din dea dias ane ee <aohe het ; ‘ Saves Nteepless, Nervous THE DAILY. EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 3, 1897 People From Insanity, THE GREAT MEDICINE HAS NO EQUAL. Medical men ofthe highest standing, and a host of others competent to judge declare that Paine’s Celery Compound is the only «ffective medicine for the banish- ment of all the troubles that lead to sleep- lessness or Jasomnia. In tke spring season tho isands are res\- less, fretful, nervous, despondent gloomy. They fiad it impossible to obtain restful and swe.t sleep, and svon become physically exhausted; some already are mere wrecks of humanity. Such suiferers cannot with safety trifl> with sieeplessne+s and continued unrest; all in such a conditioa demand immediate and | stomacn, kidneys and sie-p will be your lite blessing. mediciné that acts ina truly natural way to produce sleep and perfect rest. This wondrous remedy of nature should be used rt once if satisfactory and immed- iate results are desired. Do not slow your run-down, nervous system to lead you to the very brink of the grave in spring time. Putting «ff willonly complicate your troubles, and deeper misery wisl be yours. Use Paiue’s Celery Compound and you are assured of perfect action of the heart, liver, and sweet Get “Paine’s,” the kind that cures. Re- succor and aid before nature become: too m?mber that there are miserable imita- overtaxed, itritated system must be strengtheaed. | For, every form of sleeplessuess or in- ; dealer for * Paine’s, Phe weakened, exliausted and | uons ~celery preparations that are worth- ' Jess and dangerons as weil. Ask your “and take no other, if > somnia there is but one remedy, one heal- | you seek for life ani bealth. er; it is Paine’s Celery Compound, the only | = _—-—~ _ — « -_—— e A a q £ ‘ 2 A ae oy ‘ c e is a eee © ie ah Stescds fon BLACKS, cf ibis therc’s no daeat, ae ¢ ‘ | }1- a nam Lia enum GO o ma « gp omammly yc he Sel eihteAdeen et om en cttw Gods — eee. we es ce Jue 3 7 weeeet em 26. TES. Dita omnrdet 1 hes OF WOOi, Cit G22 » orate neee eee tuk ioe ~- “93 wee re we een) — oc t. ‘6 Gi 4f 5 ute. heat -~¢f —_ foo rood tetthin tinso hy tho muceatisccd Wise. -— . e , . o-_ a “3s @-~+~ - Tuupmiag AB CG Pook, Iilustrated.”” & sow int Ve. -- ee a ie . 4 ; Each fetter cf the Aiphabet is 2) inches longs no two ietters of the same color. . ee 5 . ¥ . 4 ™ lot the © cls foo the Httie ones. Sent for s<ent stamp to any adaress WLI TO LET. The house on Richmond St. west, at wesent occupied by Mr. J. M. McLeod. This house ia beautifully situated on the bai bor front, with splendid view. Is fit- ted with all the modern improvements. Apply to Mr. Thos Campbell. WANTED. A machine operator at once. Also, pant and vest makers wanted. None but firat -class workers need apply. J, T. MeKENZIF, wants, Lest, Found &c — a Aaverusements apder this neading charge five centa ver line. mo LET—Cn Lower Queen St. shop and [’ large cellar, suitaole for all kiads of pro- juce. Apply atthis office. 2 yUG DOG —Lost abont a week ago a preg | dog. A reward wil! be paid by Dr. Mac jeod for its recovery. 7é tf. 4 TANTED.—An active energetic agent to \ solicit business for a Jeading Liie In- surance (Co Address P. O. Bx 364. 72, dy 2 wks. TANTED.—A girl to dogeneral hour ewe rk \ refereness required. Apply to Mrs W. W. Wellner, Prince St. ,OARDERS,—A few boarders cen be ac- } commodated at Mrs MeGrigor’« Prince st 63—tf. ee experienced cook, also 8 hous°maid, relerences required. Apply Alley. Prince 64-246 at the resideuce of Mr. Thcs Street. w= ED.—Atonce a cook, references re- quired. Applyts Mrs. b. B= stewart, Euston, 76—3i pd 4 \ TANTED—A Girl for general housework Good wages. Ayply to mrs Fred Per. kins, Brighton Road 76—2i i Qe) VICTORIA: HER LIFE ANI REIGN; great historic work,sells on sigitto thousands, Lord Dufferin in- trouuces it to Canadians in glowing words Easy to make $20.00 a week some make twice: that. Many make morein spare time than during day at reguiar employment. Thi: year's Great Sexagenary Celebrations are booming it. Booksontime, Prospectus free tocanyaersers. Territory eoing fast. Tue B&SADLEY GARRETSON Co Ltc Toronto, Can . ’ S 2= RICIARDSON CO., Montreat. ad Scrofula’ is a word you don’t quite understand, but if ou talk with your doctor, he will tell you that it is generally believed to be due to the same cause which gives rise to Consumption. It appears mostly in those who are fat-starved and thin, usually in early life. <A course of treatment of Scott’s Emulsion with the Hypo- phosites wherever Scrofula manifests itself, will prevent the development of the dis- ease. Let us send you a book. Free. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville, Oat, QUEBEC HEARD FROM. Henry G. Carroll, M. P., for Kameuraska, Que,, Sounds the Priises of Dr. Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder, It will be noticed by those who have studied the testimonials for this wonderfui vatarrh remedy, that they are thorougaly unsectional in character. Every province in the Dominion, through its members of parliament, and most prominent citizens, has told of the peculiar effectiveness of Dr, Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder. It is of a character that overcomes any local or climatic conditions, and as with Mr. Carroll, itiaa most effective remedy for catarrbal troubles, in whatever shape, not Omitting bay fever, where it works like a charm, aod in every case is speedy in ettect. Sold by Dr.S. W. Dodd, Druggiet, Charlottetown, P.-E. Island. . and Despondent MecGiffin’s Tragic End. It is not easy to seo any clear traces yf insanity in the remarkable ‘‘memo”’ ieft behind him by Captain McGiffin. The man doubtless regarded death from astandpoint quite different from that of people who have not faced it so often as he or approached it so closely. He therefore contemplated suicide with en- tire composura, and he probably saw nothing uncourageous in making his last words a vehicle for expressing the common courtesies of life and in tingeing them with a humor which, while slight- ly ironical, betrayed no bitterness and no discontent with the result of a game which he had decided it was not worth while to play to the end. McGiffin was not a man of this age, but a survival of the time when fighting was done for the shecr love of excitement, with booty and pay as pleasing incidents and wounds and death as the unpleasant ones. There is no other expianation of his en- tering the Chinese service or of the reckless courage he displayed in that hopeless encczunter off the Korean coast. It is noticeable that he says ‘‘Au re- voir,’’ not ‘‘Goodby,’’ though to draw from this fact any inferences as to his behefs would be somewhat rash. The calmness of his mind, as well as its na- ture, at once soldierly and considerate, is sufficiently indicated by the first sen- tence in his note, ‘‘Look alive, that the bed is not set on fire by my shot.’’ Ex- tremely human, too, is the satisfaction he took in disappointing the expecta- tions of his doctors. Moliere, of whom in certain ways McGiffin was a con- temporary, would have thoroughly en- joyed the reference to ‘‘a hegira not anticipated by the learned staff.’’— New York Times. The Proposed Statue of Mrs. Stowe. The proposed statue is to be of light copper bronze, of such dimensions as may hereafter be decided, the founda- tions to be about 30 feet square. In the center of the granite foundation stone is to be a subbase about 7 by 10 feet in width and 244 feet high. Upon this subbase is to be a column of granite or marble, surmounted by a suitable orna- mental cap, or top piece, this stone- work to constitute the foundation of the structural work and to be of such height and ornamental design as may hereafter be approved by the committee. The whole structure will be about 25 feet high. Upon this stonework is to rest the statne of bronze, a seated fig- ure, representing Mrs. Stowe in costume and appearance of about the year 1850, holding in her right hand a pen and in her left a manuscript. Beneath, it is proposed to have a large figure repre- senting Uncle Tom with hands upraised toward Mrs. Stewe and on the hands broken shackles. Oneach side of the main pedestal will be set a_ large bronze plate about 3 feet square. On one of these plates will be a figure of Topsy and on the other Eva. Suitable inscriptions will be put in proper places. The work will cost about $22,000, and the state is asked to contribute $5,- 000, not so much perhaps for the mon- ey as on account of the propriety of such interest on the part of the state in commemorating the memory of a Con- necticut woman whose contribution to the cause of frecdom to the slaves is more widely read and appreciated in all countries than any other work ever writ- ten for the cause of liberty. —Hartford Times. An Infant Prodigy. Berlin is wendering over the marvel- ous achievements of Otto Poepler, the son of a butcher. He is an infant prodi- gy of the most infantile and prodigious sort, for he taught himself to read at the age of 2, and now, though only 4 years old, has been deemed worthy of presentation to the Anthropological so- ciety of Berlin as a remarkable speci- men of precocious intelligence. His op- portunities for acquiring imformation ‘ have been small, and yet, from an atten- tive study of the few books that have come in his way and from observing the inscriptions on the monuments with which the German capital is rich, the child has managed to learn an amazing amount cf history end something of lit- erature. He is already interested in Latin and Greek, and a professor who has been investigating the case says Ctto shows remarkable ability for learn- ing languages. The boy has a perfect passion for reading, but his dislike for music amounts almost to horror. For writing he has not yet manifested any aptitude. He has been taught to make the first letters of his name, but rebels at gaining further skill in that line. He is described as well developed, though not robust. Dirty Chicago. A little bit of municipal reform is apparently needed in Chicago. The Chi- cago Evening Post remarks: ‘‘When Washington Hesing, at the banquet of the Merchants’ club Saturday night, said that Chicago was ‘the dirtiest large city in the world except Constan- tinople,’ the truth was so palpable to those present that they were filled with pity and disgust—over Constantinople. And when he said that Chicago’s ‘as- sessment is the most outrageous of any tity in the world’ there was not a man around the table to take issue with the statement, because every man _ there knew that it was notoriously, scandal- ously, discreditably true.’’ ERFECT and permanent are the cures by Hooc’s Sarsaparilla, be- eanse it makes pure, rich, healthy life and health-giving BLOOD. The Venus de Milo, The position of the missing arm of the Venus de Milo, which has so lon? been a puzzle to artists and archeologists, is acrain discussed hy The Illustration, which publishes documents intrusted to it by the Marquis de ‘Trogoff-Lanvaux. The docu- rents established two points—namely, that it was between March 4 and 11, 1820, and notin April, that the statue was discover ed, and that it was then complete and held an apple in one hand. And Uc Was Caromed Off. Traveler (at a crowded hotel)—-How riuch do lowe you? What's my bill? Hotel KeepersLet me sce; your room was—- Traveler—! didn’t have any room. I slept on the billiard table. Hotel Weeper—Ah, well, hour.—Boston Post. 40 cents an The largest sum eyer offered or asked for a single diamond was $2,150,000, which the nizam of Hyderabad agreed to give Mr. Jacobs, the famous jeweler of Simla, for the imperial diamond considered the finest stone in the world. Rakes, hoes and other agricultural im- plements are represented in the Egyptian catacomi)s, eee creer A LD SUFFERING WOMEN Troubled With Weakness Peculiar to Their Sex, HOW THEY MAY BE CURED Dodd's Kidney Pills Act upon the Female Organs as well as upon the Kidneys—Many a Woman Suffers Needlessly. _— Women suffer more than men. From the time a girl-child turns the corner into womanhood, she has more troubles than men ever dream of. We look upon women as weak and fragile, but consider. ing what they endure they are stronger by far. Woman suffer many times more than they need to. Partly because they don’t know what ails them at first, then becauee they are ashamed to tell a doctor; Jatterly because they hate to be a continual source of expense to their hnsbancs. “Female Weakresses” are what we term the diseases peculiar to the female sex. Thev are often confonnded with female Kidney troubles, aad Kidney troubles are often mistaken for other troubles. All those delicate organs are closely connected, W hat affects one affects the others. What cures one, cores the others, tuo. DODD’S KIDNEY PIxLS which are a soyereign cure for all Kidney ills, ast to regulate and control the female organs and to relieve their difficulties. This is worth whiie for every woman to remen- ber. Mrs. Lucy Crabbe, Chambers P. ©, say::—“For years I was a sufferer from weakness peculiar to my sex, combined with kidoey trouble from a'l of which I was completely cered by two boxes of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Mrs. Klmena Ady,Walkerton,Ont ,says: complication of Kidney ‘Trouble and F+imale Disease ; and am glad to say have no pain or ache seee using Dodds Kid-} nev Pills.” DODD’S KIDNBY PILLS, cure Kidney | Disease and Female Weakness. Try them. They are on sale at all druggists. Price 50 cents per box, 6 boxes tor $2.50 Dodd’s Medicine €o., Lid., Toronto, Ont. Sir Henry Strong, Chief Justice of Canada, will leave for London in June to take his seat as a member of the Privy Council, another evidence of closer uuion of the Empire appropriate to the diamond jubilee of Her Majesty. The Domioion government has decided to provide for the expenses of Sir Henry while in London, as there is vo salary attached to the position at present. The rumor is revived that Lieutenant- Governor McIntosh has tendered his resig- nation and that he will be succeeded by Sir Henri Joly de Lotbixiere. YSPEPSIA Cusect BY DR. CHASE. . . FOR EIGHTEEN YEARS W.W.HODGES SUFFERED —DR. CHASE’S KIDNEY- LIVER PILLS EFFECTED AN ALMOST MIRACULOUS CARE hice fase Messrs. EDMANSON, BATES & Co., Toronto. DEAR Sirs,—I take the liberty of writing to ‘you regarding my experience with Dr. CHASE’S Kioney-Liver PILLS, an: the wonderful cure of dyspepsia of 18 years’ standing effected by them with three boxes. Iam as well as I ever was, and am aman of 64 years of age. I have re- commended Dg. CHASE’S KIDNEY-LIVER PILLS to a great number of people and they all say they are worth their weight in gold. If you desire any further statement or certificate of ny case, I wil) be pleased to furnish one. Yours truly, W. W. HODGES, Holland Landing, Ont. Colds — Chaps Coughs Chafing Catarrh Chilblains Are ills to which all flesh is heir. You can relieve and speedil use of our old reliable Anodyne. Generation after generation oon rol he wan oythe faction, aud handed down ttie krowledye of its worth to their children as a valuabl re ta tance. Could a remedy have existed for eighty years except that it possesses great < family use? It was originated to cure all Eilaibete attended with inflammation: eM : asthma, abscesses, bites, burns, bruises, bronchitis, all forms of sore throat, earac Such 4» ls, stings, stat Croup | Cramps | ache, la grippe, lame back, mumps, muscular soreness, neuralgia, scal< stiff joinis, toothache, tonsilitis and whooping cough. The great vital and musc Johnsons Anodyne Liniment It soothes every ache, every bruise, every cramp, every irritation, every 1 eness, = & swelling everywhere. Itis for INTERNAT as qweckh as EXTERNAL abet wa ora in 1810, by Dr. A. Johnson, an old Family Physician, Every Mother should have it inthen ‘Best Liver Pill Made.” Parsons’ Pills Positively cure Biliousness and Sick Headache, liver and bowel complaints. They expel all impurities from the blood. Delicate women find relief from using them. Price 25c; five $1. Sold everywhere. Tuse Johnson’s Liniment for cata tried almost everything recomm : catarrh, but find Johnson’s Anodynehig, far superior to any. I use it as J. H. WHiprie, South Wind Our Bork “Treatment for Diseases” Deector’s Signature and Directions on All Druggsts. LS. Jobuson & Ca,, INSURANCE NOTICE, ALL’: BRIT.SH COMPANIES Absolute security and prompt settlen i North British and Mercantile Fire Ins. Co ...... Assets, $60,000,000,99 Union Assurance Society......... sesteceereceeee seeeeeeesseeees Assets, $15,000,000,% Phenix Fire Gfiice of London ................. ......... Assets, $20,000,000.) Standard Life Assurance Co ..................0........ ... Assets, $60,000,000 00 British and Foreign Marine Ins. Co............... .. Assets, $9,000,000.05 Canada Accident Assurance Co. FRED. W. HYNDMAN | Queen -Street AGENT} RUBBERS. ‘Foralongtime ] have suffered from a | [Pins e ae Gulline Metal Stitched Air Collars} Mace By THE CULLIME PHEUMATIC COLLAR CO., Craxcy, Pg. No sweat pads. The strongest, most durable, lightest, coolest, easiest and best fitting Horse Collars on earth. Heavier loads drawn with less exertion than with any o.her collars. Sure cure for sore necks and shoulders., The stitch- ing is rust-proof metal, is not affected by moisture, and will not rip. All collars, from the lightest buggy to the heaviest dray, are made of the very best leather, and tested by a pressure equal to fifteen tons pull, and are so guarantced, THE GULLINE STRAW COLLARS are also metal stitched znd challenge all others for durability and beauty of finish (the Gulline Pneumatic Coliarsexccpted. ) THE AMES HOLDEN COMPANY, OF MCNTREAL, tro. Sole Selling Agents for Canada, with full stocks at Montreal, Teronto, St. John, N.B., Winnipeg, Victoria & Vancouver, B.C. = Paint it on the fencesand let the people know that Grat- by Rubbers of Iron wear fame are the right kind to buy. Sold by Goff Bros at same price as others s2ll common sorts. oor? Goods. — New __ We have just opened five lines of the following:-—Eng- lish and American Hats & Caps, OVERCOATINGS SUITINGS TROUSE RINGS The latest styles, popular makes and shades, The correct things for the coming season. We give the best values. Sev our prices. JOHN MACLEOD & CO ____ MERCHANT TAILORS. The Mutual Life Insurance Co., of N. ¥: .wee. 9224 744,190 137.005.195.29 918.698.338.595 Pe 8 in ic, dccncncos oak Fin obehwelsibiies NE 5. 5. ss eee sian WE sd ive Paid to Policy holders since organization. _.. SAD TI TOD 5 oc. 5 «ono Fedesdevinisies ctv ncecceees This Company issues the most liberal policies, and pays larger profits that any other Company, ? Policies payable in Canadian curreney. JOHN MACEACHERN, AGENT.