Wate who BOw Baw 2Re BDEs BEs BRS BEE ARH BRS BRS BRS SIs BEE BO CUS SSRTE EER ec eee eee ceresaeae de DODD'S only positive, ne ou earth, for all Take No Other. KIDNEY PILLS, the ‘er-failing cure, tidney discasea. Get the Genune,. [ Refuse Imitetions. There’ Caly One Dodd’a PLANT LINE. EXCURSIONS CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON AND RETURN FOR $11.00 Good for 30 Days. Commencing Oct 3rd, the well known §.S. Halifax leaves Charlottetown every Tuesday nt noon for Boston, via Hawkes- bury and Halifax. From Halifax—Every Wednesday at 11 pm. Passengers ticketed via Pictou on Ve inesdays. From Boston every Saturday st noon Tickets for cale at Sietions on P Railwoy. For tickets, rates on freight an all information apply H L CHIPMAN, Supt, Halitax. W W CLARKE, Agent NAS . “> + NZ « AEM SL Bo SY TE Re vlgy® DS “ae Herrin: Herring Herrin 300 Barels July Herrin arriverd | J.T. Pearcon Lower Queen St. an $$ DANCING PHYSICIAL CULTURE. PROWSE BLOCK, SUNNYSIDE Miss H. C. Mac Echool opens for the s¢ 3rd. Afternoon and ¢ now forming. Just term before Rink opens. Choice of days to those who come first. Ar- rangements can be made for private classes and private lesscns on applic- ation. 233 dtf ——$ $$ ad EVENING CLASSES For Yeu Will be the 16th i at the Charlottetown Business College and Writing Academy, where instructions will be given in Book-Keeping, Business Pract iec, Correspondence, Business Penman- ship, Practical Arithmetic, Shorthand and Typewriting. Classes o, en from 7.3 Five sessions per week time but NOW is the beet. Students may study any branches de-~ fired. Individual instructions given by the following teachere:—J Harry Will- tans (Penmanship); Wm Moran, Licensed Peacher of Phonography; AC McMillan, (Licensed), onald’s select ason, October vening classes time for one opened on st., to 930 p. m. Enter a. any « L. B. MILLER, Principal ' Apply at College for particulars, ee eee THE 6. Mensa s ities td SU eae SRR OT PSR a ee Napoleon and the Cobbler. On Napoleon’s arrival at Mars-la Tours the mayor, a farmer, tried 1 vain to make the speech he had pre pared. Bowing and scraping, he stood fascinated by Bonaparte’s scrutinizing black eyes—an unhappy squirrel in che gaze of the rattlesnake. Close behind the tremb! od an old shoemaker, in figure a true Don Quixote, clad in his working dress. “Why don’t you speak, you fool?” he muttered from time to time to his leader. At last his patience gave way. He pushed the mayor asice, ad- vanced, with his left haz moved his greasy eotton nightcay with his richt lifted the horn spectacles from his nose, made his bow and delivered the oration: “Iemperor, you are on your way to thrash the Prussian rogues once more. ] hope soon to see you return crowned with glory, and I have nothing more to but that Caesar and Alexander were botches in comparison with you.” The emperor laughed and inquired of the old man whether he had any sons. “Yes; four were in the army—two of these in the guards.” Their names were taken down, and the honest shoe- maker soon saw them raised to the rank of officers and found himself pro- vided with a comfortable pensivn.— Blackwood’s. Two Civil War Messages. say, | to be of any use. It was a dhy or two after General | Fitzhugh retired that the telegraph lines between Carlisle and Harrisburg were put in condition for service, and the first two messages that passeal over them gave more than one officer and civilian a laugh, operator was of the army variety and not noted for choice diction or even grammatical accuracy, but he could be terse on occasion. The Carlisle man, a civilian named Noble, probably knew more of the rules of syntax, but he was a bit flustered. Here are the mes- The Harrisburg | sages—and in those days they were of record, since receiving and sending by | sound was not in vogue: Query—Has the rebels went? Answer—tThey is. After all there is merit in the inter- change. There was no room for doubt as to what headquarters at Harris- burg wanted to know nor as to the military condition at Carlisle. poor Noble! His friends nearly forced him to resign by the methods known as “josh.” Sardou as Stage Manager. Sardou is one of the few great stage managers in Europe. He and Sir Hen- ry Irving are probably the two best. “How is it done? Well, you see,” plied M. Sardou, “I know exactly what I want, and I take care that I get it!” Sir Henry’s answer to the same ques- tion would not, one imagines, be very different from this. Sardou does not read a lecture to an actor whose in- tonation is incorrect or whose gesture displeases him; he takes the actor’s place on the boards for a few moments aud goes through the part. In theory this is simplicity itself; in practice it is sometimes productive of emotions which the scene is not in- tended to convey. As a rule, M. Sar- dou’s demeanor at rehearsal is beauti- ful, but if people will not do as he re- quests he can tegr his hair and a speech to tatters with the best of them. When the hurricane is over, he be- comes Mr. Honeytongue again, but he has carried his point.—Cassell’s Maga- zine. re The old-fash- ioned watch- man who prowled about the streets of medieval Lon- don, with a lan- tern in his hand to pro- claim his com- ing, and who , announced i his passage ; through the | streets by shouting ‘‘All’s well,” was a very inefficient protector when compared with the metropoli- tan police of Wew York City, commonly known as the ‘“Finest.”” The modern policeman does not proclaim his coming to the evil doer by shouting or by carryingalantern. He does his work more quietly and effectively than the old-fash- ioned town watchman. : It is thus that in all the walks of life and in all occupations, times change and knowl- edge and efficiency increase. In this re- spect medical science has kept pace with the advance in other lines. Physicians and chemists have grown rapidly more skillful. There are medicinal preparations now-a- days that cure diseases that were a few ears ago considered absolutely incurable. he final triumph in this respect 1s Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It was first given to the world thirty years ago, and has stood the test ever since that time. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consumption, bronchial, throat and kindred affections. Thousands who were hopeless sufferers, and had been given up by the doctors, have testified to its marvelous merits. It is the great blood - maker and flesh-builder. It makes the appetite hearty, the digestion and assimilation perfect, the liver active, the blood pure an rich with the life-giving elements of the food, and the nerves strong and steady. It acts directly on the lungs and air-passages, driving out all impurities and disease germs. An hon- est dealer will not try to persuade you to take an inferior substitute for the sake of a ow pennies added profit. P Dr Pierce’s veda Pellets cure consti. At all wedicine stores, ation, DAILY HAAMIN.AK Pree eee aon 5 Peril in Siaap Borers, A girl 4 eiid i youns oT wae t} » ‘ srcl y i> wit’ birthday is near at hand bask bought a pretty little stamp box in sil ver to give to him, but she i to give it to him, after all. ey ; ’ } PP«r +erye 7? } . ? . il ‘4 i augnter, ner fatuel Said to shot ¢ 2 “if you wish that young man hever give him a stamp box. ou couldn’t give him anything more dan serous. A man would better ex dynamite than stamps. One of the bravest officers in the navy has been for 20 years paying the penalty ot folly in carrying stamps. Everybo knows who he is. Years ago le re- ceived an order from the department Which.displeased him very much. knew to whom he owed it, and he sat himself Gown that same night and ex- pressed himself frankly on paper to the man he blamed for the obnoxious or- der. He had a stamp, and so he sent the letter off in that night’s mail. If he hadn’t had a stamp, he would not have mailed the letter till morning, and if he had@ kept it till morning he'd nev- er have sent it at all and he would not have paid the penalty of ‘sassing’ the department. “Don’t send the young mana stamp box. The officer I’ve been telling you about says that his experience taught him never to earry stamps, but the trouble about the wisdom experience brings is that it usually comes too late Don’t encourage the young man to carry stamps. It isn’t safe.” A Naval Solomon. Captain McB——, a canny Scot, was once in command of a troopship re- turning from India. On beard he had as passengers three ladies, all wives of officers in her majesty’s service. Now, it fell out that the cabin al- lotted to them was fitted up to accom modate four, and consequently it con- tained four wask basins, one of which was far larger than the other three. For the right to use this especial basin each lady put forth her claim, ‘citing ber husband’s position in the army. But the husbands, unfortunate- ly, all proved to be of equal rank, so to clinch the matter the trio bearded | the captain in his cabin. “We will leave it entirely to you, | captain,” they said, “and abide by your But | decision.” Captain McB— cogitated duly and then declared solemnly, with the fa nt- est twinkle in his gray eyes: “Leddies, as it is no’ a matter o’ rank, I think it wull be that the oldest amang ye suld have the beegest bowl.” With murmured thanks they filed out again, but that basin was never used during the voyage.—Spare Moments. Broncho Bill's Denomination, During the first years of his career as an actor Will had in one of his theatrical companies a westerner named Broncho Bill. There were In- dians in the troupe, and a certain mis- sfonary had joined the aggregation to look after the morals of the Indians. Thinking that Broncho Bill would bear a little looking after also, the good man secured a seat by his side at the dinner table and remarked pleasantly: “This is Mr. Broncho Bill, is it not?” “Tae” “Where were you born? “Near Kit Bullard’s mill, on Big Pigeon.” “Religious parents, I suppose?” "Ton." “What is your denomination?” “My what?” “Your denomination.” “Q—ah—yaas. Smith Wesson.”— “Last of the Scouts,” by Helen Cody Wetmore. Close te Nature. The West Virginia mountaineer lives very close to nature, and viewed from many standpoints the relation is char- acterized by pleasing amenities. Juicy berries refresh him along the road; nuts drop into hisepath; “sang” (gin- seng), which makes one of his sources of revenue, reyeals itself to his eye as be follows the cows to pasture; a cool brook springs up to quench his thirst when weary of following the plow; pine knots are always within reach to make light as well as warmth; mud and stones easily combine in his hand to shape a daub chimney and a treugh dugout of an old tree furnishes a re ceptacle that is as good for dough at one end as for a baby at the other.— Popular Science Monthly. A Victim of Bad Seamanship. The dean of Bristol in “Phases of My Life” relates the following: “Krom time to time | met at dinner a great friend of Lord Gage’s, Admiral Boyle. Invariably when we met this adwira) of the oid school would come to me and say, ‘Vo you, sir, read the account of St. Paul’s shipwreck?’ “*Yes, it is the appointed lesson.’ “*Well, all 1 can say, as an old sail or, is that if any captain In her majes- ty’s service handled his vessel as the captain of that ship did he would have been court martialed next day and dis missed the service.’ ” Division of Labor. Close Fisted Parent—! tell you, my gon, it is a great dea! harder to spend money with good judgment than it is to make it. The Young Man (not so close fisted) —Well, father, let me take half the burden off your hands. You make it, gad Ill spend it.—Chicago Tribups. Couldn't Mahe the Correction, A focal paper published a long obltue fa ian whe bad died in the com- inunity, closing with the stifement that “a long pre on of people fol lowed the remginus to their last roast lave.” The family read the notice d discovered the supposed error and ked the editor to make a correctiol Word “roast: ’ but he said he i not do it until seven vears’ back scription that the deceased owed bad been paid.—Exchange. Now They Mannuged It. 7 1 so you have tinally succeeded fp getting your husband to take the hl eure? T thought he always claim ed that he could quit drinking when ever he wanted to?" “Yes, he did. We have just convine ed him that he ougbt to take some thing to make him want to.”?—Cuicagy ry limes-Herald. Fish as Turtie Catchers, catching turtle ts practiced in the West It con- sists in attaching a ring and a line to the tail of a species of sucker fish, which is then thrown overboard and immediately makes for the first turtle he can spy, to which he attaches him- self. The fisherman then hauls both turtle and sucking fish in. A curious mode of Indies. Ahead of His ‘vime. “How do you like this idea of sim- plified spelling?’ “It makes me laugh. I’ve been spell- ing that way all my life, and till now everybody called me ignorant.’—Chi- eazo Record. Nerves ici Wasted and Dr. A. W. Shattered by Wo or Overwork ig Chase’s Nerve Food ‘* Nerves"—what a world of meaning this word has to scores of thousands of women who, through the strains of social life and the worry of home cares, are fast approaching the rave, Nervous headaches, dyspepsia, irritability by day, restlessness and sleeplessness by night. Pains and aches in the body, derangements of the organs peculiarly feminine, loss of energy and ambition, despondency and despair. These are some of the symptoms known to the woman of exhausted nerves. These are symptoms which entirely disappear when Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food is used. By creating new, rich blood and nerve tissue this great food cure of Dr. A. W. Chase re- stores and revitalizes the wasted nerve cells, uts new vigor and ae the system and ase woman of many ills which are due to exhausted nerves, Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food cures “<> building-up process, which makes the y round and plump, and restores the glow of health to the pale, sallow cheek. soc. a box atall dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronta. Att Br SUAP MAKERS =e @2Oes 42 8 Oe DS --A ROYAL TRIO - Sunlight and Lifebuoy ——-SOAPS—- The best laundry and tiles soaps made in the world, guaranteed to be absolutely pure. “MONKEY ERAXD” which cannot be equalled as a scour— ng and polishing soap. TRY SOME &@ All are 5c large twin bar SALT! SALT 12000 Bags Common é alt new landing 6000 ' 5 “ now du» 500 factory filled te arrive Buy rs ordering ex. ship save ccst cf storing here _—‘ For sale low to the trade. or prices write CHARLE: HAKPER, Shediac, N. B Revitalized by ———w ee ws 974 dlwk —_—_——_ St. Dunstan’s College Classical and Commercial. AFFILIATED TO LAVAL UNIVERSITY The classes in St. Dunstav’s Colleg will be resumed on TUESDAY, the 12the S eptember next. For further particulars ap ly to A. P. McLEI.LAN, Rector St Dunstan’s College, Ch’tewa, Aug 30, ‘99 CHARLOTVEDUWN, OCTOBER 18, 1899 UF PRE rg 7 ry Che ee ES Ry TN EAE aie cilia Satoh, <2 lb Bins. Sen ALAM en cyl SONSS SN “a Sy QSOS * SSS SS Os ie) Poa ag seed eM Rice SAG yl IP TH Ze el eae r Liab. is SPI gh He a Yq re a 2 gel - Bo Dy sth tS) bea ur. ¥ oe “ee Castoria 15 snts and Children. Cast harriless subs {or Castor Oil, Paregor._, .<op and Svoth’ng Syrups. It contains neither Opium, “forphine nor other Narcetic substanee. It is Pleasant- Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by Milliens of Mothers. Castoria €cstroys Worms and allays Feverish- ness, Castoria exres Diarrheaand Wind Colic. Castoria relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Miatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach'exrd Powels of Infants and Children, giving , > 7345 wea ak heaithy sataral sleep. Castoria is the Children’s « 7 rs TTothers Eri Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, i cit ney > | Cast a4 Ardveua Ler, | ori2.. ‘‘Castoria is an excelieut medicine for ‘‘Castoria Is so well adapted to children children. Mothers have repeatediy told me | that I recommend it as superio: to any pre oi its good effect upon their chileren.”’ scription known to me.” Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Lowell, Mass. H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brovklyn, N. ¥ THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. THI CINTA UVR COMPANY YT? MURPAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. , ee PPR Ley SOE eT Ng rR scare sOrEY oye Sy ape . IHS RE hic ascin Meme cena Teenie ae CGP Ae nals ae oes pera ee ok THE GREAT BAZAAR DAYS! 16th, LZth, 18th, 19th. Extraordinary Sale ———— Great reduction in Prices on Bazaar Days Ready made Clothing in Overcoats, Uisters, Reefers and Suits, Underclothing, Hats and Cap:, Dry Goods and Boots and Shoes. Farmers and then families visiting the city on Pazaar | Days, will have an opyortunity of buyiug their wants at greatly rednced prices. Speciol low fares by rail to the Bazaar. piices for our goods on Bazaar Days. Special low Come in :nd see J B Macdonald & Cc LEADERS IN LOW PRICE ann | Great rush at P MOW ! AGHAN'S, Queen St. He ware and groceries at reduced prices. Our Large Stock of Winte: Overcoating and Suitings... fmme— JTS NOW COMPLETE AWAITING YOUR INSPECTION JOHN MLEOD & CO AAG i nt PO LRAT TPT SENET IT WARE TR": = oper mm pps, SF: apes fi ae eee page reel a) ome Oe ne: = (ee ae mame