—_ . Four Dollars per Year WHOL 33° spEED OF THE HORSE. 3 » That He Can Outrun the Fastest aia F Antelope. . cs a yan ona horse is twice a man dle + more se ure, 18 Dray 8 In every _y pore formidal i.uropean officers a this. In clearing the streets of Paris ‘ gvalty are used We cali out the in- roi the militia and have to shoot In Europe they use the flat of a Weed beld by amounted man. No uu a 4 body of humanity will stand the 7 of horses. They melt before th alike snow. It is the uncontrollable int to get out of the way, and to do it god as possible. day we w 1) wiser OD this side of the Atlantic. pow we have 50 infantry companies jitia to one of cavalry. Many of ovr men are unable to pay for the keep Home does the currying and bedding with shands. Many others of them would what to do with a horse if they a bad, but with the trolley and the crowding the steed of our fathers and closer to the wall, there is not chance that it will be bettered. Five years from now, unless all siuvns y headed college professors, with sleg calves and 18 inch chests, will be dng upon an extinct animal and re- ructing him for the benefit of stu- from a piece of stifle and a front tooch, Hieleve that the horse is the swiftest alin the world. One hears strange of the speed of the antelope, the white fawn, the springbok, the elephant, jek rabbit and the wolf. The fastest these is the American antelope, and I pever seen one that a good pony could st. As for the rabbit or any kind of the horse will simply run over him. into consideration the fact that the generally carries more than 150 of rider, saddle and gun, one gets Wea of how much superior he is. A dj pony will outrun a greyhound. I gwen this tried. It is customary men who use them to give the dogs te law possible in order to avoid rid- werthem. In hunting with a brace wy good coursing hounds five years twas found that there were five ponies ie party which would outfoot the dogs, we of them, a gray of undoubted Shae, which is expensive, even if a ! { | All bg ancestry, if given the bit, would bis best to run over them and kill He did not like them. They be- id to his owner, and he was jealous. ee ee old man who looks out at the world heearand healthy eyes cannot help great gratification at the thought bechildren bave inherited from him stekoess or tendency to disease. The iby old man is the man who hae bout hia life kept his digesvion good bis blood pure. Not one in a thousand doit. Germs go through the healthy withon: effect. Let them once find ment or jet them find a weak spot, they devel p by the million aud the bleod tfullofthem. Instead of g ving Mgihiothe tissues, it will force upon Himnuiriiious mutter, acd the mao i love flee and the more susceptible he Wdveace. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical lovery ia the only medicine that abeo Nand infailibly cures all blood die Laad almost oll diseases are blood It isn’t a medicine for tome one ltalar so-called disease. It is a medi- for the whole body. It forees out all frm of d seas«, sod replaces impuri- With rich, red bivod. sa Breakfast Fod “Parinosa” is no pure Cereal Food, from the best cleaned white wheat. 'Oaree Bran is entirely removed, og duly the : erfect berry of the wheat Ain phosphates gluten aod nutriment. he food is easily and qnickly pre- Mioruse, requiring only 15 m nu.es jog, aud itis «also cheap, being only Cents w package, | GOLDEN SYRUP Me retailing Reipaths choice Gold STup, for 40 cent« per gallon, or l2cf fo pound tn. lepves fine on pancak cc. | ‘alee for money expended, is what Wegive in all goode in our line, to Which we aitribute our steady increase 10 business, We are showing @ nice WATCHES thissen-on, which are all thoroaghly tested before leaving o2zr store. W- buarautee every watch sold by us to BV Patisfaction, by buying now you £48 procure @ good time piece TYERY Low &# Our good bought low for cab 8 are g Spo Call and ace for yourself, at— | e2e> —W. W.-TANTON ui Crabbe's 8/4 VC ‘py i“ » IBEER & GOFF &80rlinent of Ladies and Gentlemens . “This is True Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euvriripxs. DAILY EXAMINER _ 1p ee ef cL esheets te! Single Copies i wo cents, _ - ee Chi ARLOTTETOWN P. E. mich ,Class Perfect Fitting [s the kind we keep. You don’t save to ican show you elegantly tailored suits, of taste, especially to those The collar fits snug to the neck, cut according to the latest fashion plate patterns, have is right in get up and price, istibly to men the custom tailor. our garments are we Perhaps you are not a regular customer of ours vive vou an idea of the kind of suits we keep. ae d the better posted you are the better satisfied you will be that efore been equalled, just to g ‘personal iuspection, an our values have never b Tet The Bargald & THE BARGAIN CORNER. SUNSET GATES AJAR, _ Tonight, as Isat by my window, When the west was all agleam With taat strange and wonderful splendor That is fleeting as a dream, 1 thought that the hands of the angels Had flung open heaven's gateway wide, And } caught a glimpse of the glory from the hills on the other side. Is it not a beautiful fancy, his sunset thought of mine, That the gates of heaven are always Fling open at day's decline? That those whose day is ended Of earthly woes and ills May pass to the morning sunshine That dwells on the heavenly hills? Them for me the sunset gateway Shull at day’s decline unclose, And I pass in through its portals To that long and sweet repose. J know that | shall remember, Ir «hat city so fair and far, My s*range and beautiful fancy Of the sunset gates ajar. Perheps while I sat there dreaming 1 Of the gateway in the west Some poor soul went through its portals To « long and endless rest— Passel through the sunset gateway To that ‘city paved with gald;” Passerl into the new life’s gladness Te be no longer old. —Frank ©. Holliday in Good Housekeeping. woorbD's PHOSPHODINE. The Great English Remedy. Six Packages Guaranteed to promptly and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions,Sperm- atorrica, I mpotency and all effectsof Abuse or Excesses, 7? eS Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opiumor Stimu- Before ai y After. lants, whic soon lead to In- # retnity, Consumption and an carly grave. menas need oaotoall over 35 years in thousands of only Ieltiable and Honest Medicine known, AsS* Mruggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers sora: worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, £1; six, $5. One will please, sia will cure Pamphlets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada, cases; is the S ld in Charlottetown by George E Ha, Deng gist. WANTED. a Coat and Vest. makers, at D. A. BRUCE’S ccceemmntaapa LL LOR ee eee ee Printing in all its branches at the Exam- iver office, one of the best equip ped Job Printing » on P, E. Island, | Thu a Manv are taken ‘n now-a-days, and are paying from ten ty twenty doliars for a watch pot worth five, by buying from pedlers and others who are not watch- makers, Do not be Deceived. But when you want 4 reliable watch buy only of one who understands the trade and asks only a fair price for & g artiele. G. H. TAVWLOR Jeweler and Optician. Charlottetown, LEGAL CARD. WARBURTON & McKINNOM Barristers, Attorney’s, Notarys Public. Commissioners for State of Massachusetts ac., & C, OFFICES —-a, ' Cameron Block, Charlottetown Brennan Building, Summersice 1 Kent Street, Georgetown, A. B. WARBURTON, B, A., D, aL, od D. A. McKinnon, L. Il. B. WARE - HOUSES To LET PEAKE’ WHARF (WO 1) Wharfage storage and yard- ag? at reasonable rates. Nov. 4 PURE APPLE CIDER, the gallon or barrel at 30c a gallon Now on draft. 80—3ieod — f Arthur &. Peake. a A small shipment;'will be sold at E. H. NORTON, Austionecr. These abound w Nell Sut Ww. D. McRAY WATCHES. EVERY ONE TIME® BEFORE S¢ .) ‘18 size $7.50 to Gd c pe 350 * 50.00 1§ ¢ 250 35.00 i 550. * 50.00 me 4.00. « 50 00 | Serew Bezel and Back, 0. F. 18 $8.50 to $40.00 14 ooo CUS 14.00 Your initials engraved on size 6é back free of charge. EW.TAYLUh, Cameron Block. City. anl4d)35kw 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TrRave MarKs DESIGNS Copyricuts &c. Anyone sending a sketch end description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly contidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scicttific American. A hendsomely {llustrated weekly. Largest cir- culation of any scientific serene. Terms, $3 a Mb four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. UiMH & Go,26:erce. New York NOTICE The property on the corner of King and Pownal Sts, belonging tothe estate of the late Catherine MeKenna, (subject to a 3 years unexpired leave, from May Ist, 1898), will be sold by Public Auction on Tuesday, May 3rd, 1898, at 12 o’clock, noon. This property is now ksewn as the Fialay House. Terme Cash. M. P. HOGAN, . - CLOTHING go to the merchant tailor for satisfaction ; ith fine points that appeal irres- who from motives of economy are shy of the arm hole is sufficiently large. Can’t we show you afew suit We would lite to have your f 'SLAND, SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1898. we Every suit -— MoO 83 ee woes ( A PACIFIC SLOFE Richness of the © w:s0mish Flats In Skagit Tvounpty, Wash. In this zroat western country, where there is so t.uch wild land, where millions of sof soil have never felt the touch cf _v plowman’s share or the keen edge of the woodman’s ax, it does not seem that i would be necessary to reclaim land from the sea to obtain acres for cultivation. But that has been done, and in Skagit county, almost in the very northwestern correr of the state, can be found scores of the finest ranches in the world, lying be- hind dikes built to kcep out the sea and the overflows of the Skagit river, the lar- gest stream that empties into tho sound. This is the veritable Holland of Wash- ington. In Skagit county are situated the faimous Swinomis4 flats, the Beaver marsh, the Olympic marsh and the Samish flate, all surr.unded by dikes ranging in height from 2 to 15 feet. There are tide gates along the seashore which act automatical- ly, and which drain the land so perfectly that crops are raised on land below the sea level with cafety. And such crops! For ages the big river has been bringing down from the hills the richest sedimens, and there is really no bottom to the soil. If a farmer in the east plows a little too deep, he turns up clay or rocks, If the Beaver marsh rancher holds his plow handles too high, he simply digs up more of the rich loam that raises every year without fail such crops that the old ranchers of other sections cannot believe the stories, One hundred and twenty-five bushels of oats to the acre, a ton and a half of hops or five tons of hay are common yields, while all sorts of root crops give equally large re- sults. In order to plow this land, which, of course, is soft and spongy, the ranchers often put ‘‘tuley’’ shoes on their horses, the shoes consisting of wide wooden blocks to prevent the animals from sinking inte HOLLAND. the loam. | There are at present eight diking dis- tricts in the county, and nearly every ranch of any size isin one or ecnother of these districts. Fully 100 miles of dikes Suicide Among the Cermans. Another socinl phenonmwnon has been laid at the dcorof the Teutonic race of northern Europe, one which even more than divorce is directly the concomitant of modern intellectual and economic prog- ress. We refer to suicide. Morselli devotes a chapter of his interesting treatise upon this subject to proving that ‘‘the purer the German race—that is to say, the stronger the Germanism (e. g., Teutonism) of a country—the more it reveals in its psych- ical character an extraordinary propensity to self destruction.’’ On the other band, the Slavic peoples seem to him to be rela- tively immune. These conclusions he draws from detailed comparison of the distribution of suicide in the various coun- tries of western Europe, and it must be confessed that be bas collected data for a very plausible case. There can be nodoubt that in Germany the phenomenon culmi- nates in frequency forall Europe, and that it tends to disappear in almost direct pro- portion to the attenuation of the Teutonic racial characteristics elsewhere.— William Z. Ripley in Popular Science Monthly. A Knotty Problem. “Why, Ethel, what are you doing with that big medical work in your lap?’’ ‘“‘Well, Arabella, you’d never guess, I am quite sure.’’ ‘*You are not going to make a doctor of yourself, are you?’’ *‘Not atall. I am trying to find out which of my two suitors I love enough to marry. What do you think of that?’’ ‘‘How can a cyclopedia of medicine help you?” ‘*Well, it’s this way. Mr. Oldspoon is 57 years of age. He is worth £80,000 and has consumption. Mr. Dukkats is 65 years eld. He is worth £100,000 and has heart disease. I thought perbaps this medical book would help me to make up my mind. I have about decided that I love Mr. Duk- kats the better. Which would you love?” —Strand Magazine. Oyster Cocktails. Oyster cocktails are not quite as dissi- pated as they sound, since no liquor is used in their preparation. T» make them, mix together the juice of half a lemon (strained), 10 drops of tabasco sauce, half teaspoonful of horse radish, half teaspoon- ful of paprika and the same of tomatw cat- sup; put 2 oysters in # glass—Blue Points ere best—and pour in a quarter of the sauce, which is enough for 8 oysters. Scientific Boxer. Garber—What does your son do fora living? Nabber--He’s a scientific boxer, “A pugilist?’”’ “No, undertaker,’’~-Boston Traveler. FOR SALE JRTO LET That most desirable basiness stand, si‘ vated on Kent Street, between Prince and Great rtvy was occupied for y the late J.A. Cameron. as is tome years past PATRICK BieKS, _ j til idicindaere? and dwelling. anl2willstapri),y2 swid D. STEW ART, Beker, Kent Stree —_——_—— | ! | | are in use in the county, and many of them are used also as roads. Very picture esque are these embankments in many places as they wind around through the trees. When the Skagit is having a freshet, as has been the case this week, the people | turn out to watch their dikes, and by re- pairing them save their lands from inun- dation. Sometimes a very high tide will go over a dike and cever a number of ranches with salt water. If the water does not stand too long this does no par- ticular damage. As there is nothing but sand and black loam to construct the dikes of, no perma- nent work has ever been done and cannot be until the river is so improved that it has a reasonably straight channel to the sea. Five or six forks or moaths discharge the water into the sound, and the delta thut formed is excellent farming land, If the water should be confined to one channel, thousands of acres of land would be re claimed and the danger of overflow re- duced toa minimum. By this improve- ment a magnificent navigable river, teem- ing with fish and fowing through a wealth of timber end mineral land, weuid be opened up and would provide employment for countless numbers of people.—Seattie Post Intelligencer. Mit uty hildee On Top of all soaps for nursery use, stands “Basy’s Own Soar.” It is made of purest 8 vegetable oils and slightly perfumed with finest flower extracts. It has been sold and used for so long, and always been good, that doctors all over Canada recommend its use, having practl- cal knowledge of its effects. Most of its numerous imitations are injurious to the skin. ; THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., Mirs. Montreal. 74 7. aCe The baiue in the Association Building have been refitted, and are now in strictly first class condition. They will be open Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, from 2to1l6 p.m. Members are invited charged a ema)! fee for their use. The Assemb! order, an¢@ will be let at rates., Apply to the Secretary. to patronise them; non mémbers will be Hall is now in good reasonable f ai i SRA aa Pe IIE re a ns snaillemangeit