SOT OE ae ee eee OT Eee LE eT TL SOW VS OW eae ee Teele eee lee eee le eee Oe Se ee 0 OU OE E88 NN SSS TU: BE ee eereelerel eee Canada an: Internatior States and s ii ku WAassd NERVOUS... DEPRESSION Means Impoverished znd Exhausted Nerves— Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food Restores and Revitalizes the Ne ve Cells. P uffer from Nervous Depression at ‘quentiy look healthy and - . , @ throw yl . <a ee . vi ch make their lives oo : nd . ! ‘s : rele la ) ve y, sl In © rt n Ss usually r d h te to i it eV v n t { tment i I Dr Nerve | { contains all the nutri- tion ¥ brain and nerve tis to the nervous system that life > which sendsa thrill of new strength and vigor through the system. Dr. A. \V. Chase’s Nerve Food will cure by t} ig-up process, which enables the I gh at disease aed weakness. Face cut simile signature of Dr. A. W. ‘ very box of the genuine. coc. a b all dealers, or Edmauson, Bates & Co., To aly wivinneiiaiati tai The Charlottetown Steam Nav- agation Co., Ltd. STEAMERS.... Northumberland & Princess Leave as below every day (Sun~ days excepted) INT DU CHENE (on arrival train from St. John) for Sum- wnecting there with express From P‘ of sfteroon merside, train for Clarlottetown. Frm &(MMERSIDE (on arrivei of morning train from Charlottetown (for Point Due Chene connecting with day train for 8:. John. g at Moncton with train fir at St.John with steamers of s| Line and railways for United Jan ada. Connecti CTOU (on arrival of day train 1x) for Charlottetown. JARLOTTETOWN, seven a. cton, (connecting there with Cape Breton avd Balifax, at th C. 4.&.P Line for Boston. From P from Hali Frota C m., for F day train f Halifax w tickets to be had at Grand sdian Pacific, Intercolonial and lways, andon tbe Company’s nd convecting lines in United F. W. HALES, SECRETAR Throvg! Truvk,Car P. E. I. Rs Steamers States. Ch’town, P EI | | Commencing May 10th The Favorite “S. §. HALIFAX” will leave Charlottetown for BOSTON every T'riday at nooo (Standard Time) culling at }iawkesbury and Halifax. Returnir zleave BOSTON every Tues-~ day at noo TAR LOTTE TOWN via Pictou, eee ‘ one cop nection at Halifax win 8,5. “HALIFAX” and “LA CRANDE DUCHESSE.” Passengrs leav’s Tickets joreale at stations on P. E. I Railway. For tickets, rates and all in- formation apply to WwW. W. CLARKE, Agent, Charlottetown orto H. lL. CHIPMAN, Janadian Agent, Halifax, N. 8. Yay 3— BLACK DIAMOND LINE The 8.3. BONAVISTA sailing from Montreal, Sunday morning,June 11, will be due at Ub’town, Tuescay morning, June 13th. and on Wednesday forencon will rail for St. Jobns, Nfld, via North Sydney, with horees, cattle and sheep on deck and produce rates. under deck at lowest possible lor further particulars as to freight an! passage apply to PEAKE BROS &CO., for dropving out so rm el } 7 l am obliged tocatch an ear!- With many thanks for your hos liv, ¢ tended and intended, I am now and zlwsys your sincere friend, B13 Agents Ch’town, June 7, A MODERN PARR! Ast JJ By FRANCIS LY (t‘ontinved, ) It was positively refresiing to such a stream of information fectly vacuous mind, with the pour into a per- assurances that it could never find its way out again, and Leonard, warming to his work, went into details with the mi- muteness which his auditor’s powers of comprehension seemed to demand. Bitts listened asa dull man might, with apparent interest when he could understand and with respectful atten- tion when the matter grew abstruse, but his questions were always fruitful, and Leonard encouraged thera as giving him a still deeper insight into the char- acter of the type burglarious. Hence, what with acute enthusiasm on one hand and patient, if somewhat ungrasping, attention on the other, the hall clock struck 1 before Leonard real- ized that what he desired to accomplish needed not to be wrought out in a single sitting. Wherefore he arose and made amends, *‘By Jove! That’s 1 o’clock. I owe you an apology for keeping you up so late, though I presume in your profes- sion you're used to bad hours. Come with me and I'll show you where you are to sleep.*’ : He led Bitts to a bedroom at the end of the corridor, touching electric pushes | for additional light as he went along. | **Yon'll find everything comfortable | and cozy, I think, Mr. Bitts. You see, | we've been expecting you for several days. Make yourself quite at home, and consider yourself for the time being a | member of the family. Only don’t try to get away. I shan’t lock the door, and, as you see, the windows are pro- tected only by fly screens, but I assure you you could never get ont of here alive witbout my help. Good night. Touch this button when you want to pug out the lights,."’ The guest said ‘Good night,'’ and Leonard thought he surprised the sim- ulacrum of a satirical grin on the man’s face as he closed the door. A mib- ute later he was giving Helen a cir- cumetantial acconnt cf what had be- fallen. **It worked like a charm from begin- ning to end, he continued, with par- donable pride. ‘‘No hitches, no danger, no violence, though I did have to give him a mild shock, just to illustrate the completeness of the thing.’’ **Oh, Harvey! You didn’t hurt bim, aid you?’’ } **Of course not. He’s too fine a speci- - men to be spoiled in the taking.”’ *“‘And what arrangements did you make with him?’ 5 | *‘Just what we planned. We've had our first seance, and he isto be our guest until I’m through investigating him. After that as he came.”’ **Thank goodnees, I’m glad it’s all over!’’ exclaimed Helen gratefully, amd with this the matter rested for what was left of that eventful night. The next day chanced to be Sunday, and it was quite late when Leovard went up toescort his guest tothe break- fast room. The door of the corridor chamber was open, the bed had not been slept in, and the room was empty. Pinned to the pillow slip was 2 note in the neat handwriting of a practiced perman: DEAR Mr he is to befree to go LEONARD—! owe Fou 27 . logy ‘What do vou malo of it??? demand —=— ee m FACTS ABOUT B*"""'S, % What woman dvocsn’t ve want a baby—a dimpl- % ing, laughing darling, es dainty enough to be 1/ cradled in a snow- \i Ay white lily? Every wo- on" + + TN matniy woman wants one, but she doesn’t want too dainty a baby A baby’s cheeks may be too waxen-white and its body too puny, and when that’s the case, baby’s won’t dimple’or its lips laugh, and death is in its eyes. Above all things a woman wants a healthy baby, and she may kave one if she will but use the right remedy for weakness and dis- ease of the delicate and important organs that make baby a possibility. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the best of all med- geines for prospective or would-be mothers. It makes a woman’s distinetive organism strong, healthy and vigorous, It allays in- flammation, soothes pain and heals ulcera- tian. It banishes the discomforts of the waiting time and makes the little new- comer’s entree to the world easy and almost painless. It insures baby’s health. In writing for advice to Dr. R. V. Pierce, for thirty years chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N. Y., a mother, wife or mai writes to one of the most eminent and skill- ful specialists in the world, at the head of a staff of physicians that has treated over 250,000 women. ” r treatment, I sent the nae ee tle who were sterile,’ writes Mrs, M. A. Scott, of Park Rapids, Hubbard Co., Minn, “ One had been married seven years | and had no children, and after takieg Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription she gave birth toa big git! inside of a year. The ot . one was confined within a year and a half, after going six rs without Saving any children. F°so not now how the third one came out, for we moved away.” Torpid liver and constipation are surely and speedily cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They never gripe. They regulate, tone up and invigorate the liver, stomach 5 ee cCnecks and bowels. No substitute urged by mer cenary dealers is as good. wed Meouard Jud Gace Willcu be hud taken the note down stairs to Helen. “Oh, Harvey! Can’t you guess?” she faltered. He fell into a chair and hid his face. “I don’t have to guess. I know,’ he groaned. ‘‘He was no than Lam. It was that villain Macar- thur of The Ream. Has the mail come?’’ It had, and Helen found the paper with trembling fingers. There it was under staring headlines, with every deiail elaborated and every id crasy, down to a minute descripti mn of the burglar trap, made the most of with true journalistic thrift not un- mingled with sardonic humor. Helen read it aloud with tears in her voice. Leonard listened sign, *‘Isn’t it too despicably heart!ess!’’ she cried at the end, and Leonard had to emile in spite of his chagrin. **I fancy that depends upon the point of view, but we'll take that ground in evening up things with Mr. Macarthur. What with this write up and the sham date he gave me last night, not to speak of the wear and tear on my nerves in landing him, he’s left me pretty deeply in debt, but I shouldn’t wonder if [ could make out to pay the account be- forc it’s outlawed. On the other hand, I’m not so sure he hasn’t served my turn without meaning to. He will make a fairly good proxy burglai in the absence of the real thing.’’ Leonard's figure of epeech was mild, bat his vengeance was smple. When pyre new novel appeared, it was speed- $y discovered that a certain young iosyn- arn nad , and made no Irishman op The Sunday Ream had posed as a model for the burglar there- in. Leonard had caught the inspiration of the moment, and the result was a beautiful bit of literary caricature s0 true to the life that he who ran might read and recognize the original. Where- upon Macarthur was rechristensd **Bitts,’’ and tothis day there are those who believe he isa reformed burglar. tO tes ene The Hindoo Child Wlife. A Hindoo child wife divides ker year in two intervals, one of whick she spends with her parents, this being a sort of vacation time, and the other she spends at the house of her husband’s parents, this being the time of daily downright drudgery. Village girls in Bengal blacken their teeth with mishi, a coloring powder. The lips are black also, and this is supposed to make them exceedingly charming. Writing letters, especially to her hus- band, is thought to be fearful immodesty in a Hindoo girl, and she has no chance of improving her mind by intelligent conversation with any one. She must write to her husband, though she has to do it by stealth in the night. The moon is her lamp, a stick out of the domestic Wie Huu pdid Wie ABpeEYILy: “ins if very irregular, sir. to say?’’ “T wish.” What do you wish answered O’Brien, ‘‘to call | your attention to the fact that the gen- more a burglar tieman opposite me has let the cap fall off his pistol.’’ Fond of Eggs. Among the animals held sacred by the ancient Egyptians was the ichneu- mon, Or mongoose, which, because of its fondness for the eggs of crocodiles and enakes, proved valuable in keeping thy se obnoxious animals from multiply- ing too fast. Rey. Chauncey Maples, a niissionary to Hast Africa, describes the Way in which this peculiar animal, Which in size and general appearance somewhat resembles the cat, disposes of its favorite article of diet. The mongoose, on receiving an eze, immediately goes to a wall, and, turn- ing its back to it, takes the egg in its fcrepaws and throws it backward be- tween its legs against the wall so as to break it. It then sucks the shel] dry. The funny thing is that whatever we give it that looks like an egg, say an old bone or a stone, it evidently mis- takes it for an egg and treats it accord- | ingly. It is very ridiculous to see it for a el broom her pen, the juice of the puin | berry her ink and probably the dried | leaf of the banana her paper. A Hindoo girl must always keep the | inner apartment of the house. She is | only let out when she goes to draw wa- | ter for the household either from the pond or the well or the river. Hence the waterside is a great feminine re- sort, a sort of women’s club, where there is much gossiping and plenty of stolen leisure. —Christian Register. A Department Store. A Punjab journal some years ago re- . . ' corded the story of the way in which an English shopkeeper supplied all the wants of a customer, an Anglo-Indian, at home on a brief furlough. The gentleman had completed the pur- chase of tablishment in was asked by the grateful Westburnia, when hes proprietor, an outfit in a well known es- | ‘*Can we do anything mere for you to- | day ‘aah ‘*‘Thank you, nothing,’’ was the re- ply. ‘‘I have all I want—except a wife.”’ **Will you be pleased to- step this ' way He led his customer up to one of the apprentices, a ladylike girl, whom he *’ said this prince of shopkeepers. | introduced asthe daughter of a deceased | officer. The journal goes on to say that the introduction led toa courtship, which in turn led toa happy marriage. Ina few weeks the shopkeeper lost his sweet faced clerk, and one of the Punjab sta- tions gladly welcomed her as the wife of the returned traveler. Fortynately the shopkeeper knew much to the credit of his customer or this hurried but satisfactory little ro- mance would never have occurred. An Irishman’'s Chivalry. William Smith O’Brien, the leader of the National party of Ireland, who was transported in 1849, had none of the gifts which attract the multitude. He was an orator, his manners were not winning, and he made few intimacies. Bunt his character and his well poised head put him at the head of the Nation- alists, whose purpose was to secure the independence of Ireland. An anecdote related in Sir Charles Gavan Duffy's book of reminiscences, ‘‘My Life In Two Hemispheres,’’ shows the chivalry of the man. He had a dus! in the days when that savage method of settling disputes waé the custom, and the two men were placed opposite to each other. Just as the signal ‘‘One, two, three— fire!’ was about to be given O’Brien oried : “Stop! No signal, I pray!’’ His opponent’s second stepped for- ee RS a ETP ae hours together trying to break a round stone or a bene by throwing it agaiast a wall, CLARKE’S KOLA COMIPUUND CURES A Child That Suffered From Asthma Almost Since his Wirth. Mr. James Paterson, 52 Prinecss avye., Victoria, B. C., writes: “Our poy, who is just aine years of age, has hen troubled with asthma almost since his birth, which has been continually growing worse 1 spite of all the medical aid we con!ld nrocure, Our doctor bills have been very lage eaci: year ; neither myself nor my wife nive had a full night’s sleep during the jast year of his trowbie, having had to poultice and give him medicine to keep him frora choking. We heard of a nelgbbor who had heen cared by Clarke’s Kola Compound anid resu.ved ‘o try It, with the result that to-day cr chi'd fis completely cured, not having had an attack since taking the second bottle, al- most a year ago. He has grown very fost fince and is now. quite etrong 2nd nealthy. We fell very grateful to Dr. Clarke for the discovery of this wonderful renedy, as if has saved our child's life.”” Certified eor- reet by Messrs. Hall & Co., draggiste, Vie- toria, B. C., from whom the medicipe was purchased. Three bottles of Claike's Koia Compound are absolutely zguara ‘ed to cure any case of asthma or hay fever, or money wil be refunded. Free sampi2 bott'!e to any address mentioning this paper. A.idress the Griffiths & Macpherson Co., 121 Chireh gtrect, Toronto, sole agents for t‘anads. Scid by all druggists. Clarke’s Kola Compound has permanently eured more cases of asthma than al] other remedies combined Scld by Geo. E. Hnghes Cheap Rates to Montreal Tust one cent invested in a Post Card and directed to G. A. Holland & Son, Montreal, will bring you a neat sample book of their magnificent ine Wallpapers by return mail—free of charge—with special discount rates. , ommneel > English Wa!l!papers Japanese Wailpapers } Scotch Walipapers i American Walipapers French Wallpapers | Canadian Walipapers. => We are in touch with the leading manufacturers of the world and buy- ing in large quantities enables us, through the Press, to supply the people of Canada with a very ex- tensive assortment of Wallpapers at minimum prices. THE POST CARD. In writing your card mention : Limit price Colors wanted Rooms to be papered Size of Kooms. G. A. HOLLAND & SON Established 56 Years Cansda’s Great Wallpaper Store 2411 ST. CATHERINE ST. | MONTREAL. P.s.—Agents for the Dominion of Ca- nada for C. J. & G. G. Potter. Darwen, England. e->-cC —_ Alewives. Iam open to purchase five hundred bbls Alewives Horace Haszard, Charlottetown June 1 1899,2w cod, wii. wAAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JUNE 10, 1889 i Hi Mi grain into flour. MMO iceman WHITE LEAD used alone, re al r one aoa : For Sale that contains the right ingredients, the right amount of each, mixed right, is better paint than any man can stir up with a stick out of the raw materials. man buys some white lead and some oil and mixes some paint and “guesses it will do,’”’ he is as much be- hind the times as a woman who should grind her own THe SHERWIN-WILLIAMS Paints contain white lead—just enough—because white lead is one ingredient of good paint. zinc—not too much—because good paint requires zinc. They are the best paints made to-day, becanse the best materials, best machinery and most skillful workmen are employed in making them. THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS are made differently for different uses—wiith different qualities for outside and inside work, rough painting and decorative painting. Get the right kind for your work. “Paint Points,’ the book we send free, will you to paint wisely and well. ») THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO., s y Paint and Color Makers, Canadian Dept., 21 St. Antoine Street: covers well ” spreads but will — - Montreal. en not last. Serr not last. {t chaiks and : Bhtree ener) It cracks and rubs off. fs , gad Si peels off. by. S. W. Whena They contain some help used alone, Men’s Shirts Underwear Collars Lies Gloves HREDEDAYODDENDTTAY TE POND TE ETE HATH EH TPE APT PI AEE PP PRET PHFD PF | f | j / } / i i ] te them 2 < YYTEPPREFPNOOOMNESPPYNRDHRD ppp HTATEROTEn: pre sesensnyTgpPerypRRSLE PT FP © 5SSE SOOO E468 $098 SOHO 90 FO SSH SE DOF4 HOO 1, ~ AT cling to you end prove to be friends, indee’, Visit our store and we will iniro’uce 1 a Re tegen Semeemeash —_ LJ. HANS 3 Al 7 Le ALAA beAMAAAAAAALLAALLAGAbd UAL UA AC AUSAbAMUd AL ack Your nearest friend is your Underwear. T.-mcrrow or fne:t day yon mav seqtuir f-.1 g, Wecan ov you where these fri nis ern be bad on the good kni—they will you WORRISBLOCK JH49 CD ST THE WORLD'S GREAEST GOMPARY. The Mutual Life Insurance Co of New York RICHARD A. [icCURDY, President AS ETS—$277,517,325 36. estimates. May 27—Sat & Mon lmo- ANNUAL iNCOME—$55,006 629.43 INSURANCE IN FORVE--$971,711,997.79 | (Se All Canadian Policies payab’e iu golds Before placing your insurance rlease call or write ‘for JOHN HeEACHERN, AGENT J. B. MACDONALD and Co’Y WE HAVE JUsT R&CEIVED 10 dozen pairs of the celebra‘ed Withim $3.00 shoe, for men, in nut brown, tans, and black, in boxcalf and dongola, in all widths. shoe for men is giving the greatest satisfaction of any shoe made in Canada for the money, and better than many told at more money by other makers. J.B.MACDONALD & CO. Ch’town Withim $3 Try a pair, for sale by