Rentae sc SAR A se A ea CN a area a ge we eh. PMN Lae a ae eee id aiae st A Ati os ld pe CALENDAR FOR JUNE, 1894, —_ =~ TERMS : Four Dollars a Year New Moon, lay, 6h 43.9m., p.m. W First Qua day, 9b 4.7m, a.m, N.E ‘ Ww Full Moo Isth day, 3h 53.8m a NW ‘ , Last Qus Ay, 9h SO.lm. a. m., W ; . | Day of Week. | | Sun | High | s€8 seta | water ' ee | 2m) h m | after’n | 1 } : ‘ 7 38 8 53 2)8 39 9 41) 3/38 40] 10 30} 4) i] ll 17 | {2 morn | 3/1 ‘ai @ 71 rt 13] 0 55 al} lt} 44) 245 9} Sa 14) 44 2 34 70 | Sunda l4) 45 3 30] 11} M | Bi er ae 12) 7 17] ) «65 44) 3; W ay LS ifee oe. My ' ‘ 7 7 48 15} Fr {8 8 36] ié i Sa a is S 2 17/8 8} 10 2 38. M ) 10 4) 8:7 4 9) it 39 20) . 4 491 1i 87 91 | Thursda 14 19 | aft 33 32 k AY L4 ») } Ss 23 | Saturday l4 Mi 14a 24 | Sun y | 0 | 2 23 26 | ‘donday } } s SI 26 i tuesday | lo; 50 3 $7 27 Wednesday 16} 50 & 2 38 | Thurs lay 16 |} 50 6 13 20 | Friday Sa | aa 30 | Saturday 1418] 7 50] 8 31 + THR DAILY EXAMINER Tus Leapine DarLy Newsparer or P. BE. Istanp, is iasued every afternoon, from the office of the Examiner FUBLIsHING ComMPANY, in the Leadon House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) I i iis aiiciin ud cinch ee amid $4.00 | &x Montrns cheers BOO] Tyanse Monris side oiegk Maes Gye Mont ‘ ite enue O35 | Sent post paid to any part of Canuda or the United States i ADVERTISING RATES | For small advertisements which are ordered } for only one or two weeks the charge is 50 | cents per inch for the first insertion, and 20 | fents for each continuation. Rate cards are furnished on application at the office. Special! | sontract prices at a reduced rate are quoted for advertisements four inches in size or | larger, which are to run for three months or tonger. No spectal notices inserted unless paid for | @i the rate of i0 cents per line, and under no eircumstances will such paid notices appear | in the jocal column. Svecial discounts made on al) advertise- meats connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Pienics, etc. No notices will be inserted with the same unless the regular rate of 10 cents per line is paid. h at Tae Examexer is considered by our Merchants and Manefacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quenily the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements pabtic, is abundanuy proved by the ‘act that in order to accommodate our auvertisers we have been compelled to enlarge the paper to its present size, Tus Darcy Examtner is for sale by the fol- lowi ents :-— R. H. Mason, Post Office, J. Melatyre. Malpeque Road, C. Paul, Lower Spring Park Road, Charlottetown. rT) W. M. Coffin, Grafton Street, S. Grey, cor. Water and Prince St. ~ D. Cha il, Prince Street, “ ; Bazaar Store, Queen Street, = } i Geo. Carter & Co., Queen Street. & Gray, News Stall, P. E. Ll. Railwa) @n ihe trains . & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- merside. Harry McFarlane, Souris. Hoa. D. Gordon, Georgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G, M. Clarke, Alberton. A. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge. 85S ee The Weekly Examiner is issued every Friday morning from the Publishers’ office. {[t is made ap of matter which has appeared in the Dally editions, and ts a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting end full of the latest news. The subscription for Taz Wexxty Exam: WER, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scaie as given beve for Tuz Dat_Ly EXaMINER. —— DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician Surgeon. and and Graduate of the Medical Department of the University of the City of New York, late Member of the Resident Staff of Belie- vue Hospital and the New York Lylag-in Hospital, New York City. OFFICE. North Side Queen Square OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Residence—Near Corner of King and Queen Streets, Charlottetown. eo Dominion Coal Company, Ltd, The undersigned having been appointed | sole selling Agents in the Province of | Prince Edward Island for the above Com- pany’s Mines in Cape Breton, are now pre- pared to issue orders for Round, Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a stock of each kindfof Coal on hand to supply customers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO., Selling Agente. Charlottetown, May 25, 1894—tf TO LET. The Store and Offices situated on Water Street, formerly occupied by F. T. New- bery, Haq., and now by M. Trainor, Esq. Possession given Ist July next. Apply to PEAKE BROS. & CO. mayt7 Bt FOR SALE. The Dwelling House and Property at Brightoa formerly oceupied by the late Admiral Bayfield as a summer residence and now occupied by Capt. W. A. Weeks. The house is heated with hot water, and is in first-class order. About three acres of lan d can go with the same. Posession given about the Ist of June next. EDWARD BAYFIELD, apl 7—dy tf Trustee. REMOVED! i have removed my Book- bindery to the Shop next to A. E. McEachen’s Boot Store, Weeks & Beer’s Old Stand, Queen St., where I will be pleased to see all my customers, J. D. TAYLOR. tf two doors below ap36 NEW SERIES Lawn Mowers ‘The Place to Buy them the Cheapest. ee NOW I$ THE TIME THIS SEASON ——I WILL —TO BUY YOUR—— SPECIAL ON —— AN D—— Barb. 0. & E. and Woven Wire, Builders’ Painters’ Supplies. Garden Tools. Before | —~18 AT— | W.E. DAWSON’S 'W. E. Charlottetown, May 12, 1894—m w ¢ THE ‘I would invite you to call and hear my prices, as I can save you money GIVE— PRICES FOR CASH FOLLOWING Hardware and making your purchase DAWSON. | nesses, and make invaluable mementoes of absent | Call and see specimens. CHILDREN’S PORTRAITS a specialty, for which no extra charge will be made. NEW FLOUR JUST AT & KB ENMAN — 1) BEAVER and FAMOUS brands of Fleur very S. B. ENMAN & CO’S., In J. D. MeLeod’s Old Corner Building. cheap for Cash at Charlottetown, April 30, 1894--mon wed fri GHO. H. COOK, wnrecs sie, PHOTOGRAPHER, | Calls special attention to the marked superiority of his _ Photos. They are not mere Photographs, they are Like- oe o ? o a friends. Studio—Corner of Queen and Grafton Streets. Charlottetown, May 19, 1894—3m dy ALL OUR SPRING SUITINGS OVERCOATINGS NOW TWN. Oe Now is the Time to Order Your Spring Suit JOHN MACLEOD & CO. Charlottetown, April 23, 1894—m w f GAWS PLANTS. — (1X ) Perennials (wintered over), Pansy in bloom, distinct choice varieties, 3 to 4c. each, 30c. to 40c. per dozen; Daisy, Bellis,.p. finest double white and pink do. Uollyhocks, Chaters (Benary’s prize), to bloom ia a few weeks, 6 to 8c. each; Carnation (dou- ble), Riviare and Margaret, 3 to 5e. each, Indian Pinks, Sweet William and Forget-me-not, 4 to 6c. each. Transplanted An- nuals, Verbena, Stocks and es Pinlox, ready to bloom, 20c. per oz; Later planted, 12c; Aster, Daisy, Pansy, Petuma Larkspur, Portulacca, Mari- gold, Zinnia, Candytuft, Nasturtium, Canary, Creeper, Balsam and Morning Glory . climber) at 12c per doz ; Edging Plants, Phrethrum or Golden Feather, oes an Sweet Alyssum, 40c per 100; Dahlia Bulbs, 6 to 10¢ each ; Gladiolias, 4 to bc eac :. Vegetable Plants, transplanted. —Cabbage, Cauliflower and Celery, 50c. wd oe Tomatoes, per doz 1 2c ; a few Tomatoes in bloom at 6c each ; Cabbage from seed bed, 2e pe - Cauliflower, 25c. “ ™ he aon price list is intanded principally for our friends ordering o_, we tance. We do not bind ourselves, dealing personally with our customer’, ¥ SON shipped or mailed to any part of the Maritime Provinces. Address J. J. GA 4. : om Pownal, P. E. 1. The above for sale Tuesday and Friday at Market, Charlot pion > and every day at our Nursery, Pownal. mon thu & wky 1m—may2 City Hardware Store. House Fittings, Stove Ware, Paints, Wholesale and Retail Hardware and Jewel Stoves below any other prices on the Esland. R. B. NORTON & CO. QUEEN STREET. Cherlottetown, April 24 4—tu fri & COS. | S. Stewart, Solicitor, Newson Block, Char- ' lottetown. | in good order, with Stable and_ Coach TINWARE RECEIVED To be sold by Public Auction, at the Court House in Charlottetewn, on WEDNESDAY, the sixth day of June, A D is?, at the hour of twelve o’clock, noon :— All that tract, pieee and parcel of land situa- ate, lying and being on fownship Number Sixty-one, in King’s County, in Prince Ed- ward Island, bounded and described as fol- laws, that is to say:—By a line commencing at a stake fixed in the south side of the Stur- geon Road, and inthe north-west angle of Farm Lot Number Seventy now or formerly in the possession of John Steele, and running thence by the magnetic meridian of the year i764 south fifty-+ix chains and sixty links, or to the rear line of farms fronting on the north side of the Saint Mary’s Road; thence along the said rear line west eight chains and eighty-one links; thence north to Sturgeon Road aforesaid, and thence aiong the same east to the place of commencement, contain- ing by estimation fily acresef land, a little more Or less. The above sale is made pursuant toa power of sale contained in a Mortgage dated the 15th day of November, A D lal, made between Daniel Dancan and Sarah Dancan, his wife, of the one part, and Henry Coombs of the olher part, and duly assigned to the under- signed. For further particulars apply to Mr. William Dated this 30th day of April, A D 1894. RICHARD HEARTZ, Assignee of Mortgage. mayl—law (tues) ti sie TO LET. Three Dwellings on Pleasant Street, all tent moderate. WILLIAM DODD. House. may3—4w ——FOR——- Creameries and Cheese Factories. The very best work guaranteed on all jobs for Creameries and Cheese Factories. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF THIS KIND OF WORK, M. STEVENSO®, MANUFACTURER OF Tinware, Stove Pipe, &e., 53> QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. All orders promptly attended to. apd— tf HAVE A GUESS. Oh, wheelinen, all take my advice, And don’t forget, be sure To take a look at the famous “ Bike ” In PROWSE’S well-known Store. The handsome Brantford Bicycle That in their window’s shown Ts as good as any in Charlottetown, And it may be your own. A jar in which are cents galore Is placed where all can see ; Guess how many cents the jar contains And the “ Bike” your own will be. Be wise, make all your purchases At PROWSE’S Clothing Store; Each purchase, on that Bicycle, Will give you one chance more. Their Carpets, Hats and Furnishings, And a!l, in fact, they keep, Compared with others in the town Are more than quite as cheap. ap6—eud REMOVAL! MR, ROBERT BRAIRSTO AUCTIONEER, Has Removed his Office to Store oceupied by Mr. W. B. Robertson, Queen Street. About the Ist of May Mr. Beairsto will move into the Store on corner of Queen ‘RLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. TUESDAY, JUNE LENE POPULAR SUBSTITUTE FOR LARD. se we s: Cy at 5) Sold by Grocers Everywhere, <i we Made only by N. K. FARRBANK & CO. Wellington and Ann Sts., MONTREAL. THE SOGIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. A Society established with a view to disseniinate the taste for arts, to encourage and help artists, Incorporated by Letters Patent of the Government of Canada, the 27th February, 1893. GALLERY OF ‘ rf PAINTINGS Dame St., Montreal. One of the hichest Galleries of Paintings in Canada, ADMISSION FREE, from 10 o’clock? a. m., to 4 p. m. All the Paintings are originals, mostly from the French school, the leading mod- ern school. Eminent Artists, such as Francais Rochegrosse, Aublet, Barau, Pesant, Petit jean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a great many others, are members of this Society. Sale of Paintings at easy terms. distribution of Paintings between Society and Scripholders on June 27. Price of Scriptum, $1.00. Ask for Catalogue and Circular. H. A. A. BRAULT, janl 7—mwf tf Director. Next the TO CURE DEBILITY, Loss of appetite, sleeplessness and all nerv- ous troubles, physicians recommend Campbell’s Quinine Wine. Do not let your druggist pursuade you that some other is just as good. K. CAMPBELL & Co., Mfrs., MONTREAL. ‘Unlike the Dutch Process — No Alkalies Other “hemieals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & €0.’S - \BreakfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soludte. Ithas more than ti reetimes | the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or a Sugar, and is far more eco- nomical, costing less than onc ceat @ cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED, Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass AFTER HAVING BEEN KEPT UP ALL NIGHT With that COUGH, if you do not want to repeat the experience, buy a bottle of the OLD STANDARD REMEDY Gray’s Syrup of Red Spruce Gum The best Cough Cure in the world. Sold everywhere 25 cts. a bottle. KERRY WATSON & CO. Proprictons MONTREAL. PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained—how ree stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- siology will not tell yous the doctors can’t or b-ywon't; but allthe same you wish to know. Your ’ SEXUAL POWERS are the Key to Life and its reproduction. Our book Jays bare the truth. Every man who A would regain sexual vi ‘ gor lost through folly, mt or develop members weak by nature or wasted by disease, should write for cur sealed book, “ Perfect Man- SL and Grafton Streets, now used by Mr. J. q Taylor as a Bookbindery. i ch29— dy hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), ERIE MEDICAL C0., Buffalo, N.Y. | | | | | 5, 1894, IS MARS TELEPHONING? IF NOT, WHAT MEAN THESE STRANGE, MYSTERIOUS NOISES? Mr. Preece, of the British Post Office, On “Electric Signalling Without Wires’’— His Recent Demonstrations — Edison, Likewise, Keeping Tab on the Noises. Can we open up electric communication with the inhabitants of Mare? That is a question recently considered at a meeting of the Society of Arts in London, where Mr. W. H. Preece, engineer to the Tele- gtaphs Department of the British Post- Office, read a paper on ‘Electric Signalling Without Wires.” Mr. Preece explained how he had recently demonstrated that wires were not at all necessary to estab- ishing telephonic communication. Under the supervision of a Royal Com- mission appointed to inquire into electric communication between the shore and light-houses he had conducted # series of experiments which amply demonstrated this fact. There was no difficulty in speaking between the shore and Flat Holm, three miles distance from the place of ex- periment. Mr. Preece then went on to say that ‘‘strange, mysterious sounds” are heard on all long telephone lines when the earth is used asa return, especially in the calm stillness of the night. ‘Earth eur- rents,” he said, ‘‘are found in telegraph circuits, and the aurora borealis lights up our northern sky when the sun's photo- sphere is disturbed by spots The sun’s surface <nust at such times be violently disturbed by electrical storms, and if os- cillations are set up and radiated through space in sympathy with those required to affect telephones, it is not a wild dream to say that we may hear on this earth a thunder-storm in the sun.” After further describing the mysterious sounds which had attracted his attention in “the still watches of the night, Mr. Preece said: “If any of these planets be populated with beings like ourselves, hav- ing the gift of language and the knowledge to adapt the great forces of nature to their wants, then if they could oscillate immense stores of electrical energy to and fro in telegraphic order, it would be possible for us to hold commune by telephone with the people of Mars.” These mysterious sounds which so puz- zle Mr. Preece seem to correspond with those noticed by Thomas A. Edison, who has turned Ogden Mountain, in New Jer- sey, into a great magneé and coiled miles of wire about it. At the time of the last opposition of Mars he noticed an increase 6f the seismic mutterings, which have recently been so violent. Mr, Edison and Mr. Preece are only two of the scientists who are now experimenting along these lines, and the whole scientific world is watching the progress being made, Neither Mr. Edison nor Mr. Preece has been so bold as to say that the strange sounds referred to are messages sent by the inhabitants of Marsa to those of earth, but they have not otherwise explained them. Ou the other hand, there are many sci- entists firm in the belief that the next few years will witness the opening up of com- munication between the people of the two planeta, This conviction has been enor- mously strengthened by the strange lights seen at the Lick Observatory when Mars was under observation during its opposi- tion a little overa year ago. The three lights were arranged in a triangle. Nightly as the great red orb rose from the ocean bed to the vault of heaven the lights flashed out as soon as darkness had set in, and in the immense lens of the Lick tels- scope they glowed with steady and con- tinued effulgence. Was this an effort of the inhabitants of Mars to attract the at- tention of those ou earth? Such had been the opinion of Flam- marion, who had argued in favor of Earth signalling back with a triangle of lights thirty miles across. It wasshown that the conditions of Mars were more nearly those ot Eartii than of any other planet. Both of the snow caps could be piainly seen, and may be seen uow in any first class tele- scope, for Mars is now to be observed in the morning about thirty degrees west and fourteen degrees south of Venus in the constellation Capricorn. The well de- fined atmosphere of Mars is also plainly visible, and astronomers can tell by the in- crease or decrease of its snow caps and its position in regard to the sun the progress of its seasons and whethe: or not the Mar- sians are haying a cold wirter. The canal theory of Schiapparelli has likewise many believers, who assert that the strange straight lines on Mars are canals built by its highly civilized inhabitants. Mr. Preeoe saya he has kept a record of the strange, mysterious seid which have attracted his attention, while Edison has doue likewise. These will reyuire much study to decipher, if they are m es from Mars. The Preece discovery on the other hand puts it in the power of the peo- ple of Earth tosend direct electrical cur- rents to Mars. whose iuhabitants are so much in advance of ourselves that they may be able to help us out in the work of opening up converse. A pantomimic elee- trical interchange will be necessary for some time, but what will be the emotions of the scientific world when the message is sent out that communication has been es- tablished? There are those who firmly assert that this is an experience of the immediate future, that eleciricity is the universal force and the one whereby the planets will come into communication with each other iftheyeverdo. The mystery of electri- city is the strange fluctuations it under- goes. If it were an earth property solely it would be steady, as it would be were it common to all the universe and not inter- fered with. But its strange goings and comings, its apparent relations to tue sun, and yetits known sympathy with other heavenly bodies, seem to show that some- body somewhere is fooling with the dyna- mo and cutting off and turning on the current. Romantic Ghost Story. As pretty a ghost story as has been told for mauy a day has been spoiled in Bidde- ford, but unlike most legends of the kind, has left behind it a romantic interest. The story was of a white-robed figure which had been seen several times lately flitting sebout among the graves in the Catholic cemetery, always disappearing by appar- ently dropping into one of them. The glare of plain dsylight thrown on this mystery discloses a veritable woman in white crazed by the grief with which for fifteen years she mourred for her lover, who is buried in this place. She comen to Biddeford at intervals, and during her last stay there has haunted the spot dearest to ber more persistently than ever. Her habit has been to re at night after the family she visited were asleep, wrap her- self in the blankets from her bed and go down to lie on her lover’s grave. She has now been taken back to Massachusetts, — Lewiston Journal. EAL MERIT is the character- istic of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It cures even after other preparations fail. Get Hoed’s and ONLY HOOD’S. —_—_ so -—— World’s Columbian Exposition. Will be of valne to the world by illus trating the iinprovements in the machanica] arts and eminent physicians will tell you that the progress in medical agents, bas been of equal importance, and as a strengthening laxative that Syrup of Figs is far in advance of all others. ; | Hood’s Cured THE DAILY EXAMINER. SINGING IN CHURCH. © (St. John Sun.) Move than once the edn of the right to sing inchut i. has come before the courte. It will be fresh in the mem- ory of our readers that a clereyman in Prince Edward Island, well known and respected here, had to suffer for two years | the vagaries of a too independent singer until the nuisance had by law. The last case happened at Chee. | ter, when a middle-aged lady, named | Frances Williame, was summoned for | maliciously disturbing the services in Ches- | ter Cathdral. The*precentor, Rev. Har- | old Wright, said the defendant sat under- neath the Bishop's throne, and persisted | in what, by courtesy, he should call | singing in parts of the service where the congregation were not intended to join. | She sang out of tune, and nearly npeet the | choir. On several occasions her conduct had become such an intolerable nuisance | that the cahedral were driven to take pro- | ceedings. She had been expostulated with | by himself and by prominent jaymen, but | without effect. WhenT witness asked her } to desist, che sang much iouder. The de- | fendant said she had not sung to annoy anyone else. She only joined ia the sing- ' ing that should be joined in by the con- | gregation. Witness eaid that was not so — she had persisted in singing during solos and anthems. Dr. J. C. Bridge, organist, at the cathedral, in corroborating, said the defendant had a most werful, penetrating voice, of nota particularly good quality. The boy choristers could hardly keep their faces while she wae singing, aud he had sometimes a difficulty in ac- companying the choir in consequence of her eonduct. When the summona wae applied for on the previons day, the pre- centor said that the defendant persisted in sitting under the Bishop's throne, and His Lerdship declared unless the nuisance was abated he should take off hie robes and sit among the congregation. The mayor said the bench did not want to spoil the defendant’s devotions if she were in earnest, but the services at the cathedral] must not be disturbed. The Defendant—I only follow the choir. I don’t lead them. Dr. Bridge—That is what we complaint of. Defendant was bound over in £10 not to repeat the offence, and was muleted in costs. to be suppressed te KEEP YOUR MOUTH SauY. (From the Boston Herald.) Gireat numbers of people go through life with their mouths open day and night. They take into the delicate organs of the mouth and Jungs the dust of the street, which is filled with the germs of disease, and breathe into the lungs without protec- tion intended by nature the noxious ele- ments in the atmosphere, and lay the seeds of pulmonary disease and of many other beginnings of imperfect health. A pro- minent physician in Boston, acting as a throat specialist, remarked that he would have nothing to do if people could only be taught to keep their mouths shut. If you notice persons on the street, you will find that a large proportion of them keep their mouths habitually open, and that they breathe through their mouth in- stead of their nostrils, never having been taught that this is the special function and use of the nose. In many cases the nos- trils have become sy impaired by disuse that they are practically filled up so that it is impossible to breathe through them, and then it is only after a great deal of effort that they are made to resume their natural function. The importance of breathing through the nose is very great in the case of public speakers and readers, who, if they take in the air through the mouth, are usually afflicted with dryness of the throat, which speedily develops into some form of bronchial disease, This is the origin of the clergymen’s sore throat. People living in the country, and never thinking of the use of the nostrils, easily form the habit of ignoring their use. It is said that people who sleep with their mouths open are usually snorers. NAMES OF CHILDREN. Down to the early part of the present century it was usual to name a child after the saint on whose day he happened to be rn. A writer to Notes and Queries in 1823 states that he had recently baptized e child by the name of Benjamin Simon Jude, On his expressing some surprise at this somewhat singular conjunction of names, he was informed that the birth had taken place on the festival of SS. Simon and Jude, and that it was always considered very unlucky to take the day from a child. The custom of naming children after any particular saint has fallen into general disuse, except in those countries where the population is composed almost entirely of Roman Catholics. The giving of a name in baptism is realiy no essentail part of the rite, but is merely a custom derived appa- rently from the Jews, aud which through long practice has become an important element in the ceremony. Many instances might be furnished oj children who have inadvertently received wrong names. The registers in Warmin- ster church contain the following entries : “1790, January 17, Charles, daughter of John and Betty Haines. This child ought to have been christened Charlotte, but, owing to a mistake of the sponsors, it was wrong named.” “1791, July 31, William, daughter of William and Sarah Weiddick. N. B.— It was intended that this child, being a girl, should have been christened Maria, but through a mistake cf the godfather it was named William.”—The Westminster Review. Dying on His Feet, “That man is just dying on his feet.” How often the phrase is used with re gard to persons brought te death’s door by overwork and consequent nervous prostra- tions and debility. They cannot afford time to rest (so they will tell you) and gradually they reach the stage where their friends speak of them in the words above quoted. For ali who have reached such a stage or are in broken health from any cause, there is @ sure specific in Hawker’s nerve and stomach tonic, the great nerve and brain invigorator, blood and flesh | builder, and a perfect stomach tonic and aid to digestion. The pen is mightier than the sword. At least ‘a Montrez! millicnaire named Baggs thinks so. He hit a man with a sword, and then had to resort to his pen to remedy the wrong. He did it by signing his came to a cheque for $500 which was handed over to a hospital. Colonel Ingersol] was riding uptown on a New York elevated when a gentleman sitting opposite recognized him and whis- pered fo his friend: “There’s Bob Inger- soll.” The whisper was loud enough to be overheard by a saintly-looking old lady | in the adjoining seat. She rose immed- iately, cast a frightened look at the Col- one], and made a break for the next car. USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the great blood and Nerve Remedy. SVIIIFSF IF. After Others Failed Scrofula in the Neck—Bunches All Cone Now. St By) , “wr Sangerville, Maine. “C. L. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: “Gentlemen :—I feel that I cannot say enough | in favor of Hood’s Sarsaparilia. For five years I have been troubled with scrofula in my neck and throat. Several kinds of medicines which I tried did not do me any good, and when i com- menced to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla there were large bunches on my neck so sore that I could tood’s=* Cures not bear the slightest touch. When I had taken one bottle of this medicine, the soreness had gone, and before I had finished the second the bunches had entirely disappeared.” BLaNcRa ATWooD, Sangerville, Maine. N. B. Ifyou decide to take Hood's Sarsapa- rilla do not be induced to buy any other. Hood’s Pills cure constipation by restor- ing the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. Our Part Below will be found a Combinatioa Covpon, which, when cut out and sent to this office with ten cents, will entitle sender to any one Part of whichever Port- folio is desired. Sample copies of all the books may be seen at this office or at R. H. Mason’s News Stand. The Examiner Publishing Comp’y, CHARLOTTETOWN, STODDARD'S PHOTOGRAPHS. Paris 1 to 12 New Ready! 9 S ee This Coupon and Ten Cente will precure any Part. eeeeetegeees See eRee ee eer rete Cen eee renees THE MAGIC OITY » WORLD'S FAIR PICTURES. Whole Series Now Ready! @ This Coupon and Ten Cents will } procure any Part. eeeeee . . . “ SOUR OWN COUNTRY, The King of Portfolios. A PICTURESQUE AMERICA. Part No lt to 2 Now Ready — eeeeeeeeeceee2eeeeeeoee? This Coupon and Ten Cents will procure any Part. SLSCSSTPLVLVS22ee PIDPIADSDWAsWs As *APD*P > 2h 720° | sassiaaaniaeal . And it will Keep You Cool are tired ; wien youareoverhested, When ving Rootbeer A 25c. pkg. makes 4g: llons, Sold everywhere. Send 2c. stamp for beau! iful pictare cards and book. The Chas. E. Hires Co., Philadelphia. Refuse worthless subsitutes. Only a Step from Weak Lungs to Con- sumption. from Depleted Blood to Anzmia, from Dis- eased Blood to Scrofula,from Loss of Flesh to Illlness, Scott’s Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil, prevents this step from being taken and restores Health. Physicians, the world over, en= dorse it, Gon't be decelved by Substitutes! Scott & Bowne, Belleville. All Druggistse. Wo. &¢L da’s Discovery. poe or." RB. Watson; Charlottetown Physicians Enporse Them, and we GUARANTER them to Cune, (or money reftunde).) Millett Mrs. Elmer EB. . P. O. Box 511, Livermore Falls, Maine. SALT RHEUM and all disease. of the BLoop & Skin Skoda’s Discovery, Skeda’s German Ointment and Skoda’s German Soap, are specially adapted to cure inherit. ed and chronic diseases. Mrs. Miilert writes: ‘I have had Salt Rheum ever since I could remember; tricd mary remedies, but received no benefit vat.) I took Skoda’s Discovery. Skoda’s Cures. My husband says it will cost too much to board me if I take any more of Sko- Skoda’s Little Tablets cure sick headache» constipation and dyspepsia. 50 ip a box, 4c MEDICAL ADVICE FREE. SKODA DISCOVERY C2., LTD., WOLFVILLE, #. & For sale by all druggists. Trade sup 1. =) = ll ial saa Sieiiiacinlimcnnpamiihinpiaparitpdal cg Re PRA A, Ay any Lapeer ane ata met an PPE ese RAMEN RE mo Sal il EOC I Al at i PNR ee emmy em: fmm ge OP SG ES ecm "7 i Sa a NR