Po renter aapemcter ss alt ee a > ari a ‘wow FR A 8 han RR a a , ERPS Ce ae eee rae . Uncle Eli and Tom Slater, © ~~ Tom Slater was as trifling a scamp as ever danced a jig or curried a mule. One dxy he went to Uncle Eli Parker, another negro, with a tale about what the white folks had been saying about him. He wanted sympathy. : “‘Say,. Uncle Eli,’”’ said he, “‘what- cher reckon dem dar Campbells heen ’er Sayin "bout me?’’ “I doan’ know,’’ said Uncle Eli. “What dey say?’’ “Dey says, dey does, dat I’se triflin *m no ‘count ’n ain’ wuff shucks. ”’ “Does dey, chile?’’ ““Yassir, ’"N day says more’n dat. Dey been tellin dat I steals howgs ’n chicis us 'n *backer.”’ “Well, well, chile, hit’s too bad, too bad.’’ “ "NN, Uncle Eli, Wuifless dat I’ze gwint big road straight tudde penitensh’y.’ dey say dat I’ze so right on down de , “Sho, boy, sho. Say, Tom, hit ’pears to me dat dem whi’ folks sho’ done lo- cate you.’’ —Chicago Times-Herald. crm Familiar to Advertisers, S AYA POH? < Top of column, next to pure reading matter.—Printers’ Ink. Poet Stoddard aod the Can. At the recent dinner in honor of Rich- ard Henry Stoddard ex-.Iudge Henry E, Howland told a story of how Mr. Stod- dard opened a tomato can, to illustrate the intense ardor wita which he opens a subject. Mr. Stoddard, he said, rent into the closet to open the can, and soon his wife heard him talking vigorously. ‘*‘What are you doing there, Mr. Stod- dard?’’ she asked. ‘‘Opening a tomato can,’’ he said. ‘‘ What with?’’ asked his wife. ‘With a knife,’’ replied Mr. Stoddard. ‘‘Did you think I was open- ing it with my teeth?’ ‘‘No,’’ she said, **“but from your language I thonght ethat you were opening it with prayer.”’ +—Chicago Post. Information. Upguardson—What does this word sinecuré mean? Atom—Well, ‘‘sine’’ means ‘‘with- oct,’’ and you know what ‘‘cure’’ means. The word signifies ‘‘incurable.’’ ‘That doesn’t seem right. I’m read- ing here about a man who holds an office which seems to be a sinecure.’’ **That’s all right. When a man has once had an office of that kind, he’s in- curable.’’—Chicaugo Tribune. The Woman. “Yesterday,’’ said Jabson, ‘‘I refused @ poor woman a request for a small sum of money, and in consequence of my act I passeda sleepless night. The tones of her voice were ringing in my ears the whole time.’’ ‘“Your softness of heart does yor credit,’’ said Mabson. ‘‘Who was the woman?’’ Anxiously watch declining healt of their daughters. So many are cut off by consumption in early years that there is real cause for anxiety. In the early stages, when not beyond the reach of medicine, Hood’s Sarsa- parilla will restore the quality and quantity of the blood and thus give good health. Read the following letter: “Tt is but just to write about my daughter Cora, aged 19. She was cum- pietely run down, declining, had that tired feeling, and fr’ 223 saic shc ~ ould not ad a bad hive over three cczthz. SH and nothing seemed to do her any good. I happened to read about Hood’s Sarsapa- Filla and had her give it a trial. From the Sey first dose she began to get bettez. After taking a few bottles she was com-~- pletely cured and her health has been the best ever since.” Mrs. ADDIE PECK, 12 Railroad Piace, Amsterdam, N. Y. “f will say that my mother has not stated my case in as strong words as I would have done. Hood’s Sarsaparilla has truly cured me and i am now well.” Cona Pack, Amsterdam, N. Y. » Be sure to get Hood’s, because Hoods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. are purely vegetable, re- Hood’s Pills iiaie and venedeia). %a, THE DAILY EXAMIYER, CHARLOTTETOWN JUNE 9, 1897. THES comune: . _ The Orator Revealed. ae Mr. F. P. Stearns, in his book of “Sketches From Concord to Appledore,”’ describes the occasion that revealed Phillips, the crator. in October, 1887, he was married tc Miss Anna Green, a cousin te Mrs. Ma- ria Chapman. In November occurred the riot at Alton, Ills., and the assassin- ation cf Lovejoy. Dr. Channing’s first petition for an indignation meeting in | Faneuil hall was refused by the author- ities, but a second and more urgent one was granted. The audience was almost equally divided between the antislavery people and their opponents, who made the most noise and cCisturbance. It seemed as if the meetings would end iz confusic®. “T went there,’’ said Wendell Phil- lips, 25 years later, ‘‘without the least intention of making a speech or taking any part in the proceedings. My wife aud Mrs. Chapman wislied to go, and ] accompanied them. I remember wear- ing a long surtout, a brand new one, with a small cape, as was the fashion of the day, and after the attorney genera) made his speech, denouncing Lovejoy as a fool, I suddenly felt myself inspired, and, tearing off my overcoat, started fox the platform. “My wife seized me by the arm, half terrified, and said: * “Wendeil, what are you going to do?’ **T replied, ‘I am going to speak, if ] can make inyzelf heard.’ ’’ The uproar wes so great that the chairman asked Dr. Channing if he could stand thunder. But the personal beauty of Mr. Phillips so surprised all hearers that they paused to listen to him and were so charmed by his eloquence, that they neglected to. make any further disturbance, The attorney general was wholly discomfited, and Dr. Channing’s resolutions were carried by a substan- tial majority. Mr. Phillips was only 26 years of age when he delivered the spontaneous, magnetic speech which proclaimed him a Vigorous, original orator. He Got His Dose. The llama of South America is an ex- pert marksman, though it never uses its craft in the procurement of its food. Only when annoyed and angry does it give an exhibition of its wonderful skill in hitting the object aimed at. The Nama’s weapon is its mouth. Its bullet is composed of saliva and chewed hay. Several years ago, at the fair grouncs in St. Louis, I witnessed an exhibition of this creature’s powers of expectors- tion, in which the victimn was a country beau, who came very near losing his sweetheart thereby. This roung mun was one of those self suficient individ- uals who imagine that knowledge sits enthroned in the temples of their own personal intellects; that what they dc not know is not worth knowing. He ‘was annoying the liama (the animal stood in the center of its pen, probably 15 feet or more from its tormentor) by throwing clods of dirt at it and by beat ing on the raila of the pen with his cane. I saw by the creature’s actions that it was angry. The rapid movements of its jaws indicated that it was preparing to attack its versecutor. I warned the young man, telling him what to expect. His sweetheart begged him to desist and to come away. But he treated my warning With derision and told the gir! that he ‘‘knew his business.’’ Suddenly there came a whizzing, whistling noise, followed by asharp spat. The young wiseacre lay supine upon his back with his eyes and forehead plastered with a disgusting mixture of saliva, hay and mucus. ‘I hate a fool!’’ said the girl, as she shouldered her paresol and walked away. I saw them again in the monkey house some time afterward, but the man was a changed being. He had learned his lesson in decorum. He had been taught modesty by the good marks- manship of a Nama.—Jumes Weir, Jr., in Lippincott’s. Located by an Eigho. A most interesting method of employ- ing the echo of a sound has been devised for the location of the carriers which sometimes become lodged in the under. ground pneumatic tubes. Knowing that sound travels at a speed of, roughly, 1,100 feet per second, and the time meas- ured in thousandths of a second between the firing of a pistol shot into the con- duit and the arrival of the echo at the outlet of the tube, a simple calculation gives the exact location of the obstruc- tion, T'> mean of five experiments in the rece..6 test gave 2,792 secc.ts, and when the sound velocity was corrected for air temperature the obstruction was located at 1,537 feet from the instru- mont, Which was the exact location. — Boston Trane-~ipt, English Lie’ ** couses, During the reign of Queci Elizabeth a rcligiens Lrotherhood known as the Exe Lerhood of the Most Glorious and Undivided frinity was directed by ar act of parliament to preserve ancien. sea minrks and to erect beacons fia “cigus of the sea.’’ For more thau 106 veurs this brotherhood kept up tke an- cient sea marks, but srected nothing ucw. Then they begaw fo purchase and operate lights owned by private indi- viduals or by societies, and still later they commenced to bnild lighthouses sud beacons. Finally, in 1856, parlia- ment gave ‘Trinity house the entire gon- trel of the lighthouses of Euglaud.— Licutenant John M. Ellicott, U. 8. N., in St. Nicholes. a ex = CURTAIN RAISERS. Marie Bates will play the title part in “The Widow Goldstein.”’ Paul Menifee has joined ‘‘Pudd'nhead Wilson’’ to play Chambers. Fritz Williams will rejoin the Lyceum stock company next season. James O’Noill contemplates a revival of **The Dead Heart’’ next season. Laura Keene’s old homestead at Fair Haven, Mass., was burned to the ground recently. Wiillam Courtleigh will be a member of the New York Lyceum stock company next season. Oscar Hammerstein has engaged Bar- oness Blanc to appear at the Olympia Mu- Sic hall, New York. Geoffrey Stein will be a member of the summer stock company at the Columbia theater, Washington, Emma Madders will remain a member of the Girard Avenue theater stock com- pany at Philadelphia next season. Felix Morris’ contract with Daniel Froh- man had a second seasen to run, but Mr. Morris, it is said, has consented to cancel it. Joseph W. Herbert is writing a new burlesque, which will be produced at Kos- ter & Bisi’s in New York during the sum- mer. Harry Knizht contemplates a revival of his success, ‘ fhe Athenian,’’ later entitled ‘*Nydia, the Blind Slave,’’ at Boston next season. The triple comic opera star alliance, con- sisting of Lillian Russell, Della Fox and Jeff Le Angas, has proved a phenomenal snéces ee Fanny Bulkeley has declined an offer from Augustin Daly for his English tour. Miss Bulkeley will retire from the stage after her marriage in June. A new ‘‘Uncle Ton.’s Cabin’’ is the startling bill at a theaterin New York city. James W. Harkins, Jr., and Edwin Barbour are responsible for it. Frances Hodgson Burnett’s play, ‘‘A Lady of Quelity,’’ will he produced at Wallack’s theater, New York, next Sep- tember, with Julia Arthur and Frederic De Belleville in the chief roles, IRON AND STEEL. A large part of the finest fron and steel of commerce is made from magnetic ores. A chemical authority states that silicon, as well as carbon, renders iron more fu- sible. The hot blast was introduced into fur- mace use some time bettween i832 and 18388. Mulhall says the United States produces one-third of the steel manufactured in tae world. The iron deposited by the galvanic bat- tery ie grayish white and takes a beauti- ful polish. The Bessemer method of manufacturing iron and steel was patented by Henry Bessemer Oct. 17 and Deo. 5, 1855, and Feb, 12, 1856. The tensile strength of Austrian gun iron is 30,000 te 88,000 pounds per square: inch, of Russian 27,000 pounds and of | Swedish about 34,000 pounds. Iron ie more extensively used in medi- cine than any other mineral substance. There are hundreds of medical prepara- tions cf which it forms the prineipal part, and their number is constantly increasing. In car wheels it is desirable to combine toughness of structure with an intensely hard rolling surface, and to this end the outside surface is sometimes case hard- ened or made almost as hard as ‘‘oold steel.’’ Chemists say that the blood of oxen contains a farger percentage of iron than that of. any other creature, and therefore beef is the most nourishing of animal food. Pills made of dried bullock’s. blood have been manufactured for use in medi- cine. Until 1730 the smelting of iron was al- ways performed with charcoal, nor was its use wholly superseded in large foun- dries by coal and coke until 1788, and in- decd in many establishments and for sey- eral kinds of manufactured iron char- coal is still employed.—St. Louis Globe- Desnocrat. CAAA DAADAA DAA AAA AAD AD Wrapper Competition for every month é of the year 1897 SUNLIGHT § so WRAPPERS. § For ful! particulars see advis, cr apply to LEVER BROS., Lro. 23 SCOTT ST., sence. TO RENT A dwelling house and stable at Alexan- dria, Lot 49. Beautifully situated for a summer residence; four miles trom South- port. For particulars apply to W. W. WELLNER 99O 90000 900608.) DOOD HO00-0 95-00-0000 90-600400900:0000000 =. oo o. a = LS ‘a £LZ Y $" 127— - ——— © FENCIL AND BRUSH. Sir Walter Besant is advocating a plan to make fhe anniversary of Shakespeare’s birth and death a universal Anglo-Saxon observance. James Payn has made the grave confes- sion that some years ago, in his capacity as reader for a Londen publishing house, he rejected ‘‘John Inglesant.’’ Miss Curtis Smith, who has recently been appointed an art director in Phila- delphia, is said to be one of the cleyerest poster artists in Philadelphia, Henri Gervex, the Parisian artist who painted the pictures of the coronation of the czar, has received the Cross of St. Anne of the Second Class. He is at work on 4@ panorama of the coronation. Mr. Ruskin spends several hours a day gardening in a little green, cultivated place in the middle of a nut wood, which in epring is full of daffodils and cherry blos- soms. Here the professor admits no other toil but his own, and is as proud of. his garden as of the great books which bear his name on the title page. HOWE’S HOMILIES. Some people are so polite that they are dishonest. Many a man who thinks he is smart can’t prove it, The best people occasionally slip into gossiping without realizing it. If you want the women to admirea man, tell them that he is fond of his wife. Go fishing and get rid of it. Every one goes fishing at least once a year end be- comes disgusted. Pious men are reminded that if the Lord hears the grace they say at meals, he also hears the comments they make to their wives afterward. A man can’t learn any more about women by being engaged to them than he can of the taste of candy by looking through a cenfectioner’s window. —Atcbh- ison Globe. STATE LINES. A curious fact about these river floods is that they never brtak out in Kentucky. —Harrisburg Morning Call. If the examples of New York, Pennsyl-_ vania and Mississippi are typical, it ap- pears that about the worst trouble a state ean suffer is to build a capitol.—Boston Journal, The claim is made for New Hampshire by one of its sons that it is the only state of the original 13 in which no man ever perished on its soil by the act of a public eoemy ef his country other than indiana —Exchange. 1 a oe rete a ~ by SIGK REABAGKE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. <A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Tastc in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Smail Bose. _ Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, os : Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. IF YOU CANT COME Write for an appointment, and have your work done by us; guaran- feed Painless Dentistry and modern methods appliances. and Berlin Dental Parlors, ‘Over store of Prowse Bros. Office Hours:—8 a. m to 8 p. m. lish and American Hats & Caps, IT IS THE FACT, Think as You Please ON It is not generally known, but itis a fact readily proven by the investigations of scieuce, that the real canger from every known ailment of mankind is caused by inflammation; cure the inflammation and you have cougquered the disease in each case. Infiammatiou 1s manifested outwardly by redness, swelling and heat; inwardly by ’ congestion of the blood ves- je id External sels and growth of un ; 5} inflammation a sound tissue, caus- ing pain and disease. ccompanies bruises, bites, cuts, stings, burns, scalds, chaps, cracks, Strains, a) Be Ve hy b _ .Sprains, fractures, etc., and is tha oe el chief danger therefrom, Internal inflam. aN mation frequently causes outward swellings: ; 5 instances familiar to all we mention pimples, tooth. ache, stiff joints and rheumatism. Yet the great majority of internal inflammations make no outside show, for whicly reason they are often more dangerous than the externa: forms, Causes Every Known Disease! Inflammation of the nervous system embraces the brain, spine, bones and muse] breathing organs have mauy forms of inflammation; such as colds, coughs, pleuris ean > ehitis, etc. The organs of digestion have a multitude of inflammatory troubles, The 7D. orgaus form one complete plan mutualiy dependent; therefore inflammation anywhere is {1 niore or less everywhere, and impairs the health. The late Dr. A. Johnson, an old fashic et Fainily Physician, originated JOHNSON’S ANODYNE LINIMENT, in 1810, to reli — and cure every form of inflammation. It is today the Universal Household Remedy.” Send us at once your name and address, and we will send you free, our New Tlluctrated Rook “TREATMENT FOR DISEASES,’ caused by inflammation. I. S. Jounson & Cc., Boston, Mas.’ es See SY SUSY ASUS SESE, *@e ole ele “@* + i is ee Public Geod Will == | grows slowly ; when secured, it is a treasure without price, to be care fully guarded and judiciously fostered; therefore we keep constant guard on goods and prices, and sce to it that our ads are always in accordance with facts, ASE TO SHE. our high back cane seat and brace armhaire for 75c. JOHN NEWSON odie ocbve ovine sine cles oc ows ow. ye ox 2 oN 2 ses ‘ STIS ES SPSS ES Ce Ne ———— —_ : £4£2222244 LONDON HOUSE) Wall Papers! A fine assortment of American and Canadian Wall Paper now in stock. For Prices and quality we will not be beaten. Have a look at our stock before purchasing elsewhere. McMILLAN & HORNSBY QUEEN STREET NOW OPENING] |h»- [lp ||» liv ; at | -«{{] «(lf «(| ait ail We have just opened five lines of the following:—Enge} OVERCOATINGS SUITINGS TROUSERINGS The latest styles, popular makes and shades, The 2): thigs for the ceming season. 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