. a eee a a - Renee set eam seF meee ee ‘ free exte Jaws rp Fro or v dou Le” sae Pe + pren Ful > 21st Th able | THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JUNE 3, 1898, ee . -" ae ee, ~~ ee NYAS -SAN) ERYSIPELAS. ME (CAL Mrs Thos. Trahey of Parrs- } eu <2 boro, N. &., says: —“In the ICE; 3 year 1892 I was in bed five weeks with Erysipe ‘las, swol len out of all } DOCTORS GAVE human shape oe ‘tee fast sinking : and given up todie. At this erisis Nyassan was used and I was cured in a few days Wanted —The Address ef every sufferer in America. NYASSAN MEDICINE CO., TRURO N.S. Mention this paper when DO yOoU r r KNOW? That we are selling Wall Paper cheaper than ever. All new and pretty patterns. Call and see samples, and be convinced that this is the place to buy Wall Paper. Also;—a new and splendid stock of China, Glaas and Crockery ware, Dinner and Tea Sets combined, from $6.00 up- wards. Don’t make any mistake, this is the place to buy Crockery Ware. C. LEWIS North Side Market Square, Grafton Street. Never Before have good Watches been so low in price as to-day. We have them rezently | bought at the latest re. duced rates, and will sell low, THE you write. Caan a G. H. TAYLOR | Jeweler and Optician. Charlottetown, Hard Coal, —— a Landing to-day, per Bar- quentine Matilda, 450 tons hard coal, in chestnut, egg and furnace sizes. [LUIS & WALL LOOT GARFIELD’S STRUGGLES. Elorw Lie urvedi* Midnight Gl When at Williasus College, Garfield was said to be only one of a very few who kept up their literary studies while in Washington. He never did so well but it seemed he could easi- ly do better. He always gave the im- pression that he had much more power than he used. As Trevelyan said of his | parliamentary hero, Garfield succeeded because all the world could not have kept him in the background, and be- cause, once in front, he played his part witb an intrepidity and a commanding ease that were but the outward symp- toms of the immense reserve of energy on which it was in his power to draw. ‘*When I was a freshman in Wil- liams college,’’ said Garfield, ‘‘I looked out one night and saw in the window of my only competitor for first place in mathematics a light twinkling a few minutes longer than I was wont to keep mine burning. I then and there deter- mined to invest a little more time in preparation for the next day's recita- tion. I did so and passed above my rival. I smile today at the old rivalry, but I am thankful for the way my attention was called to the vaiue of a little mar- gin of time well employed. I have since learned that it is just such a margin, whether of time or attention or ear- nestness or power, that wins in every battle, great or small.’’—Success, <-> > <a When a man owns a blooded horse be is always careful of its health. He looks after ite diet and is particular that the feeding shall be regular and right. Whil be is doing this it is likely is himself suffering from some disease or disorder. When the trouble gets so bad that he cannot work, he will begin to give himeelf the care he gave ihe horse at the start. Good pure, rich, red blood is the nest insurance against disease of any kind, Almost all diseases come from impure or mpoverished blood. Keep the blood pare and strong and disease can find no foothold. That is the principle upon which Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery works. It cleanses, purifies and enri:shes the blood, puts and keeps the whole body in perfect order ; makes appetite good, diges- tion strong, assimilation perfect. It brings raddy, virile health. It builds up solid, wholesome flesh (not fat) when, from any cause, reduced below the healthy standard. i Beales Corne Grafton and Gt. Geo. St. ——— ——_——— We still have some very extra brands cf French Cham pagnes in stock. Grand Mousseux, Chateau de Pierland, Gieslen & Co. a Avize, Mum’s Extra Dry. Alfred Greaticr & Co's. JOY & DAVIES New Inventoin. I have invented and patezed on July 24, 1897, a new straw elevator and shaker attached to any faonere. Itcleans all grain perfectly firet cleaning, all grain is taken out of the straw. It bas been well tested. It only takes abun’ » “f the power for to drive it of any otlsr .nachine for that purpose in the market. _I ask every, intending purchaser to see one of the Week’s shakers before purchasing any other, Anv person infringing on the pat- ent will be dealt with according to the law I have appointed Mr. Walter Grant of Mill View, Lot 49, as manufacturing agent. He will receive orders; also myself PAPRMER) JOHN 4. WEEKS, NOW OPEN ==" A large assortment of Amer- ican and Canadian Wall Pa: per. All the latest designs and patterns at lowest prices. F. J. HORNSBY Bookseller & Stationer. Window Shades from 25 up. Building Lot S0x100 Fest FOR SALE: This is one of the most desirable lots ia the city, being on high dry ground; ‘on the east side of Grow Prince St. Apply at tLe CITY HARDWARE STORE. ALBE cB. r ON. HENRY R, LORDLY ¢. A.M Can. Soc. C. E. Graduate College of Civil Engine eriag Cornel! University. Cenesulting Engineer for General Work, Specialties: Hydraulic, Sanitary Engineer- ing and Bridge Designing. E Offices at Charlottetown and St. John. Island correspondence addressed to Charlottetown, WARE - HOUSES PEAKE’ WHARF (WO 1) Wharfage storage and yard- ag? at reasonable rates. Arthur @, Peake. Nov. 4 2s not that he | — DANGER INDOORS ON A SHIP. hie end Pattleship Rulbtberds Nut Werth as Much as They Seem. On all first class passenger steamships and on all large warships a great per- centage of the tctal cost is spent direct- ly and indirectly on bulkheads or on svhat these bulkheads necessitate. No passenger would willingly make a voy- age in a liner which was not known to have a cellular structure, and no gov- ernment would think of building a bat- tleship or cruiser without bulkheads. Yet it is a fact well known, at least to all seafaring men and shipbuilders, that these bulkheads, strong and perfect in themselves, are precisely as safe and efficient as the doors in them and nota whit more so. The doors as at present constructed and operated are notoriously bad and dangerous. They have been the direct and known cause in the loss of many lives and many good ships and are doubtless chargeable with many more ships on the list of ‘‘missing and unac- counted for.’’ It is astonishing to the expert to see the general public and even seafaring men so ready to accept the prevailing superstition about the safety of bulkheads. The best possible bulkheads without equally good doors, operated on a safe system, are about as good as a chain with a link missing. The history of marine disaster has taught us this if it has tanght us any- thing, and yet we go on crossing the Atlantic in liners of much vaunted safe- ty and bragging about invulnerable bat- tleships, apparently with implicit con- fidence in this bulkhead fetich. There should be as few doors as pos- sible, and some very able experts con- tend that there should be none. On the other hand, most captains and chief en- gineers say they must have doors. Man- ifestly the only way out of the difficulty is to get safe doors, safely operated. The number of watertight doors and hatches on a first class battleship is over 850, and there are nearly 300 valves and gates connected with ventilating, drain- ing and flooding the huld and involving the safety of the ship. Jt will there- fore be seen that the systematic control and operation of these devices is a mat- ter of no mean importance. It takes about 110 men to look after these details alone in response to a cal- lision alarm under the present condi- tions, and it isa matter of very grave doubt on the part of those best informed as to whether the supreme efforts of these 110 men can attend to doors, hatches and valves quickly enough to save the ship.—Cassiey’s Magazine. fvear Startled the Old Man. The acoustics of Statuary hall in the capitol at Washington are a matter of wonder to tourists, and many are the tricks played upon them. An exchange tells of a youth employed in one of the departments who was visited by Lis father recently and took the old gentle- man to Statuary hall. There is a block about the center cf the circular hall where, if one stands and faces the north, a sound uttered from the door- way, 40 feet in the rear, seems to be immediately in front of this block. The youth managed to get his father on the block and, attracting his attention to- ward a stutue in front, slipped to the rear and said: ‘‘ What time have you? My watch has stopped.’’ The father drew out his watch and was balf through giving him the time when he looked around and saw that he wes standing alone and that the son was nowhere to be seen. He was bewildered and looked like the man from beneath whose coat cellar the magician bas just extracted a live goose. Presently the son stepped forth from the pillar where he had been in hiding, but it required many explanations to restore the old gentleman's serenity. WOooOnD’s PIICSPHODINE. The Great English Remedy. se or Exce xwcessive use 7 > Vorry, ¢ Tovacco, Opiumor Stimu- Secwia AGI 5 nts wikich cia tentte tet firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an carly grave Has been prescribed over 35 yecrs in thous and of cases; is the only Ivcliadble and Lone ‘dicine Ask druggist for W ood’ sPh osphodine; if » of this, return One will ldrass, known. he offers some worthless mé ine in-place inclose price in letter, ar 1d we will send by mail. Price, one package oi six, £5, please, siz will cure. Pamp h: ets free to any The Wood Cumpany, Winds« or, Ont., z Sold in Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggist ATENTS i FROMPTLY SECURED GET RiCH QUiCKL:. Write to-lay fora ‘ree copy of our big Book on Fatenta. “Ve have xtensive experience in the intricate patent awscof 40 foreign countries, Send sketch. model | oto for - free advice, MARION & MA-« © tf Experts, soya Building. ee, | TAKE NOTICE. I inform the pu sible that no persor pereeeresct or versons are allowed fishing in Mr. Jo.n White’s Mill premission from me. JOHN WHITIE, Pond, without wis i Prototype of the Du Marrier Girl. Coie Cin atiulv af boime there stands a certain lady. She is but lightly clad, and what simple garment she wears is not in the fashion of our day. How well I know ber! Al- most thoroughly by this time, for she bas been the silent companion of my work for 80 years. She bas lost both ber arins and oue of her feet, which I de- plore, and aiso the tip of her nose, but that has been made gocd. She is only three feet high or there- abouts and quite 2,000 years old or more, but she is ever young— Age cannot wither nor custom stale Her infinite variety— and a very giantess in beauty, for she ia a rednction in plaster of the famous statue of the Louvre. They call her the Venus of Milo cr Melos. It is a calumny, a libel. She is uo Venus except im good looks, and if she errs at all it ison the side of aus- terity. She is not only ‘‘pootiness,’’ but ‘‘wirtue’’ incarnate (if ome can bs in- carnate in marble) from the crown cf her lovely head to the sole of her re- maining foot—a very beautiful foot, though by no means a small one—it has never worn a high heel shoe. — George du Maurier in Harper’s Maga- Zine. wr 7 Biba piece la aay SICK HEAI Positively cured by these Little Pills, They also telieve Distrecs from: Drepepsfa, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. AY per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ress, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TOR.PID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Pu - Vevetable, € +21 333 Pil he Email Pose, rn —ee oe neeoe@ 6 B28 . O°? wees Bw o* | | Wheatley Rive | goeds. i tt ps wt eas Bg” ah Tea Substitution tho fraud of tho day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carters Little Liver Pills. ee BPBWDWSSGVSEESSD 6099 é The Time ¢ Has Come——... when those old jobs must be done. Maybe ‘ts a root to be repaired, ora barn to be built, cr perhaps your thinking of a house. We Have a Word to Scy You will want Boards; etudding, Lathes. You will want some Lumber, we have ju-t what you need, It will be tw your advan- tage if you buy from us. We ofter you first c'ass Lumber, ata very smal! advance on cost. Inves- tigate. It will pay you. shingles; TreLernoxe 1$l JAMES BARRETT, Connolly’s Wharf. BF DHSBWA BPBVSReteovwe ; - - ¢ é| é ? ( f ( f ¢ f ¢| a ¢ ¢ x cee an manne ata Columbian and Others ahere are two kinds of Wheels, COLUMBIAS and all others. Columbias are in a class by themselves, Prices 44, 60, 85 and 140 dollars. 60he dollar wheel is equal 2. Siz Packages Guaraniced to } H Qs ~ ’ . t's é . G3" promptly and permanent.y ; : tere call forms of Nervous } Y\ Wéakness, Ervissions,Sperm- ‘ # T Y) a . Iai? bead ctorriea, Impotency and au 7 ” y f «t =~ Cx . S\estak ws Wen? al VW to i. 2 best high grade bi- cycle yn the market of any other nake. Each wheel guar- anteed by a company who do not know how to make slop The purchaser of a ‘bicycle from me will be taught to ride free. R. M. YOUNG, jh McLEAN, Q.C BARRISTER, &c. CHARLOTTETOW* Brown’s BLOCK, |AGHE ¢ 2 FLERE FULT Res EH et —Lacks height to look symmetrical, His short arms, short legs and long body, require the special type of “Fit. _ Reform” suit, keptready to wear, forhim, ~ ‘Morning’ coat like this is best, ‘Shooting’ or ‘Prince Albert’ next, with waist line cut higher than usual, to give appear- ance of stature and slenderness. He who would add inches to his height, and know just how such clothes will make him look, can satisfy his judgement on the finished garment before he buys, if he selects ready-to-wear “Fit-Reform” Clothing. Equal to best tailor made of twice the cost. ., Makers’ brand and limited a AG , price in left breast pocket, | 4, Sag * oF i REFORM Wr $10, $12, $15, $18 SCL LOTHING «4 $20 Per Suit. ee , itr 27 . THIS BRAMD WITH RETAIL PRICE WEE (STAMPED BY THE MAKERS Np ae any = i es ‘ GARWENT, A a 3 y wih Masi eA ‘“ { 3 : ev f =|} + 8 EVERY GENUINE AR y Catalogue from Fit-Reform Clothing Co., Montreal. sence oreuagnenasetumrtnapeimetamiie IRATE RE Sy ea / SOLE LOCAL AGENCY PROWSH BROTEERS. A WORD TO THE CARELESS Many pcrsons do not value their teeth If they have the toothache their first and only thought is to have the tooth extracted, Just a few words on that point, they go and haveit taken out, that is t ae last of that tootlh; they cannot get it back again, Another 1oo.h begin troubling; out it goes, teo, and soon after» while the person cinnot masticate food; conse- qunce is their bealth becomes impairs d; then they pay doctors bills, buy oo etc., and asa fast resort they gt artificial teeth Now look at the question from a business standpoint. In the first place what would be the cost to save the tooth end keep it good fr » lifetime ? clo 's $1.00, and you will have your owa teeth in your hes and they were most certainly put there for ure ‘ ow think of this—f jou hada “wart on your fi ger, that troubled you, would you have the firger cut off 10 remove the wart? W hy certaintly not Well, why loose a tooth to remove an ache. We can stop toothache and save the tooth, and garantee them never to ache again. Artificial Teeth ‘o be satisfactory. We guarantee satis- want your money. in in the morning Wiil must be good faction or we don’t You can eall teeth same aay. BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS, Over Open evenings 7 to 5. and have your om, Store of Prowse B »oTOSs. Baby Cabs---We Don't Want Them This lot of carriages was a little late in arriving, and to make move out quick, marked tnem very low, Just Think of It A beautiful well finished uicely upho for $8. Better ones at better prices, JOHN NEWSON, ellers of good Furniture trangers to poor Furniture. have 'stered Hood Top baby Carria