ae « . eee ou ee Se Rl AO art ggg Hurrah For Tracadei., The ladies of Grand Tracadie take this opportunity of informing their frieudg and the public im general that they intend | holdiog a Mammoth Picoic oo Weduesday Jaly 13th on the beantiful grounde ad- joi reg the Hotel Acadia, Picnic to om conducted on toe basket social principal; ladves will please label their baskets with name and they will be taken charge of by committee and disposed of by auction to the highest bidder, owners of baskets and purchasers of same will be supplied with tea or cotiee free. A first-class saloon supplied with al! the delicacies of the eeason will be on the grounds, also Svrawberries aud Ice Crean salgon lunch tables ete, All amusvements customery st such places will be provided including music, dancing, swtogs, Sack races, tug-of-war. Shouid ibe day prove unfavoradbie, it will be held on the next fine day. Pro~ ceeds in aid of echool fand. By order of Committee. wk 2i. dy 31101112 of July. Valuable Property FOR SALE The White House, Dundas Eeplanade is offered for sale. This desirable property combines the advantages of town and country bouse. Good bathing and boating at foot of ger- den. Foret rate stables, coach-houses and larve yard room. Flower and vegetable gardens and con- servatory. House contains about 12 ~ooms, and is beated by hot air; with marble mantels down stairs. Large drawing room length of house; ba‘: room with hot and cold water. The fiiuation and sea view, are unexcelled in P. Be &. The sLore front is also owned in con- nection with the property, for several hundred feetout. For particulars apply J.S. MORRI righ-grade 7 Art Roome — allt S. F. TarBush, for the High Grade Art Co., has opened an office 4 doors up from J. f. MecKenzie’s store on west side of Queen street, and is of- fering to enlarge photos, tin-typ«s or group pictures very cheap for three months, that everybody may have a sample of their work. He has in the past 10 months delivered the highest grade work ever delivered on P. E. I Beware of unauthorized agents. All work guaranteed, and no deposit required, 138 ote eee eee er - roe - >— --—- CHOCOLATE suo ee are much in demand this summer. Children’s Chocolate shoes at Tic S5c and $1.00. Children’s Choco- late buttoned boots at $1.00 and 1.25 Mi-ees Chocolate shoes at$! aod $160. Misses chocolate but- toned boots, $1.40 and $1 75. Ladies chocolate shoes fron $1,00 tu $2.25 Ladies chocolate laced and button- ed boots from $2 to 3.25. W. H. Stewart & Co Columbias and Otnrs or oe : Bm Mental Worry, excessive use ‘ rey of Tobacco, Opiumor Stimu- i cand After. , Beforcand After. , > Saad toe ’ . Vinee ne tS yee 7 o lu frarve fiimity, Insanity, Conctin.piioit O16 G2 Cael Grave. Has been prescribed over 85 yoata ti taoucands of or chere are twe kines of W heels COLUMBIAS and all others. class by themselves, Prices 14. 60, 85 and 140 dollars. 60 he dollar wheel is equai | to 1 2 best high grade bi- evele ow the market of any other nake. 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, HENRY R. LORDLY ©. E A.M Can. Soc. ©. E. Graduate College of Civil Engine eriag Cornell University. Censulting Engineer for General Work, Specialties: Hydraulic, Sanitary Engineer- ing and Bridge Designing. Offices at Charlottetown and St. John, Island correspondence addressed to Charlottetown, ‘ t Molumbias are in a | | | THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY & 1898 A ETE An Unworthy Trick. In a recent Pall Mall Gazette we find a good story of a landed proprietor in Switzerland, who was very much inter- ested in a railway matter upon which the district where be was landed had to vote. He wanted it to vote affirmative- ly, and so he let it be generally under- stood that every voter would become the recipient cf a liberal hamper of wine, provided there was no negative vote to be found in the ballot box. The number of voters, including the great man him- self, totaled 108, and on the day when the voting was to he taken every one of them went tothe poll. Not only that, but every one of that crowd went to the poll with the conviction that that ham- per of wine wasas good asin his cellar Their disgust, therefore, may be readily imagined when the ballot box was found to contain 107 affirroative papers and one negative. To the imagination also must be left the language in which their feelings found expression when they arrived at the certainty that the landed proprietor had landed them by giving that vote himself. Too Classic For Them. A resident in a small suburban town quite a long distance from Boston had a visit from a German friend who knew very little English but played the vio- lin well. One cf this resident's neigh- bors gave a ‘‘musical evening,’’ and of course he and his visitor were invited. The German took his violin, and when his turn came he played one of his best pieces, from one of the great masters. When he bad finisbed, there was an awkward silence and no applause, The people were etill looking expectantly at the German, who locked disappointed and flusterea. The silence grow painful. linally the hostess, quite red in the face, edged over to the side of the Ger- man’s friend. ‘Can't you get him to?’ she whis- pered. **What do rou mean?”’ “Why, row that be’s got tuned up, isn’t ke going to play something?’’— Youth’s Companion. A Kapngsroo Colony Near London. If we were to break suddenly upon a J.ondon cyclist and teli him that with- in 20 miles of his great city there was a colony of wild kangaroos, he would probably either regard us as perverters of the truth or of being in immediate need of a straitjacket. Yet we are as- sured on the highest authority that such is the case, the colony existing on Leith Hill common. About 14 years ago some kanyaroos escaped from Wootton House, where they had been kept in confine- ment. They took up their quarters near Leith hill and have remained and mul- tiplied there ever since. It seems strange that such emblems of the far west should exist in a wild state where the great throb of London might almost be feltand where the hum of the wheel during the summer months is almost an unceasing song. — London Bicycling News. A Theological Point, That jovial Irishman and sturdy Cal- vinist, The Rev. John Hempbill, was having a stiff discussion with a Roman Catholic fellow countryman respecting the propriety of the prayers for the dead, the pastor of Calvary church, of course, opposing the practice. Neither of the controversialists would yield an inch. Finally the layman tried a spe- cicus argument: ‘*Now, doctor,’’ ‘he said, ‘‘if one of your paris! ioners should die and be- queath you $50,000, wouldn't you pray for him?’ **No, sir,”’ replied the stalwart de- fender of his faith. positively. ‘I wouldn’t pray for him. But I would pray for anotber like him!’’—San Fran- cisco News Letter. WoODND's PHOSTPHODINE. The Great English Remedy. Six Packages Guarantced to } prompy ty > iy. and permanently , by i a ps cure all forms of Nervous a H Weak Ervissions Spe rnt- Z fs atorriea, Impotency and all effects of Abuse or Exccsscs, cases; is thé only Meliah’¢ Gnd Toncst Medi known, Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodiae; If he offera Some Worthless mecicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, ome package, ¢1; six, $5. One will please, six wil cure. Pamy hiets free to any acdross, The Wocd Company, —— . : Aanat Vyindsor, On » - 4250.2. Sold in Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggist. MPORTENT 10 DAIRYMEN 15 to 20 gallon milk cans madevu’ he very best material obtainable. Prices right. The J. D. Bell Manufacturing Co Stowe and Hard were Merchaais, Montague, June 7—) m WILLIAM HH. FRANKLIN, Commission Merchant, 0’Dwyer’s Cove, St. John’s, Newfoundland. P. O. BOX 634, 150 d&w tf One of Maller’s Anecdotes. Froude and Kingsley were special fa- | vorites of Professor Max Maller, accord- . ing to nis recently pablished memoirs. Kingsley's refusal to pray for rain—or, ar his friend expresses it, to degrade bis sacred office to that of a rainmuker or @ medicine man—reminds the professor of a etory told to Kingsley by an Amer- . ican: In America we manage these things better. A clergyman in a village on the | frcntier between two of our states pray- , ed for rain. The rain came, and it soak- ed the ground to such an extent that the young lambs in the neighboring state caught cold and died. An action was brought against the clergyman for the mischief be had done, and he and his parishioners were’ condemned to pay damages to the sheep farmers. They never prayed for rain after that.—Lon- don News. Ono of Tis “Whust Days.” Andre'y Lang once called at the house of the late James Payn to inquire about his health. The servant informed him in a broad accent that it was one of the novelist's ‘‘whust days.’’ Mr. Lang im. agined that the servant referred to Mr. Payn being worse and expressed his re- gret and walked away. But the woman meant to say that it was the day or which Mr. Payn was wout to receive three old friends, who made a four at whist. Both gentlemen were amused at tne mistake which deprived each of the pleasure of meeting. At the Reform club in years goue by there was a cer- tain group of we!l known whist plar- ers. amouy Whom tain to be found cnjoying ‘‘the rigor cf the gume.’’ James Payn was cere Novel Mensnration. ne of the dificulties in the way of acqniring exact informatiou iu Georgia couits is thus indicated by the Atlauta oustitutian : ‘*How far was it,’’ asked tie lawrer ‘from your houses to the , of the v- tue-s, rowd where ‘ue difieulty occurred?’ ** Pout a acre en a balf, sub.’’ “Timean how mauy yards?” “Dey wazn'tuny yards Gere at el), enh. exceptin of my yard, en dat wuz *beet a acre en » helt tom de road!’ THE ONLY HOPE! For Victims of Bright’s Disease is Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Not a day passes on which the newspapers do not record the death of one or more persons from Bright's Disease. Already its victims num- ber hundreds of thousands. Day by day the awful total grows larger. No class is safe from this destroyer. War and intemperance, with all their miseries and fatalities, are not responsible for as many deaths as have been caused by Bright’s Dis- ease, Yet, there is a way of resisting it; of drawing its poisoned fangs, and making it as harmless as a summer breeze. That great medicine, Dodd’s Kidney Pills, has cured thousands of ‘he worst cases. It never fails to cure, hopeless as the case may seem. Would you safely shield your loved ones from the fatal grip of this curse of mankind—Bright’s Disease ?. Then use .Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the only cure on eafth for this disease. WARE - HOUSES TO LET PEAKY’ WHARP (ITO 1) Prinking In Medieval Universities. The relation whith the universities sustained with reference to the munici- pahties in which they were situated forms a large chapter in their early his- tory. The university was a state within a state. Every person connected with it even remotely, down to the servants in the families of the professors and those ‘whe waited upon the students, were amenabtle only to the academic court. The student was the citizen of a nation of echolars, whose flag overshadowed him wherever in the kingdom he might 6. Members of the student world were exempt from military service, and in many cases from all municipal tax. They might receive their books and fur- niture, wine and beer, free of duty. The students of Leyden availed them- selves of this privilege to so great a de- gree and imported in such immense quantities by private arrangements with the publicaus that a law was necessary prescribing how much a student might legally receive without payment of ex- cise. The wise legislators, animated with a generous sense of the privileges of a university, after due deliberation Sxed the proper drinking capacity of a student at 80 gulloms cf wine and 12 half casks of beer, which he could re- ceive free of all tax.—Professor W. T. Hewett in Harper's Magazine. Arter coughs and colds the germs of » consumption often gain a foothold. Scott’s Emulsion of Cod- liver Oil with Hypophos- phites will not cure every case; but, if taken in time, it will cure many. Even when the disease is farther advanced, some re- markable cures are effected. In the most advanced stages it prolongs life, and makes able. Everyone suffering from consumption needs this food tonic. 50¢, and $1.00, all druggists, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto, Newfoundland. resortin Americar The Sportsme2n’s Paradise Every tiverand Lake along the line of Newfoundland Railway abounds with Saimon & ‘Prout The Suortest Sea Voyage. Quickest and safest reute®to any partis via the:---Reyal Sinil Steamer “BRUCE” Classed A i at Lioyds. Leaves Norta Sydney every Tuesday and Kriday evening, On arrival of the I. C.R, express, Returning, leaves Placentia every Monday and ‘Thursday morning on on arrival of St. John’s express. FARE: -Charlottctown to St. John’s. | Nfld. t.rst $19 95, second $10,30. Through uckeison sale at all stations onthe I.C. Kk. aad 8. Nav. Co. Commencing about July Ist, ,steamr will make three trips per week each way, between North Sydney and Port-anx- Busques, Nawfoundlanud, Ine sea trip wi!) oaly te 6 hours. For all information app'y to R.G. REID; ot. Jobn'e, NA: Wharfage stcrage and yard: | ag? at reasonable rates. : Arthur &, Peake. Nov. 4 — -_ CABLE ADDR«SS “* ALGERNON Algernon H.. Prowse, Ship & General Broker, Com- mission Merchant, Chart- ering & General Agent St. John’s, - - - - Newfoundiand A. B. G. CODE, SCOTT’S CODE, For General Business. P, 0. Box 832 For Shippin g 148 12in eed I — ~ i Eg’ Y os fo Contracturs ! Tenders, addressed to Charles Palmer, Esq., Chairman ot Pruses, will be received up to Saturday, @th Julv, for the construction of a new building of brick and stone for the Prince Edward Island Hospital A certified cheque for 5 per cent of the amount of the offer must accompany each tender. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted, Plags and specific-tions can be seen at the office of C, B, CHAPPELL, June 14—eo0dtd Archite ct or ARCOIBALD & CO., Agents, North Sydney, C.B eee eteanee t aling itet sciae aiataiasiiilti tlie. sma til, Pure Spicss are Profitable But bad «pice is acominable, This is a truism that no com petet houskeeeper should forget. Huif the t.ouble cf cook ing ie past if you get the rigat brand of Spice, and while there sre maay that are fairiy good, it ia always safest to take one which ss invariably uni- That one is form. FF me AW AS MARK FISHER, SONS & Co. Victoria Square, MONTREAL Importers of Fine Woolleus and Tailors Trimmings Sole proprietors of the ‘Klon- dike” Serge. Sample Room, 72) Prince Wm, St. <t. John, \. B. H. H. HARVEY, Agent the. days far more comfort- | The most picturesque summer | “Round hated _ em ot A special type of “ Fit-Reform $y 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, an greater prominence of chest. Best business suit, for such a form is a three button Sack like this—tfor 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 af ee price in left breast pocket. Wee RN Ris «3, 915, $18 Nae REFORM 10, $12, $15, $18, WER ing , $20 per Suit. «= /CLOTHIN hays Poe r Catalogue from Fit-Reform Clothing Co., Montreal. QI RRFL IN NK oe sOLF LOCA AGENCY PROWSE BROTHERS. | veer Pi ei GEM oa NEASIDE | ach, P.BUS EASIDE HOTEL ¢kistico Be UMMER RES ORT Opened about July! Fine La ndscare—Beantiful Grounds—Shady Walks- Boatt —Sarr and tii) wa'er bathing—Ni-e rier—Bowling Alle croquet and Tennis Lawns, ac.-- Address: — JOHN NEWSON, CHARLOTTETO 5 , 4 p ; Q toe "BAM : Ln Tf, ~ es = ‘ Py Be. > Ange © ee a af rn hee, ggg I oe ne BOER rence Nita RE kg Gy ® c% JA eee ys 1) hth hi a + , ae : ss 5 or, os ~ : o 5 be ~ 4 s * i -e . 2 — ° i j . ‘ a 5 Rial ana S 6 Coa ch leaves Caariottetown dirsct every Tuesday, Thursday and between 4 and 5 o’clook, p. m. calling for Cuests, When the natual teeta have ben lost, the comfort, the health, the speech, and the personal appearance will be greet!y enhanced by the subsiitution of Artificial Teeth skillfully made. Good he»i'h, good appearance and comfort depend upon the dentists skill in making an Artificial set knowingly and perfectly fitted. Art ificjal teeth can be made to present a very natural ap- pearance an occasional dark tooth, an irregular arranges ment, or atasty fillings will breik the porcelain mono’¢ ouy so often noticeable. The sunken condition of 4 persons cheeks and lips due to the loss of the natural teeth, is changed completely by the insertion of propers Jy made Artificial teeth. Wemake Arcificial teeth that will fill out hollow cheeks and add youth and tone t@ the countenence. If you are troubled with bad fitting Artificial teeth that do not stay in their place as they should, we can, by use of a new method, make your old ‘et over ut asmail expense and give you a perfect fite We guaragtee our work tu be sati-factory inall respect You can call in,in the morning jand have yout teeth same aay. i? 59 ne yan aoe Re a ar ers at Painless Dentistry—Moderate Charges. BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS). Over Store of Prowse Bros. Open evenings 7to 8.