ea a CALENDAR FOR APRIL, 1804. _ = ae ' New Moon, 5th day, Ilh 47.5m.,. Pp. m. w first Qua ay, Sh 20.1.m,pm, 8 W Ful Mux iay, | 1492 pm, SE » Last Qua a . pm, Nt ? | Das Week 1s ; st H gh j Ss a ee -| a Dimou 175 y ' ; 64 2) M | OP ! aT 27 9 20 TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. Single Copies Two Cents mt ; , ‘ - 2 serate read. Room iat a ee CS He SC ry - ll 40 "rr y S72 y> . oi ailiel } a - AC _ eed anti arene |s owe NEW SERIES CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1894. VOL 33.—NO, 242 —~—— = - mi é ‘7 54 2) 7 2 39 2 5% rida 1] 7 i3 : « | 40 419 wis 41 | §& 47 is ms 6: ls; ° $4 8 10 7 i ‘5 8 5 is V t6 i Gg j } is 10 1) 2? i . 9 iO 44 21 | Sa ‘ 0 11 18 zz) 5 : i 2 ll 55 23 \ 4 ; aft 3 24 | ~ 4 I hi 25; W a) ' 4 Ll 55 26 | 1 (58) 87) 34 27) F 7 8 3 42 23 | Satur ay 4 49 0 «6S v 7 es wi ay (S2iT 2 ;. * It DAIL) Tue Ls MMM NEWSPAPER AND, spine Darty or P. E. Ist sued every afternoon, from the office of ge Exawiver Pustisnine Company, in the adon Iiouse Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANOE) ove Year $4.00 @x Monrns . 200 Turse Mowris a~-++ 1 Ons Mont - O38 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES For smal! advertisements which are ordered fer only one or two weeks the charge is & cents per inch for the first insertion, and 2 eents for each continuation. Rate cards are furnished on application at the office. Specia) eontract prices at a reduced rate are quoted | for advertisements four inches In size or larger, which are to run for three months or longer. No special @i the radle efreumstances wil! ip the loca: column. liseounts notices inserted unless paid for such paid notices appear sAcial made on gia connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars. oO notices will be inserted wit! the same Uoless the regular rate of 10 cents per line is paid. That Tux Exawtner is considered byjjour Merchants and Manafacturers (o be the lead- ing newspaper in I. E. Istand, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their anaouncements> public, is abaundantiy proved by the fact that su order to accommodate our advertisers wr have been compelled to enlarge the paper to Ms present size. cnies, ete. Tae Datiy Examtnen ta for sale by the fol- | lowing agents nh. H. Mason, Post OT ce, J. Meliatyre Maipeque Road, C. Paul, Lower Spring Park Road, ” W. M. Comin, irafton Street, - &. Grey, cor. Water and Priace St. D. Chappell, Prince Street, Pazaar Stofe, Queen Street, * Geo. Carter & Co., Queen Street. ” & Gray. News Siail, P. E. L. Railway on ihe trains M.& T. J. Walsh, merside. Harry McFar!lane, Souris. Hoa. D. Gordon, (-eorgetowan. B.A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge Charlottetown and Eclectic Beokstore, Sum- The Weekly Examiner 6 issued every Friday morning from the Publishers’ office. [i is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and tea ficw’-class weekly newspaper—interesting Gad {| of the latest news. The subscription for Tuz Weexty Exaw. NER, post pald to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for Tuz DarLy EXAMINER. DOCTOR DORozY, Physician and Surgeon. Graduate of the Medical Department of ther University of the City of New York, late Member of the Resident Staff of Belle- vue Hospital and the New York Lylog-in Hospital, New York City. OFPICE North OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Side Queen Squar Rexidence—Near Corner of King and Queer Mtreeta, Chariotietown P. E. Island Railway On and after FRIDAY, 15th December, 189 the trains of this Railway will ran daily (Sun days excepted) as follows :— Read down Read uy A.M. Leave Arrive P. M 7b Charlottetown 31 7h Royalty Junction zy #17 North Wiltshire. 1% s» Hunter River 14 ee Lradalbane. Lo 9®% Emerald Junction 124 $a Freetown . 12 te" Kensington e 122 WD) Ar Summerside ; Lv ll# PM A.M 24) Ly Summerside. . Ar 10% i® Misecouche.. wz if Wellington. 19 & 2 Port Hil 393 3h O" Leary .. 89 3 Bioora field 7 4% Alberton i Se 53 Ar Tigoish Lyv6 @ P.M A. M. 23) Lv Chartottetown 9s Ar 10% 2% Royalty Junction ..1 355 Ar Mount Stewart Ly 85 4 Ly Mount Stewart Ar 9 52 Cardigan .. 73 4 ar Georgetown. Lv 7h P.M A.M 4% Ly Mount Stewart Ars & aa Morell... - st $i2 St. Peter’ , ae 6 Ar Souris . Lv 62 PM A.M 1 Ly Ermerald Junction . Ars? 1W Ar Cape Traverse Lv 7% Dp. PO'TTINGER Gen. Mgr. Can. Gov’. Railways. E.UNSWOKTH, Superintendent Cnariot etown, Dec. 14, 1805. HAVE A GUESS. Oh, whe: taKe my advice, And d t forget, he sure To take a look at the famous “ Bike” In PROWSE’S well-known Store. The handsome Brantford Bievcl That in t r window's shown Ts as good as any in Charlottetowr And it may ve your own A jar in which are cents galore is placed where a)] can +¢ ueSss HOW Many ents the ar « ontains And the “ Bike” your own will be. Be wise, rake a ur purchases At PROWSE’S Clothing St nach purchase, on Wi re; that figry > na LB vcie, ' give you one chance more Their € arpets, Hats and Furnishings, And a'l, in fact, they keer _ ’ ipared with others in the town re nore than quite ag cheap. spend f 10 cents per ‘ine, and under no | all advertise- | LS INSURANCE---FIRE, MARINE, LIFE. i gned repr foilow “t i B sh Companies IR=. North British and Mereanti! Insurance Company Union Assurance Society tzid d Ma ster Fire Assurance Cor T_T MARINE. gn M | { Mari Marine Insurance Compa LIFE = London and Lancashire Life Assurance Company. F incl Marine Policies all written here. Ster] ng Certifiv ates, payable in any part of the world, issued on shipments ALSO—1 Guarantee Company of Canada, } Se OFFICE—Stam per’s Block, Villages Charlottctown. he Nova Scotin Marine -Insurane Company and the Dominion Burglary Agencies in all Towns and FRED. W. HYNDMAN. r law (sat APRIL ANNO UNGEMENTS | We have pleasure in calling your attention to the fol- lowing forthcoming publications :-—. Ready Apri! 6th.—Canadian Edition of “ THE HOOSIER SCHOOLM ASTER,” by Edward Eggleston Cloth, 90 cents; ' Paper, 50 cents same plates as the American edition, which has This edition is from the sold in Canada at $1.50. Rea ly April 10th.—* THE STICKIT MINISTER AND SOM& COMMON MEN,” by S. Rh. Crockett. Cloth, $1.25, 8S. R. Crockett is the new literary luminary who is } at present possessing the mind of the English public. “The Stickit Minister” has alrewly passed into the fifth edition Ready April 14th.—“ WANTED,” by Mra. G. R. Alden ( Pansy”). Cloth, 70c. A new “ Pansy book is always sure of a market. R wiv Apr 1 t9th.— I i nh AIDERS,” being Some purtsaagrves in th 2 life of John Faa, Lord and Earl of Little Ezyp". Crockett’s New Book. Cloth, £1.25. OF the English edition of this book, 3,000 pies were sold previons to publication. In + The Stickit Minister” Crockett appears asa “ new Barrie” in “ The Raiders” he is a | “ second Stevenson ”"—so say the critics. This latter story reminds the reader strongly of Blackmore’s “ Lorna Doone.” a HA harlotte bZARD town, April 19, 1894—+ t s We can pay it no stronger compliment : ‘ 2 ATAARH wv thu VW AVAL, Navy, Myrtle, Brown, Cravenettes are uni- versally admitted to be the only satisfac- tory porous waterproof goods on the market. FT esseee Atala ~~ | Priestley’s Cravenettes (In light and medium-weight goods) Are not on'y rain-proof, dust-proof and porous to air but are extremely stylish amd come in the following shades : ON WHICH THE GOODS ARE WRAPPED.~ Grey, Castor and Black. The Priestley trade mark is always a guar- antee of good wearing PP OP PO OO vy PUCT TCT CCT CCT CT CCC TCC TCC CCT T TCT quality. Always ask ¢ . > for Priestley’s. 13 ; J 4 DION SOLOS O90 0000 000-D DONT WORRY! IT BRINGS COMFORT we THE ALBERT jan6—ev sat tf Flace a Cake of B‘BY’S OWN SOAP in your linen drawer, and it will impart to your clothes the delicate aroma of fine French Pot Pourri in a modified degree. The longer you keep the Soap before using it the better. Beware of imitations. TOILET SOAP CO, Montreal, SOLE MANUFACTURERS. = Long Waist, Gorrect Shape, Best Material, Combined with the best filling in the world, makes the ‘' Featherbone Corset’ unequalled. TRreyvy A PAIR. Seed Wheat, Timothy, Clover, &c. We have ju ado Beard Elax, ete. all good, wholesale and retail. and two-horse Grain Charlottetown, SEEDS, and more to follow weekly. White Seed Wheat, also Onlario White sia ed Wheat, Canadian and Western Timothy, Large Peas, Vetches, Corn, ate Red Alsike and White Clovers, — ( b x fresh Seeds imported this spring, Also, Spring Tooth Harrows, Seeders, bined, Road Carts, Road Wagons, Buggies, ete, Will be sold cheap for cash or approved credit. A. HORNE & CO. April 13, 1894—dy law why 4i st received a large portion of our SPRING Northwest Red and Seeder and Harrow Russian and Color- Frost & Wood Plows, one Com- | The bnildings, fences, yates, garden, ete., are all in fir-t-class orde: Faces Victoria Park, is ten minutes’ walk from the principal Churches, Schools, Public Buildings and Market, with a good sidewalk all the way. The House consists of ten rooms, besides kitchen, scullery anl servants’ roome, is } heated by hot air, ant has a large water tank in lar, the whole be ws well dra ned to the sea There is also a servants’ cotia on the premises The outhouses consist of Stable, Coach- house, Workshop, I 3 Ho we, aul large | | Sheds for manure and farming rea ple michts, There is good bathing, boatine, fi hing and shooting in the immediate vieruits Possession can be givea imme liat lv. For further particulars apply to M. & D. C. McLEOD. ‘“WATERMERE,” the residence of | L.ieutenant-Goveraor Howlan, with about | eight acres of land attached, six of which } ay slay are in ap$S—Im 2aw_ pat § §. MIRAMICHI ——LEAVES—— Montreal or Charlottetown (ICE PERMITTI*G) — })\ 28th April and Mth May. CARVELL BROS. pat guar 2i ap] S—w th sat Bo You Recognize ft ? Thie is the heel of the GRANBY RUBBER. Look for this pattern on the heel when you buy a Rubber or Overshoe. It guar- antees a perfect article. Granby Rubbers Wear Like Iron. Ask your dealer for them. mechl4 ——FOR—— Creameries and Cheese Factories. The very best work guaranteed on all jobs for Creameries and Cheese Factories. WE MAKE KIND OF WORK. M. SPEVENSOY, MANUFACTURER OF Tinware, Stove Pipe, &e., 53 QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. All orders promptly attended to. apo—tf SeEUS | SEEDS SEEDS | SFED WHEAT, ©Ats. BARLEY, VETCHES, CLOVER, TIMOTHY, Kc., Ke. Fresh and Good at J. D, MACLEOD & C03, api—Im 2aw & wky Did You See the Latest? WHAT'S THE LATEST NOW? Why, Herbert Haszard’s Catalogue of “A Few Flowers Worthy of Culture,” containing a descriptive list of the most fashionable and best quality of Flower Seeds, ard the cream of the Chrysanthe- mum and other choice Flowering Plants. If you want the very best, send to him for his catalogue. Address HERBERT HASZARD, P. O. Box 196, Charlottetown. ap5- 1m eod EMOVAL! Queen Street. and Grafton Streets, now used by Mr. J. q Taylor as a Bookbindery. meh29—dy FOR SALE. TINWARE A SPECIALTY OF THIS | ISLAND. | MR. ROBERT BEATRSTO AUCTIONEEP, Has Removed his Office to Store occupied by Mr. W. B. Robertson, Abont the Ist of May Mr. Beairsto will move into the Store on corner of Queen That Pie ' had for dinner was the best | ever ate. Thanks to COTTOLENE, the new and successful shortening. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR if. Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO.,, Wellington and Ann Streets, MONTREAL, Seeds ! Seeds! In Store and to Arrive:—Red Fife, White | Fife and Bearded Wheat, Barley, Black and | White Oats, Field 2eas, Vetches, Timothy ant Clover Seed, ete. Also, Fred, Hay, Oats, Bran, Chopped Oats and Barley, Cornmeal, Vii Cake, ete. . L. MACNUTT, apls.-2w2aw wky 21 Queen Street. THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. A Society estai‘ished with a view to disseminate the tasie for arts, to encourage and help artists, Incorporated by Letters Patent of the | Government of Canada, the 27th February, 1593. GALLERY GF PAINTINGS | Nos. 1 | | } i i | j (C6 = WNotre Dame St., Montresi. ‘One of the hichest Galleries of Paintings in Canada, ADMISSION FREE, from 10 o’clock? }a.m., to 4 p. m. All the Paintings are originals, mostly | from the Freneh school, the leading mod- ern school. Eminent Artists, such as Francais } Rochegrosse, Aublet, Barau, Pesant, Petit | jean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and 6 | great many others, are members of this Society. Sale of Paintings et easy terme. distribution of i’aimtings between | Society and Scriphoiders on May 23rd, Price of Seriptuin, $1.00. Ask for Catalogue and Circular. H. A. A. BRAULT, janli—mwf tf Director. Next the Unlike the Dutch Process a No Alkalies Other Chemicals are uscd in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’S BreaklastCocoa e which is absolutely tA pure and soludtle. It hasmorethan three times }) the sirength of Cocoa mixe-t with Starch, Arrowroot o7 aro" Sugar, and is far u.cre eco- nomical, costing less than one cent @ cup. it is deliciows, nourishing, anc. EASILY DIGESTED. Sold hy Grocers everywhers. | W. BAKER &CO., Dorchester, Mass “AFTER HAVING BEEN KEPT a | ‘UP ALL NIGHT With that COUGH, if you do not | want to repeat the experience, buy s bottle of the OLD STANDARD REMEDY Gray’s Syrup of Red Spruce Gum The best Cough Cure in the worid. Sold everywhere 25 cts. a bottle. KERRY WATSON & CO. Propnictons MONTREAL. WEN <. AGES oe Sa ane cer3 c men. Four out cf {ve who suffer nerv- zre but paying the pen- alty of early excesses. ‘%‘ he dread alarm of Impotency, the exhaus- tion cf Spermatorrhoea, my be CURED in strict confidence ct moderate expense. Send for our fre sealed book, ** PERFECT MANHOOD.” ERIE MEDICAL CO., Butfalo, N.Y. | FIVE GOOD AUTHORS, MR. LOWELL’S OPINION OF BOOKS NECESSARY TO READ. Shakespear Not Placed Quite to the Fore -~Homer Presents Man Most Nobly and “Tilad”’ the ** Odyssey "’"—The Works of Others. Sincerely in the and A previously unpublished essav of Mr. Lowell's has appeared in the Century in which ne speaks of the books necessary for one to read. There are certain books which it is necessary to read; but they are very few. Looking at the matter from an esthetic point of view merely, I should say that thus far only one mau has been able to use types so universal, and to draw figures s0 cosmopolitan, that they are equally sauetptable to the whole Indo European branch, at least, of the human family. That man is Homer. and there needs, it seems to me, no further proof of his individual exis- tence than this very fact of the solitary unapproachableness of the ‘‘Tliad” andl the “Odyssey.” The more wonderful they are, the more likely to be the work of one pag Nowhere is the purely natural man presented tous so nobly and sincerely as in these poems. Not far below these I shonld place the “Divina Commedia” of Dante, in which the history of the spiritual man is sketched with equal command of mate rial and grandeur of outline. Don Quix- ote stands upon the same level, and re- ceives the same universal appreciation. Here we have the spiritual and the natural man set before us in humorous contrast. In the knight and his squire Cervantes has typified the two opposing poles of our dual nature—the imagina- tion and the understanding as they ap pear in contradiction. This is the only comprehensive satire ever written, for itis utterly independent of time, place and manners. Faust gives us the natural history of the huwan intellect, Mephisto- pheles being merely the pro- jected impersonation of that skep- ticism which is the invariable re- snlt of a purely intellectual culture. These four books are the only ones in which universal facts of human nature and experience are ideally represent el. They can therefore never be dis placed. I have not mentioned Shakespeare, be- cause his works come under a different category. Though they mark the very hizhest level of human genius, they yet represent no special epoch in the history of the individual mind. The man of shakespeare is always the man of actual life as he is acted upon by the words of sense and of spirit under certain definite coniitions. We all of us may be in the position of Macbeth or Othel:o or Ham let, and we appreciate their sayings and deeds potentially, so to speak, rather than actually, throrgh the system of our common nature and not of our ex perience. Tuberculosis in Cattle. Evidence multiplies to sustain the be- lief that tuberculosis is developed most readily in warm modern stables and under what may be called hot-house conditions. A writer in Country Gentle man in speaking of a case at Lenox, Mass., in 1888, when thirty-two cattle were destroyed, says: ‘These cattle were kept in a new barn built only after careful study into every detail. Stables were light anc. clean. Water was sup- plied in each stall. Even the most rigorous snap of a Berkshire winter failed to produce a freezing temperature in these stables, and for days at a time these cows remained inside, where they were well groomed and supplied with the best of feedand water. The warmth and comfort of these stabies seemed to provide hot-bed conditions for the nur- tare of the tuberculous bacilli. Berk shire county has had at least six serious outbreaks, or rather developments, of tubercuiosis since, all of which have oc curred in herds of cows kept in costly barns of modern constfuction, with the bes,eéeare, and I know of no instance where cattle left to ‘rough it’ have been troubled except in isolated cases which were easily traceable to hereditary in- oculation.” The Tea Cozy. No housekeeper’s equipment is com- piete without a tea cozy, and two or more are greatly to be desired. The cozy serves for coffee as well us tea, and will sometimes do more towards mak- ing a success of breakfast than even the new-laid eggs or the steaming rolls Every man feels himself wronged when his coffee or tea is cold, and let all things else be as good as they may, he will declare his morning repast a total failure if it happens that his favorite beverage is cold and insipid. A cozy is a very simple thing to make, and is par ticularly serviceable when made of velvet or silk in combination for the outside, with India or China silk for the lining. The shape is sort of half oval, with the usual 19 inches for the base line and 14 inches for the perpendicular. Layers of cotton should be tacked be- tween the lining and outside sufiici ent to exhaust two ordinary batting bundles. Dry Rot in the Tower of London. A remarkable instance of the growth of dry rot has recentiy been discovered in the armory of the Tower of London. In November a communication was made to the royal gardens from the Horse Guards, war office, to the effect that on repairing ene of the wooden horses in the armory, believed to be more than 100 years old, a mass of fun gus was found in the interior. It was cut out with the portion of wood to which it was attached and sent to Kew, when it proved to be alarge and charac teristic specimen of the ordinary dry-rot fungus (Merulius lacrymans, Jacgq.)) This fungus, as is well known, is very destructive to timber in close and ill- ventilated situations. The singular cir- cumstance in this case is that it appears to have been arrested in ite growth and killed and desiccated before it had pro- duced the smallest fragment of fructifica tion. —Kew Bulletin Great Expectation. Tesla expects to soon be manufactur ing electricity out of sunlight. ae” son has an improved process for weld- ing metals. Another inventor has a storage-battery which will drive cars twenty miles per hour. The electri cians are all hard at work. If stutes- manship developed as fast as engineer ing and mechanical talent, we would have better times. Where They Treat Horses Well. Roasted coffee and ground coffee beans mixed with honey are used to | restore broken down horses in Ger man™ poscULian in combination, pro portion and preparation of ingredi- ents, Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses great surative value. You should TRY IT. The most palatable preparation of Cod Liver Oi! in the world is Miller’s Emul- sion and is now being taken by invalids | with astonishing success- Miller’s is “the kind that cures” coughs, colds, bronchitis and all throat and jung troubles. Every bottle warranted. Ncoily taste like others in big bottles, Svc. und $1,00, at druggists, ! geese attempt to JAPANESE WOMEN. ; | i Happy and Attractive Now, but European Fashions Will Spoil Them. As arule, the young and middle-aged Japanese women are quite good looking, — to the peculiarities of their type. with fresh color, liquid biack eyes, ex- cuisite hands and well-rounded arms. Their feet are not so attractive, being spread out by the use of clogs or pat- tens. This footgear tends to give them ungraceful vaits—a sort of waddle—and | 1t is considered the correct thing to toe | in. Their costume, almost always be ; coming as to material and color, makes them look a little dumpish. This is | especially the effect of the great bow of the belt, or obi, worn on the small of the back, as rauch as a foot square. In most cases the faces wear amiable, con tented expressions. They are not worn by care or thonght. The women of Japan are much better treated! than their sisters in other East- ern nations, but they are considered dis tinctly inferior to the men, and are | tanght from their earliest childhood obedience—first, to their parents; then to their husbands, and finally to their sons when they become the heads of their households. But this does not ap- pear to weigh upon the Japanese woman She is cheerful, docile and contented with her lot, happy to serve in the sta- tion appointed her, with simple tastes and good digestion, and politeness which never fails, They are said to be good housekeepers always observant of their duties, but the simplicity of their housekeeping relieves them of a great measure of the care which wrinkies the brow of the New England housekeeper, for instance. Their honses, even the best of them, are the simplest structures imagivable, containing almost nothing of what we call furniture, and their dresses require no art in their cutting and manu facture. Thus the two great causes of worri ment from which our women suffer do not exist for these simple creatures The introduction of Occidental dress is obviously a great mistake. It means a complete revolution of the Japanese household. It means the change from sitting on the clean matted floor to chairs and sofas. It means wrinkles fo: the sincoth face of the Japanese woman Besides, it means the loss of her charms and no co:npensation; for the Japanese woinan in European costume is a dwart ish, dumpish little creature, as much out of her element as a duck on dry with these questions? Condition of Eggs, The flesh of diseased animals is very properly objected to as food. But the egy of a diseased hen isas much dis eased as the flesh. Poultry cholera, roup and other virulent diseases are | more prevalent in fowls than any dis eases In other animals. Almost every farin flock has its receptacle for depart ed sick fowls back of the barn or in a teuce corner, and in little graves in the garden under the currant bushes or grape vines. No notice is taken of the fact that the eggs of these hens have been gathered and sold for weeks pre ceding the final event, or a thought given that they were virulently un whelesome. Yet we have beeu told that hens had received the germs of diphthe ria (which is roup in their case) and of tuberculosis from human subjects. But who has seriously considered the danger of infection by diphtheria or consu:ap tion, or of intestinal fever (which is th fowl] cholera) from the eges we eat. And yet there is imminent danger of it that as been heretofore unannounced, so for as we know.—Hall’s Journal of Health. Small Female Feet. The craze for small feet is not nearly so pronounced as it used to be, and ladies do not feel disgraced when they are compelled to wear a large three or smail four. For years efforts have been made by artists and doctors to inculcate a taste for larger feet, and to a great extent they have been successful. The granitoid sidewalk, however, has don¢ more missionary work in this direction than all the talking and writing. While one walks on the grass it is pretty easy to keep the foot small and comfortable bat afew hours’ tramp daily on gram toid or granite makes a very small foot impossible and a very small shoe exceed ingly uncomfortable. By careful meas urement, however, it is impossible to make a shoe which looks a size smaller than it really is, and this is an art the days or even years. A New Idea in Hearses. An original idea for a hearse has oc curred to a Baltimore man, which, if it comes into practical use, may revolu | tionize the custom at funerals which re quires the mourners tu accompany the remains to the cemetery in coaches specially hired for the occasion. Thx coffin rests in a compartinent on the to} of a vehicle, being put in position by an apron which is lowered on the inside | In the forward part of the hearse is an apartment where the chief mourners may isolate themselves, providing thes are not too numerous. The rest of the | vehicle is for the friends. When the | mourning party is a small one such a | hearse will commend itself to pecple of small means, although the vehicle would | unquestionably attract more attention on the streets than funeral processions | do now. Wild Geese “‘Wedges."’ Wild geese that ‘‘pass in the night”— | did you hear that weird “honk” Satur day evening? Curious, that fiving in a | wedge form. Rollo asks at breakfast | how they knew enongh to do so. His | father gives this theory: Say that two follow their leader | now, in order that their wings may have | room to play, they will naturally tail out and j | i } | } | cording to Professor A. S. Packard. Notice | comprise 182 species of blind creatures, | color. ’ | } } | cludes serges and all dress fabrics. | are perfectly porous, non-odorous, and they | E Vy : 1 e | _Ch’town, April 12, 1894—2w 2aw | cess has been able to demonstrate. | are rolled on “The Varnished Board” like form a small wedge to start with Then a fourth bird lines along behind the one on the left, and a fifth, in a desire to get as near the leader as possible takes after the one on the right; | and so they keep on forming wedges of | such varying length and irregular tri angular shape as we see. Lung Surface. i Every well-developed adult of the hu- | man species has lung surface equal to | 1,400 square feet. The heart's power | is sufficient to lift itself 13,000 feet each | hour. Blind Animals, Cave animals of North America, ac- | nearly all of which are mostly white in Cost of Iron-Clads, The average cost of building a British | jrenclad is *2i0 per ton; French, §215 iauan. $205: German, $300 | ate | Priestley’s Cravenettes may be had in | all the newest fabrics. Absolutely rain- repelling they are not to be distinguished from the same goods not waterproofed. This is their great merit. Cravenette in | They never change in appearance. These are merits which no other waterproofing pro- | They | all Priestley’s dress goods. =... | USE SKODA’s DISCU VERY the grea | | Blood and Nerve Remedy. ‘y have smooth, round faces, often | iand. But what has a traveler to do | secret of which is not obtained in a few } | |; Ship hitherto existing t | ORTRANDER. i j Oshawa, Ont. Pains in the Joints Caused by Inflammatory Swelling & Perfect Cure by Hocd’s Sarsa- Parilla. | “3t affords me much pleasures to recommend | Hood’s Sarsapariila. My son was afflicted with | great pain in the joints, accompanied with | swell ng so bad that he could not get up stairs te bed without crawling on hands and knees, [I was very anxious about him, and having read | | ' a Hood's" Cures 80 much about Hood's Sarsaparilla, I deter- ! mined to try it, and got a half<tozen bott!es, | 1 four of which entirely cured him.” Mrs. G. A. JAKE, Oshawa, Ontario. N. B. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla. t easily, yet promptly and rand bowels. 25¢, | Hood’s Pills « | @fficientiy, on the ly ht Pe | | Below will be found a Con:bination | Conn hic} De ie . | Coupon, which, when cut out aad sent to t with. ten cents, will entitle sender to any one Part of whichever Port- fulio is desired. Sample copies of all the hooks may be seen at this office cr at R. H. Muson’s News Stand. GISPIIIFLIIIIFIZIFIIIIVF., * STODDARD'S PHOTOGRAPHS. is office 2 Paris l to 8 Now Ready! @ 7] % z fos “ % | fei |e sieeiiniialoaa fe | & fa \@ This Coupon and Ten Cents will @ | tay procure any Part. fy bi : fe fos ~ a fea fe fu fea a fe. * | Parts | to 10 Now Ready! This Conpon and Ten Cents procure any Part. will OUR OWN COUNTRY. The King of Portfolios. A PICTURESQUE AMERICA. Part No 1 Now Ready! fe ne bd fe fe 7] 7] fea fu fi fu fea 4) ( fa fer fe fe i fi oy % ty This Coupon and Ten Cents "4 PESPPST FSS SSFIFE PIISTIFE SEPIFIFZFTIITI eee ze . procure any Part. SFIPK FIFI I IO STII ITITII VIZ The Examiner Publishing Comp’y, CHARLOTTETOWN. ° Physicians Endorse Them, and Physicians Make Them. lirs. Warren FE. Whittemore, Fast Dixti id, Maine, ' Headache and Catarrh. How many people suffer constantly from the above diseases, which ulti- mately lead to nervous prostration, consumption and death. Mrs. Whitte- | More says: ‘‘Have had headache and eatarrh for years, and found no relief until I took Skoda’s Discovery. I have not had headache once since.” Skoda’s Discovery purifies the Blood, tones up the nerve centers and makes you well. koda'’s Lite t i bene Tablets cure , and dyspepsia. constipation, 05 Cts. per box. IModiesl Advice Free. SXOGA DISCCYERY C2., LTO., WOLFVILLE, tN. ¢ For sale by all druggist«. Trage sav ied by W. R. Watson; Chariottetown PL RI LAND SALE, JUST OUTSIDE THE CITY. I am instructed by James M. and Joha R. Hooper to sell by Auction, on SATUR- DAY. Anri! 28th, at 11 o’clock, a. m. om the premises -—~ Two Valuable Building Lots fronting on the west side of the Malpeqve Road, in the Common of Charlottetown, having a front of 55 feet each, and extending back by parallel lines 396 feet, containing one half acre each, as per plan at my office. Terms at sale A. McNEILL, ap20—eod tl sle Auctioneer. MOLASSES. 75 Puns } 30 Tierces 50 Barrels } N., B. & M CHOICE ANTIGUA MOLASSES RATTENBURY. Apl i—-3w Zaw guar ol Disselution ol Partnership. Notice is hereby given that tt between e& co-partner- the under- signed, under tiie style and firm of LONG- | WORTH & CO. has this day been dissolved by mutual consen, Dated this 10th day of April, 1894 GEORGE D. LONGWORTdH. HENRY W. LONGWORTH. The business lately eonducted by Longworth | & Co. will, in the future, be carried on by | George D. Longworth at the old stand, Water Street. GEORGE D. LONGWORTH, HENRY W. LONGWORTH. FOR RENT —The subscriber intending to leave the ‘sland, the very eligible House oo- enpied by him on the corner of Prince anc Dorchester Streets will be torent on or about lst May uext. Itis a first-class House in all respects, and is heated with hot water through- owt. For particulars apply to Judge Alley or © the subscriber on the premisea.—L. J. tf—mebls A AR EN a MONEE a a pa 0 et 3 a