eR to pep. gO } ie al if 4 ; i ; : 4 ; . me eM ee ea ait oe ee: ’ 7 : — i # oa 5 $55 ne . . ae Fi Es Safes La THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 25, 1893 | For Sale. The undersigned offers for sale by Private Contract, the several properties hereinafier mentioned viz: — 1 The Dwelling-bouse at present oc- cupied by herself with or without the warehouse attached, situate on the corner of Powna! and Grafton Streets. 9 The double tenement house and premises on Desbrisay Street, at present occupied by Mesers Ba ls and Brown, comprising fonr Icts. 3. Building Lots Nos. 20 and 21 on DesBrisay Street. t. 75 aeres of Jand on Lot 69, fronting on Wood Island and Halkett Roads. Good terms of purchase on such time as may be required, will be given for apy cf these properties. For further particulars apply to the office of Davies & Haszard, Solicitors Xc., Charlottetown. Dated this the ninth day of April, A.D. 1898, MARIA DesBRISAY. 8412aw 3wks 2 6 -- MY ERAMELI' ‘OVER is a grand soccess. If you send your Bicycles to me you'll get a hard, smooth,long weering finish, equal to the best new work. Only the BEST baking colors and varnish used. H. R. LARGE Great Geo. St.—Large & § Son's Factory. O« and after MONDAY, 27th Dee., Island Railway 1 (Sam ys excepted,) as under, — ! STATIONS, [Taleo is rains Out- . Cape Traverse .. rq. Read| 7 ac wn, | UP. >» M.!A M. r \ P.M. A» . +a * 6 20! Charlottetown ... 2 3010 oe 8 2U) 6 35). . Royalty Junction.| 2 16 9 = 14 17) 7 12). .North Wiltshire. | 1 49 8 | 44 31) 7 24). Hunter River. ..] 1 8 fs 05) 7 51]. .Bradalbane......| 1 oo] 8 6 13, 7 58). emerald.. ......119 g3| 7 58 ’ 27| 8 02). . Freetown .......)19 1s | $6 47| 8 25). .Kensington......172 93] 7 18 tac, wl | fEv-|12 00 6 48 : le M.IP. M* S’Side A, Ww f 12 5O\Ly. (Ar. 10 30 1 11)... Miscouche ...... 10 10 1 37). . Wellington...... 2 47 2 19). Port Hill .....661 9 09 3 34). .O’Leary.....0.--| 8 OO 3 58]... Bloomfield ......| 7 84 4 34)... Alberton.......-| 6 55 PE CEM cee coce 6 00 A. M A. M. 4 A. fee tee zee 19 at sé Ity Junction "Bedford eeeeeree v iy} Me Stewart {i ; « Cardigatecccoces 7 ..Georgetown .... 7 “ {a. M, «Mt, Stewart ooo.) 8 55 | csensasese 8 17 ‘ St. Peters easase q 48 , Bear River eeente q . BOUTS. 00 cecces| O Ar Me aT »oEmerald cecese Pas : ce ee — To arrive about the first of May 6000 BAGS a) ) Liverpool Salt Also 10 tons of Prussian Rock Salt for cattle, and 20 barrels Erglish Coal Far. PEAKE BROS.¢t CD). ~~ — +e _——— Voice Culture end Singing. Miss Sara Jeeres, from Milan, Italy proposes visiting Ch’town during June July and August to give lessons in voiee culture and singing. after con- tinental methods, it a sufficiently large class can be formed. Terms for ten weeks tuition, 21 dollars (one leeron a week) 35 dollars two lessons a weer) Intending pupils please apply at once to Miss Sara Jeeves, Mount Al- lison Conservatory of Music, Sack ville, N. B. 84 lwk %» ar 6B ATCHE EVERY ONE TP® BEFORE &¢ | ee } 18 size $7.50 to ag 3-~ .: 8.50 ” 50.00 J5 * 25) « 35.00 16 © 5.50 50.00 lo *« 4.00 « 50.00 Serew Bezel and Back, 0. F. 18 88.50 $40.00 14 8.60 14.00 Your initials engraved on back free of charge. BW. ALLE, Cameron Block. City. anl4di35&w to ee size ee “50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS CopyricHTs &c. Anyone sending a sketch and descri tion may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- culation of any scient fic journal. Terms, $3 4 : four months, $1 Sold by all newsdealers, MUNN & (0,28 8ro20vas, New York 3 ___ Branch Office, (25 F &.. Washington,D.C. GENTLEMEN IN NEED ofa nize fPxir of Choco late colored koots should not fail to see our $3.00 BOOT No better boot to be hads for the money than this, Other lines at much lower prices, R. K. JOST Corner. Stamper’s Valuable Property BY 4.0CTION I am instructed by 8, Go. Thorne to cell€at auction, Ou TUESDAY, May 3rd, at 12 o’clook, that very desirable property, situsted on the Lower Spring Park Road—head of Powna) Street. The house is in excellent condition, contains fine large shop, diving room, kitchen and pantry, and thirteen spacious and well finished rooms. Large frost-proof cellar, together with barn. The halls and rooms are al] painted—with two exceptions. In fact everything is in first class condition, and affords an excellent chance for come one to do business; as it is an old established stand. A portion of the purchase money may remain secured on the premises, Terms at sale. E:H. NORCION, Auctioneer FOR SALE OR TO L&T. That well known business Hotel on Richmond Street, near the market. This Hotel conta‘ns about twenty good rooms and shop, all in good repair. Good stabling for thirty horses, with Jarge yard in connection, Apply to —~ + 2 THOMAS CAMPBELL 81—d&w Queen Stre WARE - HOUSES TO LET PEAKE’ WHARF (WO 1) Wharfage storage and yard- ag? at reasonable rates. Arthur G, Peake. Nov. 4 eet Unconsciously Eumorous. It was Stetson who on landing from the steamer after a stormy voyage exclaimed, ‘Thank God, I am once more on yice versa!’’ Mrs- Billington on her return from America brought home many Stetson stories. One of the best had reference to the sudden necessity of enlarging the pro- gramme of a variety entertainment. His manager had, as hé believed, successfully filled the bill. Stetson arrived on the scene in the midst of the opening num- bers. ‘‘What is on now?’ he asked. “Well, it’s just a pretty, sentimental duet by the brothers So-and-so.’’ ‘‘Sentimen- tal, eh?’’ said Stetson. ‘‘That’s good.’’ It was one of those duets that have sup- plied George Grossmith and other enter- tainers with some of their best burlesques of part singing. ‘The tenor asks a vocal question, the baritone replies—a kind of litany, with variations. In this case the tenor was a feeble looking youth of 50, with one of those voices that may be mu- sic or an escape of gas. Stetson stood at the wing and contem- plated the duetists—youthful tenor of 50, aged baritone with the manners of 20 and such a wig! ‘‘Where are the friends of my youth?” began the tenor in pathetic tones that hardly reached the orchestra. ‘*Where are the loved ones gone?’’ re- sponded the baritone in a gloomy gurgle. ‘*Farther back,’’ said Stetson from the wing. ‘‘They’ll hear you better lower down the stage.’’ Having thus got them well out of the way of the curtain, ‘Ring down,”’ he said to the prompter at his el- bow, and the drop fell. ‘‘On with the next number in the programme,’”’ he said, ‘‘and send those two gentlemen to my room. How long are you engaged for?’’ he asked them. ‘‘T wo weeks, Mr. Stet- son,’’ they answered with deferential hu- mility. ‘‘How much?” a week.”’ ‘“Very well, my poor fellows. your money,’’ he said. ‘‘I won’t detain you. Go and find the friends of your youth.”” When you tell. this story, it is necessary that you should sing the lines to their right tune and with characteristic imitation of two played out voices, and bear in mind how cynically courteous Stetson would be in commending the fad- ed duetists to go straightway in quest of those friends of their youth.—Newcastle Chronicle There’s SS Li eta Before the Bullfight. “Now,” said my friend, ‘‘we will go to the chapel.’’ ‘‘The chapel?’ ‘‘Why, yes, the next room is a small chapel where ey- ery toreador goes before the fight to pray and ask God and his patron saint that his life be spared and that he be given the courage and strength to take that of the bull.’’ We entered the small chapel, at one end of which was an altar covered with fiowers and lighted candles, in the middle a crucifix, and behind a painting of the Virgin Mary. One of the toreadors came in and, kneeling at the altar, began to pray. What a contrast! This man, covered with silk and gold, Kneeling in front of the Christ, asking for the protec- tion of the kind and sweet lover of hu- manity and asking (in order tc kill) the protection of him to whom all lives are dear and precious. ‘*You see the man there kneeling and praying?’ said my friend. ‘Well, he is Manuel Garcia, generally called ‘Espar- tero,’ the greatest living toreador. He is the first espada of Spain and is celebrated for his great courage. When he sticks his sword in the bull’s neck, he never jumps aside, as other toreadcrs do—no, he wants to stop the bull there to kill him on the spot. As it is nearly impossible, he has often been seriously wounded by dying bulls. He has saved over 100,000 pesetas. He will retire from the ringa rich man in another year.”’ The man had finished praying. He left the chapel, shaking hands with his friends, and I could not help thinking, ‘‘A rich man in one year—yes, provided’’— But I did not dare finish my thought even to myself, and, raising my eyes to the cruci- fix, I murmured involuntarily, ‘‘God, spare him!’’—A. B. de Guerville. Woon’s PHOSPHODINE. The Great English Remedy. : Six Packages Guaranteed to promptly and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Ervissions,Sperm- atorrhca, Impotency and all = effectsof Abuse or Excesscs, 2 SS Mental Worry, cxcessive use of Tobacco, Opiumor Stimu- Bef lants, wiiic soon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 ycars in thousands of eases; is the only Ieliable and Iloncst Medicine known. Ask druggistfor Wood’s Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, €1; six, £5. One wiil please, six will cure. Pamphiets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Sold in Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggiet Bottled Joy. Empty bottles wanted, cheapest cash price paid for all kiud of empty bottles. JOHN P, JOY, Victoria Cafe Gt Geogre St. Building Lot 450x100 Fest FOR SALE. This ie one of the most desirable lots in the city, being on high dry ground; on the eastside of Upper Prince St. Apply at the ‘CITY HARDWAREJSTORE. ‘*Fifteen dollars | OLD JIM BRIDGER. Sir George Gore, a wealthy 1msn sports- man, began in 1855 a bunting expedition | among the Rocky mountains which occu- | pied two years and exceeded anything of | the kind ever seen on this continent. The outfit consisted of 50 persons, including secretaries, a steward, cooks, flymakers, dog tenders, servants, a train of 30 wagons and numerous saddle herses and dogs. Old Jim Bridger was Sir George's guide and interpreter, and no man on the fron- tier knew the glens and passes of the mountains so accurately as hedid. Though illiterate and as unconventiona! as an In- dian, Bridger was honest, kind, generous and shrewd—just the man to attract the Irish sportsman. In his‘‘Old Santa Fe Trail’’ Colonel Inman describes the companionship of the two men—one a rich, educated, wl.ole souled Irish nobleman, the other a man who from boyboed had lived on the plains, depending on his tact and rifle for food and life. Sir George would lie in bed until 16 o’clock in the morning; then he took a bath, ate his breakfast and set out gener- ally alone for the day's hunt. It was not unusual for him to remain out until 10 at night, and he seldom returned without ‘“meat.’’ His dinner was then served, to which extended an _ invitation to Bridger. After the meal was over Sir George was in the habit of reading from some book and drawing out from Bridger his ideas about the author. The Irishman usually read from Shakes- peare, which Bridger reckin’d was too highfalutin for him. *Thet thar big Dutchman, Mr. Full- stuff,’’ he commented, ‘‘was a leetle too fond of lager beer.’’ Sir George read the ‘‘Adveniures of Baron Munchausen’’ to Bridger, who re- marked that he’d be doggoned ef he swal- | lowed everything that thar baron said. He thought he was ‘‘a liar,’’ yet acknowl- edged that some of his own adventures among the Blackfeet would be equally wonderful, ‘‘if writ down in a book.’’ Bridger thought Sir George s successful he % ¥ | ‘6 { 7 4. 8! ee ee ] \ The | oc1c or Uyress y & — : f ‘ g aS ¢. — . , : the siyle cf suit worn § 4 to best advantage by ‘-O 4 the “Short stout” man #7. . é T)> bs » @ , ? B tic rerily,” ¢he ‘ 6éT 3 onan 7 t td , : a & Sound crculdcred, "ie “Very crect, "the “Sjp ing shouldered,” the “Tall thin” andthe“Tal] Stout,” Purpose of the “Tuxedo,” the “Frock Coat,” the “Walking,” “Shooting,” “Sack” “Double Breasted” and “Nop. folk” Suits, with their effect upon the appearance of different types of wearers. Wie It contains practical y{7y pointers on cloths, in- We terior construction, x4 shape retention, the 2% birth and motive of “fads” and other trade BEOCCRNSS & 6 Uhh ebeOoebesebeeoneeenenns sehen eed i a oat hunter, an opinion justified by the records of the two years’ hunt—40 grizzly bears, | 2,500 buffaloes, numerous antelopes and other small game. = Sik HEAPACHE Positively cured by theso Littlc Pills, They also relieve Distress from Drspepsfa, Indigestion and Too If{carty Eating. <A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- “eo r.ess, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Cocted Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Powcis. Furcly Vegetable. entl 771 Beane, Crs: 23 belle Ermatl Dose. oe SE PSS £ yv9 &. Ja Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter’s, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. ~eS ees 9O0O0O]S 6068 0060 The Time Has Come iobs must be done. he repaired, ora r perhaps your when those oi Maybe its @ roo! : barn to be built, thinkiog of a hous: We Have a Word t) Say You will want shingles; Boards studding, Lathes. You will want some Lumber, we have just what you need. It will be to your advan~ tage if you buy from_ us. We offer you first class Lumber, ata very small advance on cost. ITnves. tigate. It will pay you. Teceruoxs 151 JAMES BARRETT, Connolly’s Wharf. BD TH SBAWVOBLASVES GOBV*e TEETH WITHOUT PLATES Crown and Bridge Work. 2 e@e® . 6" @@ 8% @ wo o* 82800 ~aoe0@2e 2 oO] 2] O22 278222 2 GS DR. J.P. MORRAY 155 Queen Street. TO LET. The new double tenement house on Brighton Poad, containing 10 large rooms heated with hot water, large bath room fitted with hot andcold water, electric ight, etc.Pceseesicn given fire of Mey. Apply to J.J. ¥cKINNON secrets of the tailor. Mailed free on request. PESO LER Io ATE NE - 3 SOLE LOCAL AGENCY PROWSE BROTHERS. ee The Greatest Artists Endorse the Heintzman & Co. Piano FROM MADAM ALBANI. Queen Hotel, Toronto, Feb. 23, 1899. Messrs Heintzman & Co., Toronto. GENTLEMEN,—I must thank you very much for the Piano supplied to my rooms, 4s also for the grand pianotorte used in my concerts here. It is reaily an excellent instrument, and the tone and and quality of the instrument eminently satis factory in every wey. Yours sincerely, (Signed). ALBANI. } OS.., Tue Prince Epwarp IsutAnp Music Hovse. Sele agents for P. ¥. Island. ee ee + peek Se OS OS OO SS ETS SS DS SSESFG Call in and see the latest arriva!s. CONNOLLY BUILDING “wT eee CALF - MEAL. HE PERFECT MILK SUBSTITUTE ee Thousands of Farmers are raising their calves on Biatcurorp’s Carr Meat - Why don’t you. They say it saves money, time and trule. Sy the same after a trial. Ask your dealer for it. You wi 9--tf AULD BROS |