EE Sa SS awe eG” eee ae ss ee — —s | Warning “RE.DAILY EXAm@ ER. — : ‘2MS *Fout Dollars per Year. “ 3. ‘ . ‘ : ie y ai a, . pa oe, ae. eee 3 FEL SM Mr BIee ae ore ae tt ee ann See Sere al adc Mania ponent ere Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evnipiss. Siayle Copies two cents ’ ©) i + v—— 4 | oO / A eg | : yOL CHARLOTTETOWN, P E. ISLAND; WEDNESDAY JULY 241, 1897. NO 168 ihe we are Gisposing of our giacian Voats, Tweed Light Caps. _ _ ‘Be give you achanee to buy tnese goods to ittiaat you purchase yours at once. TASSE WOOD 8 Co,?”*=4-= aed aa mo) “WELL, SEND ME ae ee aif aay “THAN ANY CIGAR I KEE e ee > - ea <a _—_—S— oe — 1 wish to inform the public that several parties are travelling the coun iy using my name and pretending to be selling Spectacles for me. Mc. C. i. White is the only traveller that IL employ. He is competent to test eyes aud fit Spectacles properly. Ifany others call and say they are selling for me ptase ask them to show their licence, E. W. TAYLOR, Yameron Blo k, City. OPTICIAN ee o_o ee TT Se eee BINDERS, MOWER AND RAKES MAXWELL BINDER isrecognizad to be the best im lement on the marked. It is trne only right hand cut, and also the simplest and surest knotting machine, never break- ing twine. MOER.—The lighest cutting and strong:st machine Mheavy or light hay. Hasall the best improvements —foot lifting spring, raising finger bar clear ofall obstructions, Stumps, roots, etc. C _ RAKES.—tTiger and Sthied. These Rakes are fitted With the new steel wheel, having 26 teeth and solid steel axle, Also, angle steel bar to hold teeth. The teeth are *t torake, not to harrow the ground. They are the most Perfect Rake made to-day. Inspection of those machines in- Mted, or write us for prices. FINLAYSON & McKINNON TERLIZZICK’S CORNER. . vi: - = =~ [Nn (ie {jhe [he {h ijl» [im Iti fot Weather PROBA BILITiIneS: — y t [}ie [jie Up - =— BOO1.40008 S884 ~e*FO22086 € oats. S Coats, Cotten Ceats. White TREES AND LUMBER. The Norway spruce, well dry, weighs 82 pounds to the cubic foot. Well seasoned Spanish cypress weighs 27.56 pounds per cubic foct. Well seasoned red hickory weighs 52.37 pounds to the cubic foot. All splits and cracks, from whatever a ee Sy Cause, necessarily impair the value of a | the wife is an elocationist. tree for lumber. Foresters tell us that the best timber | is that which grows from dark soil in- termixed with gravel. American ebony is one of the heavi- est woods known, weighing 83.18 pounds to the cubic foot. The weight of a cubic foot of cork is 15 pounds. Cork is the bark of a species of Spanish oak and not properly a wood. Yellow stains in either timber or lumber are an indication of dry rot and are regarded as an injury to the tree or wood. aie abe Timber is reasoned by the evaporation | oi the water, the extraction of the vege- table juices and the solidification of the woody tissue. The ‘‘heart wood’’ of a tree has ceased to take any part in the vegeta- tive economy of the tree. Its only use is to strengthen the trunk. Antiseptic preparations may easily be forced into wood by causing them to follow the lines taken by its sap; other- wise it is exceedingly difficult fully to impreguate the wood with them. The lightest known wood is that of the Anona palunstris of Brazil, which is much lighter than cork. The heaviest is the iron bark of Australia, which wcighs nearly 100 pounds to the cubic } foot. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat. NOVELTIES. Greens, purples and reds are all rep- Pasented in the leather novelties. Ruszian ename!l is of frequent occur- rence on chatelaines and buckles. Paper racks and paper cutters of brass are overlaid with enameling in colors. Bill folds for men are out in smooth morocco, monkey skin and seal and have small silver clasps. Velvet and leather chatelaine holders for eyeglasses and spectacles are mount- ed with gold or enameled silver. The candelabrum is to the fore asa dinner table decoration. The lights, softened by colored shades, enhance the beauty of the shining silver and glitter- ing glass. Novel fittings for the writing table | are cut in crystal with gilt mounts. A pleasing example is a block of crystal sutwined by a gilt serpent, which seryes as an inkstand.—Jewelers’ Circular. —A? ThE DENTAL PARLORS North Side Queen Square. You can have your teeth extracted free of pain by the means of either general or ocal anesthesia. All kinds of work dcne atisfactorily. OR. J. WH. AYERS 2 — OTTERHER, hot weather goods y + elite . . ; } s at very low prices. old just now at Clearing Prices :— , oeopes Crate, Holland Skeleton Continues. Tae ~ ~ > s Khe foliowing gcods are being Russel Cord Coais, Du-ter and KF ancy Vests, Straw Hats and at reasonable rates the very time you want them. See PERSONALITIES. Emperor William of Germany is a practical typesetter. The Duke of Sutherland owns 1, 176,- 454 of the 1,297,846 acres in Suther- land county, Scotland. Mr. and Mrs. William Brinkman of Kokomo, Ind., are both blind. The husband is an expert piano tuner, and The Rev. Henry Rupp, the oldest active clergyman in Ilinois, now in his hinety-third year, is still strong and vigorous and preaches every Sunday. The Rey. O. W. Hutchinson of Wa- ed president of Grant university, Chat- tanooga, has decided not to accept the ollice. Austen Chamberlain, the eldest son and heir of the secretary of state for the colonies, bears an almost absurd per- sonal rescmblance to his distinguished father. 3 feet of it, and might have gone blind if | 2d a great deal nore than they ought to have been. , y-ar our traveller, Mr. C. H. tertown, Mass., who was recently elect- | ties at their homes in the country, to test eyes and show sam | i | i | | | SPECTACLES. Over twenty-five years I have been in the Spectacle bul inoss and during that time have fitted hundreds and hundres of persons. Souwe had put off getting glasses so long that the, could not s2e a large 4 inch letter A without going within 2 » ' they had put off getting glasses much longer. Others have been fitted or rather wisfitted, with wrong glasses by travellers, and charg- This White, intends calling on puir- pies of our goods. Should he eall on you I bespeak for him your favorable consideration, and any order you may give bin will be filleé as soon as possible and guaranteed ’ by ine, Glasses can also be exchanged at the store, Cameron Brock. City, if after a trial they du not prove as satisfactory as you | wish. } Baron Krupp, the great ironmaster of | Germany, carries evidences of the trade with him when he goes calling. His cards are made of iron, rolled so thin that they are said to be a great success for social use. Count Nicholas Esterhazy, who died recently at Totis in Hungary, was well known on the turf in England, France and Austria. He gave orders that he should be buried in a red hunting coat, with all the henors of the chase. Ex Queen Liliuokalani of the Ha- waiian Islands has been offered a snug sum of money to appear in public in this country as a singer. She has writ- ten several songs and is said to havea good and highly trained voice. Dr. John Lewis Smith is the patriarch of Methodism in Indiana, and he wrote in his eighty-second year a book of 450 pages, containing anecdotes of pioneer preachers and their charges in the west, together with a treatise on Indiana Methodism. All the Confederate officers who reached the full rank of general are dead. The number, including Lee, was eight. There were 19 lieutenant gen- erals in the Confederate army, of whom seven survive — Longstreet, Buckner, Gordon, Hampton, 8. D. Lee, Wheeler and A. P. Stewart. Captain Joseph Manuel (he followed the sea for 60 years) and his wife, Sarah, celebrated recently at their home in Kennebunkport, Me., the seventy- seventh anniversary of their wedding. They are the oldest people in the town. He is 101 years of age and she 99. He was born in Portugal and she in Maine. England’s oldest duke, the Duke of Northumberland, has entered on his eighty-seventh year. Though he calls himself Percy, the duke is really a Smithson, the last male Percy having died in 1670. He is extremely religious, and, as his wife was an Iryingite, one seat is always kept vacant at his table for the Saviour. For your summer honse.—Camp stools and chairs, folding chairs, lounging chairs, camo beds, folding wire cots, cheap fe: ther pillows and cheap mattresses, at prices that will please you.—John'Newson, 161, 2w } ' | : __E, W. TAYLOR, City ee You may be busy; so are we, and have Just a Minute 22%" een all the Spring. So busy tkat we did not have time to advertise and tell you all the fine things we have for this season aad the low prices we are selling for, but the people find us out, for it takes over forty people to keep the orders we get made up, 3o it keeps us moving to keep everything going right, But for those who do not know, we might say that we keep all the old reliadle cloths such as Bellwarp Coating and Serges, Tyke and Blen- heim Serges, Fashionable Trouserings to no end. Come and see us and see our stock and the fine clothes we make, JOHN MACLEOD & CO MERCHANT TAILORS. $18,000--IN CASH--$13.000 CAND PAOVINGIAL EXHIBITION Halifax, September 28th, to October tst, 1897. Goid. Silver and Bronze Medals The largest amount ever offered Proyinces. In addition to the grand Agricultural and Industrial E tions have been arranged for every day and night, The Spectacular Seige of Sabastapol i 1] ge of § Stapol every evening,—the most gorgeo realistic effects every produced in Canada. " re An unequalled half mile track for speed competition. Exhibits carried at exceedingly low ra V , ; ° - ~ ratea, er chea ePxe = © ’ railways and steamboats. J Pp eXcursion tickets on al! Full particulars later. Apply for prize lists. entry forms, ane all’ information to JOHN Ez. in prizes in any Exhibitica in the Maritime xhibition, special attrac - WTOOD. Secretary, Halifax, N. §. * — i aa PE Fag Tg as ns — - = a = dae wat Pg Se Se