esha ~~ * ett pe ellie Silage: Sled EOE os, Tl. ae x ie weet. lin rebar Nervous People find just the help they so much need, in Hood's Sarsaparilla. It fur- nishes the desired strength by puri- vitalizing and enriching the blood, and thus builds up the nerves, the stomach and regulates the whole system. Read this: “I want to praise Hood’s Sarsaparilla. My health run down, and I had the grip. After that, my heart and nervous system were badly affected, so that I could not do my own work. Our physician gave me some help, but did not cure. I decided to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Soon I couid do all my own housework. I have taken Cured Hood’s Pills with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and they have done me much good. I will not be without them. I have taken 13 bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla,and through the blessing of God, it has cured me. i worked as hard as ever the past sum- mer, and I am thankful to say I am well. ilood’s Pills when taken with Hood’s Sarsaparilla help very much.” Mrs. M. M. MESSENGER, Freehold, Penn. This and many other cures prove that Fioods Sarsaparilla Ts the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. Prepared only by C. I. Hoo. ¢: Co., Lowell, Mass. ° act easily, promptly and Hood's Pills effectively. 25 cents. P EPPS'S COCOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED. in Quarter-Pound Tins and Packets only. Prepared by JAMES EFPS & CO., Ltd., @ Homeopathic Chemists, London, England. fying, toncs —_— Which would you rather trust? An old, true friend of twenty years, or a stranger? You may have little health left. Will you risk it with astranger? If you have a cough, are losing flesh, if weak and pale, if consump- tion stares you in the face, lean on Scott’s Emulsion. It hes been a friend to thou- sands for more than twenty years. They trust it and you can trust it. Let us send you a book telling you all about it. Free for the asking. SCOTT & BOWNE, Beileville, Ont. f Qoececece0el808cs0e0e 080808080808 080808 8 oelele 2 bs ~ ” eat soe7ecjejecece ecececececace woe Fy For imei a : Colds, Bron- 5 Schitis, Sore 5 : $ throat, etc. Un § $ KE "RY, WATSON & CO., Paopr:crors, g e 8 MONTREAL. dt @ BOR AOMIOO SCEOBOOOBOBOOCHOSOOO SOOO E ' a THE DAILY EXAMI'ER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 14, 1£97 sv BMER( GED HAVRE, A PROMISING VILLAGE DESTROYED BY LAKE ERIE. The Town Made an Unusually Ambitious Start, and Its Projectors Expected Great Things From It—Now Its Site, All That Is Left, Is a Creek Bottom. Within a few miles of the corporation sine of Toledo lies the site of a lost village, which was peopled not so long ago by sev- eral hundred souls. Its existence is al- most forgotten, and only a few of the old- est inhabitants are able to indicate even vaguely where the town once stood. The Llue waters of Lake Erie ripple over town Jots and building lots which it was hoped would some day bring great wealth to the projectors of the village. A few miles north of Toledo, Ten Mile creek, dignified by gcographers with the name of Ottawariver, marks the boundary on the lake front between Ohio and Michi- gan. On the north bank of the stream, just within Monroe county, Mich., is the site of what once was the town of Havre. It was not a hamlet, such as is gradually formed around a few fishing shanties when a country is young, but a town that was treated by hundreds of colonists. When Havre was laid out, it was the only place that was more than a mere settlement be- tween Monroe, Mich., and historic old Maumee, O. Toledo was only a name, for when the colonists landed in 1836 this city was just a year old, and its future growth was highly problematical. It was situated 12 miles from the island that marks the western end of the lake, while Havre, situated to the north of Gard is- land, was practically on the broad high- way of waters. ‘The colonists were brought to the site of the tewn by the steamer Superior from Buffalo. It is probable that this steamer was the first craft other than an Indian canoe that had ever ventured into ine channel between Gard island and the mainland. Many of the colonists of Havre were French. and they named the new town after the famous port in their mother country. Denis Morin, whose descendants still live on the water front near the old town site, laid out the streets with his plow and helped to grade the locations of the principal buildings. Old Peter Tre- vick, who is still living in Vienra, Mich., also helped to build the town. Houses rose rapidly. <A first rate church was built, and stores out of all proportion to the busi- ness of that day and a commodious tavern were erected. In short, within two years from the time the first colonists landed 500 houses had been built along the water front, and the little steamer that plied be- tween Detroit, Monroe and Mauimce found profitable trading at Havre. Then came the cataclysm. Old Lake Erie began slowly to rise. The town was only a few feet above the level of the creek, and the country was marshy. It was at first thought that it was only a remarkable stage of high water. But the water came over the sills of the doors nearest tie lake and slowly but surely rose higher and higher. House after house was invaded, and the pretty little creek mouth gradually widened until it was nearly a mile across. On the water ceme until the floors in the highest portion of the town stood four feet deep in water. The people were, of course, Badly frightened. With everything that could float chey hurried to the highest spot on the mainland and waited for the end. Finding after a day or two that the waters had apparently ceased to rise, they return- ed and took away all the property that could be moved by the old fashioned ca- noes, which were an indispensable ad- junct to every French trapper’s outfit. ‘The boats were rowed right into the houses, and when it came to transporting the bar- rels of good liquor with which the tavern taproom was stocked there was many a poor Frenchman who had an opportunity of drinking better spirits than he had ever tasted before. In fact, the whole settle- ment had about as memorable a drunk as this part of the country had ever seen. Then came what is still remembered as the big winter. Ten Mile creek was frozen to its bottom, and the snow was very deep. The founders of Have, who had encamped along the water front against the day when the waters should recede and they shorld come into their own again, were forced by the inclement weather to hunt Yor new homes. Monroe received many cf them, and other towns and the adjacent farms absorbed the rest of the villagers. The waters never went back, and the fol- lowing spring there was a great sale of the town's buildings. They went cheap, and the settlers came from miles around to bid for them. The houses were raised before the ice had gone out of the creek and were hauled away by ox teams while the ground was still in good condition for sledding. Oniy a few of the houses were left near the vil- lage site, and the only one that can now be identified is occupied by young Trevick and stands over a mile from where it was first built. The great tavern was taken bodily to Vienna, Mich., where it stood for years. Even the pioneer steamer was bro- ken up, and today some of the planks are built into the house of Levi Morin, whose uncle plowed the first street line of Havre. All that is left of Havre is a few piles that can still be scen rotting in Ten Mile creck. Whether the water of Lake Erie actually rose or whether the land about the town site sank is a question. Certainly no other port on western Lake Erie has any record of such an increase in its waters, - SS neneet e etinntsiaeditneiaN e-em EE GLEANINGS. In El Pasoa meal can be obtained ata place called the Pig’s Kar restaurant. The Scilly group consists of 40 islands, of which five only are inhabited, contain- ing about 1,800 people. The oak tree which stands in the mid- dle of the high road leading from Leaming- ton to Warwick is said to mark the cen- ter of England. pain has more sunshine than any other country in Europe. The yearly average ir Spain is 3,060 hours, that of Italy, 2,800; Germany, 1,700; England, 1,400, Persian papier mche articles are made out of the Bibles sent out by British mis- sion sevieties, according to Mr. Hodgetts, » recent traveler in the east. He quotes he British consul at Tabriz as saying: ‘You have no idea what a boon these Bil yles ure to the village iudustrics of Persia.’ a POLITICAL QUIPS. Making spectacles of themselves only permits certain senators to be more easily secn through.—Philadelphia Times. Persons desiring te view the perform- ance at its best should wait until the fight for the Canton postoffice is put on.—De- troit News. California has one thing to be thankful for, and that is the fact that it is only afflicted with one legislature at a time,— Solano County Courier. China executed two citizens lately be- cause they were political agitators. Just fancy sending 14,000,000 to the block in this country.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. TOWN TOPICS. If you cre not satisfied with Vallejo, there irc plenty of boats and trains leaving here daily and you never will be missed. Don't be a kicker. —Vallejo (Cal,) News. A female verse writer asks, ‘‘Have the robins come again?’ They have, mum. For particulars read the Chicago papers relative to hold ups there in broad daylight. —Nashville Amcrican. It is all right, of course, for Paris to havea novelty in the shape of a theater for the presentation of moral plays, but where will the audiences come fromi— Cincinnati Commercial Tribune, ~ _ om - _ a ee = Dyspepsia Is completely banished from the sys- tem by the use of Adams Tutti Frutti. Save coupons inside of wrappers for latest books and prizes. Allow no imitations to be palmed offon ug BLANC- MANGE MADE WITH BENSON’S CANADA PREPARED Is an exquisite dish for the table and invalualue for invalids, RECIPE. DLANC-MANGE. Four or ave tablespoonsfi.! of Pre- ymared Cura tu One Quart Of milx : ais- vive the Prepared Cora 1.1 Suiue vf tiie nits 5 lh ae Sit Fs me iice” of tue wile, ul when bor ie pid d ssulved repared Cora: both een ri utes, ivor lo taste, el ilow it tye ntina ould. Serve witit imiix wud jay or x und sugar. . Ry BY. he Edwardsbure Starch Co., Ltd. é rhs by **ORKS: CARO Nai, On, yt OPFIS6S:t MONTHEAL, F.Q. it z Ce ee. a. a << + ities A DULLARS A DOLLAR Those times, and every Size of the Congresstonal Library. Founded in the year 1800 by the mod- est appropriation of $5,000 ‘ ‘for the pur- chase of such books as may be necessary for the use of congress at the said city of Washington,’’ this collection has grown, notwithstanding the ravages of two fires, to the present aggregate of 740,000 volumes. the Jefferson library in 1815, the Force Historical library in 1865, the Smith- sonian library in 1867 and the Toner collection in 1882, all constituted spe- cially important and valuable accessions to its stores. And by the enactment of the copyright law of 1870, followed by the international copyright act of 1891, this library became entitled to receive two copies of all books, periodicals and other publications claiming the protec- tion of copyright in the United States. —A. R. Spofford in Century. Deserved Credit. “I may lead a wild life,’’ said Jig- gers, ‘‘but I'll tell you one thing—I take care about the people my boys us- sociate with.’’ **I know yon do,’’ said Hawkins. ‘‘I’ve sbserved that you spend very little time with ’em yourself, old man, and I bcnor vou for it.’’—Harper’s Bazar. Dickens as Critic, Charles Dickens had a great love for music and particularly enjoyed songs and ballads, anything pathetic in the strains of which quickly moved him. He had his own ideas of the way in which songs should be rendered, and when occasion offered he made them known. One day a member of his household was singing a ballad, when suddenly the nov- elist, who had apparently been deep in a book at the farther end of the room, got up, saying, ‘‘You don’t make enough cf that word.’’ He seated himself at the piano and illus- trated his idea of the way in which the word to which he referred should be em- phasized and did not rise until the phrase had been sung to his satisfaction. After that, whenever the song which became a favorite with him was sung, he listened with his head a little on one side until the had made sure that his instruc- tions had not been forgotten that time.— Youth’ s Companion. Treated by the SALISKURY Methbod cf persistent SEL¥-HFLP in overceming past errors and removing the cxvuses Ol disease, ‘ihe resuit jusiifies the means. . Th's is not an eas+y quack cure-all.| Neither should it be judged by certain bad imitations already »mong the pecple, nor by the heli-baa efforts of invalids 10 go j1 aloneorhalidoit The salva'ion of health ,vecessitates sincere repentance, constant iself-denia! and whole-hearted faith in the} good works of physician and patient Not even M W’s ceri:ficates by the ream will save one from the evil consequences ol | D fluid or solid, DR. CLIFT | ema of N Y University and the V y{ Hospital Diploma reyistered in U 8. and Canada, Address :- Charlottetown, P. E. I. Office :—Victoria Row. |: A HOME tREATMENT, persevering Telephone Call. rom mouth to month ACCOMVODA- TIUN> reserved for patients. REFER- ENCES on application. AG — 52; Wants, Lost, Found &¢e WAN TT: D.—4 Conk and housempid, which hovers] wages wil! be given. Mrs. J. A, Mecijonald, Glena'adale Enquire at Queen Hotel, « harlotte.own. April 10th tf —_— FOR SA! EA desirabie Building lot on Cor- ner«tSidney and Hil'sborough st. apply to W W. Wellener. TO LET.—A Cottage cn Sidney st contain- ing five Rooms, occupaion given on april 2. 1b,app'y W. W Weilener, Wanted.A Cook, apply to Mrs F. W. Hynd- man, Kent St. WsNIED—At Juage All-y’s residence an experie: ced cook «alsO a Lousemaid, t ef-r- ences required. so TO UETV.—The southerr half of the late Chief Justice | almer’s bovse on Queen Street, (an be inspected at any time, E, t almer, or at officeor H,. "James Palmer. 3— ——e W ANTED—Atonce, a good cook, APP! y to Mrs W, a. Weexs,Jr, Beiguton. 73 - TO J ET.—A housce on Stewart St occupied by Mrs Michael Lubr, containing 7 ijarge rooms and Fartr). Possession. given May 15th. Appiy to Mrs Laby, ou the premises, 33—lweek—yd TO LET— On Kent St, a thvee story house, Apply to Mis Younker, on the premi-es si—eod tf The acquisition of . 2)yeurs’ practice in N Y City.7¢ for Arply to Mrs | is Originated by an Old Family Physician in 1810 You can safely trust what time hes indorsed for nearly a.century, There is not a medicine in use tod hich h £ en extent as Johnson's Anocyne Liniment.. for more than ciakty eine peblic to so.preap its own intrinsic merit, while generation a: .er Secnene a a..er generation have used it. The b videnceog, its value is the fact that in the Sstaic were it originated the sale of it is “peal | increasiags Johnsons /nodyne Liniment Jonnson EsQ. My Dear Sir:—Fifty years ago this menth, r fat! ealted J my store and left me some Johnson‘s hnehten Liniment aieata: I oral 1 it since. Ican most truly say that it has maintained its hirh standard and p'larity fe that time to this, JOHN B. RAND, North ‘Waterford, Maine. J “Best Liver Pill ltado.*? This certifies thet Dr. A. Johnsap name is signed to every genuine Boy , 2 ; 5 5 a ae s Anodyne Liniment, in themeun oe an. 1840, first le tat my store some of thes i have supplied my customers hj since, (over fifty vears) with increasi Fosttively cure Biliousness and Sick Headache, liver bowel complaints. They expel all epee Jasez KNOWLTON, Newburg, Sean the blood. Delicate women find relief from | Our Rook “Treatment for es slot using them. Price 25c: fiveg1. Sold everywhere. | All Druggists. LS. Jolnscn & Ke ee Eg EASTER. | See Goff Bros. New Footwear, moderate in price. just come. Stylish, and ST nnn USE —=r_Z>- Sherwin- Willian | Half a cent buys enough Liquid Paint Suerwin~- WitiiaMs PAINT pup prep for fwo coats on one square foot of surface. . « MADE Vee 'Sossusetdse SIMON YW CRABBE! Walker’s Corner 138 STOVES HARDWARE ee —————— SHEDS SHHDS For Farm and Garden. Timothy, Alsike, Mammoth, Early Red and "White Dutch, Clover Seed, White Russian, Red Fyfe, and Colorado Bearded Seed Wheat. ; GARDEN.—Beans, Beet, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Celery, § Corn, Cucumber, Musk, Melon, Onion. Parsley, Parsnip, Peas ¥ Pepper, Raddish, Sage, Savory, Spinnage, Squash, Salsify, Tomato, Tobacen, Turnip, Water Melon, ete. Flower seeds in variety. All of these seeds are new, pureand reliable. For sale at lowest prices. WM GRANT & COF QUEEN STREET, Charlottetuwn New Goods. ——— | -——— We have just opened five ish and American Hats & Caps, OVERCOATINGS SUPTINGS : TROUSERINGS The latest styles, popular makes and shades, The correct hings for the coming season We give'the best values. See ur prices. E lines of the fo'lowing:— Eng but it is argued by those who believe that the waters rose that the effect would not have been so noticeable at any other point as at Havre on account of the low level of the town site. -Whatever the cause, the waters are high above its streets, and many a fine pike and black bass has been taken on the site of the old town, although few person. wants to inb st their dollar in the est possible way. Recognizing this fact we have placed one line of our Ladies’s Mt Rdgecombe Farm FOR SALE. 9 FE ‘ @ * GIR't. WANTED—To do géneral housework A 7 sj ‘ i j i - ip asmallteamily Apply io Mis A. 3. John~ i ! Ve Cu : " ron. Prince St ae Vy, Q's VICTORIA: HER LIFE AND | MERCHANT Tt coe REIGN; erat hisioric wo: k,sells on sightto theusands. Lord Dufferin in~ | = The subscriber offers for sale this vala- aie suitable for able farm, containing about 66 acres, of the many fishers from Toledo who visit Dosgola, Patent tip ‘ troaversit to Canadians in glowing werds | which areall cleared and in a high state ot | Yen Mile ercek are familiar with the story Shoes at $i air inet ‘bene ke more in ‘pace sins ‘han CARD OF THAN xs. cultivation. of the town beneath its surface.—Toledo z 7 & palr. | during day at regular employment. This On the premises there ina fine dwelling | Correspondence. li you want a pair of | yrar’s Great rexagensry Celebrations are a Bovkson time. | Prospectus free} For the many favors received from n.y numerous friends an : ooming it. locanyua:sers. Terriiory ening fast THE BRADLEY GARKETSON Co Ltd Toronto, (an: house and «1x out , buildings, all farming purposes. This property is situated on Mt Edward Road, about 1} miles from the city, and 300 yds from St Dunstan’s College, ane about that con't fal to see Ladies’ Shoes, price, vurs, customers during the year 1895, and wou'd wish them a hap- py and Prosperous New Year, and that they may all contina? ,to buy and drink the celebrated special Blend of Empire Tea iU Lr T —Co! tage on Upper hens ~t, con taining yrooms, apjoining the premises of WANTED. adapted for modern tarming. For full ‘ iate Judge Hevuley. Possession given May 1, on nape 1 RE PUY ot eciiias abate pees Alo | R K JOST Apply to W Leitch s—eod tf | that I sell. Also as many more, invited to participate in the C. BENOIT, vant and vest makers wanted. Nere but > . ¢! LO T.—On Monday Morning, the 12th inst, pleasures of drinking Empire B ead duri ing 1897, Eureka Hotel, Water St } first -class workers need apply. 5 sare containing a emait sum of money | ; > 2 : j 2 ill please yveat Stewart € Cates | 7 ‘ . Ch’towr, P.E.I.—75 25 w. J. T. McK“ NZIE, STAMPER’S CORNER. ae ee eee ae T. J. MORRIS, Grocer and Crockery} Man