aS = TT . a a —_ _ THE DAILY EXAMINER . . - - “ . Springtime mn A healthy condition of the kidneys is the best safe-guard against all the ills incidental to the season. ‘Tone the sys- tem by using saa. DODD’S Kidney Pills ‘The best blood purifier on earth, and the only Absolute Cure for all diseases of the kidneys we can sell you Dodd's Kidney Pills « he following prices, viz.:—50c. per bor @ix boxes for $2.50. To the trade—$4.0 vt dozen, or three dozen at $3.75 pe dozen. Sent hy mail to any address po :3 GEORGE E. HUGHES, Charlottetown Fitz-dames ScotchWhisky t%ECOMMENDS ITSELF. SPECIAL QUALITY—8 Years Old. PURITY GUARANTEED Sole Proprietors: pf rMivtr Hervey thy, -or Sale by all Dealers. self=help You are weak, “run-down,” health is frail,strength gone. Doctors call your case an- zemia—there is a fat-fam- inein your blood. Scott’s Se Emulsion of cod-liver oil, with hypophosphites, is the best food-means of getting your strength back—your doctor will tell you that. He knows also that when the digestion is weal: it is better to break up cod-liver oil out of the body than to burden your tired digestion with it. Scott’s Emulsion does that. Scorr & Bowne, Belleville, Ont. soc. and $1.¢0 THAT ...-. BEAUTIFUL WHITENESS WHICH YOU GO MUCH DESIRE VO S24 AFTER THe CLOTHES HAVE BEEN WASHED, CAN BEST BB SECURED BY USING SUNLIGHT fovwucs / / | | SOAP It is also well ta Beoks for remember that Wrappers. For clothes washed with | every 12 “Sunlight” this Soap are saved | wrappers sent to from any injury ; so} Lever Bros., Ltd., are the hands. Toronto, a useful This Soap cannot [| paper-bound bock hurt anything. will be —- a 2 pure, cloth-bound for 50 ry it. P > > » eas lds 3453s eel St Seeton ard Muchell, H. for Noya Scotia, and P. E. [. ifax, Agents * . CHEES&. 100 Boxes September make. N. RATTENBURY. mech3)—135 pt guar BUTTER. 10) Tubs Good Quality. {A TTENBURY. ur rN. mch30135 pat guar Sale. Tob? seid by Public Auctior, at the Law Courts Buliding in Charlottetown, in Queen County. ia” rinee Edward Island, on S4TUR- MAY. the Sixteenth dayoi May next, A D 3895, at the hour of tee've o’cloch, noon :— All thattract, piece and parce! cfland, being art of Town At Namber Sixty-five, in the second hundred of Town Lots in Char- lottetown, in said Isian?, bounded and de- scribed as follows, that isto say :—-Jommen- cing onthe north side of Richmond street om tne eastern division line of landsin pos session of Artemas Sims, and running along said division line northwardly one hundred and sitty feet, or to the southern boundar line of Lot Number Two, in the third han dred of Torn Lots aforesaid; thence east wardly paraiiel with Richmond Street afore said along said southern boundary line a dis tance of twenty-one feet; thence southerly paralle! with said division line ope hundre and siaty feet,orto Richmond Street afore said, andthence w stwardly along tai i stree twenty-one (21) feet, or tothe place of com- mencement. ALsSo— All that other tract of land having a frontor width on Weymouth Street of ten fe-t, and extending back along said rear lin« of sa'd Lot Number Sixty-five forty-two feet or to land in possession of James Tarn-«r, sub- jeet to said James Turner’s right of way thereover Auso—All that ether tract, plece or parcel of iand having a front or width of sevcn and one-half feet on the nor. hern tide of Pich- mond Street aforesaid, and running back northerly along the eastern division line oi said jand in ession of Artemas Sims by paraiiel limes @ distance of one hundre! aud sixty feet, subject to right of way thereover of said Artemas Sims The above sale is made under and by yvirta of a power of sale con a'ned inan Indeatu e ut Mortgare bearing date the twenty-eigh:h dav of Januery, 4 Dis74. and mauve uciween William Kenne'ty of Charlotteiown, in said foeunty and Island, Trader, and Martha I Kennedy. his wife, of the one part, and the wndersigned of the o her part, d fau!t havin been made in payment of the interest an principal. : should the above property not ve disposed of on the day of sale, it will thereafter be sold by private sale on application to Peters, Peters & Ings, or to the undersign«d. For further particulars apply at the ofice of Peters, Peters & Ings, tolicitors Cameron Biock. Charlottetown, or to the undersigned ‘ated this thiity-first day of March, A D M ortgage JOHN INGS, M apl—Si 2aw 3) ortgage. - WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 1896. ARKANSA ~ PROPHET A New Year's Stcry. BY RUTH M’ENERY STUART. AN ne paused ana looked from one face to another for the answer, which was slow in coming. “Go on an’ tell it, Dan’l,”’ said the doc- tor, finally, with aninclination of the head toward MecMonigle. Old man McMonigle shook the tobacco from his pipe, and refilled it slowly, with- outa word. Then he as«leliberately lit it, puffed its fires tothe glowing point, and took it from his lips as he began. “Well, parson,” McMonigle began at last, “ef I had o’ seen you standin’ in the front o’ the sto’e clean to the minute you come back here, I'd think you'd heerd more’n names. “Of co’se we couldn't put it quite ez elo- quent az you did, but we had jest everyone of us ‘lowed that sense the day May Mere- dith dropped out o’ Simpkinsville the sky ain't never shone the same. “But for astory? Well, I don’t see thet ther’s much story to it, and to them thet didn’t know her I reckon it’s a common enough story. “But ez tothe old nigger, Proph’, being mixed up in it, ] can’t eggsac’ly say that’s so, though I don’t never think about the old nigger without seemin’ to see little May Day’s long yaller curls, an’ ef I think about her, I seem to see the old man, some- how. “Don’t they come to you all that-«- way?” He paused, took a few puffs from his pipe and looked from one to another for confirmation of his story. “Yas,"’ said the doctor, that-a-way, Dan’l. Goon,ol]’ man. a-tellin’ it straight.”’ “Well, that's what I'm aimin’ to do.” He laid his pipe down on the stove’s fender as he resumed his recital. “Old Proph’—which his name wasn’t Prophet, of co’se, which ain’t to saya name nohow, but his name was Jeremy. an’ he used to go by name o’ Jerry; then somebody called him ‘Jeremy, the prophet,’ an’ from that it got down to ‘Prophet’ and then ‘Proph’—and so it stayed. “Well, as I started to say, Proph’ he war jest one o’ Meredith’s ol’ slave niggers—a “jest exactly You're SET ON THE FLO’ BY HER BED ALL NIGHT. sort o’ quare, half luney, no ’count darky —neverdone nothin’ sense freedom but what he had 4 mind to, jest livin’ on Mere- dith right along. “He wasn’t to say crazy but—well, he’d stand and talk to anything, a dog, a cat, a tree, a toad-frog — anything. Heap o’ times I’ve seen him limpin’ up the road an’ he’d turn round sudden an’ seemed to be talkin’ to somethin’ thet was follerin’ him, an’ when he’d git tired he’d start on an’ maybe every minute look back over his shoulder and laugh. They was only one thing Proph was, to say, good for. Prop wasa capital Al hunter—shorest shotin the state, in my opinion, and when he'd take a notion he could go out where nobody wouldn’t sight a bird ora squir’l all day long, an’ he’d fill his game bag. “Well, sir. the children round town,they was allafreed of ’im, and the niggers— th’ain’ta nigger in the county thet don’t b’lieve to this day that Rroph would cunjer *em ef he’d git mad. “An’time he takin’ to fortune-tellin’, the school child’en thet’d be feerd to go up to him by theirselves, they'd go in a crowd, an’ he’d call out fortunes to ’em, an’ they'd give him biscuits out o’ their lunch cans. “From that he come to tellin’ anybody's fortune, an’ so the young men, they got him to cgme to the old year party one year, jest for the fun of it, and time the clock was most on the twelvestrike, Proph he stood up an’ called out events of the comin’ year. An’ sir, for a crack-brained fool nigger, he’d call out the smartest things you ever hear. Every year for five year Proph calle& out comin’ e-vents at the old year party; an’ matches that no- body suspicioned, why he’d call ‘em out, an’ shore enough, ’fore the year was out, the weddin’s would come off. An’ babies! He’d predic’ babies a year ahead—not always callin out full names, but jest insinuatin’ so that anybody that waen’t deef in both ears would understand, “But to come back to the story of May Meredith—he ain’t in it, no ways in particular. It’s only thet sense she could walk an’ hold the ol’ man’s hand he doted on her, an’ she was jest ez wropped up-in him. Many a time when she was a toddler he’s rede into town, mule-back, with her settin’ up in front of him. An’ then when she got bigger it was jest as ef she was the queen to him —that’s all. He saved her from drowndin’ one’t, jumped in the creek after her an’ couldn’t swim astroke, an’ most drownded hisself—an’ time she had the diptheria, he never shet his eyes ez long ez she was sick enough to be set up with—set on the flo’ by her bed all night. “That’s all the way Proph is mixed up in her story. An’ now, sense they’re both gone, ef you ’magine you see one,you seem to see the other. ““An’ May Day’s story? Well, I hardly like to disturb 1t. Don’t rightly know how to tell it, nohow. “Idon't doubt folks has told you she went wrong, but that’sa mighty hard way to teli the story of May Meredith. “We can’t none of us deny, I reckon, thet she went wrong. A red-cheeked peach thet don’t know nothin’ but the dew and the sun, to grow sweet and purty—it goes wrong when it’s wrenched off the stem and et bya hog. That’sone way o’ goin’ wrong. “Little Daisy Meredith didn’t have no mo’ idee o’ harm than that mockin’ bird o’ Rowton’sin its cage there, thet sing, weekday songs all Sunday nights. “She wasn’t but jest barely turned seventeen years—ez sweet a little girl ez ever taught a Baptist Sunday-school class —when hecome down from St. Léuis— though some says he come from Chicago, an’ some says Canada—lookin’ after same DEADLY IF Mr. J and unab!e to work. --USE-- All dealers, $1 00 per large bottle. devil his due, he was the handsomest man tet ever trod Simpkinsville streets—that is, of cos’e, for a outsider. Seen May Day first time on her way tochwrch, an’ looked after her—then squared back di-rect, an’ follered her. Walked into ehurch delib- ’rate, an’ behaved like a gentleman, reli- giowsly inclined, ef evera well-dressed city person behaved that way. “Well, sir, from that day on, he froze to her and, strange to say, every inother of a marriageable daughter in town was jeal- ous exceptin‘ one, an’ that one was May's own mother. An’ she not only wasn’t jealous—which she couldn't ’a’been, of co’se—but she wasn’t pleased. “She seemed to feel a dread of him from the start, and she treated kim mighty shabby, but of ce’se the little girl, she made it upto him in politeness, srood as she could, an’ he didn’t take no notice of i Kep’ on showin’ the old lady every ‘tention, an’ when he’d be in town, most any evenin’ you'd go past the Meredith gate you could see his horse tied there— everything open and above-board, so it seemed. “Well, sir, he happened to be here the time of the old year party, three years ago. You've been here a year and over, ain't you, parson?” “Yes, Iwas stationed here at fall con- erence a year ago this November, you re ol-ect.”’ “Yas, so you was, Well, all this is about wo year befo’ you come, “Well, sir, when it wasknown that May Jay's city beau was goin’ to be here for the arty, everybody looked to see some fun sause they kuow’d how free ol’ Proph’ nide with pames, an’ they wondered ef ie’d have gall enough to call out May Jay’s name with the city feller’s. Well, ‘z luck would kave it, the party was at uy house that year, an’ I tell you, sir, -olks thet hadn't set up to see the old year »ut for ten years, come that night jest for fear they’d miss somethin’. But of co’se we saw through it. We knowed what fetched ‘em. “Well, sir, that was the purtiest party I ever see in my life. Our Simpkinsville pattern for young girls is atoler’ble neat one, ef I do say it, ez shouldn’t, bein’ kin to forty-leven of ’em. We ain’t got no, tosay, ugly girls in town—never had many, though some has plained down consider’- ble when they got settled in years, but the girls there that night was ez perfec’ a bunch of girls ez you ever see—jest ez pur- ty a show o’ beauty ez any rose arbor could turn out on a spring day. “Have youever went to gether roses, parson, each one seemin’ to be the purtiest tell you’d got a handful, an’ you'd be startin’ to come away, when away up on topo’ the vine you’d see one that was enough pinker an’ sweeter’n the rest to make youclimb for it, an’ when you’d git it, you'd stick it in the top of yore bouquet a little higher'n the others? “I see you know what I mean. Well, that was the way May Day looked that might. She was that top bud. “Thad three nieces and wife and she had sey’a) cousins, there—all purty enough to draw hummin’ birds—but I say little Daisy Meredith, she jest topped ’em all for beauty and sweetness an' modesty that night. “An’ the stranger—well, I donno jest what to liken him to less’n it is to one of them princes thet stalk around the stage an’ give orders when they have play actin’ in a show tent. “They wasn’t no flies on his shape, nor his rig, nor his manners, neither. Talked to tke old ladies—riccollect my wife she had a finger wropped up, an’ he ast her about it and advised her to look after it an’ give her a receipe for bone-felon. She thought they wasn’t nobedy like him. An’ he jest simply danced the wall flowers dizzy, give the fiddlers money, an’—well, he done everything thet™a person o’ the royal city gentry might be expected to do. An’ everybody wondered what mo’ Mrs. Meredith wanted for her daughter. Tell the truth, some mistrusted, an’ ‘lowed thet she jest took on that way to hide how tickled she was. “Well, ez I say, the party passed off lovely, an’ after awhile it came near twelve o'clock, an’ the folks commenced to look round for ol’ Proph to come in an’ call out e-vents same as he always done. “So d’rectly the boys they went out an’ fetched him in—drawin’ him ‘long by the sleeve, an’ he holdin’ back like ez ef be dreaded to come in. ‘I tell you, parson, I'll never forgit the way that old nigger looked, longest day 1 live. Seemed like he couldn't sca’cely walk, an’ he stumbled, an’ when he took is station front o’ the mantel shelf,seemed like he never would open his mouth to egin. An’ when at last he started to talk, stid ®’ runnin’ on an’ laughin’ an’ pleggin’ HE SAW MAY GOING TO CHURCH LOOKED AFTER HER. everybody like he always done, he lifted up his face an’ raised up his hands, same ez you'd do, ef yeu was startin’ to read in public prayer. An’ then he commenced: “Sez he—an’ when he started, he spoke so lowdown in his th’oat you couldn’t sca cely hear him—sez ne: To be Continued.) rR A ee AND SUGGESTIONS FOR MOTHERS. The children whose mothers have no time to pet thent are to be pitied. To amuse children and to romp with them is sometimes quite as mucha re ligious duty as to pray for them. A nervous, worn-out fretful woman is not a fit associate for a sensitive, impres- sionable child who reflects the ssing moods of those about him as in a looking glass. It isacruelty to @ child to neglect its tseth. From the time of the first appear- ance of the teeth through the gums, they should be rubbed twice a day with a soft rag and lime water, until one year old, when a soft brush should be substituted.— Prairie Farmer. SPRING! YOU SUFFER FROM Spring Complaints, use SCOTT'S SARSAPARILLA. spring medicine to be had anywhere. a and puters = “rx oe an Sa for ies onstipation, Scrofula, rippe, Indi ion, sia, Troubles, Nervousness, Chrome 1 Headache, aaa Throat and Stomach ; Syphilis, Skin Diseases arising from impure blood or a disorganized system, and Gatarrhal Stomach Troubles. oseph Morrow, Merchant, of Fullerton, Ont., writes: ‘‘William Cornish says that Scott’s Sarsaparilla is the best family medicine he evertried. His son William who works fora farmer was laid up His system was bottle of Scott’s Sarsaparilla cured him immediately.” For further facts write either Mr. Morrow or Mr. Cornish, personally. Scott’s Sarsa It is the best Scott’s is pleasant to take, emale he, Catarrh of the Head, generally run down. One Then One teaspoonful a dose p USE SCOTT'S SKIN SOAP FOR THE COMPLEXION! FOR THE MUSICAL MAIDEN. To Enable Her to Hear Herself as Others Hear Her, Too much pedal in playing is worse than none at all, Do not place books or music on the piano if it can be avoided. It tends to deaden the tone of the in- strument, If you love your piano do not allow bric-a-breac to rest upon it. It is in wretched taste; besides, itis often the cause of an unpleasant rattling while the instrument is being used. Never place your piano close against the wall. It will sound much better if drawn out into the room. If this is not possible allow a space of eight or tweive inches between it and the wall. Cultivate the habit of listening to your Own playing. Fine results may be ob- tained by playing single notes and chords very slowly, endeavoring to produce a pure, round and long tone without striking the keys heavily. Listen to the tone. Speed is not everything. Even in rapid passages musical effect should be most carefully studied. While playing Mozart’s compositions it fs well to remember that he (Mozart) demanded of the pianist a perfect legato, a singing touch and an unaffected style. He practised what he preached, and his beautiful fingering was the result of a close study of Sebastian Bach and his son Emanuel. He required ‘‘a quiet and steady hand, with its natural lightness, sinoothness, and gliding rapidity so well developed that the passages should flow like oil." The delivery of every note, grace and accent with appropriate ex- pression. He was opposed to an over- rapidity of exscution and to violations of time. ‘‘Three things’’ he said, ‘‘are Necessary for a good performer.’’ and he pointed to his hand, his heart, and his fingers—Chicago Inter-Ocean, THE LITTLE PENNY SYNDICATE. Children Met a Financial Emergency. The old man had evidently been meet- ing a lot of friends, for he was plainly unsteady. There were three children with him—a bright-eyed, good-looking girl of about fifteen, a boy of about thirteen and another of about eleven. The party boarded an uptown Third avenue car at Fourteenth street. They wose badges stamped with the word ‘‘Guest’’ in gold. It was plain to be seen that they had been to some ball or reception in Tammany Hall. The old man dropped into his seat, and with some exertion reached his hand into & trousers pocket in search of the fare. He fumbled for a minute or so. He with- drew his hand without any money. He tried a vest pocket. There was no money there, ‘Then his face grew grave and he suddenly seemed to become as sober as a stork. He tried pocket after pocket with- out avail. All this time the conductor stood in the doorway. The children looked on nervously. Suddenly the elder boy fished a little bit of a purse out of his pocket. “T’ye got eight pennies, Rose,’’ he said to his sister. Rose looked in her pocket- book. ‘'I have just five,’’ she said. The little fellow on the end pltped up, ‘‘I have a nickel too,’”’ And Rose, with a pleading eye, held the sum total of the syndicate towards the conductor. “T’ve got it,”’ said the old man, with a joyous chuckle as he pulled back the little girl’s hand. ‘‘I knew I had a half- dollar left out of my expenses,’’ and he handed it to the conductor, who rang up four fares. The people in the car who watched the little serio-comedy felt like cheering for the little penny syndicate. How Three Colors Run Riot, Even the tweeds and cheviots for spring have caught the color craze and display many gorgeous dyes, and the staid serges and mohairs long celebrated for their demure appearance show a reckless tend- ency to frivolity with their gny chameleon patterns, Dresden devices, and dashes of brilliant color. Silks and fancy satine also show these gay blendings of oolor, but a toning and refining effect is im- parted by the elegant black costumes and those of fawn, gray, beige, and the green and brown fabrics in monochrome which in various elegant shades are in high favor both here and abroad. The great difference between gowning in France and in most other countries of the world is that the French woman, whose gown- ing is her religion, will elect for only the atyles and fabrics that individually suit and compliment her. She never puts on a garment because her neighbor, relative, vr best friend looks charming in it—not she. ‘‘ Know thyself,’’ is her motto, and this ls why she is always and ever a pretty figure in artto study, and her gowning a liberal education to women of other nations, thousands of whom put on what they know is the latest fashion, whether it is suited to their particular style, figure and st ro indings or not, but these points are vitai considerations with a Parisienne. —New York Evening Post. A Score of Evenings. The two girls were walking along Woodward avenue tslking about their best young men,of course, At least, one of them was. ‘‘Charley was up to see me last night,’’ she said, with a twitter. ** That’s twice in a week, inquired the other. ‘*Yes,’’ and she blushed and giggled. “I suppose he'll come three times in the next week?’’ **T suppose so.’’ ‘*And four times the next?’ “That's what brother says,’’ ** And five times the next?’ ‘That's what sister says.’’ ‘‘And six times the next?’’ ‘That's what auntie says.’’ ‘*And seven times the next? ”’ ‘‘That’s what papa saya.’’ ‘* And then what’’ “Then well get married; that’s what everybody says.”’ “And then what?’’ ‘*Then I won't see him any more of an avening; that’s what mamma says.’’— Snow Hill (Md.) Messenger. isn’t it?’’ A New Kind of Sandwich. Have you eaten of the very latest dish? I say latest in every sense of the word, for it’s a dish that goes with the mid- night Welsh rabbit, and is the newest and best sort of asandwich. You take fresh bread and perfect butter. Then you have some fresh roasted peanuts—it’s the fad to roast them yourself—ground fine in a coffee mill. Next you mix the ground iat into a paste with a little sherry or old port, spread them on the bread and there you have the sandwich everybody is eating. You may substitute mayonnaise for sherry, or add a drop of almcnd essence, but a peanut sandwich you must have if you are to follow the fashion set, they say, by the wife of a Cabinet tem ber.—Washington Post. Bulgaria gives proof of a Russian en tente by agreeing to grant to the Czar, in cate of war, two Black Sea ports for use, and also egrees to concentrate an army at Shula. News has been received of the death of Coi, A. A. Naff and a half dozen compan- ions on the the Canadian boundary of the Raivg Lake district in Minnesota Their team went through the ice and all were lost. They were looking after unruly Indians under orders from the Interi-r Department at Washin gton. An Italian company at Frence, wishing toattact Americans and Englishmen, ex- plains on its posters that “La Bisbetica Domata,” the play it gives, ie Shakes- peare’s “Tamed Shrew.” Europe’s population has increased by 29,928,600 in the last ten years, nearly half the increase, 12,510,000, being in Russia, while France has remained stationary, her total increase being only 67,000. Vesuvius is again active, liquid lava flowing from many little outlets from the crater opened last July, and making the mountains very pictureeque at night, Visi tors climb no higher than the observa- tory. Insurance Company OF NEW YORK. RICHARD A. McCURDY, PRESIDENT. Statement for the year ending December 31, 1895 :— RODE, « 500s ec ccensdecsstectetes 221 ,213,721.33 Lim iRiNS i cree arteries cetsce 194,347,157.58 $26,866 563.75 SUP pl beieencysscepapigcsvsscne Total Income...........-+..+++.$48,597,430.51 (Com pany’s total income is about $10,- 006,000 more thau the annual revenue of Canada). Total Paid Policy-holders Bib Wiccan hie, $23,126,728.45 Insurance and Annuities Ste ORDO ii. ctor sscctavhecend $899,074,453.78 Net gain in 1895............. $61,647,645.36 Nore—Insurance merely written is dis- carded from this Statement as wholly mis- leading, and only insurance actually issued and paid for in cash is included. Paid to Policy-holders since Organization............000. $411,567,625.79 Robert A. Granniss, Vice-President. Wa'ter A. Gillette, General Manager. Isaac F. Lloyd, 2d Vice-President. Frederic Cromwell, Treasurer. Emory McClintock, Actuary. JOHN MACEACHERN, Resident» Agent, Charlottetown, P. E. I. J. A. JOHNSON, General Agent, 87 Hollis Street, Halifax, N.S. mch3l d&w tf. Seed Wheat. _Campbell’s White Chaff and White Rue- sian, grown one year from Imported Seed on the “ Warren Farm.” JOHN NEWSON. mch9—Ilm Stem Winding Watches are now as cheap as Key- Wind formerly were, are much more convenient and give less trouble to the wearer. We have a large stock and will sell low. G. H. TAYLOR. mchll FOR SALE. The subscriber offers for sale his Farm fronting on the Mount Edward Road, in the Royalty of Charlottetown, one mile from the city, comprising about 75 acres. This Farm is in prime condition, and is specialiy adapted fora Milk or Dairyirg business. There are on the premises a farm-houes three commodious Barns, almost new. For terms of sale or other particulars apply tothe undersigned or to F. L Haszard, Solicitor, Charlottetown. B. F. LONGWORTH. mch4—Im 135 pat WE WISH all our friends to know that we are still on CONNOLLY’S WHARF, and intend remain‘ng there for this year at least. We would strongly advise our Country friends not to Kill their horses after coming long journeys, by hauling Lunber over bare streets, when they can come to this Wharf and load their sleighs 80 conveniently right on the ice, which they cannot do anywhere else. Good stock now on hand. LATHS, SHINGLES, BJARDS and CEDAR POSTS galore. JAMES BARRETYS, mchl6 Connolly’s Wharf. Valuable Property For Sale. The subscriber offers for sale the desir: able residence, “Edenhurst,” on West “treet, between B. Heartz, Eeq., and Hon. I.. H. Davies’, The property has 84 feet fronting on West Street and 200 feet to the water. The house is heated throughont with hot water; also a weil of spring water in cellar. Apply on the premises to Simon Davies or Davies & Haszard, Solicitors. feb29 ODDS AND ENDS. Sigrid Arnoldson is to sing at the festi- | when the| val performances Jat Moscow Czer is crowned. Glad Tidings of Great Joy. There could be no gladder tidings than | news of a cure for consumption. Miller’s Emulsion of Cold Liver Oil cures con- sumption and every disease of the lungs | and respiratory organe. Why? Because | it supplies new blood to the exhausted | system, thus giving a new lease of life. | Miller’s Emulsion is made from the Oil | of the Norwegian Cod Liver, and in con- junction bypophosphites of lime and soda forms the greatest vitalizer of the age. Miller’s Emulsion is the great nerve strengthener and blood maker, and cures Coughs, Colls, Bronchitis, Scrofula and al] Lung affections. In big bottles, 50c. and $1, at all drug stores. Liverpool, having discovered that it once gave birth toa poet in Mrs. Felicia Hemane,’ proposes to erect a monument to commemorate the fact. Commercial Travellers. Wm. Golding, commercial traveller, 130 Esther Si., Toronto, says: For 15 years J suffered untold misery from Itch- ing Piles, sometimes called pin worms. Many and many weeks have I had to lay off the road from this trouble. I tried eight other pile ointments avd eo-called remedies wity no permanent relief to the intense itching and stinging which, irri- tated by scratching, would bleed and ulcerate. One box of Chase’s Ointment cured me completely. Hardtack is doomed in the French navy. M. Lockroy has ordered that soft bread backed on board shall henceforth be s rved out tothe sailors instead of ship’s biscuit. Parents Must Have Kest, A President cf one of our Colleges says: “We spent many sleepless nights jn consequence of cur chilaren suffering from colds, but this never occurs now : We use Scott’s Emulsion, and it quickly relieves pulmonary troubles.” The first schooner has left Quebec fir Anticosti. 90, ‘ree Samples Give Eight Months, oe * way in Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills are the only kideey pills known 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 derang- i EARNEST MEN AND WANTE WOMEN to circulate “ The Sword ef Isiam or Secffering Ar- menia,” a thrilling book. Graphic xc count of the Eastern Question, the Turk, Armenian and Mohammedanism with its horrible massacres. Numerous startling illustrations taken on the spot. 448 pages, only $1.90. Send 60 cts. for canvassing book. Agents make $15 to $50 weekly. Brapiey-Garrerson Co., Ltd., Torunto. d&w— feb26 Wants, Lost, Found, &: Advertisements under this he: ding charge five cents per line. LOST—On Saturday, a wallet containing pers, ete, and a cheque on Merchants’ Bank of P E isiard tor $25, payable tome, Infor mation leading to recovery of s»me wiil be rewarded by the subscriber—J D +EAMAN. april6 — WANTED—A good smart girl in a email family. Apply at EXAMINER Office. m >: TO LET- The pleasantly situated dwellirg house jacing south on }.ilford Street, nesr Brighton Road, a the re-idence of Mr \ J Bullman Five minutes’ walk from bathirg house and lawn tennis grounds in Victoria Park, nie minutes from Post Office Drawing room, dining room, large verandah, square hall, pantry. kitchen and back por on ground floor. Four bedrooms and ba 100m on first floor, two bedrooms in ; tiic Ample yard and shed in rear, gress plot and shade treesin front. Rent moderat prly to W C. HARRIS, Arciitect. 216 ti—m3i FOR SALE-A six-room cottage with kit chen attached pply toW A Gay, Spring Park, Chariottetown 5bwil3 pd—meh3 TO LEf—That targe and well arranged house, corner of Prince and Kent Streets, ai present occupied by the Misses Finicy ss a private boarding house, containing +ixtee: rooms, heated throughout with hot water, a choice location. Possession given ist “ay or Ist July, as desired. Apply to F S McCoRE. mchs0—135 Im WANTED *T ONCF—A general servant in a tma'l family; references r quired; good wages to a competent girl. Apply at this office, 3i-—apl WANTFD-—A gi 1 for general hcusework Apply at thi* office. lw—ap2 FOR SALE OR RENT—The dweling house, shop and stables on corner of Rich mond and Prince Streets. Fcrterms ayply to J H Gates tf—mh24 ANY PERSON having an old-fashiored open iron stove, Franklin or other make, may find a purchaser by applying to P O Box 678. ti mehll TO RENT -The dwelling house on Water Sircet at present cceupied by Mr Joh: coombs. Possession giyen Say Ist Oper for inspection any afternoon between © and 5 Apply te MES W SSTEWaRT, Water Strect. mchlo—ti P, — $600 down, $900 on mortage if dk: $1500 ee tee esirable dwelling nea centre of city, not farfrom park, good beig! borhood, healthy, Grafton Street. Aprly t A MELLISH, London House building, or cor ner King and Great George Sireets rovs PuTERS, PETERS & INGS, Barristers, Attorneys-iit- Law, &c., Cameron Biock, - - VUharlo tetown MONEY TO LOAN. Frederick Peters, Q. C., Arthur Peters, A. Ernest Ings. mch7—2m (136) Modelled each year to fit all the latest shoe shapes. Extra thick ball and heel. Sold everywhere. w~VTryVVvVvvVVYVVVvVeVVYTVVeVTewTT Granby Rubbers BOY WANTED—\ smart boy wanted \ learn the printing business—GkO W GARDI NER. 2i--ap7 WANTED-—A girl ina smali famil;. Ap- ply to Mrs F + ep Rosins. aya WANTED--A competent gir)! for general housework—WRs RC Gor, Fiizroy Street. ap7—dy 3i wy ii WANTED-—By the Ist May, acoox, wages $10; also a parlor maid, wages $3. Apply al this office. dy & wy tf ~—api Honestly made of pure Rubber. Thin, Light, Elastic, Stylish, Durable. Ay tin bb bp bp be by hp hh he be he i de They Wear like Iron. Lobster Packers } 8 I am prepared to contract for one pound ard half pound Flats and one pound Tall Cans Lobsters 1896 pack, at the highest prices the markets will afiord. Correspondence solicited. HORACE HASZARD Charlottetown, Febraary 27, 1896, 136 Ca EE What is RSS RA MAAR * Castoria is an excellent medicins for chi'- fren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its good effect upon their children.” * Castorie is the best remedy for children of which Iam acquainted. I hope the day is not far distant when mothers willconside>theroal interest of tacir chiliren, and use Castoria in- scead of the various quack nostrums which are stroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, orphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves.” a rm Casteria is Dr. Samuci Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Obildren, I¢ contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. I¢ is a harmless substitate for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil, it is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty ycars’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, eures Diarrhea and Wind Colie. Castoria relicves tecthing t .1bles, cores constipation and flatulency, Castoria acv.miiates tte food, regulates the stomach) and bowcls, giving heaithy and natural sleep. Case teria is tho Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Fricnd, Castoria, * Castoria is So well adapted to children thay I recommend it assuperiortoary prescriptiog known to me.” Castoria. Ht. A. Ancees, M. D., 111 So. Oxford St., Drooklyn, N. Y. Dx. G. C. Osacon, Lowell, Mass. “Our physiciras in the ch’kiren’s depart ment heave spoken highly of their experi- ence in their outside practice with Castoria, and although we only have among our medical supplies what is known as regular products. yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it.” Usrrep Hosprrat 4ND DISPENSaRy, Boston, Masa Da, J. F. Emicneror, Conway, Ar 7 Atien C. Surru, Pres., Murray Street, New York City. PS eee = “he Centaur Company, ‘ we i WAR IN AFRICA f but EL am pursuing the even tenor of my busi- ness, making and im-. porting all kinds of up- to-date Furniture, EF am now selling the greatest variety of Parlor Sets ever offered at bargains. JOHN NEWSON, Ch’town, March 30, 1896. THE BARGAIN GIVER. po ROSES CS HEED COE ETE OPO EY CET It is now within the reach of Five Years. CABINET SEWING MAGHINE A Wonderful Invention, of this Maaline at $40.00, all, Fully warranted for BROTHERS. We have placed the price Call and see it. MILLER RIPANS ONE GIVES RELIEF, What we want of you-=-a call to see our ‘nagnificent stock of Cloths to suit all the requirements of tie coming season, embracing all the newest makes in Tweeds, Serges, Worsteds and Trouserings. A full line of the latest English and American Hats, Lowest prices, good workmanship, and best and latest styles guaranteed JOHN MACLEOD & CO, Charlottetown, March 21, 1896. almost hopeless—casesthat had been treated by the most talented physi- cians—cases that were on the verge of despair and insanity—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 manly vigor and health— Reader you need not despair—no mat- ter who has given you upas incurable—the remedy is now within your reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness. Wood’s Phosphodine,—z%- Great English Remedy Is the result of over 35 years treating thousands of cases with all known drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment—® combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stagesof Sexual Debility, Abuse or Ezcesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Mental Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Wood's Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed Price, one package, $1; six packages, $5; by mail free of postage. One will please, c7x guaranteed to cure, Pamphiet free to any address. The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont-., Canada. Wood's Phosphodine is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominion, DVVVAVVVAVIVWA FS TSVA AWS VVs wow nin