+ oT e ie ey é ‘ . ¢ a THE DAiLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 3 1898 In THE RACE FOR FAVOR Baby’s Own Soap has distanced the field, Its the purit: it the be: cate skin scientific preparation and of its ingredients make t of soaps for the deli- of ladies and children. Tue Acerr: Tomer Soap Co. MONTREAL : i 2 MAKEP ® ALGO OF THE CELEBRATED ALSERT roitcet SOAPS 84 ha. OOOFOSO9900000 Low-pricad Practical Watches So low-priced that the poor man need not go without one. So practical that they wil] last a lifetime. Ye’ve lots of them. We want | you to have one of them. G. F. HUTCHESON. Queen St. Jewelery Store, SOS DOSS 6094 D. 611190366 0900 : CORSET QUALITY In P. D Oor- eet genuine Frevch Ceoutil is used in all the low-priced grades and silk and satin in the higher. Real French Coutil ‘the ideal corset cloth, is light-~ ness, strength, asd durability combined, but being quite ex~ pensive, is rare- ly used in other makes of corsets . Cheap imitation takes its place, but they are eitber thick and heavy or thin and weak. The French, tailor-cut, and hand sewed corset, the Paes is strictly genuine through and through. It is the lightest. sirong~ est, most comfortable, mor: t-shion able and best corset mad~. In all sizes and for all figures, $\ to $30 per pair. BE OO01 6900 D ISS Hv VO D000 —s Valuable Property FOR SALE SDI ES EN EE OTS BI SS EE SE IE SS ET ' aa Ex The undersigned offers for sale the premises, eiiuate on the corner of Queen and Water Streets, Charlottetown, con- sisting of large brick warehouse 50x24 feet, now used as Bonded Warehouse. Renta! value $150. A new roof put on same last year at large cost. Also corner house containing shop, of- fices and boarding house; size of land about 62x33 teet. Rental $260 per annum Also proptrty between corner house and Mr. Archibald Kennedy’s, containing boarding house and two shops. Size about 51x86 feet’ Rental $220 per annum Any further information by applying to 250 tf J.S.MORRIS. Apples Wanted. I will receive apples suitable for the English market to pack on owners account from Monday the 3let inst, until the de- parture of the steamer Lake Winnipeg, or I will pay good prices in cash for small lots of Ribstons, Spys, Russets, King Tomp kine, Ben Davies and Baidwins They, must be No. 1. in quality and free from all spots and bruises. They must not be carried in bags. D. FERGUSON. —Ken St, Ch’town Oct 2298. 247. : 3) | dent brothers went with light hearts to A PLEASANT LETTER a A Pleasant Letter. It takes a clever man to find :n.good word to say on every ocoasion. [tis said of Thomas Bailey Aldrich that he once received a letter from his friend, Pro- fessor Edward 8. Morse, and found the handwriting wholly illegible. Mr. Al- drich was not ata loss for an answer. In due time there came to Mr. Morse the following reply: My dear Morse, it was very pleasant to receive a letter from you the other day. PerhapsI should have found it pleasanter if I had been able to decipher it. I don’t think I mastered anything | beyond the date, which I knew, and the signature, at which I guessed. TAere is a singular and perpetual charm ina letter of yours—it never grows old, and it never loses its novelty. | One can say every morning as one looks atit: ‘‘Here’s a letter of Morse’'s I haven't read yet. I think I shall take another shy at it today, and maybe I shall be able in the course of a few years to make out what he means by those t’s that look like w’s and those i’s that haven’t any eyebrows.’’ Other letters are read and thrown away and forgotten, but yours are kept forever—unread. One of them will last . a ' a reasonable man a lifetime.— Youta’s Companion. A Very Prudent Young Man. Of William and John Scott, after- | ward Lord Stowell and Lord Elton, Lord John Russell used to tell this story: When they were young men at the bar, having had a stroke of profes- sional luck, they determined to cele- brate the ecoasion by having a dinner at the tavern and going to the play. When it was time to call for the reck- oning William Scott dropped a guinea. He and his brother searched for it in vain and came to the conclusion that it had fallen between the boards of the nocarpeted floor. **This is a bad job,”’ said William, | *““we must give up the play.’’ **Stop a bit,’’ said John. ‘‘I knowa trick worth two of that,’’ and he called @ waitress. **Betty,’’ said he, ‘‘we've dropped 2 guineas. See if you can find them.’’ Betty went down on her hands and knees and found the guinea, which had rolled under the fender. “That’s a very good girl, Betty,”’ said John Scott, pocketing the coin, ‘fand when you find the other you can keep it for your trouble.’’ And the prn- the play and so eyentually to the bench | and the woolsack. Fish In Icebound Waters. Fish do not breathe air, but the life supporting constituent of air—oxygen gas—which is soluble in water to the extent of three volumes in 100 at ordi- nary temperatures and four in 100 at freezing point. The water containing the disso!ved oxygen is made to pass over the gills, where it is separated from the blood only by a very thin membrane, through which the gas is able to pass. Fish in icebound rivers have to de- pend entirely upon this store of oxygen for their respiration, and if it becomes exhausted they are suffocated, just as we should be if deprived of oxygen. It rarely happens, however, that any considerable area of water is entirely covered with ice, especially in the case of rivers. Holes and cracks are almost sure to occur here ard there, by which the oxygen of the air can reach the wa- ter and become dissolved in it. During a long frost fish may always be found congregated beneath air holes in large numbers. They are there to breathe.— Exchange. Early Use of Tobacco. XY have heard my grandfather say that ons pipe was handed from man to man round about the table. They had first silver pipes; the ordinary sort mada ure of 1 walnut shel] and a straw. Tobacco was sold then for its weight in silver. I have heard some of our old yeomen neighbors say that when they went to Malmesbury or Chippenham market they culled out their biggest shillings to lay in the scales against the tobacco. Sir W. R., standing ina stand at Sir Robert Poyntz’s park at Acton, took a pipe of tobacco, which made the ladies quit it until he had done. —*‘‘ Brief Lines Set Down by John Aubrey,’’ 1669-96. eT Le ALL HEADACHES from whatever cause cured in half an hour by 4OFFMAN'S HEADACHE POWDERS 10 cents and 25 cents at a)! “rv erists, ——— es REMOVED. » | On and afier enday, Oct 2rd, m patrons will fin! 1.e im my office in the New Prowse Luock, on the north side of Queen’s Square, first door to the right upstairs. OR. J. H. AYERS, Dentis Single Office TO LET In Cameron Block apply to | without sleeping. THE PHILOSOPHICAL TAILOR How often have | taten away a gar- i ment for a fault which did wot exist ' and which I of course never intended to rectify. How often bave I taken back the same garment without it ever hav- ing been unfolded and been commended for the alteration which had not been made, and then been reprehended for not having done what was right at first. Aman to be a good tailor should be either a philosopher or a mean, cring: ing slave, whose feelings had never peen excited to the pitch of manhoed. —‘‘ Life of Francis Place,’’ Literary Puarsualit. Fynshly— What is Wally doing now? Harrison— Well, when I last saw him he was engaged in a literary pursuit. Fynshly—Indeed! I didn’t think he had enough brain to write. Harrison—He wasn’t writing. He was chasing a newspaper that the wind had blown away.—London Fun, Prayer From a Grateful Heart. Prayer as the expression of a sincere and grateful heart may have its uses, and doubtless has. But in the mouth of ® man who loans money at 200 per cent interest on chattel mortgage it may as well be omitted. —Colum bus Press- Post. ‘*There is an old woman,’’ says a London paper, ‘‘who has a milk stand in St. James park, who has stood at it for 63 years. Her mother kept it before her and her grandmother before that, the latter having been in possession for 92 years.”’ The officers of a leading London hos- pital believe that the general increase of cancer is due to excess in meat eat- ing. Going Without Sleep. It is an interesting question to studi- ous people how long a man can go | without sleep. A physician asserts that no healthy man can overwork because eventually nature will compel him to fall asleep at his task. A journalist re- cently claimed to have worked 72 hours Humboldt said that when a young man he required only two hours sleep each night, but that in his old age he found he really needed as many as three or four. Victims sub- jected to the Chinese torture of being kept continually awake die on or before the fifth day. By far the most inspiring example, however, is that of one of the ' saints, whois related to have lived 19 years without sleep and to have remain- ed standing a large portion of that time. —an Francisco Argonant. Irascible Carlyle. _ A lady who lived near Thomas Car. lyle kept Cochin China fowls, and their crowing was such a nuisance that the philosopher sent a complaint to her. The owner was indignant upon hearing the appeal. ‘‘Why,’’ said she, ‘‘they crow only four times a day, and how can Mr. Carlyle be seriously annoyed at that?’’ Upon hearing of her attitude upon the subject, Carlyle replied, ‘‘The lady forgets the pain I suffer in waiting for those four crows.’’ Delicate children! What a source of anxiety they are! The parents wish them hearty and strong, but they keep thin and pale. To all these delicate cnil- dren Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- phosphites comes with the best of news. It brings rich. blood, strong bones, healthy nerves, and sound digestion. It is growth and prosperity to them. No matter how delicate the child, it is readily taken. 50c, and $1.00, all druggists, SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists. Toroato. You Can If You Will Have one of our reliable time— keepers, No person can afford to en- danger an important engagement by not owning a reliable timepeice. Any person may derive a distinct advantage by possessing a good watch, OUR WATCHES ARE TIMEKEEPERS; they are just as represented. A guarantee is given with every watch sold, our prices are so low that the poorest man can afford to carry a good watch, WN. TANTON HORACE HASZARD. The Great George St Jewler. Used Wooden Guna, - A Confederate veteran quoted by the, New Orleans ‘Times-Democrat says: ‘*Wooden guns did deadly work before! Fort Blakely. The Yankees fixed them! up, and they shot just as well asif they/ had been manufactured of iron. The op-; posing lines were 500 yards apart. The, Confederates were behind the walls of the fort and the Federals were strongly in-| trenched. General Canby, the Yankee! commander, was without artillery, What, did he do but manufacture 100 mortars, from black gum trees. Black gum trees grew everywhere in the vicinity. He bored them out, put irom bands around them and fired 8 inch shells furnished by Far- | | ragut’s fleet. The lines were so close that! | light charges sufficed, and the extempo- | rancous weapons did all that was asked of them,”’ He Knew Them. Once at an important function at Mar}- | borough House Sir Francis Knollys came | up to the Prince of Wales and remarked, | “Some gentlemen of the press wish ad- | mission, your royal highness.” ““Oh,’’ said the prince, ‘‘show them in. | If they don’t come in at the door, they’ll ; ! nome in at the ventilator.’’ ] i c= — The two most critical times in a wo- man’s life are the times which make the girl a wowan, and the women a mother. At these times, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre. scription is of incalculable value. It strengthens avd invigorates the organs distinctly feminine, promotes regularity of the fuuctions, allays irritation and inflam~ mation, checks uvvatural, exhausting drains, and puts the whole delicate organ- ism into perfect condition, Almost all the ills of womankind are traceable to some form of whatis known as “female com- plaint.” There are not three cases ina hundred of woman’s peculiar diseases that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription will not cure. Patience—What isthe cheapest look- ing thing you ever saw about # bargain counter ? Patrice—-A husband waiting for his wife. Yonkers Statesman. I was curep of pair ful Goitre by MIN. ARD’S LINIMENT. ODO OOOO OOCO-O-O-0-0-0-0-9 rOoO-Oc all Chatam Ont. Eyarp McMvuiuw | I was cvurED of Inflammation by MIN ARDS LINIMENT. Walsh, Ont. Mrs W. W. Jouyson I was cvrep of Facial Neuralgia by MINARD’S LINIMEN?, Parkdale, Ont, J.H. Battery The young man who zealously guards the moments shal] in his latter vays have affluence and hours of ease. Worth Trying if Sick. A verified record—1,‘16 persons cured in one month by Dr, Chase’s Family Remedies, All dealers sell and recommend them. Stay athome these evenings. People haven’t their front room stoves up and are sitting around the kitchen stove and don’t want visitors.—Atchison Globe. Minard’s Liniment the best Hair Restorer “What is rapid transit, Uncle Chrir?” “Rapid transit? Why, it is electric cars which have to run so fast that they never siop to take op passengers.”—Detroit Free Press. * A Quebecer’s Confidence in Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure Gives Relief at once, He Says. Danville, P. Q., April 9th, 1898, EDMA NSON, BATES & CoO., Toro) to. Dear Sirs— Enclosed find $1 for } dozen boxes Dr, Chase’s Catarrh Cure. Please send them atonce, Every patient using it says “Itis an excellent cure, gives relief at once,” JAS, MASSON, Gen’] Merchant, Janville, P, Q, Riprap—The eyes are the windows of the soul. Wigwag—Then the soul of the man whose eyes have been blacked looks out of stained glass windows. -- Detroit Free Press. Min ard’s Liniment is the best The Tabby—Not a charmep life! mean lives, don’t you? The Tommy—No. I mean life! lost eight.—New York Journal. No Cocaine in Dr. A. Chase’s Catarrh Cure. Prof Heys, Ont, School of Chemistry and Pharmacy, says:--‘I have made an examina- tion of Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure for Cocaine andin allits compounds, from samples pur- chased in the open market, and find none present.” We otter a reward of $1,000, to be devoted toany charitable institution if any druggist or doctor can find the ieast trace of that deadly drug Cocaine contained in Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure.” Dr, Chase’s Catarrh Cure, recommended by all dealers at 75 cents box, blower included free. You He’s Ww. Possibly Lillian Russel] is merely ambi- tious to be able to say that ehe has held four of a kind.—Milwaukee Sentinel, Minard’s Liniment Cures LaGrippe Camara’s real fighting will occur when it comes to getting a naval appropriation through the cortes.—Washington Star. Minard’s Liniment for Rheumatism Commissioner Day gets a fee of $20,000 | for his services in Paris. Does he earn it by Day’s work or peace work?—Philadel- AAAAAAAH AAAS CHF SAAAEAREA e, if H T CQ ox b2en8 6CSS, lavorit a“ olders. Butter and Pickle Dishes. i ALSO IN SOLID SILVER, FINE GOODS zi o’clock Spoons, Tea Spoons, Souvenir Spoons, Oyster Forks i heese Scoops, Cold Meat Forks, Tea Bells, Thimbles, a ae “3 a : - The cheapest ladies’ Watch that we think would be worth * buying, $4.00, better ones $7.50 to $50.00, Watches for Boys, $2.75 to 10.00, Watches for men $5.00 to 100.00. Beantifal Rings Any Birthday Stone Ring made FRO INDLA AND CeYLi ~ \ ELEPHANT BRAND PURITY AND STRENGTH Combined with flavour, make Totfey’s Elephant Prand Inds Ceylon , - . at Feat s the world over. These w prices have made them known as ” N Gualities and their Da t e Te ¥ | Dest of lea Value vf. TO Gi1.00 Pi he, cer cannot supply you, write us and we will see you * is fil! poly yau, write id we will see your orde-s is filled. 1 TCVLCY & CC., London, Cng., Conadion Heed Office, 14 Lomoine so‘ fortron! a ee rays, Salad Bowls, Cake Baskets, to Order Nearly every one knows we are the pioneers in the spectacle busines and in keep up to date in our stock of spectacles and eyeglasse and fitting. B. W. TAYGOR, Victoria Je Nearly opposite Post Office Charlottetown, P. E. I. FFELP ESSE ES SS SE FEES — 1 Cvery packet, OMODOGORDQOOOOOONGOODO 6: ARK That Will Wear Right Tea Sets consisting of Tea Pot, Coffee Pot, Sugar, Creara and’ Spoon —$—$——$< $$$ SOOMLO-AIOAR SO & eRe - ; « ‘ 7 Peep Rl SR ) Baking » welry Store It is easy to love your neighbor as yourself, When your neighbor is a pretty girl, And it is just as easy to have good music When your piano isa “Bell” The pbove may not be very good poetry, But it is a fact, all the same. New sto:k Bell Pianos and Organs now opening a, — Rlectric Shades Electric Lamps Brass Electroliers Brass Brackets And a fullline of Electrical goeds for incendeszent lighting DODD & ROGERS i FLETCHER'S PIANO WAREROOMS Opera House Building ann ir phia Times, TYPHOID ——_——_THE POLICIES OF————- THE OCEAN, ACCIDENT & GUARANTEE CORPORATION Give weekly indemnity for—Typhoid, Scarlet and I'yphus Fever, #9 Smallpox, and in additicn cover accidents of all kinds.. Double liability in case of accident on Public Conveyance, J. J, JOHNSTON, EVER. Barrister, 2 Gea BO O04 4644446464464 646.444 4464644668444. “se 46 we @. se 10. 2. OM ite 2. Baie 2. Ae 19 .oR wel 10. se eT ae LS es ae ee ee ee ae a eS Ee Sle lhl CX