4a —_ ABSOLUT SECURITY, ' March 30th. We Cenuine 9 Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Muect Bear Bignature of See TPac-Simile Wrapper Below. i is ry emali aud as casy j to take a5 sugar. |FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. |FOR BILIGUSHESS. 'FOR TORPID LIVER. |FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. |}FOR THE COMPLEXION Tegetaule. A eA cool Sot A r ! CURE SICK HEADACHE, EPPS'S COCOA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior | Quality, and Highly Nutritive | Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous anil dyspeptic. Sold only in }-Ib tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & CoO., Ltd. Homecopsthic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPS'S COCOA i MITATION |S THE SINCEREST FORM OF FLATTERY.” best proof that WINARD’S LINIMENT has extraordinary merits, and is in good repute with the public, is, that iT IS FXTENSIVELY IMITAT- ED. The imitations resemble the genuine article in appearance only. They lack the generai excellence of Genuine his notice is necessary, as irjuricus and 14 1gerous imitations, called WuH1itTe LINI m vt, &c., liable to produce chronic inflam mation of the skin, are often sn stituted fo MINARD’ LINIMENT by Dealers, because hey pay a larger profit. They all Sel) on the Merits and Advertising of MINARD’S, Qne in particular claiming to be made by a ormer, proprietor of MINARD’s LINIMENT, whick simply is a lie. INSIST UPON HAVING MINARD'S LINIMENT ¢. C. RICHARDS & CO.. Yarmouth, N.S., ‘Its all , Those Who Plain Sailing _ Deal With With ~ Us UuriGoods are Right (ur Prices are Right it lies with you, reader, togive us a shanee to prove the above assertion. We are receiving new goods daily. See our Covered Chip Market Baskets from 10c up. ‘hoice Creamery Butter juet received. Try our Orange Pekoe Tea at 28c per ©. It wll please you. We also eell da zard’s genuine BRAHMIN TEA. _ A ing etock of other Teas on band, from 2Vc per Ib up. ‘A in stock, canned Salmon, Lo'.-ers, Clams, ete, and a full line of general groceries, all at the iowes possible prices. Free delivery of goo » all parts of the city. Telephone nunication. h. F. Maddigan & Co LOWER QUEEN STREET. TOLET Store and Warehouse at St. “2 -_— A SLL APG 22 | wood and | fatigue partes are told off every day from amen. — THE BAILY EXAMINER GCMARLOTTETOWN, MAY 9, (9e0 email ——_—___ ee LETTER FROM MR. E. LORD. Mrs. Artemas Lord has received an in- eresting jetter from her son HMruves', wu rhting with the first Canadian Cor in South Africa. The letter is 1 Bloemfontein, Orange Free kindly per State, have been d to make the following extract : ** * We are encamped about a mile | from the city on a large flat plain; there about 60,000 troops here now. I have | be n the city once and am going soon It is a fine little place with some | fine buildings,but has a very deserted look | j w. We have been able to eajoy the ' ixury of bread since we came here bu price is rather high, land six pence being the regular price pe loaf. Hedley McKinnon, E. Bowness, Roy Harris, Ed. Small and myself ar formed intoa mees and as each of us gets into town we manage to buy sometl ing to eat. The army rations here are nearly as | bad as on the march, the bread half cool ed. We bave to walk three miles for fire about a mile for water, but each company to do the work, so eve one has his turn. Ten passes are issued to each company per day for visiting the town beiween the hours of 5 and 8 o’clock. Five men goin at once. We | on the Nineteeth brigade with the Cornwalls and Shropshires. Grordors, Last Sunday wasthe firet time I ever marched to church to the music of the bag-pipee. Our camp is only a few yards from the Gordons, 89 we get the full ben¢ fit of their music every day. They wear their kilts —but with the*addition of a khaki apron and none of the ornaments of the home dress. There is a great deal of sickness here now, but [do not think many are serious- lyill. We have not got the box sent out by the second contingent yet, and I shal! need to have my Christmas dinner for 1899 when we get home; but I know you will not object. I hope the war will soon be over. We are all very well Today we hearda report that there was an engagement pear here a day or two ago and the British lost heavily, but de- feated the Boers and mortally wounded Joubert, which I hope is true #for it will shorten the war we think. Mr. Fallerton bas not been very well; he has been troubled with rheumatism, but is much better. I donot witnout him. I often have him although he is not our Write soon know what we should do Mejor Weeks is very well, a talk with captain now. TRIBUTE TO THE DEPARTED. The following is the resolution passed at the recent annual meeting of the Pro- vincial Rifle Assoc ation respecting the death of the late Major George D. Davi- soa : Whereas we, the Provincial Rifle As-~ sociation of Prince Edward Island in annual session convened have leareed with deepest regret of the very sudden and unexpected death of Major George D. Davisoo,&a member, and for many years, the efficient Secretary of our jAssociation. Whereas, he was always an enthusias- tic and active promoter of everything that tended towards the encouragement and improvement of the force, ready at all times, to sacrifice his time and give tangi- ble support to all measures ha ving for their object iis best interests; and Whereas, his services 2s Quartermaster of the 82nd Battalion forthe past fifteen years have brought him into contact with every branch of the service in this pro- vince, his early demise, in thejmidst of his usefulness, will be felt not only by bis comrades of the militia but by the cit’zens in general, who appreciated his kind and generous disposition. Therefore Resolved, that wethe Pro- vine'al Rifle Association of Prince Edward Island do place on record our very high sppreciation of the noble and manly char- acter ofour deceased brother officer, and desire to express to the parents and broth- ers of the deceased our heartfelt sympathy in this thehour of Stheir sorrow, and we pray that our Heavenly Father may com- fortthem in their affliction. F. Docuerry, Lt.~Col, R. L., President, 8. F. Hopasoy, Mejor, Secretary-Treasurer, E. Stewart, Committee. Charlottetown, P. E. I., May 4th, 19@@. ++. o>-e+se Mail and Empire : It must be said, to Mr Tarte’s eredit, that he did not accom- pany Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Sir Riebard Cartwright,aod Sir Louis Davies on their trips to Washington long before the Joint High Commission was formed. [It is not to Washington, the Meccaof his colleagues the little Minister looks, but to Paris. “There is no little enemy.” Little ime purities in the blood are sources of great danger and -hould be expelled by Hood’s Sarsaparille. Bacon—Men are always looking for ex- alted lineage. Egbert— Unless they the railroad; then they berth. are traveling on are after a lower _ Peter’s Bay, The store and warehouse until recently oc- cupied, by the iate John P. Sullivan. Apply : MRS. McLRAN, St. Peter’s Bay, South Side. The lls of Women, Are usually the result of an exhausted nervous system which can be fully restored 3 the use of Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food. omen made nervous by the waisting dis- eases which drain their system find new life, ad y gor.) Pr energy, in Dr. A. W. Chase’s ry » the world’s greatest bil nerve builder. ip Yate ; one shilling ; The Octopus Preblem Papers friendly to the Ottawa Govern- meni are asserting that the way out in the case of the Standard Oil monopoly is by the complete removal of the protective dutv on oil, Let us see how this would work. The octopus does not own the Canadian oi! wells ; it simply buys their product, In “these wells Canadian money is in vested, and thousands of Canadian people are dependent upon them. If tbe duty be removed the Standard Oi! Company need not buy one barrel of Canadian crude oil, lt can import crude snudian refinery ; {oil from its U it can bring in re- ; to refine in “its ae ted States establish- | nents Thus the removal of the protective | luty will bit Canad and ot bother | or pus at all, [he threatto desiroy the investments | of the people of tambton is simply a proposal to ruin Cassdians in an attempt | to repair Mr. Fie ra dreadful blunder — Mai! and Empi —“The monthly clean-up of our mine,” sail a gentieman connected with the Cariboo Hydraulic Mining Company’s mines On the Quesnelle River, British Columbia, in laterview, ** is about four huo fred pounds of gold, which is made into one brick and carried cut by stage to Ashcroft on the Canadian Pacific, > recent 235 miles away. It may not occur ty vou what thai little brick of gold, for 400 pounds of gold isn’t as big as a bale of hay,represents in bulk of material handled to Cbtain it, but it means alot. For ip stance, the pay stre:k inthe mine runs 25 cents to the cubic yard, which means that 100,000 yards of cubic gravel ~ 409 pounds of our gold being worth about $100,000 — must be washed out by our big hydraulics toget it. Aethe pay streak is about cne- third the whole quantity to be blasted and washed, it would give the enormous mase of 1,200,000 cabic yards of earth and rock tu be handled. This balk weighs nearly one million and a balf tons—and all this for abit of yellow meta! that could be covered by a peck measure If we had to carry it away in the same kind of six-horee stages that we send the gold Out in, it would take 750,000 of them, with &s many mento drive them, and 4,500,000 horses to haul them. —The foreign trade of both Canada and the United States has greatly increased during the current fiscal vear. For the nine months ending March 31 the ex- ports of Canada were valued at $139.973,- 223 as compared with $122,872 347 for the same period of the previous fiscal year, an increase of $17,100,876. The imports were valued at $135,639,293, as compared with $112,760,006, an increase of $22,- $79,287. The exports of the United States during the nine months were valued at $1,036,629,070 as compared with $931,373,132, an incsease of $105,- 155,938. The imports of the United States were valued at $641,568,491 as compared with $500,022,579 during the same period of the previous fiscal year, an increase of $141,645,912. For the month of March, 1900, the Canadian exports in- creased nearly two million dollars over March of the preceding year while the increase in imports wes over two millions. The American exports for the month of March were neerly thirty million dollars greater than for March 1899, while Amer ican imports during March 1900 was nearly fourteen million dollars greater than during Merch 1899. When ceom- menting upon these facts the Mooatreal Star noticed that the value of Canadian exports for the last nine months exceeded the value of imports by $4,133,930. While the value of American exports ex ceeded the value of imports by $394,- 960,579. Blood Disorders are simply kidney disorders. The kidne filter the blood of all that shouldn’t there. The blood passes through the kid meys every three minutas. Ifthe kidneys do their work no impurity or cause of disorder can remain in the circulation longer thanthat time. Therefore if your blood is out of order your kidneys have failed in their work. They are in need of stimulation, strengthening or doctoring. One medicine will do all three, the finest and most imitated blood medicine there Dodd's Kidney Pills FOR SALE rrr TD LET That nicely. situated resid- ence, with out buildings, on the Malpeque Road, one mile from Post office, with 9 or 32 acres of land, as desired, Apply te J. T.PEARWON, | | dinary truckmen. Astounding Politeness, The truck driver is proverbially pro- fane, and when one is discovered who doesn’t swear between syllables when his vehicle is jammed in a bunch of other trucks and biocked trolley cars you feel like taking off your hat to him. Down at Second and Chestnut streets one afternoon, when traffic was at its thickest and trucks and cars were lined along both two truck- men had equal chances of making the crossing. One was coming down Chest- nut and the other along Second street. Had they been ordinary truckmen each would have whipped up, and the thoroughfares, | chances are that a collision would have resulted. But these two were not or- With Chesterfieldian | grace one waved his arm to the other, inviting him to take “You first!” shouted the driver, whereupon a messenger boy who had w'tnessed the remarkable gasped nearly swallowed his cigarette stump. “After you,” was the next contribution to this remarkable dialogue. ‘“Wouldn’t that jar you?” muttered a motorman, who was standing clanging his bell for all he was worth. The two truckmen continued to mo- tion for each other to go ahead. “J insist!’ shouted one. “Ob, no; I in- sist!” shouted the other. Finally a po- liceman interfered. “Say, one o’ yous ducks git a move on,” he commanded. “This ain’t no pink tea.” The truck- man coming down Chestnut street con- sented to cross the street, and traffie was gradually resumed.—Philadelphia Record. precedence. scene and A Persistent Poet. Although R. K. Munkittrick has an enviable reputation as a humorist, yet he is not the quickest man in the world to see a joke when it is played on himself. Mr. Gibson, one of the editors of Puck and also a practical joker, arranged for a special jest to be administered to Mr. Munkittrick. He had provided a trick telephone which emitted a shower of flour when anybody spoke into it. When Mr. Munkittrick had arrived, it was suddenly discovered that the paper had gone to press and that his copy was too late. There was only one chance, Mr. Gibson said, and that was to telephone to the printer and tell him to stop the presses until his matter should be set up and inserted. He asked Mr. Munkittrick to go to the phone at once. Then the staff sat and held their sides, waiting for the explosion. Final- ly Mr. Gibson rushed to the telephone and found his friend deluged in flour, but still persistently calling “Hello!” through the phone. He led him back and carefully ex- plained the joke. When he finished, Munkittrick calm- ly remarked: “Still, 1 think we ought to let the printer know about the don’t gou?’—Saturday Evening Post. copy: 2: GEST: resulting ‘from weakness of the stomach, is relieved by Hood’s Sarsaparilla, the great stom- wh tonic and cure for DYSPEPSIA. > —— Trangress the law and reap unhappi ness. God can alwsys overcome the devil. Ee Se =e 32? @ oe 4 ©] @ peters Bring back any‘hing not dene properly ¢ Brin g back anything not done right > Its our business to turn out work right, and if we are informed that f any work we have done is not satisfactory we are only too glad to make it satisfactory free of charge. Its our business to please customers ¢ and we always strive to do eo as far ¢ as it lies in our power. _ When in need of anything in our line remember “THE MODERN” Founders Engineers & Machinists and Boiler Makers. Bruce Stewart and Coy. . Steam Nav. Co’y’s Wharf a Ch’town, PEI Phone 125 , é lielief of Ladysmith The book “¥he Relief of Lady- smith and How it was Celebrated in Charlottetown” wil! be on sale ip the city bookstores this (Saturday) evening. It is a souveneir of ch historic and memorable event which should be in the hands of all. See it at the Bookstores, PRICE 10 CENTS, | a een. See aeeaereeiirrerr rire eae eee eae aa Ea sataatoat ST EA on ee ee Don't lmacine That all boys’ suits look alike,—quite the contrary, some never look well, some look wel! at first but soon give out beeause not honestly made. Others took well at first be- cause they are made honestly. We guarantee our suits free from defects, from faulty material or workmanship, We have nearly three thousand suits for the little men. Prices are 75c, $1,00, 1.25, 1.50, 1.75, 2.25, 2.90, 3.25, 4.26 : Don't Waste Your time looking elfse- where, you can’t get boys suits to suit you as well as ours, you'can’t get as large an as- sortment to choose from, You can’t get as good a fit as ours because it’s our hobby to fit tbe little men, and we do it. You need not go any further than right here for the best. Don't If you can’t go out with your boy to bay his suit. Send him to us and we will fit him a half dozen times. and seud them all to your house; we'll be glad to help you in this way. We will take more pains with the boy alone than when you are with him. We trust you, vou trust us, rowse Bro URE tt et, SENET 3 DON'T l eRe ee oR a SORE ~~