Te Sy A A ee IR EE Hote - Acadia ame BVO 1 uesTs are having } poard with Tuition in English Departiment, SLSS., Music Art, Prvysicat Cvirvre, ete, Preparation fo@ the Univer- Year begins Sept. 15th, 1897. pply to Dr. Hixp PURE WEST INDIA Reine extras ees SERRE =~ - tmce ONLY (5c A PINT —-AT— I & bills --AT THE--- DENTAL PARLORS North Side Queen Square. You can have your teeth extracted free of pain by the means of either genera) or ocal anesthesia. Ali kinds of work done atisfactorily. UR. J. H. AVERS PUBLIC AUCTION by private As I have sold my farm tale, I sha]! on, THURSBAY AUGUST 26th, at 10 o’clock a. m. sell by auction, my stock and farming implements, con- sisting of two well bred mares, one eight years old, and ove four year ‘old. two milch cows; one two year old, and the other four year old, also three heifers rising two 3 ear with cal’, also three calves, aleo ten sPeepn, fat, re ady forthe butcber. Farming juplements:—Two carts, two wood-sleizhis, two good ploughs of the old Scotch stvle, one principally new, one pair of good S} ring tooth harrows, one set of pin harrews, one escuffler, and one mould- ing plough. One jaunting sleigh of an excellent qnaiity never have been used, and buffalo; one wagon and harness, also eart harness, and many other articles too Lumerous io mention. _ JOHN CUMMISKY Glenfinnan. Pond § Lot 36 Qneen’s Co. SALE OF i f> lacipahla Vibb AN AU Property That he: fal property opposite Birch Grove. Fre. ‘ nresent oceunied by Mrs Cy I about 4 acres of Choice land, and the build ings, it velling hense, barns, fgratary, nes, €tc., are in goo condition property includes all o: that Jarge i grove very able for 1 ties, On the port of the ni: sin a charm be f hati, stor ety ‘ a1 > fron Freetoy and two mi i [: i suit pul ser j sali before i De i € i d € = ‘ } - OF furtie Lars appv to E. CROSBY, Pp nf, Cape LTraverre. 168~6j a. ‘yr . 1 fisnu from Tyraesdie vou . Harbor | and Mackerel, | and fishing Good | ick ¢ 8 rm Ung ¥ 9? rie x Ba dde bk Bh Sas Mer guy - 185 > : e748 a » Oe a La ; t abii!.. 1 Sensel for Girls figs: piers vie OUHLELE lol Gaiid | “Windsor. Neva Scotia. IN‘ ORATED 1891. Dn. R \ TNEY D. b> Un re ate at _ Miss Li Cheltenham Ladies’ College, Engiand, Frincipal; eight Resident! experienced Governesses from | and ; Housekeeper, Matron i Ty Nv ana YUree. Also | TWELVE LOCKED UB. Senator Sorghum ana the Punishment of the Grasping Trusts. SP 'm sorry, ‘? said Senator Sorghum ina tone of gentle remonstrance, ‘‘to hear you joining in this thoughtless rlamor about the failure to catch the vo Where they can be punished." ee,” Said; the man of euger man. ners, ** don't they always get away, and is there anything they want that they don’t get?"’ sang, A OBs Sits”? was the emphatic reply. There isa great deal they want that they don’t get. I have no doubt that the Sugar trust frequently experiences sen- sations of pain and resentment when rt realizes that the Match trust and tha Cigarette trust and @ pumber of others are getting money which it will never see. That's enough to make any trust Irritable, ”’ “And a you think after their Maving all that trouble there one to be a chance of anybody's ae ished when a trust is brought to trial.” ‘*But there is a chance of somebody's being punished.”’ see. “i defy you to cite a case where the trial of a trust has caused anybody to be locked up.”’ : : The senator looked, seemed at a Joss ani scratched his forehead with his forefinger, but his embarrassment was only momentary. “Your statement merely demon- Strates,’’ he said, ‘‘that you have neg- lected to carefully inform yourself on the topic you undertake to discuss. And, you will pardon me for saying so, but that being the case you have wasted not only my time, but your own.” ‘I have given a large share of atten- tion to the subject.”’ ‘But you said that nobody had been Jocked up as the result of a trust trial.” “And I repeat it.”’ “‘Thereby displaying your lack of in- formation. As many as a dozen men were locked up because of such a trial only a short time since.”’ “A dozen!’’ ‘*Yes, sir. They were the members of the jury that couldn’t agree. ’’—Wash- ington Star. Not Up to Date. Manager—No, I can’t use your play. You'll either have to rewrite it or ’U try something else. Author—Why? What’s wrong with it? Manager—Your villain is a crack bi- cyclist, while neither the hero nor the heroine can ride. The public would never stand that, you know—never.— Cleveland Leader. Luxury. **Ball tells me that although he has inherited a fortune, he sets his alarm clock for 6 in the morning, same as ever.’’ ‘*Habit, eh?’’ *‘No. Hesays he likes to wake up and enjoy the sensation of not getting up to go to work.’’—Cincinnati En- quirer. Anywhere In Scotland. Tourist (who has been reading Ian Maclaren )}—Excuse ma speirin, ma guid mon, but gin ye ken whaur Jock Mac- lachlan bides hereaboot I’]1 gie ye twa bawbees tae yersel’. Rustic—I am sorry, sir, but Ido not understand French.—Pick Me Up. Where He Won. ‘*You told me this horse kad won half a dozen matches against some of the best horses inthe country. He can’t rot a mile in six minutes to save him.’’ “Tt was in plowing matches that he took the prizes, sir.’’—Detroit’ l’ree Press. Happy Fellow! Cholly—I heah that Chappie commit- ted suicide in Lunnon. Dudely—Yaas. The pwince spoke to bim on the stweet and he nevab wished to be recognized by an inferioh pehson afterward.—New York Truth. Saved. **T have taken a life tosave my own.”’ **What do you mean?’’ “Tf [ hadn’t taken that ‘Life of Grant,’ the woman book agent would have talked me to death.’’—Cleveland Plain Dealer. More Absurd ‘)uestions. ‘How often do you kill a man asked 2 passenger cf a New London motorman the other day. “Only once,’ was the laconic reply. =—New York Tribune. The Vernacular, “Don’t you think he puts on too much side?”’ ‘“Yog and a good deal of front, but I don’t think it bas any backing.’’—In- dianapolis Journal. 99) His Defnition. ~ ‘wy ‘ ¥ c Kha / ~ Little Erastus—Fodder, what kinder fish is speckled trout? Father--Er, I doan’ no zactly, son, but I guess he’sa reg’lar trout wif spec- tacles.——-New York World. tt LST tates cretion. —~ + : ee ee THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 21, 1897 The Highest Postion eee In the Dominion of Ganada Paine’s Celery Compound the Populer Medicine With the People ard the Medical Profession. Onlv a traly great aad effective could continue, as remedy Paine’s Celery Com- pound has done, to hold its high place in the estimation of the able st pi vsiciaus and Of the tens of tLbonsands o} k UUFY men and women whose only means of julying is from the actual results in their own bomes or among theirfriends. No remedy was ever so high.y recommended, because no Other ever achieved so many vrani victorie over disease and sickness, For feeding exhausied nerves, building up the strength of the body, giving a na- tural and healthy appetitite, and as a pro- moter of retreshing sleep, Paine’s Celery Compound stands today without an equal in the world, Mrs. Garland, 675 Crawford St.. Teron- to, give. her experience with the worid’s best medicine as follows: “Your Paine’s Celery Compound has most wonderfully improved my health. Before using it my appetite was poor— almost gone; | was also weak and debili- tated aud suffered from pains in the head. *“Paine’s Celery Compound does al] that is Claimed for it. I have recommended it to my friends, and they all speak highly of the results received from it. [ wish Paire’s Celery Compound the success it so richly deserves.” TREES AND LUMBER. The Spanish yew is a heavy wood, a ybic foot weighing 50.43 pounds. ‘*Doatiness’’ is a speckled stain ap- pearing cn the bark or wood of a tree. *‘Brash’’ wood is porous, of a reddish color, very friable and regarded as a sign of age and decay. Lumbermen say that the best times of the year for felling timber are mid- winter and midsummer. ‘*Dry rot’’ is the putrefaction of the vegetable albumen in wood and can he prevented only by some process of hard- ening or extracting this element. The best process of seasoning is that accomplished by placing lumber under dry sheds, leaving it entirely open to ventilation, but protected from rain. The time for seasening wood varies very greatly, extending from weeks in the case of some timbers to many months er years im the case of hard, dense wood. Timber is best hardened and pre- served by withdrawing its fluid constit- uents, hardening its albumen and fill- ing the cells as far as possible with an- fiseptic preparations. As a rule trees which grow in moist ground prodtce wood that is more sap- py and less durable than those which grow on dry earth. To this rule, how- ever, there are several notable excep- tions. —St. Louis Globe-Demorst. —_————- ee ere Mortgage Sale Land On Lat 65. To be sold vy public auction, at the Court House, in Charlottetown, on Fridav, the 17th day of Septenrvber,next,at the bour of 12 o’clock noon, under and by virtue of a power of sale contained in a certain Indenture’ of Mortgage tearing date the twenty third day of December, A. D., 1879, made he. tween Heniy ‘Taylor, and Mary Jane Tayler, bis wife,of the one part, and Philip Large of the other part. All that tract, piece and parcel of Jand and prem- ises, situate, lying and being on Lot or Tfowuship number sixty-five,in Queen’s County, bounded and described as follows that is to say:— Commencing at a square dost fixed on the North Shore of the Northumberland Straits, at the south eastward boundary of Neil McKachern’s farma; thence runing on said boundgry north fifty-six degrees and thirty minutes east for the distance of one hundred and thirty two chains, or thereabouts; thence south for the distance of four chains, or thereabouts: thence south fifty- three degrees west for'the distance ot one hundred and twenty-three chains, or thereaboute, or until it meets the said shore; thence following the various courses of said shore westwardly, to the place of commencement, containing one hundred acres cf land, more or lees, with the app- urtenances. For turtber particulars W.S. Stewart, Solicitor, Charlottetown Dated this 1897. . apply 10 Mr Y : tT) i Newson BiOCK, 23rd day of July A. D, PHILIP LARGE. Moritgag” dylaw5 Old Bottles Wanted | ] ama ee Old Bott €8 waniea. tr] I iy to ¥ , va S pote ane +4 Great George Street—augivu NN NG LE EEC GONE Sn THE GLD OAKEN BUCKET. Disease May Lurk Inthe Dreft With Which It Refreshes, Let ns now examine into some of the conditions surrounding domestic wells and springs in the larger towns and vil- lages, conditions which also prevail some- times even about rural homes. We shall then be better able to understand how a well, like a Nevada silver mine, nay have ‘millions in it,’? and how ‘‘the old oaken bucket’? may bring from the depths ele- ments of disease with the same draft that refreshes the thirsty throat. For conven- jence a well is situated in the back yard, perhaps a rod away from the house, or it may even be nearer, Certain other things, also for convenience’s sake, are grouped close about the hack docr. Here is a cess- pool but a short distance, perhaps only a few feet, from the well. There is a vault, a filthy institution, which is an open dis- grace to civilization. A little farther away is the garbage heap. In other adjacent localities are the chicken coop, the pigpen and the stable, with their accumulations of decomposing filth. It may be that in a corner a deud animal has been buried to save the trouble of conveying it to a dis- tance. A damp and reeking spot pear. the back door marks the place where the slops have been deposited since the drain to the cesspool became stopped up with the accumulated refuse of half a dozen scars. Every one of the sources cf contamina- ticn mentioned is a contributor to the well. A part of the putrid material floats upon the ground and is disposed of by evaporation, but the greater portion of it soaks into the ground. It isa common error to suppose that whatever has disap- peared into the ground is destroyed. The {lth which has disappeared from the sur- face may be cut of sight, but it is not out of existence. If the soil is filled with refuse of various kinds, the well will be contam- inated. Every rain washes the filth a lit- tle deeper down until it reaches the well proper or one of the underground veins of water by which it is fed. It may not be generally known that a well will draw water a distance of 60 feet.—Arena. Freon ay BUWARD PME Musical Direcior Toronto Conservatory of Music. The Bell Organ & Piano Co.,L’d. Dear Sis,—Allow me to compli ment you on the quelites of the Piano ordered from jou for the To- ronto Conservatory of Music. The tone is remarkably pure and brilliant throughout, while the bass is deep and powerful. The mechanism is appar- ently perfect. the touch elastic, and in appearance the entire Piano is a work of art Yours truly, (Signed) SpwWARD FISHER Musca] Director Toronto C odnser- vatory of Music P. E. Island Ageney, L. P. FGlgle Opera House Building J.C. P. Yeo, Agent at Summerside. ee INTERNATIONAL EAHIBITICN ST. JOHN, N. B. tAth-24th Sept 1897 OVER $12,000 18 PRIZES Live Stock, Furm & Bairy Product Competition open to the world. For Very Cheap Excursion Rates on all ways and Nteamers. Hates and dates nounced later, Rail- ap- Special Arrangements are made for the Cheap transport of Fxaibites. A splendid new Poultry Butidingis in course of erection, anu Amasemeni Hall wiill be enlarged and improved. In addition to industrial, Agricultural and Live Stock Exhibits. six nights of Hand & CO’S Magvitivent Pire Works and an Lourly programme of ‘ al High Class iramatic Effeet, will be given in Amuse- ment M@alf, making together the best and cleanest special attraction ever brought retort the people of the Mariiime Provinces. A trip to the rea Shore, a visit to Canada’s Winter Port, and astay in the cleanest and health est tvin is with a visit to th tnational Exh }e i at the very Low R ttes to ba jater tt Hition advertised Arrange Now to Come to St. Jehn. Entry Forms will be ne wi) applies persouaily or .by ‘ . . r ‘a2 [°eCrs CHAS. A. EVERETT, Manager and Sec! st 2 ‘ 1 rar ‘ : forsarde,l to ev *p3 ietter to Lary, bon, es 1ada, can be combined | | } | 1 j Salute the Colors. We make it comfortable for our prtrons py seltiag then cheerul sh es. Snug, trim looking attractive shapes that are liked immensely are that kind. as our sales show. Oure Men's Lines of Colored Shoes for Summer wear Our Ladies, Oxfords are marvels of beauty and good va!~>. Men’s Bicycle Shoes,a conplete assortment of a . 3 ‘ Low prices. Children’s in all styles. staple lines. Great variety. Misses’ an?é Wreelzs & Warren uonyside Shoe Store. He Must Give Satisfaction . . very workman in our Tailoring Department busy, and is kept We are Rushed with Work And so we should be when we have such an artistic ‘cutter as MR J. J.McDONALD. When you want Good Clothes order from us. =e ee e oe ea] cKay Woo High Grade Tailors. en Co., ne one Sustainin, a J ———— s pedal The greatest triumph of tae Heintzman & Co. wo eee e PldNO. oeeee Greatly iacreases the tone producing power of a Piane Latest and best invention of the musical age. Call and hear it at Ii LER BROS., The P. E. Islan’ Music House. Are Sole Agents on P. E. Island for this Piano. Results are the I Strongest Convincers——= Our advertisements only begin in the papers. The- strongest part of them is in their fulfilment in grving: values that force recognition as genuine bargains, that win appreciation and instil confidence. Woven Wire Mattresses —* are a line we always boasted of being leadergin—a full line of Wire Cots and Mattresses in stock . * We Furnish Houses ” JOHN NEWSON. Newson Block, Victoria Row. Large, fat Herring in half barrels, barrels and quarter barrels, from Sydney, Cow Bay, Madalene and Arichat We will warrant every package we sell, or refund the money. For sale wholesale and retail bv “nD 1% 2 the a . A Ni Oia WBS ek ai ‘se é & Ors VEEP a dite - pa