seen I SNC TA 8 a eee Pee smote ae yy eae, ope a ed ee aN NI Si 5 oe a aa oe < Sa ES ot CURE FOR ERYSIPELAS. ‘ Mrs Thos, Trahey of Parrs- tup— boro, N. 8, says:—“In the CE year 1892 I was in bed five WSS . ° -. weeks with Erysipelas, swol- len out of all human shape ae fast sinking ongiieer and given up todie, At this erisis Nyassan was used and I was cured in a few days DOCTORS GAVE Wanted —The Address of every sufferer in America, THi NYASSAN MEDICINE CO., TRURO N. 8. Mention this paper when you write. din REMOYED G. G. Jury has removed his jewel- ry tusiness to Great Geo. St., oppo- site J. Stumbels’s harness shop, where he will be pleased to see all his old aud new customers. He is now pre- pared to attend to all watch repairing and will guarantee to regulate them by the town clock, as it is the stand- ard for time. For Jewelry and Warches his prices can’t be beat. Just received, a new supply of wat che clocks and solid gold wedding ri u ¢. Cc. C.JURY Great George Street, Ch’town. ne CHARLOTTETOWN [isiness Collese y riting Academy Let thesear chlight of practice illuminate the dark places of Theory. : THOROUGHLY Progressive Practical Institution, in which young men and @eomen are notonly taught Book keeping (inallits applications to commerce) both In single and double entry, but are trained how ae, business, by actual business transact- fons. The students act as buyers, sellers traders, bankers, book-keepers and account- ants, in actual business operations, and the currency issued by the College Bank and the mdse. issued from the Emporium, are used in bona fide business transactions, just the same asin mercantileand banking houses. k-keeping in itself may be learned at me, but a knowledge of how to transact usiness, cannot be thus acquired. That our course system of training is eminently pract- ical write for testimonials trom business men, and from students whe are now hold- ing jucrative aa» responsible positions. SUBJECTS: Book-keeping by single and double entry theoretical and pratical,) Actual Business ractice, Business Penmanship, Business Correspondence, Commercial Arithmetic Commercial Law, Raiiroading, Steamboat ing, Banking, (actual practice inthe College Bank)Typewriting, Shorthand and Naviga- tion. FACULTY: L. B Miller, Principal, Teacher of Book- keeping, Arithmetic, Business Business Correspondence, iypewriting ard Navigation, J. W. Coulson, (Vice Principal,) Teacher of Railroading, Steamboating, Banking, Ac- counting and Actua! Business Practice. J. Harry Williams, Teacher of Busines Penmanship. Wm. Moran (licensed), Teacher of Short- hand. George S. Inman Esq., (Law Firm Me- Donald & Inman) Lecturer on Commercial w. Yor circulars and full information, write or appiy to L. B. MILLER; Principal, interested are cordially invited to cial e college erd inspect our system flo re, #cu work in general. All til 4i2 Columbias and Others kinds of shere are two Wheels, COLUMBIAS and all others. Columbias are in a class by themselves, rices 44, 60, 85 and 140 dollars. 60he dollar wheel is equal to the best high grade bi- cycle on the market of any other make. Each wheel guar- anteed by a company who do not know how to make slop goeds. ‘The purchaser of a bicycle from me will be taught to ride free. R. M. YOUNG, sey tm NOTICE. Having leased the privilege of fishing trout cn the stream koowp as Sherry’s Creek, to partirs iv Ch’town you will please take notice that no person will be _ allowed to fish but them. P, & T. SHERRY. 101 lmo—eod Practice, | | the products of her factories and milis. come to the gateway of the Soo wheat and flour and lumber and iron cre—all country, drawn to the lake route be cause it is so much cheaper to moyc of manufactured goods aud immense furnishes raw materials; the east manu- THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 23, 1898, COMMERCE OF THE LAKES. | Total Tonnage of the Soo Donble That of ihe Suez Canal, In St. Nicholas there is an article on “The Great Lakes’’ by W. 8. Harwood. The author says: The commerce of the lakes is enor- mous. The outlet from Lake Superior to Lake Huron had always been a seri- ous obstacle to commerce, in that it was not deep enough to allow the larger freight and passenger boats to pass com- fortably through. Locks have been built at government expense, at the cost of many millions of dollars, which now allow the passage of large boats, and two more locks are being built—one by the Canadians and one by the Ameri- cans—which will still further increase commerce. The new lock 8n the Ameri- can side is larger than the old and when completed will be one of the most won- derful pieces of masonry to be found in the country. It will allow the passage of vessels drawing 21 feet of water. It has cost several millions of dollars and will not be completed for a year or two. For many years the great Suez canal was looked upon as the most wonderful piece of commercial engineering in the world, carrying enormous cargoes through its gateway from the east. But in this newer land the commerce of the lakes has dwarfed the Suez canal. The total tonnage of the Soo during the year 1897 was 16,500,000, The tonnage of the Suez canal in 1896 was 7,000,000. This tonnage of the Soo does not by any means represent the entire commerce of the great lakes; it is only a portion of it. Hundreds of thousands of tons of merchandise and supplies of ali kinds are shipped annually up from Lake Michigan points through the strait of Mackinac eastward, which do not pass through the Seo, and many thousands more go eastward from points below the Soo on the other lakes, to be exchanged for other supplies for points also below the Soo, Year by year this immense traffic is growing. From the great west there the natural products from a vast area of goods by water than by rail. In return, the east sends the west vast quantities supplies of hard and soft coal. The west factures these materials and sends back There were received at the ports of Du- juth and Superior during the year 1896 —that is, during the lake season— 1,775,712 tons of coal. On the margins of these lakes, par- ticularly on the shores of Superior, there are ore bearing rocks containing iron, silver, copper and gold. The iron ore is of remarkable commercial value and practically inexhaustible in amount. Immediately tributary to Lake Superior, in some cases on its very banks, are iron mines the output of which rivals that of any mines in the world, and the sup- ply in ‘‘sight,’’ as the miners say, will furnish the world with iron for centuries to come. Some of the lumber which goes east by way of the lakes is sent away on to South American points without separa- tion, taking first a journey of perhaps several hundred miles down the rivers to the mills, then a thousand miles and more on the lakes to the St. Lawrence, passing through the Welland canal to get to Ontario, and then trying a fev: thousand miles of salt water—a pictur- esque voyage indeed. =— = —— WOOD'S PIIOSPHODINE. The Great EngiNsh Remedy. Six Packages Guaranteed to | promptly. and permanently ; cure «all forms of Nervous Weakness, Ervissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotencyand all / effectsof Abuse or Excesses, wm Mental Worry, excessive use a ® — ‘ a ; ef Tobacco, Opium or Stimu- 5 , . J ’ Before and Af CF. y tnts, whic soon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only Ieliable and Ilonest Medicine known. Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless mecicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, $1; six, $5. One wil please, sie will cure. Pamphiets free to any a‘idress, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Sold in Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggist. v.M.C. A. The baths in the Association Building bave been refitted, and are now in strictly firet class condition. They will be open Tuesdays, Thursdays. and Saturdays, from 2to 10 p.m. Members are invited to patronise them; non members will be charged a smal! fee for their use. The Assembly Hall is now in good order, and will be let at reasonable rates Apply to the Secretary. WARE - HOUSES PEAKE! WHARF Wharfage storage and yard- age at reasonable rates. Arthur @, Peake. a The World's People. Hubner’s statistical and geccraphical tables, us a resuit cf the latest investi- gations, give the population of the world at 1,535,000,000. This is an in- crease over the figures of 1896 of 23,- 000,000. To this increase Europe is credited with contributing 5,700,000; Asia, 6,200,000; Africa, 7,500,000; America, 3,200,000. The United States, with its great growth, estimated by this authority at 2,800,000, and its present population, placed at 72,300,000, repre- sents more than 538 per cent of the en- tire population of North and South America—a circumstauce adduced as highly significant and occurring in no other part of the earth. The population of Europe was increased to 375,600, 000, which is about a quarter of the entire population of the earth. Lost on the Atlantic, From March, 1840, until March, 1893, 122 transatlantic vessels—steam- ships plying between Europe and Amer- ica only—were lost en route, and as & direct result of this 6,369 Kves were lost. The estimate of lives lost from va- rious other causes is 600. The number of steamships never heard from after leaving port was 17, The number burned was bine, and the number foundered was 12. The other wrecks were caused by collisions, being washed ashore, col- lision with icebergs, etc. From March, 1893, to the beginning of the present year the loss of life on the Atlantic has been very much less than in former years, though one or two large steamers have had serious mishaps, and one was never heard from.— Washington Times. Her Cup of Tea. ‘‘How will I take my tea?’’ repeated an inveterate tea tippler in answer to the test question the other afternoon. ** Well, Ill take my first cup with sugar and without cream, and my second without sugar and with cream, and my third cup without either, and my fourth cup with both. My fifth cup I’d likea la Russe, while my sixth’’— —New York Sun. Justly Bereft of Ground Hog Facilities. A year or two ago Charles Green, a well known hunter, declares on a bright ground hog day that he stood by the hole and shot and killed the animal as he poked his nose out of his winter’s home, and in that way prevented him from seeing his shad- ow. Since that time, it is said, people in this section have been unable to obtain any satisfactory prediction as to the weath- er of February and early March.—Lyuch- burg News. They also relieve Disiress : Dyspepefa, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Torcue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. = They Regulate the Bowels. furely Vegetable, Email Dose. @rnall Pos. Gree’) Price, Substitution the fraud of iho day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter’s, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. DESIRABLE PROPERTY SIDMOUNT For Sale By # uction eel I have received instructions to sell by Auction, atthe premises, on Wednesday, the lst day of June next,at 11 o’clock a.m. The beautiful residence of the Hon. F. Peters, “Sidmount.” This property comprises 20 of acres ex- cellent land, with large and commodious dwelling house and out buildings. The house is fitted with modera im provements, having hot and cold baths, heated with hot water, and lighted with electrie ligbte. The gronada are beautifully laid out and planted with ornamental trees, Terms easy and made kG 4 at sale. h, -AKISTO, Auctioneer 927 &w TEETH WITHOUT PLATES Crown and Bridge Work. DR, J.P. MURRAY Nov. 4 155 Queen Street. French ard Enclich Crusoes, Frenci: wen of Jetters have uotcnorgh of the audacious spirit of the English, says Henry D. Sedgwick in The At- lavtic. They troop to Paris, where they have been accustomed to sit on their classical benches since Paris became the center of France. The romance of Villon is the romance of a Parisian thief. The romance of Ronsard is the romance of the Parisian galon. Montaigne lives on his seigniory while England is topsy turvy with excitement of new knowl- edge and new feeling. Corneille has the nobleness of a jeune fille. You can measure them all by their ability to plant a colony. Wreck them on a desert island, Villon will pick blackberries, Ron:@@d will skip stones, Montaigne whittle, Corneille look like a gentle- man, and the empire of France will not increase by a hand’s breadth. Take a handfal of Elizabethan poets, and Sid- ney would chop, Shakespeare would cock, Jonson dig, Bacon snare, Marlowe catch a wild ass, and in 24 hours they would have a log fort, a score of savage slaves, a windmill, a pinnace, and the cross of St. George flying on the tallest tree, Caloric. The emotional litterateur had just written a piece of which he was very proud. The editor looked it uver and then said: ‘‘Do you candidly think such opinions ought te go into cold type?’’ *‘I don’t know nruch about the prac- tical work of printing,’’ was the reply, ‘*but I don’t believe it makes any differ- ence. Even if the type is cold, I guess that article will take the chill off it."’ — Washington Star. Nature makes the cures after all. Now and then she gets into a tight place and needs helping out. Thing: get started in the wrong direction. Something is needed to check disease and start the system in the right direction toward health. Scott’s Emulsion of Cod- liver Oil with hypophos- phites can do just this. It strengthens the nerves, feeds famished tissues, and makes rich blood. soc. and $1.00; all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Torento. eo cnn tn epee Never Before Lave good Watches been so low in price as to-day. We have them revently bought at the latest re- duced rates, and will sell low. G « Hi. TAW LOR Jeweler and Optician. Charlottetown, e commenced burn We b: iny, ang can supply any quan tiiy of b st quility ot Lime, for farmizg and building pur- poses. ’. LYONS & vo 85—pat. ¢iar. 1 mo We are not poing to move But we are selling Crockery just as cheap as we were. Special discounts on aj] Cro-kery China and Glass now in stock, to | make room for sprir g importations. Also:—First class Photographs made in all the leading styles, at the old stand, C LEWIS \xactly opposite the North Side ' of Market House. Garrow S7TREET....-... | ; a Fee . us, aS ds . gs AP ee : 2 : - [he Go-Lightly Kind, are the best wheels » ade. periority can 9e seen at « glance. tound on them, ; ished, in fuct the “Imperiil’ is acknowledged to be the best finishe i wheel in town. prices, $65 and $55. “Round Shouldered”’ ad A special type of “ Fit-Reform” suit, cut loose and straight, with skil- fully moulded collar, which rolls high in front, but low and full, with ample cloth at back, giving more erect appearance, and greater prominence of chest. Best business suit, for such a form is a three button Sack like this—for dress, Tuxedo. Close fitting body coats as ‘Morning’, ‘Shooting’ or ‘Prince Alberts’ accent the rounded curve of back. A man may know just how his suit will look on him before he buys, if he selects the right shape of ready-to- wear “Fit-Reform” garments. Makers’ brand and limited price in left breast pocket. i SN Narr . ae im! © ~ . - \ 5 oe = a fi i se $10, $12, $15, $18, $20 per Suit. “%, REFORM N ee, ad os CL "amma maa hl ON EVERY GLNUINE Catalogue from Fi-Reform Clothing Co., at Montreal. \ 6 , SOLE LOCAL AGENCY _PROWSE BROTHERS. OBLEM for intending riders is ~om— What Wheel Will I Ride ? We c:n help you to solve it ie IMPERIAE WHELS Their su- All the ’95 i nproveme .ts e strong, light runniovg and well tin- ‘ Th voor <a yY ahi ihe prices are $75 and 360; cash THE PROGRESS is the best $40 wheel in town. firm as the Iwperial, and unlike most cheap wheels has tke good reputation of the Imperial to back it up. FRED P. NEWSON, It is made bv the same ACENT 2g>SS SSPETELZ2R89S42543 . “— = Seer zceR