f; j 4 ‘ OE AB Ae: NE AAI MM oe NS a apse 2 Se a ae a 9B nn ER sere: see alee Senn n om = ot A ei a sian agape Coad DOS ery. ar 2mEP — ne ee THE DAILY EXAMINER, Se JUNE 11, 1898, veraataebameteaee rae APPALLING DRATH From Kidney Disease Prevented by Dodd's Kidney Pills, Only. “ Kidney Disease.” Do you know what it means? It means that the kid- neys are either rotten, or rotting; the Photography | is Easy | Photography | All 1898 Kodaks use our light-proof film Cart tidges and can be Loaded in Daylight. $5.00 to $35.00. EASTMAN KODAK CO. Roi chester, N. Yr Das, Beale's ee | St. manta i Grafton and Gt. Gs». We still have some very | extra brands of French Cham | Mum’s Extra Dry. : pagnes <n **tock. | Alfred Greatier «& ; JOY & DAVIES —_—- | Wants, Lost, Found, &t,. Grand Mousseux, Chateau de Pierland, Gieslen & Co. a Avize, TO LET.—One half of that double tene- ment house on Queen St. Apply to rs | Younker, 132 2rw6i | WANTED.- _An experienced clerk in the hoet and shoe business, in the citr. must have geod reference, Address box 328, , oe Charlottetown, 131 ai WANTED-—A Maid Servant, Mrs Geo. Peake, Euston St, —. —— Apply to 131 WANYTED.—At Victoria Cafe, a smart girl todogeneral work. Good wages — John P. | Joy. 131 ” PASTURE TO 1 FT.- For two « cows, che? p | &pply to Wm. Murray, Pownal St. 131 WANTED.—A housemaid. Apply to Mra. E. Bayfield. "W ANTED—A girl for general housework, good wages. Apply to the Central House . 126 Iw — TO LET—A conveniently situated and com fortable house en Uorer Hillsboro St, with bay window and six rooms. besioes#large p?n- try, and large clothes closet. 4 pply te Aud- rey Brown, at Mark Wright & Co’s. 126 tf TO LET—That heantifully situated house on Brighton Road, now occumed by Vrs @ameron, containing nine roemsand bath- room, and heated by het warer, and fitted for electric Oe Possession given June 5th Apply to W.C Harris, Architect, )25 PASTURE TO LET -- Within city limits. Water thereon. Apply to J. A. Longworth. SiORE TO LET—in a short time—The ahop occupied by Johnson & Johnson, Drug gista, next to london House Correr. Apply at once to Goff Bros. 246—2wks — oo es WANTED=—Agont « for new season, new Semples, new plan of engage-ment. hake Bros Co., Montreal WANTED — \ Cook. Apply to Mes. F. Ww. Hyndman, Kent St. 7 TO LET— On Haviland Street, opposite the Charlottetown Hospital, a house conteining nine rooms, at present occupied ny Conductor Gillis. Possession eiven about l0th June. Beautiful !ecation, rent moderate, A’ ply to Mrs Connolly next door, or to John Conn- olly, corner Queen and Dorchester Sts. 116 TO LET. -A confortable cottage on Rich mond St west, Possession given June ‘4th, or earlier, if desired, Apply to James LD. Mason, TO LET —The house and premises Known | aa the “Old London House, ’ situate on Wate St., next+> Government Warebonse No Ir Appl’ to Peake Bros & Co. jan2s-—tf ssrenpeneenemeeat cnnennags ian WANTED -—Sute2ssfu! cinvwsers in anv Hneto act as closers, $¥.0) per month and eapenses. Address box 679, Montreal. Seasonable. r WE Salis The most Sparkling | can’t do their work ; | pale colored ; pe blood is full of poisonous, death- dealing corruption; that the Kidneys that the victim is a walking charnel-house; that his hours are numbered ; that the victim must take Dodd's Kidney Pills if he does not want to die. Have you Kidney Disease? Is your skin hot and dry; memory fail- ing; breath short; urine, reddish, or does it scald when passing ; is your appetite changeable ; do your ankles swell ; have you bitter taste in the mouth on getting up mornings; is there a brick-dust de- posit in your urine? Any of these signs is proof positive of Kidney Disease. Will you be cured, or will you die? Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the only means on earth that will cure you. They never fail. od ES The D&A — cetaad ‘CREST’ doen if , a ; C—) 0} CORSETS (| Stand every strain. Always comfortable and absolutely un- breakable, every active woman needs one. Unrivalled for golfers and bicyclists. Cost only 25c. more than regular D & Astyles, and made in all sizes. Ask to see them. (s) PURE Your horse will look twice as well, feel twice as well, do twice as BLOODE much work, sell for twice as much money, if you tone his HORSES system up with Dr. HaRvEy’s CONDITION POWDERS. No other condition powder will be so ef- fective as this well tried remedy. If your dealer does not sell it we will mail you a full size package, as sample, cn receipt of price, 25c. THE HARVEY MEDICINE Co., 424 ST. PAUL, MONTREAL, » eA NCW NREC ae 3 se) ; A NEW DRESS: FOR 10 CENTS A package of Magnetic Dyes will ° > make a new dress of your old one. e @ Quickly and easily done. ®) @ _ All materials can be dyed sorr ~~ S ® like new, and MACNETIC DYES e will do it, 6 For sale at all stores, or full size packet as 5 sample, aay cis postpaid, on receipt of ® @ price, 10c. e 2 HARVEY clini CO., 424 St. Paul, Montreal @ PLSWSDLALALOLALVOLDLDLOVSE THE EXAMINER CALENDAR For June, MOON’S CHANGES. 4th day, Full Moon. llth day, Last Quarter. 18th day, New Moon. 26th day, First Quarter. 1898. LIME JUICE he finest flavored FRUIT SYRUPS A. few California Wines and Ciders still in stock. SANDERSON & C0 in all its branches at the Exam- LXER Office, one ef the best equip ped Job Printing Establishment, — =F. Fe Island, NI tie gr “wie = High Wa Sun “ of We’k —— sett Q Morn. Aft. Rises Sets. 1 Wednesday! 9 1510 20 3 54 7 31 2' Thursday 9 57 '11 17 54 31 3 Friday 10 33 ‘12 10 53 32 4 Saturday 11 10 | 1 00 53 33 5 Sunday ll 49 52 34 6 Monday 1 50 (12 35 52 35 | 7 Tuesday 2 39 | 12) 51 35 8 Wednesday 3 28 | 2 26 51 36 9 Thursday 418 3 33 51 37 10 Friday 500 4 47 51 37 11 Saturday 600 6 03 50 38 | 12 Sunday 6HizMi SB 39 } 13 Monday 739 830, 50 40 | 14 Tuesday 827 9 41 50 40 : 15 Wednesday 9 12 1 40 50 40 | 16 Thursday 9 48 11 35 50 41 | 17 Friday 10 22 12 16! 50 41 |18Saturday (10 56 12 55 50 42 | 19 Sunday ll 34 50 42 | 20 Monday 1 32 12 15 50 2 \21/Tuesday | 2071258) 51 | 42 } 22 Wednesday | 2 41 1 43 51 42 | 23,Thursday | 3 ]6 2 31 51 43 | 24 Friday ieaeicsi SI 43 |25\Saturday | 432 410 52 | 43 26|Sunday ($12) 507 52 43 27| Monday eae 1634! 43 | 23 ITuesday | 6 38/730! 53 | 43 29|Wednesday| 7 24 850 54 j} 43 | 90 Thursday 8 12 10 06 | 54 | 43 | i THE VOICE ABOVE, Lost on the drift, and where the full clondr flow The steep above him looms, And strong winds out of distant regions blow The snow in streaming plumes, And yawns the gulf of the crevasse below In sapphire glows and glooms. Along the precipice there is no way That he may surely tread. Slight is his foothold on the slippery stay That trembles to his tread, And chill and terrible the dying day Falls fast about his head. Could he but hear some lowing of the herd, Some mountain bell ring clear, If some familiar sound one moment stirred To guide him lost in fear! He dares not move. Some beckoning leading word, Alas, could he but hear! In those waste places of the earth and dim No star shines forth at all. Through awful loneliness enshrouding him He gives one shuddering call, While horror of great darkness seems to swim And fold him in its pall. Then like blown breath of music in the height A cry comes far and low. He thrills, he springs, he gathersall his might He feels new pulses glow! His father’s voice—he needs not sense nor sight! He knows the way to go! —Harriet Prescott Spofford in Harper's Maga- zine. REPORTER AND CHINAMAN. Newspaper Man Was Very Tired When the Oriental Finished. Numberless are the tricks which newspaper reporters play upon one an- other to relieve the somber ‘‘grind’’ of their calling. Two young men employ- ed on a morning paper ina large city were detailed one day to cal! upon the resident Chinamen and ‘‘interview”’ them respecting some immigration measure then pending in congress. One of the two re-worters was a beginner, and the other, an experienced man, naturally assumed the management of the assignment. ‘*Billings,’’ be said after they had invaded several laundries without any important result, ‘‘here is a tea store. I wish you would go in and talk with the proprietor. I want to know what he thinks about Chinamen voting. I'll go on and pull off an interview with the man who runs this cigar shop next door. Remember to use the very sim- plest English at your command.’’ The young reporter went inside the tea store, took out his notebook, and thus addressed the proprietor, who hap- pened to be alone at the moment: “Jobn, how? Me—me—Telegraph, Jobn! Newspape—savyvy, Jobn? News- pape—print things. Un’stan? Me want know what John think about China- man vote, see? What Jobn think—Chi- naman—vote—all same Melican man? Savvy, Jobn? Vote? What think?’ The Chipaman listened to bim with profound gravity until be bad finished and replied: ‘*The question of granting the right of suffrage to Chinese citizens who have come to the United States with the avowed intention of making this coun- try their permanent home is one that has occupied the attention of thoughtful men of all parties for years, and it may become in time cne of paramount impor- tance. At present, however, it seems to me there is no exigency requiring au expression of opinion from me upon this subject. You will please excuse me.’’ The young reporter went outside and leaned aguinst a lamppost to rest and recover from a sudden faintness that had taken possession of him. His com- rade had purposely ‘‘steered him ( against’’ cne of tbe best educated Chi- namen in the United States.—Youth’s Companion, The Reading at Breakfast. Reading at breakfast is fatal to socia- bility. In breakfasting alone it is per- missible, but not in company. Leigh Hunt wrote in The Indicator: ‘‘When we lived alone, we could not belp read- ing at meals, and it is certainly a deli- cious thing to resume an entertaining book at a particularly interesting pas- sage with a hot cup of tea at one’s el- bow and a piece of buttered toast in one’s hand. The first look at the page, accompanied by a coexistent bite of the toast, comes under the head of intensi- ties.’ A book at breakfast is no compli- ment to the cook, but a newspaper is an insult. On the other hand, a news- paper at breakfast is a benefit to the doctor, for it is when one is put o/? one’s guard by the struggle with the folds and the search for items of inter- est that the way is made easy for the approach of dyspepsia. In the old days of The Spectator and Tattler, when papers were of a reason- able size and reposeful to boot, they did no barm. Now--well, now the largest circulation in the world may produce the poorest digestion. It has been re- marked (by a collector) that the only literature suitable at breakfast is book- coed deeded vv vevetv ive sellers’ catalogues, but since catalogues | lead always to telegrams or envy this is | doubtful. The line should probably be drawn at private letters.—Cornhill Mag- azine. Respectability Defined. British respectability has been defined in a London police court by a prisoner | charged with begging, and the defini- tion seems to have been accepted by the magistrate, for he discharged her. She said: ‘‘I’m a respectable woman, a tai- loress). Why, I make trousers for Mr. Newton—Mr. Newton, the magistrate, Imean. If I’m respectable enough to make a magistrate’s trousers, I’m good enough for anytbing.”’ [.adies string ties ard latest styles in c. lara and cuffs at F Perkins & Co. Ay Me ROO “ a % THE STAGE DRIVER? S BLUFF. —— Bairbreadth Stories of Accidents Which Failed to Awe One Passenger. As we left Sandy Gulch for Rising Sun there were six male passengers to go by the stage, and the route was over the mountains and: full of chances of jisaster. The driver came out from breakfast as soon.as the stage was ready, and looking about on the passengers he selected a small, pale faced man and invited him to elimb up beside him. While the pale faced man was climbing the driver whispered to the rest of us: ‘*] picked him out in order to scare bim to death. You fellows will see a beap of fun befere we’ve gone ten miles.’ Two minutes west of the gulch the road made a sudden turn, with a sheer fall of 100 feet down to Wild Cat creek, and the driver put his horses at the gal- lop and said to the man: ‘*We may get around all right, or we may fetch up down below. Hold your breath and say your prayers.’”’ The passenger made no move and did not change countenance, and after mak- ing the course all right the driver rather indignantly demanded: ‘*‘Didn’t you sev that the off wheel tun within a foot of the edge of the precipice?”’ ‘*It ran within six inches, sir,’’ wae the reply. Beyond the curve was a dowa grade of a mile, and witha yell and a flour- ish of his whip the driver urged his horses to a dead run. The five of us in- side had to hang en for dear life, and avery half minute the stage seemed bound to go over. ‘*Did you know that if we’d struck a rock we’d all been dead men in no sime?’’ ‘*Of course.’’ ‘*And you wasn’t prayin?’’ **Not at all.”’ Three or four miles farther on the jriver tried his man with another curve. {n his determination to make a close call of it one wheel ran off the edge of the precipice, and cnly a sudden effort of the horses saved the coach. We were : flung in a heap and frightened half to death, but the man beside the driver never lost a puff of his cigar. When things were safe, the driver turned on him with: ‘‘That surely was the brink of the grave.”’ ‘‘Guess it was,’’ was the quiet reply. ‘*The closest shave you will ever hev till the last one comes.”” = * sé Yes. a4? ‘*See hero, now, b:.! ~ bat sort of @ critter are you?’’ was.... -nery. ‘Don’t you know ‘uuff to gits. »t?”’ ‘‘Nothing bas happer . yet to ecare me."’ ‘*But mebbe you want meto drive plumb over a precipice 1,000 feet high?”’ “‘If you conveniently can. The fact is, I came cif up here intending to com- mit suicide, and if you can dump the whole of us over some cliff you’ll oblige me.’’—Atlanta Constitution We are now doing busiress in the store formerly occupied by Miller Bros. We wanttoste every ve in peed of good crockerv. Cali and see us in tbe Cheap China Store.—W P Colwill. Childrens straw hate, silk tame, bennets aud white lawn tams a F. Pepkine & Co. sgkdetvnivnvetnndteeg It is Kighly Palatable... Don’t be under the im- pression that Abbey’s Ef- fervescent Salt is unpalat- able. It is a most delicious preparation to the taste-— so pleasant, in fact, that it is oftentimes taken as a beverage. It is an un- equalled thirst - quencher. But aside from these excel- lent qualities, it is the most wonderful regulator of health known. Fibbey’s Effervescent Salt taken daily, will purify your blood and cleanse your sys- tem. Its effect is mild— almost imperceptible—but certain. ‘Takeit every day and you will enjoy constant good health. Abbey’s Ef- fervescent Salt, which is prescribed and endorsed by physicians, is a standard {nglish preparation which all druggists sell at 60 cents a large bottle. Trial size, 25 ceuts. } i > For 10 cents. | ee in cash or stamps, we will’ mail you, all charges prepaid, a hand . some metal box, size 51¢ inches:long, 3% inches wide and 1 inch deep, filled ’ =i . *y’s ELEPHANT: BRAND ‘ ies i with TETLEY’S ELEPHA BRA INDO-CEYLON TEA, 50 cents per th, quality. The box alone is.worth the money—the Tea it contains is wort! more than the money. It’s offered uuceries . lan 2 c Vt mr »t soe ‘ ~~ » as : 1 with the Celicious eae Prand Teas, eo: incilent:2!y to sce wher TC Our advere tising is best rea TETLYy's CLerwHart Praxp I>p0-Crytow _ , , , : e cas are sold only in 's and 1 Ub, lead packets, never in bulk and can be had fr A : a rom x ee : 4TOT most cealers in good groceries in Canada. At the price printed on each packet (2 to $1.00 jar ib.) they ar Best of Tea Values, 5 cents ¢ considered to be the TEAS ELEPHANT BRANQ. JOSEPH TETLEY & CO. 14 Li LEMOINE STREET. EASA AAA AR RAAAAAAARARAR “ RICH MONTREAL MELLOW. THE KING OF SCOTCH WHISKIES A WEE DRAPPIE 0 ; PATTISONS SCOTCH a nt > * Guaranteed 10 years old. Tasting tells the flavor cf this GRAND OLD WHISKY For sale here, there, everywhere, For Sale By All Licensed Vendors ATE EE EE EE SEE EE ET TAAARAAAA SAARASARA SAS | ‘4 Who find the day all too short for their numerous engage- ments, and whe sacrifice luncheon time rather tl an miss al appointment, will appreciate a cup of BOY RIL. It is a stimulating restorative, repairing the waste of the overworked system and increasing bo:h mental and bodily ~ BOVRIL umes 30 Farrivgcon St., and 25 & 27 St. Peter St London, England, Mintessdi Canada. 44444 £444444244 £44242 22454 att tl 4 «| ail| at Fine Yorkshir Serge For Strength, elasticity, durability and finieh vo cerges can eur- pass our “TYKE.” ‘Toprotect ourselves and ensure our customers getting this high class serge we have stamped this trade m ark «fl «itl «a att{] at(f «il «(il aff] on the inside every 24 yarde. Any serge offeredas “TYKE” and not marked a* above is not genuine, and therefore worthless, Kefuse tt ai} Insist on your tailor getting “TYKE” for you if he has not got it in stock ¥¥V"VF FFVIII VIVF Atl! ail] atl] ai al af, «ttf ail all all al alf ail] «(l| ti] al «ill «ill «if aii] «(lll «t{j} «tif] | al) If You Have Books — oy a convenient receptacle for them is almost a necessity. and soiled in a short time if not properly cared for. Books get dusty We Have Some More of thoce pretty Book Cases, which marked at $9.25. JOHN NEWSON, {ellers. of good Furniture trangers to poor Furniture. $5.75. Thie new lot were formerly ee