. on 9 D AILY EXAMINER ~ ooo Pepiencsoenannes _ ee — mn ———__ ie ‘ERMS, Four Dollars per Year. “This is True Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evnipipes. Single Copies TwoC ee — — N _—— ——— " — tf You are Going’ ——TO— | BOSTON or any part of the [nited States, the cheapest and best route is via the Plant Line, THE POPULAR SUN- MEE ROUTE FROM CH’/TOWN. Commencing May I4th. the favorite S. 8, ‘ Halifax” will leave Ch’town for Bos- ton every Friday at 1 p. m. Returning leaving Boston every Tues~ day at noon. Steamer call: at HAWKS: BURY and Halifax both ways Via Picton & Halifax Passengers leaving Charlottetown Tues and Saturday moraings via Pictou make close connection at Halifax with steamers “QOlivette” and “Halifax” for Boston di- rect Wednesdays at 7 a. m and Saturdays 11 p.m. Tickets for sale at atations P.¥-.I. Railway, Ch’town Nev Ca, and Clarke’s ticket office. H. L. CHIPMAN, Can. Agent, Halifax, N.S. dkw _EPPS'S COGOA _ ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING t) the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED. In Quarter-Pound Tins and Packets only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd., @ Homeopathic Chemists, London. England. , ? Pain-Killer. (PERRY Davrs’.) A Save and Safe Remedy in every cease | and every kind of Bowel Complaintis | Pain-Killer. ain-Killer.. This is a true statement and ft can't be | too strong or tooemphatic. | It is a simple, safe and quick cure for | Cramps, Cough, Rheumatirm, | Colic, Colds, Neuralgia, Diarrhea, Croup, Toothache. TWO SIZES, 25c. and 50c. waawrd Suen FOR SALE (1) THAT farm of SIXTY ACRES at PISQUID, LOT 37, lately oceupi- ed by Jas, A. Campbell. * The greater part cleared and in good condition. Remainder with a fine growth of hard wood. _(2) ALSO, a comfortable and well situated dwelling house and premises AT CLYDE RIVER, LOT 31, with a half acre of ground. (3) A fine, dry building lot on Ed- ward St., Charlottetown, (near Graf- ton St. R. R. Crossing), 42 feet front, by 120 foet Lack. Terms easy. (4) ALSO, al) that fine farm of 10 ACRES AT DROMORE, LOT 37, lately owned by John Logan. (5) THAT convenient cottage with garden, yard and stable on Poplar Terrace, East Kent St., now occupied by A. Bannerman Warburton, M.L.A. Possession Ist October next. 4 ee IN SEARCH OF A WIFE. Cautious Suitor States His Requirements In a Letter of Inquiry, A prominent attorney preserves the following documeut as one of the chief curios of his office. It bears a recent date and was written from one of the Missouri river towns. The young wom- an referred to is the presiding genius of the kitchen in the lawyer’s home: “Drak Sir—I got acquainted with Miss —— through our corresponding with each other. She wants to marry me. Should she suit I will not marry her for three or four mouths yet.* Please find out through your wife and let me know by return mail if she is worthy of a good husband. “Is her character good? How about her honesty and integrity? Does she seem to hike children? Is she neat and clean? Is she tasty about her dress? Is she gay or frivolous, or what you call sullen? Is she wasteful in her cooking? Is she strong and healthy? Can she hear and talk good? Is she homely or pretty? Is she smart? To make it short, would she make a good man a good wife? ‘‘I am a cooper by trade, a widower with five children, and I need a woman that’s a good cook and to look after my children. She has been working for your wife three weeks. You ought to know her pretty good by this time. Anything you may say she won't know if it ism’t good, unless you tell her your- self. “Is she stylish? Has she begun to break or show edge? Is she steady and does she know how to please? You can do me a great favor if you take five minutes of your valuable time to an- swer these few questions. Please write at once. I want to know quick. Your obedient servant.’’—St, Louis Republic. oe. Re, siete History on a Watch >... Almost the last work of the Belgian astronomer Houzeau, deceased, was an article in which, while arguing in fa- vor of a decimal division of time, he pointed out the origin of the double set of 12 hours represented on our watch and clock faces. The ancient inhabitants of Mesopotamia chose the number 12 as an arithmetical base because it has four divisors—viz, 2, 3, 4 and 6, while 10 has only two divisors—viz, 2and 5. They counted 12 hours in the day and 12 in the night, measuring the day by the progress of the sun and the night by the progress of the stars across the sky. This system, prevailing over all others, has come down to us, and so our watches bear on their faces asouvenir of those ancient days when the sun served for a clock hand haif of the time and the stars the other half.— Youth’s Companion. Her Awful Ordeal. **Mary had a dreadful experience on ber trip to Painesville?’’ ‘*How was that?’’ ‘‘Why, she got something in her eye, and it hurt her so that she asked a nice looking young man to look for it, and he was so dreadfully nearsighted that he got so close that his big mustache tickled her nose, so that in trying not to sneeze right in his face she burst four buttons off her new jaeket.’’ ‘Dear me!’’~—-Cleveland Plain Dealer. [F YOU CANT eR SIE COME Write for an appointment, and have your work done by us; guaran- teed ———— Painless Dentistry and modern wethods and appliances. eee Berlin Dental Parlors, Over store of Prowse Bros. Office Hours:—8 a. m to 8 p. m. TO LET. The house on Richmond St. west, at present occupied by Mr. J. M. McLeod. This house is beautifully situated on th- : F. W. L. MOORE, #ndor. House Corner Solicitor 99—déw—3wks barbor front, with splendid view. Is fite MRS, HUFE'S STORY Ce ee After Years of Suffering and Anxiety She Receives a New Lease of Life, — Her Rescuer and Deliverer Was Paine’s Celery Compound, | Itis the Medicine that Brings Health. Happiness and: Good Looks to Every Ailing Woman. Every sick and ailing woman in Canada will save many weeks and months of suffering and anxiety if Paine’s Celery Compound is used at once to strengthen the nerves, purify the blood, and set the whole digestive inachinery in perfect work ing condition. If vou have not 80 been benefitted and cured by medicines you are now using;it will be wisdom on your part to put your trust to Paine’s Celery Com- peund which has wrought such mira- culous cures in the past. The case of Mrs. F. M. Huff, of Salmon Point, Ont., is strong proof that Paine’s Celery Compound “makes people well.” She says: ‘After receiving so much benefit from Paine’s Celery Compound I think it my duty to inform sufferers what this great medicine can for all who wish to regain health and atrength. | bave been a great ‘eufterer for years from nervousness and weaknese, and have had the advice aud attendance ef doctors with but lite benefit. I was in- duced to use your Paine’s Celery Com- pound some time ago, and I must confess it is the best medicine I ever used, Noth- ir g else has ever done me so much good, and I now feel quite a different person. “I trnst sufferers will not be influenced to use any other medicine while they can procure yours which does such good work. I cannot speak strongly enough in favor of Paine’s Celery Compound, and you may he assured I will always recommend it You are at liberty to publish. this letter in your work.” » ttt eset ate tate eee eee cetera ter ere 8. USE sor alby’s Own Soap and you'll know why we recommend it stator 8s 2c oc eees > - o Petet tate. rons $.Ba% a PTR MEPERERS rete t eee Uae ete t fetta te eee eee t esa e ete Seta e tae ° ~ erat ett t ete t atte t tte t ete te ane Te state eat Eta at EN 3 3 ce “ = BE SURE AND GET THE 8 GENUINE. 4 @ 3 The Albert Toilet Soap Co., Mfrs. Montreal. ‘ Red. Blue, Brown Yel- low, Or any color you wish, for the same price as Black. OR we will print you any job any color for less money than any other firm in this city. J.D. TAYLOR, ted with all the modern improvements. Apply to Mr. Thos Campbell. PrIntER & BooKBINDER CHARLOTTETOWN... P. E.. ISLAND; PEFESDAY, MAY ..25,, 4697. ON ce Men, Women and Hats. A German professor has been study- ing that article of masculine apparel which the irreverent call a “‘stovepipe”’ and has found in it proof of man’s su- periority to woman. Time was, he says, when men, like women now, ornament-~ ed their hats with ribbons and feathers more or less beautiful and wore gar- ments of the brightest colors they could find. This was all “plumage d’amour;”’ it indicated no intellectual superiority and no moral worth. It merely repre- sented the superiority of the peacock over the peahen. Now men have molt- ed. Their headgear has become the un- plumed “stovepipe,’’ their habit theinex- pressive frock coat. It fs woman, the professor points out, who wears the “plumage d'amour” today, in her hat ; and elsewhere. Nature, he explains, means something by every evolution or revolution she permits. What she means by this one is that fine feathers are best suited to the feather brained. The plumed hat of woman is symbolical of her fall, the plain “stovepipe’’ of man, of his rise in intellectuatity. Man’s moral worth, in short, has become such that he can lose plumage to the inferior animals, If this isn’t “just l1®xe a man for all the world,” nothing ever was.—New York Times. All Wrorg. One of the boys brought home his arithmetic lesson, and his mother, after watching his struggies for a time in si- lence, offered to help him. “Oh, no,” said he, with a look of scorn, “you can’t do it to save you.” <As the mother was a college graduate she nat- urally felt somewhat nettled at this and insisted upon her ability to solve the problem. She did so to her own satis- faction, but not to the boy’s. He de- clared that she did not do it right, though he could not tell what was wrong. “We'll leave it to papa,” said she finally. The father, too, was a college graduate and had taken high honors in mathematics. The father said that the mother’s method was the right one and, indeed, the only one. Unconvinced, the boy went off to school the next morning. At noon he came home triumphant. “There, I told you so!”’ he shouted as he entered the house. “You did it wrong.”’ “What was the matter?” both parents asked. “Well, you left out two ‘sinces’ and a ‘hence,’’’ was the convincing reply. — Brooklyn Eagle. Baboon Guides. It seems probable that travelers and ‘wxplorers who are usually accompanied with dogs, who hunt with them and guard their camp from danger, would find a more reliable companion in a baboon. So far as speed is concerned, the dog, of.course, has the advantage, but for keenness of scent, for the instinct of finding edible plants and hidden water and as a sentinel against every kind of danger, the baboon is unequaled. Le Vaillant, an African traveler, gives an account of a tame baboon, which accompanied him on some of his journeys. “By his cries,”” he says, “he always warned us of the approach of an enemy before my dogs discovered it. The dogs were so accustomed to his voice that they used to go to sleep, and I was at first vexed with them for deserting their duties. When he once had given the alarm, they would all stop to watch for his signal, and on the least mction of his eyes, or the shak- ing of his head, I have seen them all rush forward to the quarter where his looks were directed."—Pearson's Week- ly. Carter's for Wall Paper —AT THE--- DENTAL PARLORS North Side Queen Square. You can have your teeth extracted free of pain hy the means of either general or local anwethesia. Al] kinds of work done satisfactorily. DR. J. H. AYERS PYNY - PECTORAL Positively Cures COUGHS and COLDS in a surprisingly short time. It’s a scl- entific certainty, tried and true, soothing and healing in its effects. W.C. McCoyser & Son, Bouchette, Que., report in a letter that Pyny-Peetoral cured Mrs, C. Garceau of chronic cold in chest and bronchial tubes, and also cured W. G. McCumber of a long-standing cold, Mr. J. H. Hurry, Chemist, 528 Yonge St., Toronto, writes: “ Asa general cough and lung syrup Pectoral is a@ most invaluabie preparation, gyen he ees ‘ all who man spoken Saeco erat Sane ae Powers t is suitable for old or youn, the taste, Its sale wa me been wonderful, and I can always recommend it as a safe and reliable cough medicine,” Large Bottle, 25 Cis. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CoO., Lrp. Sole Proprietors MonTREAL Tried and True THE OLD RELIABLE WOOL DEALERS Have an announcement of considerable im- portance to the farmers of this country to make, We Want Your VWrool We are prepared to handle the entire growth of PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND'S WOOL We offerfevery inducement to obtain it Tke highest figure will be paid The most carefully bought stock of goods in the mar- ket will be given in exchange. It consists of Ready-to-wear Clothing, Hats and Caps, Tweeds and Flannels, Gents’ Furnishings Dress Goods and Staple Dry Goods We have bought this stock at the low- est cash figure, and will sell it at the lowest cash figure. Remember, we are the only manufacturets of cloths in Charlottetown When you get our goods you know what you are getting A NEW DEPARTMENT GENERAL DRY GOODS Goods, etc, as cheap as in the market Wool taken for everything The Bargain Corner, ~ McKay Woolen Company 124 This spring we have made an addition to our already large store, the department of has been added, and we can now give Dress 3 \ h te aN ee Sage ey Fm a ES i 8 pee ¢ eae ae 5 Teil SER, ‘ES PR WRT OE LTS onarad of eae Pe. CBE. Sa TE RT RT ie SS GE PRT OS wa. ee eee rt Seach We oe ee © ue aliinainy