: ao SSAe tag HE from the office of EAM flernoon, tt! gmaed every Tue ExAMINER PUBLISHING COoMPAN T woods 3 Hous Ballding, Queen Street RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. \.N ADVANCE) \ Owes Year .. 84.00 | @ix Montes . 200 Tuars MenTus ti 1.00 , Oni PTE, . wc cerwcnccccwecccececstcvesscet 0.35 | Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the | TERMS : Four Dollars a Year vai ted States The We oa Examiner we orn Rr “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. 2 eR RE eee ec a ee ciwining 2 : an Single Oopies Two Oente je isswed every iday morning from the geritshers’ offic tt is made up of matter q@hich has appear wet tn the Daily editions, ard | a first class weekly newspaper interesting ‘| VOL 35. of ail the latest news. = CHARLOTTETOWN P. E. ISLAND, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1896. NO 278. | The shrewd advertiser is the one who knows | how, when and where to advertise. The merchants who advertise in Tue Examiner are not the mer to make mistakes, as you can see for yourself. | But you may get the Lenefit | of their experience | by watching | how, when and where they advertise. | Some papers pay advertisers, | some do not, many do not. Only a few pay, jand they can be picked out i by the large amount of advertising they do. CALENDAR FOR JUNE, 1896, | past Quar 3rd day, 4h 50.0m. a. m. New Moon, Iith day, th. 30 im. a. m. ‘ First ir. " b day, th, 28 2m. a. m™m a <SSSSss‘ : . > G2 FO C Cee of . ~ SE Too A PI - eae LES Dy FES FEES — GDI, HFT Sem F ee beh | Das of Week. | * Sun | High | . rises Bet water | h m h m aft 1 | Monday C1T/7 38) 231] 2) 7 ay 16 | Sr 2th 3|W. eee = 1 Gk et ee 4} Thursday | {i j § 13 bi F ‘ ) 4° 6 5 6{ Sut ay 2 | 7: 3a Ti Sa ay 14 3 BS al 8 | M ay 14 $4} @ fy oo lay Lt} $4 9 33} 1}! W resday l4 15 | 10 {$5 PRE eee eeper ee "| Thur ay l { 10 571 }2j Frids ee 7} 11 37 eis > 7 ry a a 4 By We have again been applying the pruning knife. *§ | Mooday Let’. results have been most catistactory. 18 | Tuesday 3} ag 14 17 | W lay | 13 $s 2 23 ia i - Me ° Se. Thereday ia a te Children’s Ciothing has been booming. Bis a bat eo by the unprecidented values we have given in this department. 4] | Sunday ee tae 73 a - day | as | te We can say ditto about all our clothing. 24 " y | I | 957 carefully selected stock of clothing ever shown on the Island, r 2 } , a. , > ~ 4 ! y | Is} 50} s aL always caused a sale. The reason is plain, we have the right goods at the right prices. ao r i ov <6 $7 Saturday | )iaft 4 a ae ; ‘ ae = i: an 0 42 Waterproof Coats have come in for a share of the demand, and we are just opening up a Barna RAF | fala new stock of these goods to-day. . () When you want anything in the line of Hats and Caps, P E Island Railway () Bicycle Furnishings, the Bargain Corner is the place to come, * On and after THURSDAY, 5th December, $8, the trains of this Railway will run daily . Sandavrs ex “es ted aa ollows .— — oe ins Out ward Trains Inward Read d Read up. w * ra _ v “ os ~~ McRAY — : The process was a cutting ene, but the Keen and practiced buyers have been led our way We started this spring wiih the largest and most an inspection of which has Gents’ Furnishings, Underwear, A | or PM A M AM 7. ze 310 1010 » 25) 9 50 4 8 ®.... 304 906 o 4:1 $817 coos 1D 851 S15 «43852 cocee LD § 37 $13 98m a aie 8 os $62? 915 . n -+ 3253 7 54 Sa 938.... *‘emaington sees dn ae 733 6 WW Ar , Lyi2 00 700 " Samaersile ¢ AM 123 Ly {Ari030 AM B Bhs se -++.Miseouc che. .......10 30 i Seeeete y eane SSeS SS SS SSeS Sseses 219.. ‘ort Hill 309 : > , ? 7 > 7 ? ? 334 . O’Leary......... 80 SAPS De ; “ SPS a - ~ =<B , — ——~= <= 3 58 .-Bloomfield........ 734 oe aun a o 7 ae oe - an fs e $96. ...00.00- AMDOAOR. 200.000 OS ah. sinminiien ntcceccen UN PM AM AM AM 2 %)......Charlottetown. ....10 30 230... Royal ty Junction....10 10 Pics enenens EE 937 3m A (Lv 905 ‘ ‘ q Mt a a r e Poa, oo wee : ® |L Ar 830 5 Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t sient w ) v) OF uss... MN. «...e SO 5 45 ..Georgetown... 70 —— Mount Stewart..... $55 St Peter’s.. 317 eee 7 48 557 Bear River.. 743 icon + deel occcsccese GON M AM AM BD. wccceccee--oseeMeMR@POSd. ..cc000 cocece 2 SO 05 ...-Cape Traverse os ond ae _M AM Trains are ruc by Eastern Standard Time &| anta” w a OP on ene me | ~ 2 toow -MCDONALD, D. Superintendent, Charlottetown. Railway Office, Dec 1, 1895. Provincial Loans. Under Act 57 Vie , Cap. 6, and Amendment POTTINGER, Gen Mgr Govt. Rys, Moncton, N B. A good range in Cotton, Bal- briggan, Natural Wool. All qual- ities, from 40c a suit up. \ (x) = T.d. HARRIS, LONDON HOUSE HE limi! of the amount having been ex- tended by statute of last session, the Gov- erament of this Province is now prepared to receive loans fi r shurt or long periods In- terest4 percent. Loans payable at eall or at such time as may be agreed apes NEW FLOUR | | IT WILL PAY YOU sr eecsiven— —/T0 Buy Clothing and Hats of Us. New Flour, including such well-known brands as Lily Queen, Monarch, Kent, Beaver, Five Roses, Sunbeam and Jewel. A lot of 75 boys suits from 5 to*10 years of age, of extre good quality tweed, this lot we will close out at cost. There is nothing wrong about these suits, but are sample lot, uud we can afford to close them cut cheap—look at them. 50 boys felt hats for 35c., worths 502 to 75c, the lot will go for 35c. each. Bargains in new clothing. Our pants for If you want a bbl. of Choice | 98¢- beats them all. Family Flour CHEAP FOR CASH call at si B. MACDONALD & CO. Beer & Goff’s. an _ Char yttetown, May 22, 18 96. ee * TM BECAI Sit A { HORSE SHOE : Denotes good luck is no reason why a man My | \ | I eS, a should wear them. Yet thousands of people & buy shoes to w hich a . horse would say “neigh.” We fit feet om UF with good shces at fair Wailer I Ch prices. We have a man’s calf boot for $3.90 that cannot be beaten in Ch’town. The same can be said of our men’s $4.00 tan boot. Good value in all lines. R. K. JOST, —AT— GOFF BROS. STAMPER’S CORNER —— BICYCLE LIVERY, LOOK cies at our stock of White and Regatta Shirts Collars, Underclothing, Hats, etc,, will convince you that we have one of the finest stocks in the city, and at very low prices, Ties 3 for 25c, Hose 3 pairs tor 25e, ‘better ones for more money, D. A. BRUCE, Canada’s Famous Tailoring Fvt=ishmet SKATING RINK. A number of first class light}, Wheels for hire at re: sonable | rates, by the day. hour or by the | P. DOULL. Royal ABSOLUTELY PURE Baki ng Powder THE FEIGNING OF DEATH BY ANI- MALS, of protection says James Weirin Lippia- cottvs for June,can be observed among many of the lower animals,—animals which differ wide] ly in family, genius, and SI ecies. Indeed this habit is to be observ- i The babit of feigning death for the sake ! | Mary E. J. | | ed in creatures microscopic in size and of | exceedingly low organization, as well as in those as ‘high in the scale of animal life as man himself; for even man does not iesitate, On Occasions, to avail himeelf of | this natural subterfuge when he thinks it | will aid in the preservation of his I.fe. | occupations With the aid of the miscroscope one can | observe and study the natural history of | transportation the increase was one thons- the minute animal world which other- wise would remain a closed’ and |} upread volume. This istrument has} j shown me, beyond cavil, as low in the scale as atinapbryans, very minute, microscopic animalcules, practice | death-feigning when surprised by an en- emy from which they cannot otherwise escape. Thur, have repeatedly seen actinopbryans fold their delecate, bair-like | legs or cilia and sink to the bottom of their miniture lake (« drop of water) when approached by a water-louse, which preys upon them. They remain to all appearan- ces absolutely without life until the water- louse swims away, when they unfold their cilia ann go back to their fee ding-grounds, —a bit of water-weed, or moss, or decay ed wood. ———— ee The New York courts have given the manager of M le Pilar Morin, the panto- mimist, the choice of paying a fine of $250 or spending thirty days in jail,as a penalty for producing a pantomime in which the heroine dis robes and goes to ted in the presence of the audience. The failure of the late dramatic srason in New York is generally attributed to the indecent char- acter ot most of the productions that have Leen staged there. Mrs. Carles Comstock, living at Fish er’s Corners, pear Ottawa Lake, Mich., recently gave birth to seven children, four girls and three bovs. One of the babies has since ded. At latest accounts the mother and the remaining half-dozen were duing well, A HEAVY MORTCACE. How a prominent farmer quickly lifted it. A mortgage has been described as an incentive to industry, a heavy mortgage, asasure signe ruin. The last is pardicu- larly true, for if a mertgage is allowed to run it will eat up the farm. In this con- nection Mr. Henry Fowler, of Huron writes: “From my boyhood scrofula had marked me for a victim and it seemed as if it had a life mortgage on my blood, I suffeyed fearfully with sores, and know- ing my condition I have remained a sin; gle man. Doctor after doctor prescribed jor me, and re a Toronto specialist told me bluntly that my comp aint was a deep-seated, incurable, blood disease. Sarsaparilla I knew was a good blood medicine, and I sent for a ottle of the the druggist, sent me Scott’s Sarsaparilla, and I have stuck to it. It has lifted my mortgage, for to-day l am free from thos: horrible sores, my eyesight is not blurred, my congea — furry, and I have n: irritation ae upon Scott’s Sarsaparilla as a marvellous medicine when it will cure a life long ase in so short a time.’ Saotula, mre running sores, rheu- matism an discases generated by Logeote aca in the blood are cured best. Mr. Todd, Scott’s Sarsaparilla. The kind that Sold only in concentrated form ps at $1 per bottle by your om from to one \easpoo ? . tise, “5 ‘f es ero that creatures | | WUMAN IN BUSINESS, Woman’s introduction into the business world is no lorger an experiment, says Kelley in Lippincoti’s for June. The feminine wage earner is now a permanent factor in the national econ- omy. The individual drops out of the ranks to form a centre around which home springs up, but another woman, not a ian, takes her place. The type remains. More and more places are being made for women, to such an extent that a recent census bulletio reports tue increase in the number of women employed in gainful during the period between 1870 and 1890 to have been one hundred and thirteen per cent., while in trade and and and fifty-one per cent. significant. Itis,in fact, a revolution. Twenty, or inde-d, ten years ago, the | girls of an ordinary middie class family iu which the father wasa small business man, anexpert mechanic, ora ft .rmer capable of supporting his family with decency, if uot absolute comfort, were expected to stay at home and help with the housework until they went to preside over homesof their own. Ii was cousidered something of asiur to say that aman’s daughters were obliged to go out to work. Nowadays this senti ment is reversed. A business training is asimuch a matter of course f-r the daughters as for the sons. And no one is surprised when the daughters prefer put- ting the tra‘ning into practice instead cf devoting their time to household duties enlivened wth social amusements. The growth of the idea that woman is an in- dividual, not an appendage, that she has social du:iet and moral re-ponsibilitics as we!l as men, iz really at the bottom of the revolution. This change is AN ALARMING ) INCREASE, the Preva'ence of Female Complaints found to Kesult Largely from the Kid. neys, facinaw, Mich., May 18.—Doctors are beginning to turn their attention more ex- clusively to the causes for the great in- crease Of what are known as female com- plaints during the past ten years, and to the remedies for the same. Many cases have been investigated, and among others that of Mrs. Reany, of Ashland, Wis., who was cured of this form of trouble bv the use of a kidney medicine known as Dodd’s Kidney Pille, which originated in Canada but has now become widely kuown and used throughout the Western States. This and other similar cases go to show that these troubles are largely due to the kid- nevs and that the above mentioned remedy is likely tu have a great effect in lessening the number of victims to this furm of con § plaint. It is for women to know that § for all their ail- ments and dis~ orders INDIAN * WOMAN’S BALM is pre-eminently the remedy. Tired women, weak women, sick women— it cures them all. Never known to fail. Price $1.00. Pamphlet free by addressing: Balm Medicine Co., Ltd., Toronto, Ont. VAN 2 OPEN 2 SECRET. For sale by Geo. E. Hughes and Joo n30a & Jchason, Cheriottetown “and Souris, The London News says that owing to the Fenian scare the police are watching arrivals from America at Liverpool and eleewhere. SOME CURIOUS RIVERS: Freaks of nonin iain Never Reach the Sea--A River of Ink. One of the most curious rivers that have come to the knowledge of men is the Webhe Shebeyli of Eastern Africa, a deep and rapid stream, po eo strange fish and ferocious crocodiles. though it flows for hundreds of miles through fertile lands the immense volume of water never reaches the sea. A short distance north of the equator the river is lost in a desert region, a few miles from the Indian ocean. Some of the more recent explorers of Alaska and British America claim that the Mississippi can no longer be regarded as the largest river on the North Am- erican continent. This distinction is claimed for the great Yukon river. Ac- cording to Ivan Petreff, who spent over two years in Alaska collecting materials for the last census, the Yukon empties into Norton sound about one-third more water than the Mississippi pours into the Gulf of Mexico. The Yukon basin comprises the larger part of Northern Al- aska, and 600 miles from its mouth the river is a mile in width. Many centuries before it was discovered by white men it very likely served as the water high- way into the interior for tribes whom we believe to have crossed from Asia to the American continent. The Yukon river is over 2,000 miles in length, Travellers report that in Algeria dss? exists a small stream which the try of nature has turned into ink. it is formed by the union of two rivulets, one of which is very strongly impregnated Cc Atm with iron, while the other, meandering through a peat marsh, imbibes large quantities of gallic acid, which forms this small, yet wonderful, stream. The Rio de Vinagre, in Colombia, is a stream the waves of which by admixture with sulphuric acid become so sour that the river has been appropriately named the Rio de Vinagre, or Vinegar river. The Orange or Garieh river in South- ern Africa, rises in the mountains which separate Natal from the Orange Free State. The length of this stream is 1,000 miles. In banks around it are found rich copper In this stream are many varieties of fish which are found ores. until the river passes through a rocky region containing copper, below which the water is said to be poisonous, almost instantly killing the fish that venture near it. ‘“‘China’s Sorrows,’’ is the title stowed upon the great Hoang Ho which rises in the mountains of Thibet, and follows a wonderfully circuitous channel for 2,500 miles to the Yellow Sea. The waywardness of this mighty volume of water makes the river a constant source of anxicty and danger to the 170,000,000 of people inhabiting the central plain of Asia. It is known to have suddenly changed its course nine times. It has moved its mouth four degrees of latitude each time, emptying its vast floods in different directions, and finding a new channel for itself, where scores of towns and villages have stood. The river greatly changed in physica! character over u wide area, converting fertile into a sandy desert or making shallows of them. Whether it is within the power of modern science to save this great plain from disastrous overflow and changes of the river’s bed, is a question which duriug late years, has been widely discussed, especially in the scientific circles of London and Paris. Another remarkable river is the Indus, a great stream iy Hindustan. It rises in Thibet, and its course is a wonderful one. be- has regions On reaching Sussi, its most northern point, it turns southward, loses itself in the hills and reappears in Takot in Kohistan. The Indus is 1,700 miles in length. After receiving the waters of many tributaries its channel grows nar- row, and here it is divided into many channels, some of which never return to the parent stream. It abounds in fish and crocodiles, That classic river, the Ganges, is erra- tic in its course, like the Hoang Ho. It is prominent both in the religion and the geography of India. It varies not only from season to season, but from year to year, and frequently exchanges old pas- sages for new ones. It has been said that the Ganges delivers into the sea every year 534 090,000 tons of mud, sand and other solid matter—San Francisco Chronicle. Speak Kindly. A man once saved, poor boy, drowning. restoration he said to him:— ‘“*What can I do for you, my boy?’ “‘Speak a kind word to me sometimes,”’ replied the boy, the tears gushing from his eyes; “‘I ain’t got a mother like some of them.”’ was by a very from After his A kind word! Think of it. This man had it in his power to give that boy money, clothes, piaythings, but the little fellow craved nothing so much as a kind word now and then. If the ever so little heart, the ly have had the wish granted. man had boy aust certain- “A kind word! You have many such spoken to you daily, and you don’t think much of their value; but that poor boy in the village, at whom everybody laughs, would think that he had found a treasury if someone spoke a kind word to him. Why Do We Apologize for Laughing ? Did you ever notice how people will apologize for laughing? Letanyone relate how at a certain place, and upon a certain occasion, thelr mirthful nerves were tickled by some circumstance or unique combination of circumstances, and nine times out of ten he will say, ‘‘I laughed, or I had to laugh—lI couidn’t help it.’’ “T laughed,’’ says the independent man of business. ‘‘I couldn’t help it.’’ ‘‘I laughed,’’ says the jolly matron. “I couldn’t help it.’’ ‘“‘I had to laugh,”’ says the giggling school girl. “‘Icouldn’t hely it, you know.’’ Rare indeed, is the per sen who will say, ‘‘I laughed,’’ and let it go at that. It would seem, sometimes, that ‘“‘laughed’’ and ‘‘couldn’t help it’’ are wedded and _ inseparable.—Bostoa Globe. The Christian should so walk and talk, that no wicked man can remain for an hour without feeling ashamed of himself. ee The Madrid correspondent of the Lon den Standard says that it is made a condi- tion for the trench and Spanish bankers who are interested in the Spanish railway enterprises, to assist the government to obtain loans for the Cuban campa‘gn. The government is drafting a bill providing for railway concessions until 1980. HE ONLY True Blood Purifier prominently in the public eye to- day is Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Therefore get Hood’s and ONLY HOOD’S. | | Boils It is often difficult to convince peo- ple their blood is impure, until! dread- ful carbuncles, abscesses, boils, scrof- ula or salt rheum, are painful proof of the fact. It is wisdom now, or when- ever there is any indication of =| impure blood, to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, prevent such eruptions and and suffering. carbuncle fierce and sore. The doctor at- When the abscess broke, the pains were terrible, and I thought I should not live through it. I heard and read so much about Hood’s Sarsaparilla, that I decided to take it, and my husband, who was suffering with boils, took it also. It soon purified our ood built me up and restored my health so that, although the doctor said I would not be able to work hard, I have since done the work for 20 people. Hood’s Sar- saparilla cured my husband of the boils, and we regard it a wonderful medicine.”’ Mrs. ANNA PETERSON, Latimer, Kansas. Floods Sarsaparilla Inthe One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1 *T had a dreadful red, fiery, tended me over sev abscess, en weeks. . ‘ure liver ills, e asy totake, Hood Ss Pills | easy to operate. 26 cents. By Special 6 Soap Makers Royal Wartane 3, To Sotuee Gold Me da! ¢ ond other Awards <=> Sunlight ( .. Soap d Books ron Wrappers 2 “Sunlight” For every wrappers sent to Lever Bros., o Ltd., Toronto, a useful paper- BECAUSE iris HONEST Soap, PURE AND SuRe bound book will be sent,or =» ¢ e Seeton ard Mitchell, Halifax, Agents for Noya Scotia, and P. E.I CARTERS’ FOR WALL PAPER! few words. if These heeded, will save money and give pleasure and satisfaction to all householders. Our WALL PAPER DEPART- MENT is worthy of the pat- ronage of the people of town and country, because of the quality, variety, artistic merit and cheapness of the goods. Aud the best of it is the peo- ple are finding it out. GEO. CARTER & Co. Booksellers, &c. May 28796 REDDIN BROS. THE PEOPLE'S S«<ORE Tonight—Sponges, Soaps 5 | 5 y ’ Hair Brusees, Combes, cheay. CREME DE LA CREME CIGARS AND CIGARETTES. REDDIN BROS CPPOSITE POST OFFICE. May30 OPTICS: Having made a special : tudy of Optics, and just comple:ed a course with Dr. Hamill, of the Ontario Optical Institute, I am prepared to test the eyes and properly adjust glasses. G.H. TAYLOR. JLVIELER, North Side Queen Square, Charlottetown. m ay | 7 BOARDING & TRAINING S STABLES Grafton Street, Opposite Court House. JOHN M. NICHOLSON, Prop’r. Having opened a public Stable on Grafton Street, I am prepared t> take Ge1tlemen’s horses and Colts at all seasohs of the year to board, train, break or keepin road condition for immediate use. Horse Clipping also at tendedto Terms reasonable. Nov2?—dy&w 310 OPERA HOUSE. WEEK COMMENCING JUNK 4th, ‘RSIURN OF HARS THE FAVOURITES, ¥ LINDLEY And his big Company, on THURSDAY EVENING, Thh Beautiful Drama, Entitled Ltegle Sy The Child Wonder, LiTTLE ETHEL, Will Appear Every Evening. CHANCE CF BILL NIGHTLY. Admission 25 and 35c. Plan of Ore vestra chairs at Dodd’s Deng Store. Balcony at Kankin’s Drug IITLITAI FIIIITIIIIAE The on Wall Paper’ Je Speaxing of Wall Paper. § place to buy Are you satisfied with the appearance of all your wal!.? if not, hb: dat you better see us, Giving satisfacticn is our Lobby. {MOORE & McLEOD. THE WALL PAPER MEN Wholesale & Retai SOS EE ES AEE SRS EEIIr eS Telephone 49. PAE REDE ERET LEROTE EAT PEEIATIRTETEIITIATTTS x: ae 4ZIXIZIISITIIIILALIIIIT New Prices in Watches We have lately receivel a nice assortment of Silver Watches for Ladie’s and Gentlemen, which were bought right, and can- not fail to please in price. Call and inspect them. W. N. TANTON’S, Great George Street, NEAR QUEEN SQUARE. Cast Your Eyes Over this ad., then call and see cur stock of Boots and Shoes. Cheap, cheap, cheap. We are noted for good shoes at low prices. Your dollars will go further in buying shoes at our store than any other store in town, We are down town, but it will pay you to call and see us 4. E. MecEACHEN, THE SHOE MAN. VALUABLE Brick Residence FOR SALE. contract, that hahd- residence, situate on fronting Hillebo ough property of the lat: Wm. Kennedy. There are two enterances to the premives, one from Richmond st, running north 162 ft., and the other in the rear on Weymouth et. TEN good rooms in the house, and a large dry cellar under the whole, nameiy, Coub ce drawiaog room, si'ding doors, dining, bed, and bath rooms, ete In th» rear of the premises are a stab.e and coach house, in good repair, Water fiom the water works in the house, “- House can be seen, and terms of tale known On application to the unde signed, JOHN INGS FOR SALE by private some three stery brick Rechmopd Street, Park, known as the Ch’town. juaei—'t HON. Wa. FERGUSON'S MEETINGS. Stanaope Hall, Friday, June Sth, ai 7 3) p- mm. Grand Tracadie, at 7.30 p.m. Saturday, June 6th, Bonshaw Hall; Monday, June 8th, at 7.30 p.m. Rustico Hail, Tuesday, June %h, at 7.30 p. m. Montague Bridge, Wednesday, June 10 h at 7 30 p.m. Monaghan Road Hall, Thursday, June llth, at 7.30. Denagh School House, Friday, 12th, at 7.30. By order of Committee, June 1--—watn. hrd, guar, June “Why Some Succeed” ee - ro oni — ails = ae : * Pa 4 + a Yeu Pate vai hy 4 z