,) 2ad,* silver medal 4.1 Mile Bicycle Racesopes)—lst prize, siiver medal, (Dodd & Rogers;) 2nd, bicycle pants (Jar Calder) 5. Putting Shot—1st prize, silver Medal (Moore & MeLeod) 2nd, silver medal 6. Pole Vault—Ist prize, gold meda! (S. B. Townsend Co.,‘Montreal;) 2nd, silver medal (Jchn McLeod & Ce) 7. } Mile Flat Race (under 16) —let prize, silver mecal, 2nd, silver medal. 8. 3 Mile Flat Race—let prize goid medal (Grace & Gast- eoguay, Halifax;) 2nd, box cigars (J M Fortier, Montreal.) 9, Sack Race—Ilsv prize, *tox cigera (J. Bruce Payne, Granby; P. Q.,) 2nd, silver medal. No second prize unless three entries. Dancing Booths with the best of Music. Swings and other means for a (Baterbury, List— ; 10. Hop, Step and Jump—lIst psize, silver medal dd Daviet;) 2ud, silver mounted revolver (Fennel & Chandler) l!. Hurdle Race—Ilst priza, gold medal (A. Keith & See Halifax); 2od, silver medal, Pros.); 2ud, s:lver medal. 13. of Mauchester, Kobertson & Allison, St. John); 2ad, gold medal (Jas Waddel') of Royal Eletric Co.) 14. Fat Men’s KRace—tst prize, It, gset of pipes caved (t.eddin Bros); 2nd , pipe (Dodd's Medica! Hal!.) . 15. Hook and Lalider Team Race, composed of 81% meo ateam. A prize to cach man of the winuing team, presented by A. N Larg-, Chief of the Fire Brigade. ; 16. The Inisa Jic Dax er will be presented with —_ some quadruple silver plate tea set aod tray by (A. W. ct Myers Bro«, Jewellers) ted 17. Tse Best Hicutaxyp Fire Dancer will Le preses with » handsome gold watcn by Jas Paton & Co. 18. The Best Indian Club Swinge:—1lat prize, dal—value $5. Entry fee, 50c & silver mes rood day’s fun o Special trains and boats will be arranged for June 9, 1898— Ur, T. PAYNE, Secretary Committee. a i2. Running High Jump—let prize, goid medal (Prows i Mile Fiat Rave - lst prize, gold meda! (Jas Gallagbet st 5 ta