a aad. ee ee ‘ \ \ hill A Tur Leaprne D or P- BE. [anand, ~ oat 4 (AMIN sity Newsr APaR the offiee af . efernoon, from —. . ix ran PR arisvine Company, in the i> . . * » STTree. » Rui : i <= ,oadon House eae RIPTION nares OF SUBSCRIPFIO® (iN ADVAN $i. twee YEAR 2.00 S:x MonTss 1.00 Taree MexTHs . O35} ne Monte . . $ post paid to any part Canada or the Sen f " r } } TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. THE DAILY EXAMINER. —IF YOou— Want a wife, Want 8 cook, Want a partner, Want a Want » servant girl, Want to sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want fio rent a house, Want to exchange anything, Wat to sell plants or grain situation, United States | . Want tol sell groceri drugs, Th e \\ e e kly Ki XaMiner | aaubin a an : i a wiieawenipneiclltmicmetenl teeta ener erle wer et fee me oo esi liaise Want to oell a ade dee a tasued — Se =e Sn) a Oe ana eee Want to fiod customers for anything, getintae! eta ine Dally eaten ean] VOL S4. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1895. NO. 266)" *" uae is a ‘aas weekly hewspaper-—interesting | z laa weeks THE EXAMINER First Quaar : a ae & M th 46.5m p. m Last Quar 16 ay, 3L.5m, p. a. New M 24 8 im. a mM F . t an a ana ; S i in | Hieh | ‘ Week i i » i r oi sets water * ——_——— |—— | fa mf ] ; \ hay t Si 2 ia + 3 | #Q 4) Sa | $5 $i Sua zy : { i % ' ‘ 3 { ay j : i ? } Puesday | (3 11 & t We ine lay a 12 i 10 45 3 | Zz rsday ; | St i126 19 | Friday i 48 15 aft 8 11 | Saturday | 37) 161 o« 2 | Sunday i i 17 I 33 13 | Monday si 18 219 14 ; Tuesday } 19 = . t . i j > . 15 yy eaunesda { Si 26 4 16 | Thursday . 2 e4 v* | . ” “ i’ : a62 sf iay i aa i 22 i 6 il . | ; 8 ; Saturday od 1< | Sunday ats. Oe 7 59 2¢ | Monday i 26 26 | R 43 2 eday 2 ' a ae ‘gt 22 lay j 24] 2 10 5§ ‘ ; n | j , . 23 | rsday . 23) 0} 10 46 24 I iV i 22 | ; ' 30 25 s iny } 21 o ro 26 | Sunday a 5 | 15 27 | Monday | 28] Mio4. . i = - 28 , Tuesday } 19 ) l Sl 29; Wednesday | 18] 36] 2 37 on | Wheseedl is} art 3 : i hursday { i; si{ 3 44 7 Ry 4 17/7 38 4 54 ee island Railway On and after THURSDAY, 27th December, BSB, 2 traias of this Raiiway will run daily 7 | leave Hawkesbury at 6 p.m. same days, 3 | | HALIFAX SERVICE. CALENDAR ela MAY, 1885, ‘Canada Atlantic and Plant, STEAMSHIP LINE. FOR BOSTON, | Hawkesbury and Halifax. S. 8S. OLIVETTE will leave Navigation Wharf, Char- lottetown, FRIDAY, May 17, at 12 noon, and every Friday thereafter until far- ther Will Co’s. notice and Halifax on Saturdays at 10 p.m., ar riving at Boston Mondays at 7 a m. FROM BOSTON—Tuesday, May 14, at 12 noon, and every Tuesday thereafter until further notice, calling at Halifax and Hawkesbury, and arriving at Charlotte- Si, , ’ | town on Thursday evening ; . For rates of passage, freight, etc., apply | to local agents, or the general agents as — - S. S. “Halifax” or “Olivette” will } leave Plant Wharf, Halifax, every WED i NESDAY, 8 a.m., and SATURDAY, 10 i. until further notice, for Boston Returning, will leave north side of Lewis’ Wharf, Boston, Tuesdays and Saturdays, 12 noon, until further notice. Passengers arriving in Halifax TUES- DAY evenings can go directly on board the steamer without extra charge. Tri-weekly services by S.S. Olivette and Halifax, between Boston and Halfax, and weekly service by S. S. Florida between Boston and Char’ ottet resumed in Ju »wn will be as | checked at al] stations on the Iutercolonial For rates of passage, freight, etc , apply local agents, or W. L. CHIPMAN, Agent for Canada, Plant Wharf, Halifax. RICHARDSON & BARNARD, Agents, north side, Lewis’ Wharf, Boston. (Saadays exces ted) as follows .— Trains Outward. Trains Inward Read down, Read up AM PM AM PM 7” .-Charlottetown Ic 10 2 30 739 349....Royaity Junction....9 0 211 803 £3 -.-North Wiitshire.....9 3 i 27 Si? 447......-Huanter River......85l 113 S45 518 Bradaibane occ ae ui aeee 857 2 .. Emerald ~adneu ae 12 $ 10 > ..... Freetown 754 12D 7 S8........ Kensington -..238 120 GW 630 Ar Ly 70 110 rua Pe Summerside AM AM] 12% Ly Ar 16 30 ai. s«ese. Misconche.... -.-10 30 13? .« Wellington.... 9 47 219 ..- Port Hill 909 334 , CPE ncccse 8 OO 38 -. Bloomfield. .... oomee Ee sat PNG hatunceceese ve 655 5 30 ov RAMI. «<0 a 6 00 PM AM PM AM coun Charlottetown ‘ cones BORD § & an Hoyalty Junction.... 10 10 32a ‘ Bedford “ ‘chee 855 ( Ar Ly 9 05 ? ; Mount Stewart ) , 410¢ Lv} far) $50 ia enshe ..-Cardigan padhea a an OR cnues qeorgetowa 710 PM AM PM AM 405 -Mount Stewart.... 8 55 443 o POTOEL. 200% weoma aa ae 512 pp Ow anavdesean 7 48 &57 RF oO» pT ciceane satece 6 BW PM AM PM AM 410 . ..-Bmerald ee eee 7a > in? Cape Traverse 6 Px - AM Trains arerun by Eastern Standard Time D. POTTINGER, Gen Mgr Can Govt Railways Moncton, N B. A. McDONALD, Superintendent, Charlottetown, dec26 Operative & Prosthetic Dentistry. DR. MURRAY, OFFICE, 145 QUFEN STREET. CHARLOTTETOWN. aplé <—_; julie Safe ee ent nett LP DAL | Gees } buire | our gares 1 OB TAR ee erris i ~ n.. sTHONS i CnAy Is fl ; alt ln : X HIGKEY & NICHOLSON, Tobacco Manufacturers, NO. 1 QUEEN STREET. I N f BRIGHT CHEWING i BRIGHT SMOKING —-ALSO—— Their Oid Reliable Brands of BLACK | CHEWING and BRIGHT SMOKING TWIST. Prices Lower Than Iwported Jobarcos, 95—6m 135 wy THE 1895 COMET. Price $i03.0)]—Any Weight, If you want a good, reliable Wheel, fully guaran eed by a reliable maker, then get a “COMET.” Noted for its ease (f running and beauty of finish. See the sample Wheel at Davies’ Drug Store, and ask for a catalogue. F. DeC. DAVIES, Sole Agent for P. E. Island. meh2l dy a ls —, ~~ = ee SAS ad STMR. FASTNET Will commence the season of 1895 by sailing from Halifax on the 30th April. Por freight, etc., apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent. ‘ ‘iy Black The SS. BONAVIATA, due here from Yon- treal MONDAY, May 13th, will sail for St John's, Newfoundland, via Sydney. carrying horses, cattle and sheep on deck and produce, ete, under deck at lowest possible rates. For further particulars as to freight and passage ipp y to PEAKE BROS. & CO., may? Agents. SALT! SALT! To arrive per Steamship3 Sunrise and Tafua, 10,000 bags Liverpool Salt and 300 bags Fishery, which will be sold at lowest prices whilst discharging. Both steamers are due here about Ist May. Apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO. Ch’town, April 18, 1895—tf What’s the time? If you bav- = Cough it is timc you were takizg GRAY’S ,, RE SYRUP “ SPRUCE amma —- GUN THE OLD STANDARD CURB FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all 1. UNG AFFECTIONS, Gray's Syrup has been on trial for more thas &6 years and the verdict of the peeple is that it le the best remedy known. Se. and Be. per bottle. Beld everywhere. KERRY WATSON 4& CO. Pucrasvene MAN THe BAL. i A GOOD WATCH At a Low Price IS WHAT YOU WANT. UESEE OUKS. oH G. H. TAYLOR, North Side Q@ucen Square. mch30 FOR SALE. House in Georgetown. That Dwelling House in Georgetown the property of Mrs. Capt. John McDon- ald, formerly known as the “ McDonald House,” together with the outbuildings. | This House is in first-class repair, con- | tains fourteen large rooms, and is well adapted for a Dwelling or Boarding House. Any party or parties desirous of secar- | ing a summer residence will find this a | capital opportunity. This property will be sold at a bargain For terms and particulars apply at the office of J. A. Matheson, Solicitor, George town, or to L. W. MACDONALD, apd Box 694, Charlottetown, Ask your Druggist f ibor Murray & L_Lanman’s FLORIDA WATER ae, 5 HEE BGO pets Ae For Handkerchief, Toilet and Bath. “* Farm For Sale. The subscriber offers for sale his yvaluabel Farm, containing about sixty acres Houre isin good repair. There are six outbuildings, some are newly built. There are two orm chards, one: ontaining sixty trees of different varieties of fruit. Aboat one aud a half miles from the city. Terms easy. Cc. BENOIT. febli—im dy & wky TO LET BARA . One half Brick Honse on Kent Str et, next door to Dr. Keily, at present occupied by Miss MeMillan. Possession given about May 24th. Apply to Dr. Kelly April 23 tf tu thur sat. | Is a dangerous disease because it is } liable to result in Joss of hearing or | smell, or develop into consumption. | Read the following: “My wife has been a sufferer from | catarrh for the past four years and the | disease had gone so far that her eyesight was affected so that for nearly a year she was unable to read for more than five minutes at a time. She suffered severe pains in the head and at times was almost distracted, About Christmas, she com- menced taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and since that time has steadily improved. She has taken six bottles of Hood’s Sar- saparilla and is on the road to a complete cure. I cannot speak too highly of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and I cheerfully recommend it.” W. H. Furster, Newmarket, Ontario. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. ee REPAI ders for Custom Stock, right. HRepatring neat and cheap. Ch’town, April 19, 1895—dy ee are prepared to 2 s cure habitual constipa Hood Ss Pills tion. Price 25¢. per box, GUSTUM WORK Skint RD ts RING! filt all or- Work promptly. workmanship and _ prices of all kinds done 3. #4. ERLE, The Reliable Boot and Shoe Dealer. = material and workmanship. at the store. Also, Vats and Scroll and Crescent Cemetery prices, according to quality. vinced of their merits. years. At the Old Stand To QUEEN AUGUSTUS Charlottetown, April 11,1895—dy & wy DAIRY MEN ! a ee te 1 am now prepared to furnish the Dairy Associations . of P. E. Island with all sizes of Milk Cans of superior Sample Cans for examination will be sent free of cost on application, and may be seen all heating and other appara- tus necessary in such establishments. I am also prepared to furnish handsome Wrought Iron, Palings at very reasonable see them is to be con- Remember, I guarantee all my work to give entire satisfaction. such as it has been doing for the past thirty STREET. HERMANS. aplO—135 tf THEY WEAR LIKE IRON. Keep Your Feet Dry. | If you catch cold now it will | hang on all Summer. Wear Granbv_ Rubbers. They are the best and last longest. Perfect in Style, Fit and Finish. Make a er and Pure Quills better fiiling for Corsets than any other known material. '*Featherbone”’ Corsets are tough- more elastic than any other make, as they are entirely filled with quiils (Featherbone). To be had at all Retail Dry Goods Stores. Seed ! TIMOTH Y—Peas, Vetches (English) SEED BOXES (double) for Rakes. PLOW REPAIRS—Mould Boards, Clevises, for all Plows. Ch’towa,May 4, 1895—246 w ND Seed ! WHEAT—White Russian, Colorado Bearded, Red and White Fife. CLOVER—Island Red, Early Mammoth, White Dutch. , Corn, Mangolds, Turnips, ete. HARRKOWS—Steel and Wood Frame Spring Tooth, wholesale and retail. This is a fine attachment, sowing Grain and Hay Seed in two separate boxes; all Stee! Feed. Wholesale and Retail. Shares, Soles, Land Sides, Heads, Jaws, D. W. FINLAYSON, H. T. LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. CANADA AND ITS RESOURCES An Interestlag ae tectredien ies by Mr. J. Heber Haslam—-Pab- lished by Request. (ontinued.) Sut it is of the great Northwest that I wish more particularly to speak tonight. Imagine an explorer returning after a voyage of discovery and reporting that he had travelled threngh a land almost illim geographical position as does Great Brit- ain, Holland, Germany, Belgium, Den- mark, Sweden and Norway and the most of Russia, and almost as gteat in extent as all of those combined; with a climate vary- ing very little from its southern to its northern boundary, and tne healthiest in the world; wih a soil that yields with the minimum of labor every product of the temperate zone, aud of the v@y highest quality; having the most extensive forests in the world and mountains in whose bow- els lay concealed every precious and econ- omic metal; coal wel! distributed over the whole area, and of every kind; petroleum, natural gas, and in fact everrthing that now conduces to the comfort and luxury of modern civilization, and withal a coun- try having every conceivable kind of scenery; Jakes Jarge enough to wash the coast line of Great Britain, rivers among the longest in the world, leagues of prain where nothing lies between the beholder and the horizon but ripening wheat and waving grass, and mountain scenery rival- ling in rugged beauty that of the Alps. How the sons would rush from the thresh- hold of nearly every home in the old world to hear more of this favored land. How their ears would be strained to catch the welcome news, for the future at home is dark, the patrimony is small and there are too many to share it. Wages are low and employment scarce, and for them and their children a prospect before which their stout hearts quail. I wilitry in very truth tonight to de- scribe a Jand as fertile and as fair as any that God ever gave to man. Western Canada extends from the Lake ef the Woods to the Pacific Ocean, and from the 49th parallel (the boundary between it and the United States) to the Arctic circle, and contains an area of ter ritory of overa million and a quarter equare miles in extent. It comprises the Province of Manitoba, the provisional pro- vinces of Alberta, Assiniboia and Saskat- chewan, and the unorganized territories of Arthabasca and Keewatin, and the Pro- vince of British Columbia. In this vast region there is more arable and pasture land than in the whole of Europe save Russia. Its forests are also more extensive, and every cereal that grows in Europe will grow here in greater abundance and of Let- ter quality, The most extensive oil finds in the world are supposed to be in Arthabaseca, and cual is found distributed over the whole area, and of most every quality. Iron abounds in the northern part of Alberta, and gold and silver is ia Alberta, Arthabasca and British Columbia, and lime, buildiog stone, brick clay, terracotta and cement, are in abundance. Nature has still further laviched her fayours on this wonderful country by stocking her rivers and Jakes with fish. The salmon of the Fraser, in British Col- umbia, are so abundant that the packers have to curtail the ontput so as not to overstock the market. The lakes and rivers of Manitoba, and the Territorities, are also teeming with fish of various kinds. I willdescribe more particularly, the province of Manitoba, and the Territories of Assiniboine, Saskatchewan and Alberta, for they comprise the greater part of the arable land, and for the present at least, offer greater inducements to settlers, than any other part of Canada, and it is tu this region that we bave to look in the future for the greatest increase in our population. The first thing we have to consider is the climate, for no matter how rich and deep a soil is, if the climatic conditions of a country are such, that through extremes of beat, or extremes of cold, of excessive drought or excessive rainfall, crops will not grow, soil avails little. Now it may be stated broadly that the climate of those four provinces is such as to promote the very highest development both of vegetable and animal life. The wheat of this region is undoubtedly and undeniably the finest ia the world, and Manitoba hard has a reputation as the best milling wheat grown. The oats and barley are equally good. All kinds of roots aud garden vegetables grow in abunance and without any manur- ing, while the grass fed cattle of this country reach a developmeat which is al- most miraculous, to an eastern farmer who has to stall feed his cattle for from four to six months before having them fit for market. Now it must not bethought that what is to follow is wrong because it is con- trary to the acepted belief regarding this country. This is an age when precon- ceived ideas of things have to make way before corrected information and newer knowledge. The northernmost boundary of Alberta and Saskatchewan is cn about the same paralell of latitude as the boundary be- tween England and Scotland. Of course the climate of England and Scotland and in fact the whole west coast of rorthern Europe, is altogether exceptional, owing to the influence of the Gulf stream. The same thing operates to a certain extent to modify what would otherwise be a very cold climate in the extreme north- west of Canada. A great warm current flows northward from Japan to the Arctic Sea. It is inter- rupted by the Alaskan Peninsula and the Aleutian Archipelago, and its course is turned southward along the coast of Alaska, British Columbia and the states of Washington and Oregon. It has precisely the same effect on the climate of this coast asthe Gulf Stream has on the coast of Europe. On the British Columbian coast, which is on the same parallel as Labrador, there is no winter; and even so far north as Sitka, in Alaska, ice is seldom seen. Now, while this cur rent has i‘s greatest influence.on the coast, its influence is felt in the interior, and serves inno smal] degree to modify the climate of Alberta, which is a thousand miles nearer the coast than the Minnesota and Dakota plains. Moreover, the moun- tains intervening betweeu Alberta and the coast are far less lofty than those of the United States. Another very important thing to consider is the effect of altitude. There is a continual drop to the northward of the great central North American plain. In Mexico it is two miles high where the Union Pacific crosses the back- bone of the continent; at Sherman, in Wyoming, the elevation is eight thousand feet, while the elevation is only two thousand one hundred and fifty feet where the C. P. R. crosses the South Saskatche- wan at Medicine Hat, and the country less than one thousand feet. The™differ- ence in elevation between the continental plain in Wyoming and the valley of the Peace River is equal to ten degrees of lati- tude in its climatic effect. But not only does Pacific currents and altitude tend to modify the climate of Western Caneda, bat what perhaps has a greater effect than either, are the Chinook winds which come periodically threugh the passes of the Rocky Mountain:, and often makes a dif- ference of from forty to fifty degrees in the temperature in twenty-fuur hours, stripping the ground so compledely of snow and ice that nota particle of moisture remaina, and the ground is left quite firm and dry. It is hard to give a reasonable explanation | of those winds, which after blowing over ; ; : | hundreds of miles of snow-covered moun- itable in extent, occupying almost the same | tains, should beso mild and genial and bring in the heart of winter all the warmth of spring. Dr. G. M. Dawson, Director of the Can- adian Geological) Survey, than whom there is no better authority, expresses it as follows : “The complete explanation is to be found in the great quantity of heat rendered Jatent when moisture is evaporated or air is expanded in volame, but which be- comes sensible again ou condensation of the moisture, or compression of the air. The pressure in the upper regions of the atmosphere being so much less thaa in a lower, a body of air rising from the sea level to the summit of a mountain range must expand, and this implying molecular work results in an absorptien of heat and consequent cooling. When the air descends again on the other side of the mountain range, its con- densation results in an increase of sens- ible heat equal to one degree ventrigrade for every hundred meters. [t thus becomes easy to understand how the Western Ter- ritories may be flooded with air nearly as warm as that of the coast. Another very important thing to con- sider in this connection is the greater length of day during the growing season in the northern regions than to the south. In latitude 56 sunrise occurs on the 20th of June at 3.12 and sunset at about 9 o'clock giving about 18 hours sun, and the influence of this on the growing crops is that vegetation is phenomenal. It is reported from some of the missions on the McKenzie River, that trees pass from bud to leaf in a single week, and it is a wel) established fact that graina, grasses and vegetables reach maturity quicker there than in any part of America! But whatever the explanation the fact remains that the climatic cenditions of the Canadian northwest are eseentially the same as those of the northwest of tle United States, although 20 degrees of Jati- tade intervenes between the northern boundary of the former and the southern of the latter. The climate is marked in each case by extreme heat in suminer and cold in winter. In Winnipeg the thermometer often reads as high as 95 and 98, and d_- scends as low as 30 and 40 in winter. This extreme heat is usually attended by cool nights with heavy dews, and con- sequently is not felt with the same degree of discomfort as the same beat further south, where it extends over long periods and is accompanied by protracted seasons of drought, which drva up the small streams and wells and very often destroys the crops and grase. On the other hand the extreme cold of the Canadian northwest is very rarely at- tended by high wind. The days are clear and bright, and to healthy active men the clear frosty air has no terrors, and it seems just the medicine that is required to restore wasted tiasue and bring animal life to its highest perfection. To those who have lost vitality in the humid at- mosphere of the East, the dry invigorating air of this country acte as the best medi- cine. In onerespect the climate of the Canadian northwest is superior to that of its favored rival to the south, and that is practical emmunity from the dreaded cyclone in summer and the blizzard im winter. But in view of the wonderful progress which has been made in the states of iowa, Minnesota and Dakota, it seems too much to claim that our Northwest is su- perior. Hut there is good reason fer do- ing 0. Consider the growth of the states in question. Nothing like it has ever been known in the history of the world. Twenty-three years ago an American statesman on the floor of Congress ques- tioned the ability of the state of Minnesota to grow enough in ten years to feed a graee- hopper, and stuch was the ignorance re- garding this magnificent region that many believed him. It now has a population of abont a millionandahalf, Its average wheat yield is greater than that of any other country, but Manitoba and the Northwest of Canada, and it is, perhaps, the best all-round agricultural country in the world that is settled. Seventy years ago an officer of the Unit- ed States’ army reported to Washington that “Fort Dearborn should be abandoned for the reason that the surrounding country is of such a _ character that it is impossible that it can ever support a population large enough to justify its maintenance,” and yet in this short space of time, not beyond the memory: of living men, there has grown up at this place the most woacerfu cityofall time, baving apopulation of overa million andahalf. The focal point point and centre of 90,000 miles of railway, and the greatest distributing point for food products in the world. It is no unwarranted statement, but one made after careful study and travel, that in the Canadian Nerthwest there is a country capable of maintaining just as dense a populaticn and producing just as many bushels of wheat, oats, barley and buckwheat, as many ponnds of butter and cheese, and as many hoga, cattle, sheep and horses as were raised east last year in the great, prosperous, progressive country tributary to Chicago, and from which ahe drew the trade necessary to make her one of the proudest and most progressive cities in the world. Let anyone travel over the ground, view the expanse of prairie and plain in the Northwest, compare its soil with the seil of Kansas, Nebraska, lowa, Minnesota or Dakota, and ite product with theirs, and consider the tendency to droughts, insect pests and cyclones, in} the one territory, and the practical immunity from those things in the other, and more decisive than all the supreme test of average yield of the prin- cipal crops in both countries, over a series of years, and the fact is established beyon doubt, that in every thing that goes to make a successful agricultural country, the Canadian Northwest is equal, if not superior to the very best of these great states. (to be continued) NOT WHAT WE SAY, ut what Hood's Sarsaparilla > that tells the story of its merit and suc- cess. Remember HOOD’S Cures. Salvation Jass (to young man who has been paying great attention tothe speak- ers)—Are you savec? still farther depresses unti] the Peace River is reached,, where the elevation is Young man—No, I’m a reporter, Salvation Lass—Oh, I beg your pardon. SPRING HAS COME, Aud itis Time to Set Your House in Order. What a feeling of relief comes over one to realize that the wihter is past. “May is here, the world rejoice,” Says the old school song, and our hearts echo the words. Bat all are no able to rejoice. Some have met with sor~ row in the dismal winter days, and the memory clings to them. Others have lost health, and are, therefore, unable to “rejoice with them that do re- joice.” For the winter and early spring tell upou the hea!th, and there is need of something to cleanse and invigorate the physical system, that the mind may be made once more cheerful and hopeful and streng to grapple with life’s problems and duties. In Hawker’s Nerve and Stomach Tonic and Hawker’s “Liver Pills is found the most effective combin- ation for cleaniing and toning up the system. They form the best ofall spring medicines, The liver pills cleanse thesys- tem and aid digestion. The nerve and stomach tonic does what its name implies and more. It stimulates, rebuils, invigor- ates and strengthens. After a course of these remedies a mar who had previously been run down, nervous, sleepless, unable to eat with a relish, troubled with indiges- tion or any of the symptoms of a diseased condition, finds himself restored to health, and feels like a new man. Countless testimonials prove the truth of these statements. These great Canadian Remedies are manufactured by The Haw- ker Medicine Co., Ltd., of St. John, N. B., and New York City, and are sold by all druggists and dealers. : mow to Get a “Sanlight” Book. Send 12 “Sunlight” soap wrappers to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto who will send post-paid a paper-boun vook 160 pages. For 6 “Life buoy” Car- bolic Scap wrappers, a similar book will be sent. This is a splendid opportunity to obtain good reading. Send your name and address written carefully. Remember “Sunlight” sells at 6 cts. per twin-bar, and “Lifebuoy” at 10 cts. One cent postage will bring your wrappers by leaving the ends open. sat&wk. The soundest appreciation of good- ness is based upon a comprehension of evil. [FF EvERYTHING FAILED A PsOSaG Qua The Ideal Tonic ~~ Efticacious RESTORING HEALTH Avoid Su ° Steaeateenee Sole Agents for Canada LAWRENCE A. WILSON & CO., MONTREAL. LONDON + 239 OxroRn Br, DONTREAL: 28 HOSPITAL BY, Panis: 41 Bo. Haussmann, Maw York : 52 W. 157» Stacer, Grateful—UComilorting. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the nat ural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a cafeful &pplication ot the fine properties of vell- selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavor ed beverage which may save us many heavy foctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such srticles of diet that a constitution may be gradualiy built up nati] strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floacing areund us ready to attack wherever there isa weak = We may escape many ¢# tacal shaft by keeping ourseives wel! forii fied with pure blood and a properly nouriab ed frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk ~ ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelled taue, JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid, Homoeopathic Chemists, London England. PRICE REDUCED. THE ¢ TWIN BAR EVERYBODY CAN NOW AFFORD IT Why pay a quarter for three cigars Merely a suggestion. when you can get five “Some- thing Goods” for the same money ?-—and they are equal to apy fencenter. Wedon’t want you to take our word for it either, we only ask you to buy a quarter’s worth and judge for yourself. They are on sale every- where, and are manufactured by the EMPIRE TOBACCO CO, may3—246 & w Montreal SUMMPRSIDE ADS, W. B. MALLETT, HAIR DEESSER, Shaving, Hair Cutting. Shampooing, Having lately renovated and refitted my Shop, I am now prepared to give satisfac- tion in all kinds of Barber work. ap3—dy 3m McXinnon's English Ointment. Cures Old Sores, Erysipelas, Salt Rheum, Eczema, Piles, Burns, Corns. Cuts, Sore Eyes, etc. Made and sold by NEIL McKINNON, Summerside, P. E. I. TOOTHACHE! _ This is addressed te all those who are suffer- ing from Toothache. or who may uire treatment of any kind at the hand< of a Den- ‘ist. I make the very best Teeth, guaranteed, for $'5 a set. If not satisfactory, money re- tunded. Gold and Silver Fillings a specialty. The following letter from Dr. Robertson, of Crapaud, as regerds the PAINLESS EX. TRACTION of Teeth, speaks for itself:— foJ E McDonald, DD S,Sanmorsida,P E Dear Doctor,~I am so well pleased with the work yeu have done for me, that I will take it as a special favor if you will give publicity 'o'this letter. I positively assert that after an experience extending over twenty-two years under the hands of many dentists, you are the only one who ever extracted a tooth for me ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. The TEN teeth you removed forme atone sitting did not hurt a particle, as Mr James Dawson of fryoo, who was present at the operation heard me testify, The man who inven your method shou'd be knighted, Tam a ag mn Le - W. RoBERTSON d. Crapaud, Jan. 10, i895. = J. E. McDONALD, D. DL. S., y Summersi ap4~ly api—-i TS ee reer PDL LN Ne NL celal Ie, ? ? > ? , , , $ , , ; _ The greatest medical authori- ‘ies and scientists in the world commen’ Apius’ Trevs Feorrié : Indisestion. Among them : ; L.pson, Health Commis- mer, dud R. Ocpen Dovemus, ie baked ‘WF iS upitalions to te valmed off om UN Wee war nara WANTED. “ustomers for 10,600 Bar- rels of Lime, which I will sell this seascn at the follow- ing reduced prices, delivered at Kilns on the Malpeque and St. Peter’s Roads :— Unriddled Lime for Fara purposes, 60c. cash ;, 65c. payable Nov. Ist. Ridd'ed Lime for Building, 65c. cash 70c. payable Novy. Ist. Any orders for car Jots will be delivered f. 0. l. at same rates. JOHN T. PEARDEN, Upper Great George Street. apl3—dy 246 & wy - Dairymen, Attention Of the Cheese and Butter Factories in operation in 1894, we furnished, to the satisfaction of all concerned, the necessary apparatus for the following:—Winsloe, Hampton, Tryou, Crapaud, Grand River, Dunk River, Mount Stewart, and Vernon River Bridge. In the summer of 1894 we made nine Cheese Vatse (each holding from 650 to 706 gallons of milk), and two Butter Vats (cach everaging 400 gallons of milk); no complaints were made—satisfaction given. From our large experience in the past we are now better than ever pre to meet the wants of Dairymen, We guaran, tee satisfaction, and respectfully solicit the patronage of those who are contemp lating the erection of Cheese or Butter Ftories. Cur make of Vats is superior to all others, and our fifteen and twenty gallor Vang are the best and cheapest in the pro. vin ¢, Terms to suit puchasers. M. STEVENSON, febl4—3m dy & wky Dominion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appointed sole selling Agents in the Province of Prince Edward Isiand for the above Com pany, are now prepared to issue orders for Round, Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selli nts, Charlottetown, May 25, oa 90 YEARS For me last 50 years Cough Medicines have been coming in and dying out, but during al! this time SHARP'S BALSAM OF HOREHOUND Never left the Front Rank for Curing CROUP, COUGHS AND COLDS. All Druggists and most G@rogerymen sell it. §@~ 25 cents a bottle. ~ ARMSTRONG & CO. i Proprietors, St. Joha, N B. | aova3—d nae 0) Braet ae ee h eee oe el er ae