j f — » nine Se ) EAWMINER NEWSPAPS WM Lxapine | LHE 4 or P. E. Is ANI - ? every am : a ‘ e MINER ExamMi ton Heuse . ,oadon . N , & BSURAS s RATES OF : (IN A AN 2:00 : « YRrark 2.1K Sey Months 1.00 1 M ae ‘ M@QN { 4 < M a ini . 2 ada the Sant post The Weekly Examiner from . a up of matter MS, AIM eres y TERMS : Four Dollars a Year VOL 34. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY, aa iA nine OE TE EAST TIE: Spas a MAY 10, 1895. NO. 2638 nancies —IF YOu— Want a wife, Want a cook, Want Want a Want a servant girl, Want to Want to ,sell ‘a Want fto Want to exchange anything. a partner, situation, sell a farm, nouse, rent a house, Wat to sell plants or grain Want tol sell groceries or drugs, Want to sell or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or cattle ADVERTISE IN THE ESZAMINER LLL LEEDS Se CALENDAR FOR MAY, 18285 t m t ‘ rt Las . . New i _ 2 - ~~ q \\ i water i i { } . , 5 ’ i 4 | ; 3 . ge 42 , ' @ >%- j ‘ 2 2i , ve : ’ a 6 e n : 12 10 45 G sat * i : J | sat § 26 ‘ . , id | aft 8 1 ~ ~ | , ' i ay ‘ Lv | Q 49 ais ay Li 1 33 7 ar j . « i ay i 18} 219 I | ay | 19 | . & i4 i ws Mi ' i ° . = sday =| 20; 64.6% u : S ae .6 6G 4 : y ao | 6 ll » ‘ | a i Saturd 28 24 | > 2 ’ >” = . S m “/ 25 | i 39 ur ; ’ . 26 | 2 8 4 | - é ' av «4 ai | 32 ‘ } , sales y -t| va i oO ) : aa = - i at : » . -- lt 4 a ° 2 . | ; 267,35 iv 20 | 015 |i wu : 27 | Monday ee it 4® " | i 51 29 W sdayv ~ » 37 9 y . 7 , I rsday 18 , 44 . al 8 4 54 P. FE, Island Railway erton oD ios iigmisn.... « Lv , (Ar) erun by Eastern Standard ° D. POTTINGER, Gen Mer Can Govt Railways Moncton, N B. A. McDONALD, Superintendent, Charlottetown. decd Operative & Prosthetic Dentistry TYE DR. MURRAY, CHARLOTTETOWN. Dominion Coal Company, Ltd ng been appointed t Province of Ln oe se ’ 4 ’ Dn - in tu Prince Edward Islaud for the above Com pany, al y prepared to issue orders for Ro ._ Slack and Run of Mines, and will kee S f each Mine’s Coal on hand to supply stomers at lowest prices. '” PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agents Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—tf SPRING, 1895. S ‘ | so is my annual sup- Seeda—Red Fife, White Fife, White R Bearded W at, Barley, Bla 1 White Oats, Buckwheat, Fod- der | i Peas V etc! a, : mothy a { Seed Also, Garden Seeds in var F. L. MACNUTT, Queen Street . 2 wky 2 lin heels HIGKEY & NICHOLSON, Tobaceo Manufacturers, NO.! QUEEN STREET. P nde of : BRIGHT BRiGHT SMOKING Te b ‘ CHEWING and &’s to the pound won LO 7 — 7 iheir Uid heliabie BRIGHT Brands of BLACK SMOKING Prices Lower than Imported Tobaccos, Ch’town, April 1, 1895—6m 135 wy " omnes Mechanical Drawing, &c u ; Phe ndersigned is { repared to give evening tes sin Mechanical and Indus- trial Dra to: and Specifi cation vents, Copying, Blueprint ing and Draugist y ral. . wv. ACDONALD. Land Sur veyor an Nov —2 l . 7 : i Vraughtsman. For Sale or To Keut.| The well-known Business Stand, th “Central Hotel,” formerly the “ Railway Heuse,” « ited on Richmond Street. This Hotel contains 21 rooms, with large Shop and good stabling for 25 horses. Is centrally situated, and within two minutes’ walk of Market House and Post Office. Apply to THUMAS CAMPBELL, Richmond Street, Bid=-1, 246 & why URSDAY, 27th Deczmber, | 1is Raiiway will run daily | 145 QUEEN STREET. | Canada Atlantic and Plant STEAMSHIP LINE. FOR BOSTON, —=-CALLING AT—— Howkesbury and Halifex. Ss. S. OLIVETTE & 3 will leave Navigation a nap . ‘ os Co’s. Wharf, Char May 17, at 12 and every Friday thereafter until far- ther not ce. Will leave Hawkesbury at 6 p.m. same days, and Halifax on Saturdays at | riving at Boston Mondays at 7 a m. FROM BOSTON—Tuesday, May 14, at 12 noon, and every Tuesday thereafter until farther notice, calling at Halifax and Hawkesbury, and arriving at Charlotte- town on Thursday evening For rates of passage , freight, etc., apply to local agents, or the general agents as Ww HALIFAX SERVICE. S. S. “Halifax” or “* Olivette” will Plant Wharf, H Liliax, every WED r Boston until further notice, f . will leave north , lof Lewis Boston, Tuesdays and iS avs, 12 noon, until further notice. | Passengers arriving in Halifax TUES- | DAY evenings can go directly on board | the steamer withont extra charge i lri-weekly services by S.S. Olivette and Halifax, and S. Florida between i Char'ottetown will be resumed | | Ha Ax, } weekly service by Bo-ton a lin June, lr and baggage | l ch i Ke tS fur saie t all stations on the Intercolonial For rates of passage, freight, etc., apply HW. L. CHIPMAN, r Agent for Canada, Plant Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, north side, Lewis’ Wharf, 2 boston. 1895 by Will commence the season of | sailing from Halifax on the 30th April. For freight, etc., apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent. | i re from Von- sail for St. John’s, Newf -undland, via Sydney, carrying The SS. BONAVIS8TA, due h treal MONDAY, May lLih, will Lorses, cattle and sheep on deck and produce, | ete, under deck at lowest possible rates. For further particulars as to freight and passage ipp y to PEAKE BROS. & CO., may? Agents. SALT! SALT! To arrive per Steamships Sunrise and Tafua, 10,000 bags Liverpool Salt and 800 bags Fishery, which will be sold at lowest prices whilst discharging. Both steamers are due here about Ist May. Apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO. Ch’town, April 18, 1895—tf What’s the time? _ If you heve a Congh ft is time you were taking GRAY’S ,, RED SYRUP —~ SPRUCE shins, THE OLD STANDARD CURB FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and ali LUNG AFFECTIONS, Gray’s Syrup bas been on trial far more thas 50 years and the verdict of the people is thas it le the beet remedy knowe. 256. and 6. per bottle. Bold everywhere. KERRY WATBON & CO. Paopaistone MON T= SAL. ‘43))) WATCH At a Low Price IS WHAT YOU WANT. kKeSak | OURS. G. H. TAYLOR, North Side Queen Square mch30 FOR SALE. — House in Georgetown. | That Dwelling House in Georgetown | the property of Mrs. Capt. John MeDon- | ald, formerly known as the “ McDonald House,” together with the outbuildings. This House is in first-class repair, con- tains fourteen large rooms, and is well adapted for a Dwelling or Boarding House. | Any party or parties desirous of secur- ing a summer residence will find this a capital opportunity, This property will be sold at a bargain For terms and particulars apply at the office of J. A. Matheson, Solicitor, George town, or to L. W. MACDONALD, sox 694, Charlottetown, apd lottetown, FRIDAY. 10 p.m., ar- ESUAY, 8 a. m., and SATURDAY, 10 side Mortgage Sale Public Auction, at ti ‘ ol at the Court House in Summerside, on WED NESDAY, the { nd day of May, A. D* 1895, at the hour of twelve o’clock, noon, under a power of sale contained a Mortgag wring late the fi dav of May, A. D ide Angus My D be we mald of the one part and Albert L Anderson and George Comp- ton, Trustees of the other par und duly assigned lersicned :— \ pa of Jandy situat ying and n Lot or Township Naum- | ber Twenty in Queen’s County, in Prin Ti |Kdward Island, butted and. bounded as ired but Sleepless fi vs, {hat ist say:—Commencing at the south-east angle of land now or for-; Is acondition which gradually wears merly owned by one Robert Heanev, and away the strength, Let the blood be also by one William McKay; thence purified and enriched by Hood’s Sar- iwardly along the easterly boundary i ‘ Bie ‘ saparilla and this condition will cease. of Heaney’s (or McKay’s) land eighty-two chains, more or less, to the Kerrytown “For two or three years I was subject to toad ; thence north-eastwardly along the poor spells. I always felt tired, could not said road to the western boundary of Jand | or formerly owned by one Ma'thew | White; thence southwardly along Matthew more or lé ss,to the land now or for- j | Maleolm MelLean; sleep at night and the little I eould eat did not dome any good. I read about Hood’s Sarsaparilla and decided to try it. Before I had finished two bottles I began to feel better and in a short time I felt sll right and had gained 21 pounds in weight. Iam stronger and healthier than I have ever been in my life.” JoHN W. CovuGHLIN, Wallaceburg, Ontario. Hood’s Sarsaparilla’ » ts the Only Frue Biood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. Be sure to get Hood’s and only Hood’s, Do not be induced to buy and other. fry: 1 e Hood’s’ Pills sir. 2mcea* buoo now said | western boundary of W hite’s land eighty-six chains, northerly boundary of merly »wned bv one thence westerly along said northern boun dary of Malcolm McLean’s Jand ten cl less, to the place of begin containing by admeasurement eighty-three more or acres, be the same more or less. | Dated this eighteenth day of | A. D. 1895. : lor turther particulars apply to J. Ed- [{ ward Wyatt, | ' ide side, Barrister-at-Law, Summer- GEORGE HOLDEN apl9—4w law (5) % COMPTON, C. MILLS, Assignees otitis RD its Vie are prepared to fii! all or: ders for Custom Work promptly. Stock, workmanship and _ prices right. Repairing cf all kinds done neat and cheap. oD Hi. Gb EWE, Ch’town, April 19, 1895—dy The Reliable Boot and Shoe Dealer. DAIR YOIEN ! 1 am-now prepared to furnish the Dairy Associations of P. E. Island with all sizes of Milk Cans of superior material and workmanship. Sample Cans for examination will be sent free of cost on application, and may be seen’ at the store. Also, Vats and all heating and other appara- tus necessary in such establishments. I am also prepared to furnish handsome Wrought Iron, Scroll and Crescent Cemetery Palings at very reasonable prices, according to quality. To see them is to be con- vinced of their merits. Remember, I guarantee all satisfaction. such as it has been years. At the Old Stand QUEEN STREET. AUGUSTUS HERMANS. Charlottetown, April 11,1895—dy & wy to give entire my work thirty doing for the past Keep Your Feet Dry. | If you catch cold now it will hang on all Summer. Wear Granbv Rubbers. They are the best and last longest. Perfect in Style, Fit and Finish. THEY WEAR LIKE JRON. Seeds ! AXD GARDEN. aplO—135 tf eee PE a eeds ! FOR FARW and White Timothy, Alsike, Mammoth, Early Red Colorado Dutch Clover Seed, White Russian, Red Fife, Bearded Seed Wheat. : GARDEN.—Beans, Beet, Cabbage, Carrot, Cauliflower, Celery, Corn, Cress, Cucumber, Mush Melon, Onion, Parsley, Parsnip, Peas, Pepper, Radish, Sage, Savory, Spinach, Squash, Salsif, Tomato, Tobacco, Turnip, Water Melon. FLOWER SEEDS in variety. All of these Seeds are new, pure and sale at the lowest prices. WILLIAM GRANT & CO., Charlottetown, Apri! 13, 1895-135 w QUEEN STREET. For reliable. = a " 7” _ Leave your order at Tus EXAMINER office. We can print anything you JOB PRINTIN Good work, promptness, low rates. need, See our samples. LEADING CANADIANS. INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT OUR FOREMOST MEN. The Birthplace and Age of Prominent Politicians and Other Conspicuous Fig- ures in Their Career. Archbishop Walsh land, in 1830. He took charge Mary’s Church, Toronto, in 1857. Rev. Dr. Grant was born in Nova Scotia in 1835. He has ben head of Queen's University, Kingston, 1877. Hon. David Mills, now in his sixty- third year, is a native of Oxford Coun- ty. During the Mackenzie regime he was Minister of Interior. Hon. Chief Justice Haggarty, a na- tive of Ireland, became a judge in the was born in fre- of St. since Ontario Court in 1856. In 1868 he be- came Chief Justice. Senator Sanford was born in New York in 1838. He had his business training in Gotham, and his first under- taking in Canada was a foundry. lion. Louis Oliver Taillon, the well- kuown French politician, is a lawyer. He was born in 1840, and is one of the best known men in Quebec. Chief Justice Meredith was born in the County of Middlesex in 1840. He was called to the bar in 1861. He was elected to Parliament in 1872. Mr. D’Alton McCarthy, Q.C., is an Irishman. He was born near Dublin just 59 years ago. When very young he came to Canada. He entered Par- liameanat in 1878. Hon. G. W. Allen was born in Little York in 1822. He was one of the first to take part in forming a volunteer corps here. He was called to the Senate in 1867. Sir Hector Langevin owns Quebec for his birthplace. He is now 69 years of He was the foremost of French- age. Canadian statesmen, and won some prominence as a lawyer. On July 22, 1820, Sir Oliver Mowat was born. In 1857 he entered politics. He is one of the fathers of confedera- tion. He became Premier of Ontario in 1872. Sir Richard Cartwright was born in Kingston in 1835. He entered Parlia- ment in 1863, being a Conservative. He left the party in 1870, and has been a Lberal ever since. Hon. William Harty was born in the County of Middlesex, where many of our politicians have come from. He is 48 years of age. He made his for- tune in commercial pursuits. Col. Casimir Gzowski is now 82 years of age. He is of a noble Polish family, and took part in rebellions against Rus- sian rule. He came to Toronto in 1841. Professor Goldwin Smith was born at Reading, England, in 1823. He was educated at Oxford and came to Cana- da in 1872, taking up his abode in To- rento. Sir Mackenzie Bowell is an old news- paper man. He came from England, where he was born in 1823. In 1853 he was defeated in North Hastings. Five years later he was victorious. : Hon. G. W. Ross was born in the County of Middlesex in 1841. His first occupation was that of a school teacher, and he had his first experience in speak- ing on the temperance platform. Hon. John Costigan was born at St. Nicholas, Quebec, in 1845. He entered Parliament at the general election after Confederation. He represents the Irish Catholic element in the Cabinet. Archbishop Cleary of Kingston, was appointed to his present position in 1880. He is an Irishman by birth and in his native land took a deep interest in poli- tics. Rev. Dr. Caven, Principal of Knox College, was born in Scotland, in 1830. He came to Canada in 1847. He became a proiessor in 1866, and was appointed to his present position in 1870. Hon. Edward Blake was born in the County of Middlesex on October 13, 1833. He was educated at Upper Canada and Toronto University, and was admitted to the bar in 1856. Ijeutenant-Governor Kirkpatrick is 54 years of age. He was born in Kings- ton. He was an enthusiastic military man. He was elected to Parliament in 1870. and was Speaker of the House. Hon. J. M. Gibson is a native of Peel County, being born there in 1842. In Toronto University he had a brilliant career. He was elected to Parliament in 1879. He was called to the Ontario Cabinet five years ago. Sir David Macpherson was born in Scotland in 1818. He was a member of the Canadian Parliament three years be- fore Confederation. He amassed wealth as a railway contractor and steamship owner. Hon. Wilfrid Laurier was born in L’Assomption, Quebec, in 1841. He was called to the bar in 1865. He was elect- ed to the House of Commons in 1874, and became Liberal leader on the retire- ment of Hon. Edward Blake. H. P. Dwight, president of the Great North Western Telegraph Company, is by birth an American. His first em- ployment in Canada was as an operator at Belleville. He was gradually promot- ed to his present position. Sir Charles Tupper, the elder, is the son of a Baptist clergyman. He first saw the light of day in Nova Scotia in 1821. He is a doctor and a politician by profession, and one of the ablest speak- ers who ever sat in the House of Com- mons. Hon. A. S. Hardy showed ability when tender in years. Soon after being called to the bar he became head of his pro- fession in the County of Brant. He was born during the troublesome times of 1837, and entered Parliament in 1873. The Language of Signs. A youhg provincial, newly arrived In Faris, got into a dispute with a boule- vardier who prided himself on his fine manners. The Parisian, wishing to carry off the thing with a high hand, pulled a glove out of his pocket, and threw it at the stranger. The latter, astonished, inquired the meaning of the action. When it was explained to him that throwing a glove was equivalent to a slap in the face, the young pro- vincial sat down, gravely drew off one of his boots and threw it at the back of his opponent.—Almanach Amusant. Better So. “No,” said the “emancipated” young woman, “Harold and I will not marry. The engagement is broken off.” “What was the trouble ?” “HHe does not agree with me in poli- tics, and I am compelled to believe that his ideas about housekeeping are hope- lessly crude and chaotic.” eg ai a aie There is a movement on foot to hold a convention of Irish Americans in one of the larger cities ot the United States at an early date. It is the intention to in- augurate a new and bolder policy in the interest of Irish independence. The idea is to force the Irish question upon the at- tention of the world, which, it is alleged, will compel a settlement satisfactory to the Irish people. “Pa, will women get their rights ?” “JT don’t know, my son; but if they do there’ll be very little left for the rest of us,” “HE WORLD OF LABOL. CHOES FROM THE BUSY MILL Aid ews and Happenings of Special Interest iuthe Various Fields Where Mechanic and Artizvan Meld Sway Night and Day. —Japan exports beer. —There are paper plates. Paper pulp doors are new. China exports human hair. There are steel billiard balls. Coftins are made of paper pulp. All the coins of Greece are copper. —Ilinois railroads stretch 10,576 miles. —Floor mosaics are made from wood pulp. London daily. —London has 10,000 prefessional mu- sicians, Americans use 90,000,000 pounds of tea a year. -There were 13,885 business failures in the States last year. consumes 11 tons of salt Danish light-houses are supplied with oil to pump on the waves dur- ing a storm, A clay found near Clarence, Mo., has been found to contain 40 per cent. f aluminium. A steel ship has been constructed in Cardiff, Cornwall, with the standing rigging, as well as the hull, all of teel. -~A\ German Periodical devoted to wood industries anounces that food products consisting partly of wood are now manufactured. In China, which has long’ been known as “the land of opposites,’’ the dials of clocks are made to turn around, while the hands stand still Probably the most extraordinary journal in the world is published week- ‘vy at Athens. It is written entirely in verse, even to the advertisements. W. C. Sterling & Son, large cedar- pole dealers of Munroe, Mich., have re- ceived an order for telegraph poles to be shipred to Zuenos Ayres, South America. —Wheat can be grown in the Alps at an elevation of 3600 feet, in Brazil at 5000, in the Caucasus at 8000, In Abyssinia at 10,000 and in Peru and Bo- livia at 11.900. —The colony of Waldenses, at Val- dese, Burke County, N. C., has, up to this time, held the lands there in com- mon, but now each family takes what it can cultivate and pay for. —It is estimated that a capital uf $3,850,000 is invested in the linen indus- try in Ireland, which gives employment to an army of skilled workers at its 850,000 spindles and 28,000 power-looms. —Paper straws for drinking iced bev- which are superior to the na- tural straws, are being placed on the market, and so is a peculiar cloth paper for printing bank notes on. —The French industry of icing milk is an original departure in tinned com- modities. The milk is frozen and placed in block form into tins, and requires to be melted previous to use. —Portland, Ore., has just completed a system of waterworks at a cost of $2,000,000. The supply comes from Bull Run River, which rises in the Cascade Mountains, and is brought a distance of 40 miles. —The railways in Ohio+carried 85,- 000,000 passengers the last two years without a fatal accident to one of them —a creditable fact which appears to contirm the assertion that a seat in a raiway train is one of the safest places in the world.—Railway Age. —The Boston Police Board is of Opin- ion that many saloonkeepers of that city are supplying very inferior whis- adulterated and far below the standard. The Board has recommend- ed to the Legislature the enactment of a law providing for the appointment of an Assayer of Liquor for Boston. ~The Municipal Technical School Committee, of Manchester, which is one f the best in England, has decided to establish a testing-house to test samples of raw and manufactured goods. All the leading technical institutes in Ger- many and France provide facilities for testing, brt the Bradford Technical Col- lege is the only other institution of the kind in England which has done so. Its conditioning house, which has been in existence three years, tested over 20,- 000 samples last year. —The work of excavating a ship canal of twenty feet in depth through the wa- ters of the great lakes between Chi- cago, Duluth and Buffalo, which was begun in 1893, is now more than two- thirds completed. The work is divided into eight sections. The first four sec- tions include the excavation needed in the Saulte St. Marie River, through which there will be a channel twenty- one feet in width. The remaining four sections will complete the channel from the foot of Lake Huron to deep water at the head of Lake Erie. —The proposed overland route from America to Europe, via the Trans-Si- berian Railway, is one of the biggest nterprises of the century, and is pro- gressing at such a rapid rate that the Russian Government is looking forward to its completion in 1901. The western and central portions, reaching down to Irkutsk at the foot of the Baikal, and the extreme eastern portion from Vla- divostock are to be ready for use be- tween 1896 and 1898, and the Government is pushing on with the Baikal connee- tions, so as to get them finished by the same date, if possible. erages, key, A Fatal Article. “That was a good article you had in the paper this morning, Mr. Sikes, giving the details of the method by which an expert burglar opens a com- bination lock without having to blow the safe to pieces,” said the editor. “I have instructed the cashier to give vou two guineas extra for it. Sorry to part with you, Mr. Sikes, but we shall not need your service any longer.” “Wh-what !" gasped the _ reporter. “You give me two guineas extra for that article, and then discharge me ?” “Yes, sir ; I discharge you for know- ing how to write it.”’—Tit-Bits. Modern Journalism. take “The I thought you you don't more, Viggs—I see Scieamer” any syore by it. Giggs—So I did, but now I swear at it. On the first three days of the week it is filled with caekles over its last Sunday issue, and on the last three duys of the week it is filled with puffs of its coming Sunday issue.—New York Tribune. GREAT BATTLES are contin u ally going on in the human svs- tem. Hood's Sarsaparilla drives our disease and Restores Health. Experience Has Proved It A triumph in medicine was ach ieved when experience proved that Scott’s Emul sion would not only stop the progess of Pulmonary Consumption, but by its con- tinued use, health and vigor could be fully estored. AGE OF THE EARTH. > Sclentists Are Puzzling Themselves Over This Interesting Question. It is more than thirty years since Lord Kelvin pointed out that there must be an | ascertainable limit to the antiquity of the earth, and that from the data at that time available the limit could not be fixed at less than 20,000,000 or more than 400,000, - 000 years. He based this calculation on the thermal conductivity of the globe. Afterward returning to the subject, he placed the limit within 100,000,000 years, and still more recently, reviewing the question in the light of the arguments from tidal retardation and the age of the suns heat, he tas brought down the period of the earth’s antiquity to about 20, 000, 000 years Geologlists have not been slow to admit that they were in error in assuming that they had an eternity of past time for the evolution of earth’s history. They have frankly acknowledged the validity of the physical arguments which go to place limits to the anti- quity of the carth. In vain they have protested that there must somewhere be a flaw ina line of arguments which tends to result so entirely at variance with the strong evidence for a high.r antiquity, furnished not only by the exisiing races of plants and animals. Scientists have insisted that this evidence is not mere theory or imagination, but is drawn from a multitude of facts which become hope- lessly unintelligible unless sufficient time is admitted forthe evolution of geological history. They have not been able to dis- prove the arguments of the physicists but they have not contended that the physi- cists have simply ignored the geological arguments as of no account in the discus- sion. So here the matter has rested for some years, neither side giving way, and with no prospect of agreement. Prof Perry, fecling that, after-all, the united testi- mony of geologists and biologists was so decidedly against the latest reduction of that it was desirable to reconsider the more or less definite time the physical argument, has gone over to them once more. He now finds that on the assumption that the earth is not homogeneous, as postulated by Lord Kel- vin, but possesses a much higher conduc- tivity and thermal capacity in its interior than in its crust, its age may be enor- yaousiy greater than previous calcula- tions have allowed. The question being sub-judice, we must wait until it is set- tled. But there seems at present every prospect that the physicists will concede not merely the 100,000,000 of years with which the geologists would be quite con- tent, but a very much greater extent of time. “os ce ee GIVE BABY A START. BUILD UP THE 2ODY. Lacta' ed Fuod has all the Eiemonts that Promote Health and Strength. At this season the weak and sickly baby requires a new start in life to enable it to build up the body, and gain strength for the trying summer weather. Lactated Food does the good work to perfection. When baby is regularly fed on it all goes we!l; the home is joyous and happy be- cause baby is bright, hearty and healthy. Thousands of mothers in Canada have this happy experience, and know that Lac- tated Food isa home blessing. Try this grand Food, dear mother, for your baby. Grateful—Comiloriing. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the nat ural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application ot the fine properties of well- selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavor ed beverage which may save us many, heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitutior may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating argund us ready to attack wherever there is;a weak point. We may escape many # tatal shaft by keeping ourseives wel! feru fied with pure blood and a properly nour:sb ed frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Bold ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelled thus, JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homoeopathic Chemists, London England. REDUC 50 YEARS For tne last 50 years Cough Medicines have been coming in and dying out, but during all this time SHARP'S BALSAM OF HOREHOUND Never left the Front Rank for Curing CROUP, COUGHS AND COLDS. _ All Druggists and most Giogerymen sell it. B@™ 25 cents a bottle. ARMSTRONG & CO. Proprietors, St. John, N B. aov23—d (NOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvemen! ond ends t3 personal enjoyment whea cightly vsed. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy ‘ife more, with less expenditure, by more promptly ulapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to nealth of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptab’e and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly eneficial properties of a perfect lax. itive ; effectually cleansing the system, y iispelling eolds, heacaches and fevere und permanently curing constipation. t has given satisfaction 4o milliona and ‘aet with the approval of the medical a2 fession, because it acts on the Kid- icys, Laver and Bowels withovt weak- ing them and it is perfectly free from ‘very objectivnable substauce. ‘up of Fiss is for sale by ali drug. in 75e. bottles, but it is manu- California Fig Syrup ’ »name is printed on every ..xage, also the name, Syrup of Figs, d being well informed, you will ne? -“y substitute if offered, scant W. B. MALLETT, HAIR DRERiSSER, Shaving, Hair Cutting. Shampooing, Having lately renovated and reiitted my Shop, Iam now prepared to give satisfac- tion in all kinds of Barber work. ap8 —dy 3m MicKinnon’s English Ointment. Cures Old Sores, Erysipelae, Sualt Rheum, Eczema, Piles, Burns, Corns, Cuts, Sore Eyes, ete. Made and sold by NEIL McKINNON, Summerside, P. E. I. apt—ly TOOTHACHE! his is addressed to all those who are suffer- ing from Toothache, or who may require treatment of any kind at the bands of a Den- tist. IT make tbe very best Teeth, guaranieed, for$ 5a set. If not sutisfactory, money re- funded Gold and Silver Filling= a sperialty. The f llowing letter from Dr Robertson, of Crapaud, as regards the PAINLESS EX- TRACTION of Teeth, speaks for itself:— ToJ £ MeDonall, DD S,Sanmo2rsida,P E Dear Do: to*,—I am s» well pleased with the work yeu have done for me, that I will take it as a special favor ‘f you will give publicity to'h's letter. I rositive y assert that after an experience extending Over tweniy-two years under the hands of many dentists, youaret>e only one who ever extracted a tooth for me ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN, The TEN teeth you remoy.d forme atone sitting did not hurt a particle, as Mr James Dawson of Tryo”, who was present at the operation heard me testify, The man who invented your method should be knighted, Jam yours, gratefully, H. W. RoBERTsoN, M. D. Crapaud, Jan. 10, 1895. J. &. McDONALD, D. D. &., api-—ly Summersi Se ——— a —— The Professor of Chemistry, Toxi- cology, and [ledical Jurisprudence, New York City College— Rk. Ogden Doremus, rn.D., LL. D.—highly recommends Adams’ Tutti Frutti for indigestion. See that no imitations are paimed off on you. I! j WANTED. Customers for 10,600 Bar- rels of Lime. which I will sell this seascu at the follow- ing reduced prices, delivered at Kilns on the Malpeque and St. Peter’s Roads :— Unriddled Lime for Farm purposes, 60c. cash ; 65c. payable Nov. Ist. tiddled Lime for Building, 65c. cash 70c. payable Nov. Ist. Any orders for car lots will be delivered f. o. b. at same rates. JOHN T. PEARDEN, Upper Great George Street. apl3—dy 246 & wy SMALL’S TIN SHOP MILLNER'S OLD STAND, Great George Strect, Charlottetown, ROBERT B. SMALL, Bell Hanger, Gas Fitter, Sheet Iron and Tin Plate Worker, Water Works Piumber. Tinware of every description for house- keepers kept on hand or made to order at lowest rates. Give us & Don’t forget the place,— MILLNER'S OLD STAND, Great George Street. Satisfaction guaranteed. cali. apS—3m 135 + 3 eee ee ae oats i eee ee moe > ene naa nt pee NER eR eae cep