PART -~»_.-»‘.§==~'~ ‘ -~ ‘er ~ ri ' __ .;,_._,>_.,,.~__ g , - .o ng. . _ ._,,- ._ _ im, >" - . 1. _,,.__=, ` = f V _.f. ~ t 'I »f~~1: ...t V ‘f -..~`~=.'f~~' . _ _ ' ,' = _ ' ,' "-_- 1 . ` ' V '- ' o . , , __ _ ' .IC o THE .lf?- V , ".E,l,}ABL,gHE,§ QQ; W" - ¢nA|u.o'rri Piuitc__ _E nnwaan isi.AND' . 1fiiusS,lIAf:'si-:P'ri:, Msrzaic, iso; ‘l`V_. _ f I #Tier . ‘__-~f.~o_--~ . :.¢~o..» ¢ Y BUWELS. Digestive Organs lyllsfsd and rendered healthy and active by au occasional dose of c§_l___l_E?S PILLS IQ sick imaoeiie, niiiou amen. _ fédipllions; Foul and Diaordzred Btomacha they have no equal . . . . 'DI Ill! lYlIYV(NERC| 250 PER BOX. DI IY HAIL ON RIICIIFT DF PRICE. S‘rANroN's ram RELIEF. ll INTKINIL AND KXYIIIAL ilulfvo Cures Rhumaiism, (`o!ic, Sprsins, Neuraigia. 9&0n\.¢ lvrnvvnsunl. raicl 25:: nun norrtl. . Sde yrmwiewfs, 'l`i'n Wiscai s tjmuircai. CQ. Limited, Montreal, Canada. _ ,__ _-__ ._,/,Q .',|g ,»_~ zfgsg- .` g ,ll Bw 2' 2'# AIWZLYS. ' The Ice Cream we Sell is recognized as the best that can be made. e You Can Have Any Flavor _ If you want it for a spec- ial event let ns know and we’ll make it specially H’ you. _ l 'PICNIC P ARTI E 5 Should get our prices on Ice Cream before leaving their orders. W. H. SMAl.LWO0D. ‘ 0er.ct.Ge?and Pitsrcy 821:- _ . _ __ 'tonu. 1 -6-stu, x .Al :" O Casii__igS,§ "i200 bills. _ llerbs and Spices, &e. J0iiN HOPKINS. St. ]‘ohn, N. B. Please mention this paper. T --= ...-» -o .;_c ~ F- ef.-to ~ r _ _ ._ _ ‘z ` if iiillli lillii Are prepared from the choic- est ingredients and flavored with ripe fruit fjnices. One package makes ONE:PINT of delicious ielly. Ask lor Kovah. 104:. per package. ‘ 0 folenkms it Sun, Cor. Queen sud GraftonISts. ¢ ,l_ _ l ¢1 - - Iaynanl of Conflu- | At a recent. sale in London , fog. Life and Strange Surprisin¢ iAdventures of Robinson Crusoe, of Ygg-k_’ Mariner," and "The Farthel: Adventures of Robinson Crusoe.’ two volumes, of 1719, In the orig- |inaI calf bindings, realized $1,535.' If such a thing had happened in De- foc's own time it is probable that that gifted roinancer would have end- cidents are the irony of fate. Every other day one roads of a Poe mann# script having been sold at a largo 'price. And then one remembers oe’s miserable life and ill-paid re- ‘od his days in a ruadhouse. Such hr P _ ‘tm-as Shakespeare, a prosperous dramatist, considering his time. would gladly have sold not only thc manuscript copy. but dramatic rights to “Ha.u1let" for scarcely a larger sum than that given above. It is safe_to say that the Avon bard. not receive from all his plays what a modem "popular" novelist gains ti-gm a, single book with its dramat- ic rights. It looks rather unjust. but, Shakespeare still lives, while the novelist sees his reputation flickering before his eyes. It is doubtful whe- ther, taking all things ‘into consid- eration, Mr. Shakespeare would care ig ghgnge places with M--: You may fill in your own blank.-Current Lit.a*Bturo. lgood business man as he was, did Ll¢_nfl8\\0_O¢» f 'According to a'Fr`mdl paper. than isamaninlpndonwhoponasesa habla straw hat For years Yelllll' ~ lpast he has followed King Edward about at foreign watering places, and whenever he saw the Prince of Wales, as the King then was. dfillklllg UW* thing through a straw he pounced down upon the straw and added it to his collection. Last year this strange collector had gathered such s. bundle of straws that he had I. | hat made of them- The Powlrl Tint lt. - The Cook-She laves iverythlng to the millinar, does she? The Maid-Oh, yes! What the milli- ner says goes. 'Die Cook-Bedad I didn't kno . wx. lllllinc_l3_!ll_ so _much_1ika cooks. - Bleeding Piles and Eiysipelas. tg|__'mn`nln_-nu-1 g nnnmunnqnn l _*_ ‘ri-is MAGNET. rue mem* no-pus, in n nature. lspqtsrlhfs story. aatalbllls- ~ ocvory-Bypltlll of Romanian. In a. lecture on “The Magnet and' _Its Author” at the Royal Institu» nion, Prof. Silvanus Thompson di- verged for a time into the attract- ive bypaths of romance. We need hardly say ‘that Dr. Gilbert was not the discova-er of the magnet, nor was hc even correct in ascribing the introduction of the mariners' coin- pnss into l§l'rope to Marco Polo. That idea is dismissed by Col. Yule with :the reuiark that of it. and the alleged bringing of gunpowder he will sny ‘nothing, since no one, he believes., 'any longer imagines Marco to havcfhad anything to do with the Inattcr` The properties both of the llmlllch and the magnetizcd needle havc been so long known that their disco vercrs have been forgotten. They faile d to obtain a vatos sacer, and havu gone down to oblivion like hun- drc' ls of the world's benefactors. P Iobably the attractive effect exer- ¢lS ed by the magnet on iron was dis- co vemd by accident, and its other PI ropertics ascertained by degrees. The Vrolessor repeated P1iny's str-ry Qbout the former-how an unsuspazt- Ing shepherd unconsciously stepped on to a mass of magnetic iron ore, had found that the top of his crook and the nails of his boots stuck to .the rocks. Strange, if true; and that shepherd must have felt very _ much ali! he werowalkingonnoft as- Dlmlt outa. hot day. But those who have scrambled in Alpine boots over spoil banks of magnetic ore tell us 1’-ll!! 'Ko' unconscious of any im- pedimsnt. But to the first discover- er the property of attracting a bit 0! ordinary iron must have seemed- "“8. very_ great `medicine," and it is Ilndoubtidly a marvel. Why does that particular substance lposness this property in so extraor- dhary a degree? Touch a common noodle with a piece of pure iron and’ .it remains on the table; the ore hematite which consists of two atoms of iron in chemical combination with three of oxygen has no more edect, but. substitute the intermediate mag- netic thrce atoms of iron combined with four of oxygen and the needle comes to its arms like a ,_ long-lost brother. So, too, when a hand mag- net. is dipped into a little heap of 'scaly hematite nothing happens; but granular magnetite rushes to it so eagerly ,that grain sticks to grain. Pliny’s mention, however, -shows that the loadstone was known #long be- fore his time. and the discovery was more probably due to wise men ol Two Severe Cases Which Illustrate tho East than of tho west. But it no Exnoofaioory soothing, noni- 'mms “S if "° must 8° f“*°l‘<‘f “field ing Virtues of Dr. Chase-:’s Nerve Food. - ». Scores of people do not think of trying Dr. Chase’s Ointment for blinding niles because they have used so many other treatments in vain and do IN'-_ believe their ailment ourable. It lst by curing when others fail that Dr. Ch nle‘s Oint- ment has won such a record for itself. It will not fall to promptly rellem and _com-_ pleiely cure any fomi of piles, 30 latter how severe oi' of how long standing. Mr. James Uiiah Bye, Marie J nseph, Guylbmongh Co., N. S., writcs:- _ “l was had with hleedilt piles Im' about four years and could get no help. Chase’s Ointment cured me in a very snort time, and I cannot praise it too highly for this c ire. Mrs Thomas Smith was troubled _ with ei-ysipelas in the feet and legs and was all swollen up. I gave her some of Ithe ointment, which took out the swel- ling and healed all the sores- She had tried many treatments before, but none i seemed to do her any good. I am telling l my friends about the wnntkdul cures which Dr. Chsse's Oiutmeutnizide for Mrs I Smith and myself, and would any that it is oulv a pleasure for me to recommend so excellent a preparation." | Wherever there is irritation, inflam- mation, ulceration or itching of the skin DrChase’s Ointment- will .bring quick relief and will ultimately heal and cure. Ou this account it is useful in scores of _ ways in every home for the cure' of \ecsema,_ salt rheum, tether, seald head, chafing, itching pscul ar Ptofwomen, pin worms, piles and all sorts of skin diseases and eruptions. = Dr Chase’s Ointment, IK) cents; box, at all dealers, or Edmansm, ,Bates Sc Goin’ pany, Toronto. To protect you against _ E iA'1......_.°R"'<= Having opened our store on Great George Street, opposite Crabbe’s corner, we would invite you to call and inspect our stock which we nave just re- ceived. The latest novel- ties in woolens which we will make up in the la' est fashions at mod- erate piiees. Your own _material made up if dg. Sl’¢ll. S&lilSfaCtl0I1 gnar. ; anlcedf Patronage noi- iciled, _ Boyce & Blanchard, ffllbl flllerta; It Il Sat. f I imltations the portrait and signature of Dr A W Chase, the famous receipt hook author, are on every box of his remedies. _ ul i -u -_ ,Q llaokinnon & Williams Burlstees, Solicitors, Notrles, eta D. A. QIACKINNON, LL. B., K. C. B. BAYPIHD WILLIAMS. Ones-Cameron, ‘ e ' ” Uhulotietow llnnevin Ida na im. ~ Juny i7 mw wl yr _. ' I can Electro-plate any made of metal, Mechanics’ tools, Household Utensils, Carriage and Harness Mountings, Bicycles, etc. etc., etc. CLARK’5 Electro-Plating Works, WATER STREET, 1 'B ' K Charlottetown. l 7-21 is w ... ` r _ ` _ - ‘ l 3'” _ he could not extract. - - \ ' -‘ .-s~*'o'_l.~ .‘:-f=1. 1 --_H 3., ' i~ .__ _off .. ...».-.E>;»;~'._» Repairing Stoves, Lawn Mowers, suppose the Chinese to be S emigrants, and to have taken them from their ancestral horn the Euphrates Valley 'the than even Chaldea, unless we are to umerian' 8 of thcloadstone, if not of the pass. The Far East, b_v common conf sent, is credited with the-latter if we may believe a certain historian, the rudimentary idea was known about forty-five`centui'ies ago. The Emperor of that day, finding the movements of his army impeded' by a persistent fog, constructed is kind of chariot which indicated the cardinal points. But as the fog is Said fo have been raised by the ma- chinations of his enemythe story _in- vites experts in the higher criticism! The compass, however, is mentioned -,lircnrly _Chinese records, and some-` of 'tho kind must have been' bdore the Christian era. It seems to have been used in naviga- tion »§y,:sa.i1ors of that nation 'early ia_thc».nfth century, and in eastern senpgnnsrally in the earlier Middle Ages. the first really definite *men- tion of the mariners' compass by a Western writer dating from the twelfth century. At first the aeedlsi was supposed to turn ,due north be- cause a huge mass of loadstons marked the position of that pole; but when its variation was discover-1 od the theory had to be modified. Then, as Professor Silvalus Thompson tells us, the centre of at-' traction was shifted about, as ciré cumstances seemed to require some putt-illg the magnetic mountains in Calcutta-certainly an unfortunate guess-others near the Red Sea., or in the north of Russia, or at the back of Greenland, or in J apan. Wa must, of course, not forget Sinhad’s experiences with a magnetic island, or the way in' which two magnets held Moham;mcd’s codin suspended between heaven and earth. Siri"'l‘ho- mas Browne has embalmed many strange notions about the magnet in his “Vulgar Errors," yet, after' all, the scientific facts are suiciently curious.-London Standard. _ A Iliotnbla Llngnlst ` Major the Hon. Henry Dundas Ng- pier, who has been selected to suc- ceed Colonel C. E. de la Poer Beres- ford as Military Attache at St. Pet- ersburg, is a son of the first Lord Napier of Magdala.. He entered" tha' army in 1884, receiving a comm.i_s», sion in the King's Own Scottish Borderers, from which he transferred' to the Indian Staff Corps two years later. For a considerable period he was employed in the intelligence' branch of the Quartermaster-Gener al's dapa_rtin_ent., und won an excel-' glent ,__rep_‘_uta_f.ion as a stan officer. Subsequently he omciated ' as stall captain at headquarters, andin' 1900 accompanied Sir Alfred 'too on opooioi oorvioo omoor, his marci to the relief of Peltln; Hs" ,was anointed Military as 'His l{aidst.y’S Legation 'int,'1‘eli‘e’ran in the following year. Major Napier is a notable linguist, qualified to uct as an interpreter in both and German.-London Star » ‘ _fi A Iovlco. - passed Ritcli this morning. but alia . Do _you think ond? Urs. 'have been I iiie ,yo e tisgiie “Els hasnt -.-e011, ' kno' '110 .'\.";L 01' anne, British Govcrnmciit giving returns of accidents and casualties as report- ed to the Board oi Trade by the sev- eral railway companies in the United Kingdom, during the year ended De- cember 31, 1902, together with rg- ports of the inspecting oflicérs f the railway department to the Board! of_ Trade upon certain accident! which were inquired into. Accidents to trains, rolling stock, permanent way, etc., caused the death of 12 nrmon nanwav aeeiaonas’ _ __ f ‘A Blue Book has‘heerr‘lssued'by the ___ .» R . persons and injury to 854 persons* Of the '12 who lost their liyes 6 were passengers and 4 servants of com- panies. Of the 854 persons' injured l 732 were passengers, 110 servants of ther of these classes. In 1901, 11 persons were killed and 637' injured, but 1901 was noteworthy for the fact that in this _veartrain accidents did not cause the death of a single person. Of the 641 persons killed and 2,094 injured by accidents from companies, and' 12 _belonged 'to nci- _ causes other than accidents to I trains, rolling stock, permanent ACTUAL nr-:sUL'rs ! t 1 I way, etc., of the 135 killed and 1,- 814 _of the injured were passengers. While trespassing on the railways, 1286 persons were killed and 116 in- jured, 135 persons committed sui- cide on_ railways,_ _and 17,_`persons were injured while apparently at.- tempting suicide. 'Accidents caused by the traveling , of trains or' the movansnt. of vehicles usqd_,exc1,usive- ly upon railways caused thefdenth during the twelve, montlihof ser- I vents of companies and injury _to 3.- 713 others. Ol these, 15 __woi'o.kiIled and 501 injured. while uncoupling vehicles. number of persons killed on in the United Kingdom in the course of public tradimduring 1902 was 1,- 096, and ,thenumber of persons in- iured. 6,661. In addition _to the above, the railway companies _ha - reported to the Board of Trade dents which occurred upon t ’ but in which the “ of vehicles used_ exclusively ,upon Asc ct. ropes E-°8i2i8&i@"68E&i‘»2£é§8’&i&°i38'£l38S52‘&‘$`& _. _ .V _ _ "W B ""'°” _*"“""t¢@»"!°*’ railways was not concemed,_ ,which brings the total number of personal accidents during the _.twelve months/to 1,1`71 persons killed and 17,814 Times. -nl ,-.1 he ~_21l'u~; o -i ann: nano. ' ` ~ ,Your ¢»-m.__m----nm-hugh* bliliglveakld s ple and see when he stops. ' ~ q Sm, Throat N. S.,- was was _ . I A married msn ssyshlshofmeisr by the rule of-three'-baby,I siid‘dio“£ier in-law. _ e Worms are ' I rousfoften’ brin on . _‘Sometimes in Japan afgh-1 dog; my - ne _ _ _ ooohornoobooauotnoi.oiomsn-ioa."'- '-7' “Over here she seldom sees him after he is mauled.” ‘ ' ‘\l:n2mJ'm`|:|\f¢I\»c\ _ I' When it comes to salllnu the ships; the more rocks you strike the better 13059080. Headache All Gone. used t _and , _th h .33 z5.,“f’..u°'ii&i.r.£“’ Likely Sir Tommr‘t1uu_k_q ithotror to have raced and lost than never to have Mii:\fd’s_l.inimeat Cures." Dtndruff. _,. Mother-Tommy, you’r_e too Here’s a hole in your trousers that wasn't there this 'morning y A _G GE AToium-Whsnd suppose' ,' -.. 1“.5_-1"‘TF`»$) 05* wen* y _ mm Loansin Canada @_-lg? ' ;o?7.€'o“o`f“»f..°’i.°' ii” }"2.i`3..§‘.‘¥."‘§'..’$""°"’ 52”’ “‘lV3l‘°¢¢`~°“ N11 l'3‘$l4l¢ if Cllrrtli MW! Ill qnent if desired. Rat'es_more`_`favorabl_e~ A&t‘f¢iil ,gompany _ g better r _ orth _ o i t _ “S” Wn - - I & 2' *ii "__ :__ iv" fr mmm-_mg- -» oo-I B. The Sntfest and _ _ _ J. snug? Coinpopnd nvcstmcnt P5” -e_~» uri \€Qf§O*€ 1~»q?, il@il'i'll1 LEW* ‘*'="“-1"-"Y oiwoysosootui. 1-irtoo aio. _ ;' ~ .,,_;-15;, S_P¢°l‘_|g, Ba-_f ` `l`hcB_cStAC¢ldc`lll Tlhllllll 9 gthsutwlmo o-B nom- “A 'inllnmai ,'ta¥e3' ‘-ws, "'._'~"§sf' oi; A - ’ cureysscutsb mmbl ‘ ‘lg 5 Bas’ »......o.;...“.f'Z'.z. "ri,-’i..?f"o...'. “ ““‘“ Appueuomariegéadl wt -f ' _mn __m_ , -_, fgiglip _ énnn-Tn:»sisnan~n»o "°°“"° l.'f`i"’°"‘ ""° “~“°’° I' F- H- HW-_==»eWi=e1°°-_ _ :vu-roe...i§‘°°vn|r»"'i Rebecinu reno. Thomaslhllph K0 G°°’f0W11. Henry F Feelian, &wlC ~0. A. Woodman Wlhltin _Afmcy-tic#-The fashionable wedding. - cures sindusn' ‘ e “I hsvet‘i~l - A ` and mm ..°"°°‘..,.:.'.=.;s'1'°"'..?..:sf..':'.°“‘°‘°*f’§f" f~=f"=-~ V ~ mnooonom f Fmwcthsc in seine smal1huys'stllnaah, tlieiimcen crop is not__so green. __ ' -_ ._ .__ ltoiievoo Noof.||;.__. _ _sho--nartyeu oiwqo ,H°~r<°=eLf»-as ~»\»_ fb M l:DW¢ `,.'-_' _ =Jo¢gs-“iowotaoouzt mono Wages-‘Inevcr henniof arose A. L. Fraser, Scans. Donald McLean _ Teni`pl'eiW.` ~ l°1“1'A1\_tfi_i,»;r»'§,~r *ini .M .noni iv, is it ‘S ii