EEE SSS The Daily Examier) —=— RATES OF SETRSOCRIPTION E DAILY EXAMINER. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Enuripides. CHARLOTTETOWN P. ISLAND, SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1896. Single Oopies Two Oenta ee a eee. eels cians a “Why Some Succead The shrewd advertiser is the one who knows how, when and where to advertice. | The merchants who advertise in Tne Examiner | owe not the men to make mistakes, ~ | as you can see for yourself. NO 26. | But you may get the benefit | of their experience by watching | how, when and where they advertise. | Scme papers pay advertisers, | Some do not, | many do not. Only a few pay, and they can be picked out | by the large amount of advertising thev dp ae W si.ao _ Menthe 2.00 Serer Se see = TERMS : Four Dollars a Year I ca Lia « { THE WEEKLY CXAMINER - og y afied wwe \ O a3 36. aS WeeRTYV Lat wspaper we CxacSs: AB FOR AUGUST 14546, , N sy iu For Sale er To Rent, | at Q lay 219m. pa = j oe | bev a : j : The Brick House on Prince Street, op New » " am, 8 ™. posite St. Paul’s Church, Heated by hot First Q jay, 4 m water Kiectric light, ete Apply to Pull % : may, < ‘7s » = S. R. JENKINS La ARE YOU GIING Td | - — — |, — |; — | | | 4 =| ry OSTON | Sa'urda $47,725) San] : 41 I 3:58 4 2 | 2 4 z0 6 48 —BY THE— ‘ ’ ) ) S 4 lec’ 1 8) E / FAST p >. | 9 4 - a! Sa 10 2 9/8 . ; ll x ry) M ct. 164 Fh 4 > : *' Lg | : meen 5 B Ay your tickets by the SS H Al IFAX, 13 . : 7 >» | leaving Chaclottetown every Friday at | 7. : : ae “o | Lp. tar 3 ay | ~ ‘ } l vi £6 | Priday iat SoS W. W. CLARKE 5/8 v 5 $ | 2 30; . * (Edi te wis . j 2 ; 3 Ticket Agent. 7| M | 7 »1 a § May 2¢ d&w is ] j . » &é i i z | wii i‘ : ia’ ' ‘ i 45] 2 tj v i | , ! wer ’ , ‘ ‘SY 26 | Thor i) 3) $f] STEAMER FASTNE T. 22 : Sa y | »2 10 i a ae . a . at. AY . . sie ae The steamer Fastnet commences her My & BY ! ™ .S . oe ovre ason’s work, sailing from Halifax 6 | Tuesday a i £6 | : = ' TUESDAY, M ay Sth, and will continue 2 Wel. esday i As : ? aft 12 to 88 | weekly, leaving Halifax every 7 ‘Vv | 2 +3 0 : Cuesday, calling at the following ports 3 2 i lata a0 ’ y a — : mi Sheet Harbor, 30 ‘ i Zs = ae . 3 2» Salmon River, i r Isaac’s Harbor, = ‘ Can-<o, PE Islaad Railwa iit ; . s u 4 Port Hawkesbury Bio Oe Port Hood, Onand after FRIDAY i July, 1 Souris Charlottetown and Summerside. the trains of th's Railway will rua dbily Sundays exce; .¢ |) as follows .— Freight solicited. Low rates. MEF 0 \ 0 ( eards. Oe ing before it will be cleared out on all this class of goods, and it will pay you to inspect, But Taik Abou ™~ “ Our prices on all snidsummer goods are down to the fine point a splendid selection of summer Readymade Clothing for children, youths and men, Our prices on these are tempting bates, and we are having a very good catch, but our stock is a tremendous one and will require so. ne pretty lively buy- Don’t forget we are offering real inducements & Call here, 4} THE FINE POINT. pales! But the bates we offer in our Custom Tailoring Department are such tha taste cannot resist, The finest and newest cloths, made up in a style that caunot be surpassed in America, and at the most reasonable prices are our drawing Would you be togged out up to the nines, McKay Woolen Co. BARGAIN CORNER A ) »} \ } We hae Tr p 4 we STAT NS ‘ I W. W. CLARKE, Agent. : Ch’town, April 20, 1896—dy 33 ie. » 15/12. 10 |] ——————————— 352 6 44 9 O11] 48 es +; ii ‘ S$ Zk a) ~ : = : + <4 : rovincia dans § 3t 7 & i 7 410 Uy ' 644758.) 7 48) 9 57 Under Act 57 Vie , Cap. 6, 5 59 $8 OS 7 38) 9 42 and Amendment 6 2) 8 2 _. Kens 72, 092 6 55 8 45 Ar. ) (I 7008 8 45 Ta mi’ of the amount having been ex- 7 D110 ; 39 ‘ 6 05! 8 10 tended by statute of last session, the Gov- i ; > : - ; sc . . |] @ ee rament of this Province is now prepared to (toi? co ’ ) 4.2 4 06} receive loans for short or long periods In- 8S 12)]0 49 W og > 16) 7 SS | terest 4 percert Loins payabl- at call or at 8 Wil » (331711 suck tim? @. my Ge agreed apon 9211 # ' 2 15) 2 2 ANGU3 MeMILLAN, oe we a2 & Provincial Treasure 9m 11 2 DS 6 O4 0 2 2? 13 5 40 = = oO 4 ; (ei lig 1 OS’ 5 OO 64 2 ix 9 15' 5 4 66 7(& 3 14 | 901 5 BZ 938 337 8 371 4 47 BIO 4 F. aece i $15 41 SD 4 ; j S14 vim 4. 74232 SZ 4 51j..5t. Peters ..... 7D 2G 0 t6 52 Bear | S ciee 6 46 2 & lili 6a “ 615 12 - 1 M Bo 4 M 8 10, 3 &S c 037 1 38. .Cardig 7172 FROM ANCIENT INDIA wwe 5l ry ‘ 7m 21 ano SWEET CEVLON.”* A. M \ ut 7 & I t 7 s 4 Tr 7 00 M ! Older leaves conta in those we use. Trains are run by Eastern Standard Tim A McDONALD, D. POTTINGER, superintendent, Gen Mgr Govt. Rys, Charlottetown. Moncton, N B Raiwar Office, June 3). 18% 476. BCc+ 6Oc. -_ Aré not injurious to nerves or stomach because early pickings only are used in blending. in strong acids that are not found Delicate or Nervous Women Should Drink Tetley’s. In lead Packets to preserve their Fragrance, TOc. Pea La. Wharf daily (Sundays excepted ), . 2552225252 522522552> 22552525 555-= TIME TABL© FOR FERRY STEAMERS | > = — | 2 2 7 .f r Sout! port w ply on the = f = Eat and st Rivers until further notice | = Onlv ag Few i3f6 ¥ a ‘ - = s a“ emt = - = EAST RIVER = = W ave Pi Street Wharf on everv| ¥ i . '> " . = ~~ se Monday for Ea-t River at cataals Dm = Altnough our stock of BABY CARRIAGES wee & retur g Tueeday for sharlottetown, 'F ei 2 ae cme i gee < => leaving Hayden's Wharf at 730 0. m7 { received a little late, we have only a few left. 7 ea at SHaggarty’s and Hickey’ | 2% These we do not want to carry over. They = Whar aving Charlottetown for East oe => River a , and making return trip.| 2 2 also leave Prince Stree: | == = wor oso «51 Wiiust be Sold = a : ¢ Havden’s Wharf for Cuar a = etown st 730 a. m, calling at Higgar | SS : = ty’sarnd Hickey’s Wnarves— making re = ¥ it ae Or eaten 1 Dou’t neglect this opportunity of buying good 2 e at . Mouct Stewar | == ° . — every alternate weck as the tides may suit| © carriage much lower than the re_u'ar price ¥ WEST RIVER. = = W rot wo for West River = = Bridge, 7 reday, at 4 p.m., calling at 2 ——_ — We-t: tired Fr lay moro- = — ing lea gy We-t Kiver Bridge for Char = = lottetow at 7 , calling at Westville = f FE N = making return trip from ¢ harlottetoan to| SS ¢ we West iver Bridge at 4 o’clock, p. m. > = ROCKY POINT. = = (3 as fol- - - : 4 J lows :—At 6.30 a. m, 8.00 a m., 9.30 8. ni, lla. m.,2p.m.,4p. m., and 6.00 p.m W eave Ro ky Point aa fullows : ~At 7.00 4. m., 8.30 a.m., 1000 a.m., 12.60 boo f p ™., 5.00 p. m., 7.00 p. ™ in a ° ' Sundave - From Charlottetown at 9.00 did it i & m., 2.45 p.m., 200 pm ani 4.06 s p.m. From Rocky Point—t0.00 a. m., : Fa 1.30 | » 3.00 p. m. and 5.30 p. m. Bad soap—bad skin. Starts } I I 4 SOUTHPORT FERRY. pimples where there were none i J ¢ Hili-borough will ply on takes. them worse where M the S rt Fe rry till further notice a- here are some. Delicate skin y fe} Ww ‘43 i asl s sve excepted, leaving Charlotte ceeds a delicate detergent like & Sa aly a 650 om, enn oves Uae cdl BABY’S OWN SOAP. | hour vy 16 p.m. Leaving Southport j : = at making half hourly trips up| i licen; skia soft and healthy. MH it sume " ¢i— < ' ' 1 ee | te ‘ tow a 7. ‘ : " aan! i d by all druggists. hy ave iown ¢ Ss Tey e es] } half rips upto & s5 p. m. Stearn.er} { a | o 1.15 wo I2oreleck, room | HH THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., MONTREA!. On 7 i Friday of each week the t ” adhe : ’ {| Meamer n off time to ace modate . ; ata i ff time to accommoda toe zx ee ea ee ee eS Se ee eS se tra ry ‘ eet eg 2 ea And examine the contents. We can “J heret.y certify that | have drawn, | ‘apply you with all kiads of jum li Will Pay You. Scarde, Shingles, Scantling, Stud SUGAR, indiseriminately taken from ten with no impurities whatever.” ding, etc a : » A lot of laths just landed. | (Signed) JOHN BAK JAMES BARRETT, \N mays Connolly’s, W hart. aaa tO tl St Lawrence Sugar Refining Co., Ltd, Montreal Laboratory of Ioland Revenue, Office of Official Analy-t, Montreal, April 8th, 1895. y my own hand, ten samples of the ST LAWRENCE SUGAR R#FINING Co’s EXTRA STANDARD GRANULATED lots of about 150 barrels each. | Lave | analyecd same, aod find them uniformly to con‘ain: $9 9 to 100 per cent. of Pure Cane Sugar. ER EDWARD4, Ph D., C. L, Prof. of Chemistery and Pub. Analyst, Montre RATTENBURY, AGENT SCOLDING WOMEN. Formerly aGreater Pestin Eugland Than at the Present Day. Formerly the ‘common scold”—the woman who made her neighbors’ live: intolerable with her raging temper, he: bitter tongue, her slanders and calum- uies—was found everywhere. Laws were passed recognizing her as one kind of criminal. There were twe forms of punishment by which she was repressed or deterred, or cowed intc gentleness; viz, the cucking-stoo) and the brank. The cuckiny-stool as sumed various shapes, but it generally consisted of a chair on one end ofa beam, which rested on a bar so as te make a see-saw. Sometimes the chair was hung from the beam by a chain. The culprit being tied on the chair, the other end of the beam went up and the chair went down into the water, sous: ing the woman completely. They did this three times, after which they let her go. Such stools belonged to nearly every parish; like the stocks and the pillory, they formed part of the furniture of justice. For instance, about London. There was one on Bankside, with which they ducked the wives of the players. There was one at Ratcliffe; one at Kingston-on-Thames, and there was one which stood till the beginning of thiscentury beside the great pond or reservoir of the Green Park. Apparently the chair and the cold bath did not completely destroy the ferale tendency to scold, for it was found necessary to invent another punishment, which was extensively adopted, although not authorized by the law. This was the “brank,” or *‘scold’s bridle,” which consisted of a small cage formed by iron hoops to fit the head, with a piece of iren which pressed the tongue and formed the gag. Thus adorned, the scold was either led or carried about the town for all the world to see. Sometimes she was placed ona high scaffold. ‘Phe brank was used in some places down to the beginning of the century. Its disuse, its disippearance, the universal obliv- ion of the punishment makes one in- cline to the belief that the scold has also disappeared. However, such is not thecase. The disease or infirmity of scolding still exists, but in a much milder form. The mildness of the modern form is mainly due to the im- proved conditions of life. Two hundred years ago the village househo!d was insufficiently fed, the quality as wellas the quantity of the food was bad, work was hard, men were rough. husbands beat their wives habitually, incold weather they were thinly clad; in hot weather their clothes were too thick. If there was any indulgence possible, it took the form of beer. ‘Tea did not exist. Children, hungry and cold, cried all day and all night; everything combined to exasperate a woman. What wonder if from time to time. she lost control of hersclf and beeame _ copiously eloquent over her wrongs? Things have greatly improved. The husband no longer—or very seldom—beats his wife; the food has become cheap; wages have gone up; luxuries, formerly un- attainable, have become necessaries; the scold is dying out of the land, be- cause there is so little left to scold about.— Philadelphia Ledger _—=s == = aD Rolled Oats, Oatmeal POT BARLEY, &c., AGENCY. Having teen appointed Agent for Walte Thomyson’s Mills, Seafurth, Ont., I am prepared to receive orders fur the above Guaranteed the best quality. Please get quotations before purcbasing elsewhere, W,W. CLARKE, agent wkynl = = = ‘al YARIS Re Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE | SPAIN FROM A CAR WINDOW. | The Country Was Dry and Dusty and Seem- | ed Burned to a Cinder. It was fiery hot. It was noon when we reached the junction of Bobadilla where we turned eastward toward The carriage seemed;n furnace, its wood was fire to our touch, the air that came through the windows was burning. The country was scorched to a cinder; the | mountains glittered in the heat; the shadeless towns quivered in a hot haze like a mirage. We lay back, panting, fanning ourselves with our hats and our guidebooks. We came to baked, dust- driven stations; at each was the same ery of ‘‘Water! water!’’ from the women who made a living by selling it, and the people in the train who were trying to drink it. To names—Antequera, Loja, San Fer- nando—¢hat earlier had thrilled us in Murray and Washington Irving we were now indifferent, as they were spluttered by the dust-choxed guard. For hours the horizon was bounded by low mountains, with here and there tiny patches of snow on thetr upper slopes. But where were the dazzling, glowing, snow-peaks of the Sierra Nevada, that loom up so mag- nificently 1n the romance of Washington Irving, and in the story of every traveler who has been to Granada? True, through the cane-brake, stifling in the torrid air, we had seen two or three low hills crowned with live groves, planéed like a map, and on the top of each something that looked like the ruins of gigantic brick-kilns or tumbled- down factories. Granada must be near, for we had passed San Fernando; but neither to the right nor to the left could we see the minarets of the Moorish city, o7 the domes of Catholic Spain. Slower and slower went the train, and then it stopped. Every one got out, and we knew it was Granada,—‘‘Lights and Shadows of the Alhambra,’’ by Elizabeth Robins Pennell, in the Century. Th? Question Answered. The Reason Why Same Daz'- ers Seil Pooe Dyes Many lalies who have been deceive! by the imitation dyes so often sold by some dealers and draggists ask the question, “Why will these merchants p-rsist in selling us dyes that are positively wortli- less ?” The qnestion is easily answered. The dealers who se.l these common dyes ¢o se fora very selfish obiect—b‘g profit-. Tuev bay these crule and poisonoi: dyes for much less than the celebrate! Diamond Dyes co-t, and they are sold to the ladies at th> sem» price, ten cents per packer. The dealers in this way make Jong, big protit», while the deceived consumer muse suff-r loss at every time of using. Dealers know well that the D’amond Dyes are the ouly true an! warrante! col- ors, but the love of gain is too great ty allow them to treat the public honestly. Tue ladiescan soon compel d-alers to do what is bonest and right if thev insis every time upon getting the Diamcnd Dyes. Yotican always find one dealer i: your town that is anxious to sell dyes that wiil give entire satisfaction. “Dandy” dressing for ta: shocs for sale at KR. K. Jost’s. 4000's Sarsaparilla has over and over again proved by its cures, when all other preparations failed, that it is the One True BLOOD Purifier. Granada. | To Prevent Brass Tarnishing. To prevent brass from tarnishing after polishing with any good paste, apply a solution of a quarter of an ounce of shel lac to quarter of a pint of methylated | spirit. Sct in a glass bottle and cork. Your off the clear fluid and apply to the , brass with a camel-hair brush. Before ; Going this heat the brass, if possible, jand again after painting over with var- ‘ nish. Good LKeseolutions. “Dah am er good many folks,’’ said seems ter tink dat Unele Eben, *‘dat when dey’s made er good resolution dey’s done tu’hned out er day’s wuh’k.’’ More Phan Fneugh, “Do you think that two heads are bet- ter than one?’’ “Well, the one I quite subicient.’’ had last night was Be Well and You Will be Happy. Paine’s Celery Compound Naiure’s Aveaue to Health. Tf you are sick and out of sorts, it is within your power to rake yourself healthy and strong. Thereis not th: slightest reason why you should go through the hot snmmer weather feeling miserable, languid and melancholic. To be well means happiness and true joy, an! this is the season that you shou'd be bright, hearty «nd glalsome. 1 Let us witn sincerity and honesty diree- your attention to Paine’s Celery Com pound, nature’s avenue to health and per- tect physicai strength and robustness. This marvel'ous health giving medicine begins its vitalizing work at the great Lerve centres and soon Lrace up the weak end frail body, giving every organ that is out of tune tbat full vigor and strength so necessary fur the complete working of the whole human frame. Paine’s C-lery Compound is ‘suited for all ages anl conditions; it is purely vege- table, p'easant to u-e and prompt and effi- cacious in the mo-t dang rous and subt cares. Thoiacis now. living owe thei: lives to th 3 worlerful medicine that a! ways wek-s sick people well. If yo. area douber ani hive not any friends that can vouch for all that is said about Paine’s Celery Compound, send fur our byok of corv.ucing cares, matled free to any wldress. Wells & Richardson Co., Mootreal. e_ —> Every ingredient in Man= ley’s >Celery-Nerve Com- pound is a blood maker and | health giver. If you are weak or run down, try it. Dear Sirs: It is with pleasure I can recommend others to take Man- ley’s Celery-Nerve Com: , ast = thoroughly satisfied itis a ster- & it, and in all cases tt ee Dry Goods M — y 360 Youge St, Terente. ” & Johnston, Charlo:tet wn and Souris, For sale by Geo E.'Huzhes and Jolnstg ve | CHURIM ; ERV.CzS. | MITHODIST. Prince Street—Prayer meeting at 10.15. | Rev. W. J. Kirby at ll, and Rev. W. T. oo mF. Sundiy School and ' Bible Class at 2.30. Upper Prince St.—Prayer meet nz at > ay. T..Merekell ot °31 and 7. San lay Schoo! and Bible Class at 2.15. Eosorth League at 3.30. Strangers cor dially invite’; com‘ortable seats provided. Sacrament at the close of the eveaing ser vicr. PRESBYTERIAN. Zion—Prayer meeting at 10.15. Rev D. Sutherland at 11 and 7, School and Bible Class at 2.39. St. James’ —Praser meeting at 10- tev. T. F. Fullerton at 11 and 7. day School and Bible Ciass at 2.30. Sun ROMAN CATHOLIC. First Mass, 7.30a.m. Children’s Masa, Sa. m. High Mass at 10.39 o’clock. Ve-pere and Benediction, 7 p. m. CHURCH OF ENGLAND. St Pau's —Holy Comn anion at 8.30. Vorning prayer at il. School and Bible Class at 2 30. Eveninz prayer at 7. Holy Baptism at 4. A | seats frre and unappropriated., Every- budy welcome. St. Peter’=.—Aloly Communion at & and 11. Matins, 10.15 Ciuildren’s catechising and Bible Classes at 2.30. Evensong at 7 All seats free and unappropriated, BAPTIST. Prayer meeting at 10.30. Rev. C. W Corey at ll, and 7. Sunday School and Pastor’s B.vie Class at 239. Strangers welcome ani provided with comfortable seate. CHRI TIAN Church, Upper Great George Street Professor Norton, Labo le, M svour’, at 11 and 7. Sunday Scheel and Bible Class at 2.30. Y.P.S.C.E. praver meeting Widaes lay evening at 8 o’clock. A cordial! invitation to all, SALVATION ARMY, Sunday Services, at 7, 11, 3 and 8, Week night services.—Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 8 p. m. RAILWAY MEN. Gospel Meeting —Remember the Gospel! meeting in Philharmonic Halil Sunday afternoon at 4 o’clock, conducted by the Railway men. Strangers always wel- come. Lesson, John, 13-8, “If I wash ” thee net. ST. THOMAS CHURCH, LONG CREEK. Morving service and sermon by lay readers every Sunday at 11 a. m.—the fourth Sunday in each month excepted. Holy Communion on the fourth Sunday in each month—-ervice and sermon by Rev. Mr. Andrews. Mr. Andrews wil! also con- duct a service and deliver a sermon on the second Wednesday of each month. MYTHS OF HISTORY. Modern tesearch Has Wrecked Many Cherished Stories. The path of recent historical research is strewn with the wrecks of discredited myths, but of all these the wreck of the once cherished story of William Tell, Gessler and the apple is the most con- spicuous. In 1760 a German book was published casting doubts on the narra- tive, and this hook was publicly burned py the hangman of the canton Uri. It is now proven beyond any doubt that neither Tell nor Gessler had any exist- Sunday | | flicted with | Sunday | was contemplated. my legs, drawn up out of shape. |} wreck. i | | | i j | take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. ence, and the story of William Teil is now forbidden to be inserted in school books. Among many other myths ence accepted as fact the following are conspicuous: The pass of Thermopylw was defended, not by three hundred Spar- tans, but by seven thousand Greeks. Nero did not chant the ‘Burning of Troy’? during a conflagration in Rome, and he did not murder his mother. Con- stantine the Great was great only as a scoundrel. The priest at the guil- lotine did not say to Louis XVI: ‘‘Son of St. Louis, ascend to Heaven!’’ and the king did not die with dignity, for he struggled with his executioners and screamed for help and mercy. The Span- ish Armada was not scattered by the winds of Heaven. ‘The winds changed four times in its favor and saved it each time from destruction. In fact, if the wind had not gone right round to the south just after the battle of Gravelines, it is highly improbable that a single ship would have escaped. Carriage and Visiting Toilettes. There is no end to the charming de- signs for carriage and visiting toilettes— many of them as dainty as dreams. White mohair forms the base for many of the smartest toilettes. A fetching one 1 have in mind is made up with a wide skirt and jaunty Eton jacket and is beau- tifully embroidered in an open wcrk pat- braid is a favorite decoration in many of these natty toilettes. A handome gown of illuminated mo hair showing tints of soft rose and velvet is made up with a blouse of Persian mousseline de soie in the same shade, and frills of rose yelvet. Black and whit effects are still much the rage, and form the color scheme for many of the elabor- ate costulnes. A charming dainty gown of black mousseline de soie, thickly embroidered with small leaves in white bhoniton lace, is made up over a foundation of black taffeta, and Javishly trimmed with frills of yellow point de venise and broad black satin ribbon. The skirt is trimmed with lengthwise frills with flat insertions of the lace, an extremely Frenchy touch. The bodice is round and smoothly fitted with the black gauze drawn loosely over it. There are double ripples at the waist of the black satin ribbon, edged with the narrow lace, finished at the waist by a narrow belt of cut steel and jet. The sleeves are banded with ribbon and lace lavishly, and are cut in a deep point at the wrist to extend over the hand. A smart French sailor hat to be worn with Swiss | tern with shades of tan and brown. Go d | this gown is in the dead white braid, | faced with fancy black braid, trimmed with a huge knot white ribbon valley. ind bunches of lilies of the Growing Up. “T wish he could always remain a baby,’’ many a mocher has said, as she has suddenly realized that Time is almost imperceptibly, yet surely, carrying the little boy away. The man, though, takes his place, more helpfully, more intelli- gently; but it is not the same. ‘I wish he could always remain a baby.’’ A writer of note has truthfully and beautifully written in regard to the training of the man-child: ‘*To-day he is at your feet; to-day you can make him laugh, you can make him cry, you can make his eyes fill and his swell with recitals of good and noble deeds; in short, you can mold him if you wil) take the trouble. But look ahead some years, When that littfe voice shall ring in deep bass tones; when the small form shall have a man’s weight and tramp; when a reugh beard shall cover that lit- tle round chin, and the wilful strength of manhood fill out that httie form. Then you would give worlds for the key to his heart; but if you lose it now when he is little, you may search for it care- fully some day with tears and never find it ” bosom and | of black and | ommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla.”’ SSCHSOSSS SSSVOSOSOOOA *§SOSSSSOSSCOSCEOSEOE Cripple The iron grasp of scrofula has no mercy upon its This demon of the blood is often not satisfied with causing dreadful sores, but racks the body with the pains of rheumatism until Hood's Sarsaparilla cures. “Nearly four years ago I became af- scrofula and rheumatism, Viade Running sores broke out on my thighs. Pieces of bone came out and an operation I had rheumatism in I lost ap- petite, could not sleep. I was a perfect I continued to grow worse and finally gave up the doctor’s treatment to Well Soon appetite victims. | came back; the sores commenced to heal. My limbs straightened out and I threw away my crutches, 1 am now stout and hearty and am farming, whereas four years ago! was a cripple. I glad}y rec- L URBAN HAMMOND, Table Grove, Illinois. Floods Sarsaparilla Isthe One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass, : " cure liver ills, easy to Hood Ss Pills take, easy to operate, 25c. SOSH] TISS SSCL ISIE SE0EHECOCOS S UNLIGHT SOAP PICTURES WRAPPERS A pretty colored picture for every 12 “ Sunlight” or every 6 “‘Life- buoy” Soap wra; pers. These pctures are wel] getting worth ADDRESS: Lever Bros., L'd, 23 *ecott §t, Toronto See ton & Miteh il, Helifac for Nowa I-t acd * gents Seo ia and Prinee FE lward ont oe 2 24848484 S323 4844 42 OO SG 308 2% © 32 O ff 28 @ @ OE STEAMER ~CAMPANA,” i A eae Quetec Steamship Company. _ fine steamship is now running regularly between Montreal and Charlottetown, calling at Quebec, Father Point, Gaspe and Perce. Eleganily Furnished for the Passenger Trade—Eleciric Lights threughont. Freight carried at reasonable rates, and bandled with Great care. Special! rates made for Dry Goods, or any laige qaantity wr mercbandize. Eggs Carried Very Cheap. The sailing dates are:— From Montreel. kth June tea 6th July ca.” 3rd Ang. iim 6 me lth Sept. From Ch’town, let. June lea 6 * a CU 13th July aa 10th Aug t 4th Sept. CARVELL BROS., Agents. May 2&h—2aw (1 4), 2m t- a7 . we ; VERY FANIILY tt SHOULD KNOW THAT wes Is a very remarkable remedy, both for IN- TERNAL and EXTERNAL use, and won- derful in its quick action to r-lieve distress. PAIN-KILLER is & sure cure for Sore Throat, Coughs, Chills, Diarrhea, Dysentery, Cramps, Vholera, and ali bowel Compilainu. > . PAIN-KILLER 2255 Beer sre: Sickness, Sick. Headache, Pain in_ the Back or Side, Rheumatism end Neuralgia, a is TNOUVESTION APhY the PAIN KILLER Bis LENIMENT MADE, It brires SPEFDY AND PEEMANENT RELIDE in all cases of Bruises, Cats, Sprains, Severe Burns, ete. is the well tried and PAIN-KILLER trusted friemd of the Mechanic, Farmer, Planter, Sailor, and is factall classes wanting a» medte:ne «iways st hand, and SATE To Us® *mtermaily or externally with Certainty of retief. ; ef lhuitations Kewar Take none but the cenuine *PEKRY DAVIS” dvld everywhere; .5c. big bAtie tub Robb-Armstrong Engines. Correct Design, Best Work man-hip ROBB ENGINEERING CO. Ltd, Awherst N: 8S. ° + EN gaa tole antag peso tid gat negra ee eet ye ge peri cs peepee 9 A ee gg > Seca 9 ig ghey tig rte ees ergo & 0 ae bo ue dita i= ete * th ee 2