| ) A i cc BR re te CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 25 1839 —_ A EOE | TTI on a nt Why is it that nearly al | aged persons are thin? | And yet, when you think | SS : | of it, what could you expect? | ars of wear | ryt Three score vi and tear are enourh to make the digestion weak. Yet the body must be fed, In Scott’s Emulsion, the work is all done; that is, the oil in it is « ivested, all ready to be taken into the blood. The | \dy rests, while the oil feeds and nour- ishes, and the hypophos- phites makes the nerves steady and strong soc. and $1.00, 3 SCOTT & BOWNE, Caeniists, T ta EVENING CLASSES \ For You Will be opened on) the 16th inst., | stthe Charlottetown Business College and | Writing Academy, where inetruciions wil] | he given in Book-Keeping, Business Pract | ce, Correspondence, Business Penman- | ebip, Practical Arithmetic, Shorthand | and Typewriting. Ciasses ogen from 7.20 to 930 Pp. Mm. Five sessions per week. Enter a} any | time but NOW ie the bert. Students may study any branches de- | sired. Individual instructions given by | the following teachere:--J Harry Will- | ams (Penmanship); Wm Moran, Licensed | Teacher of Phonography; A C McMillan, | (Licensed), L. B. MILLER, eee | Apply at College for particulars. ae eee EXCURSIONS CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON AND RETURN FOR $11.00 Good for 30 Days. Commencing Oct 3rd 8.S. Halifax Jeaves Ch Tuesday nt nocn for Bo bury and Halifax. From Halifax—Every Wednesday at 11 pm. Pusesengers tickeied via Pictou on Wednesdays. From Boston every Saturday at noon Tickets for cale at Sivtions on P Railway. For tickets, rates on freight an a)! information apply EH L CHIPMAN, Supt, Halifax. the well known irlottetown every ton, via Hawkes- W W CLARKE, Agent P Devs Lt, ~ese* 2 2 4. O22 OOo OSD SuAP , RR MAKERS FIERY, QUEEN WemeVeA weewewe | -—A ROYAL TRIO- Sunlight anc Lifebuoy —SOAPS The best laundry and twilet soaps made in the world, guaranteed to be absolutely pure, “MONKEY SRAND” which cannot be equalled as a scour- ng aud polishing soap. r . PRY SOME &7 All are Sc large twin bar in re Estate ot Reubin Tuplin, of Kensington, deceased ~_—-——- All persons baving any demand upon the ettate of the abeve named deceased, sre hereby required to eahibit the seme Guly attested, as by law required, at the office of Charles R Smallwood, Solicitor, Charlottetown, within one yearfrom the Gate of thie advertisment. j — this 2nd day of Septemter, A. D. | 1399, JAMES TOPruIN, RR FITZGEnALD, 8 W BODD, Executore, | TOLD HER FAIRY STORIES. ton Travele ORARRARARRRRLLARELARRANRRS 7~ s % = VICTIM OF : x co » NCATNESS = — % She Scrubbed Horse Blank- " ets Before Sunrise,Washed © he the Garden Tools and Was alt. s Able to Live Until She | i & s Cleaned the Roof on a } & Hot Day. 3 . &% 3 | DRRARRRARRAKAKARUAnKeKen2d “Jest bring in them ’ere horse blankets, Jake, and I'l] give ’em a good sudsing, as today is Saturday.”’ “The hi blankets!” rse exclaimed the new hired help. “Yes, the law of the barn as weil as the house is neatness.”’ Jake brought in the blankets, and Mrs Plummer said to her niece: “Here, you wash them che fust and the old striped ones after in the same water, and then ri ‘em in clean.” “They ain’t fit to tech,” the girl sullenly as she looked at the old blankets. “TI never heard of any washing horse blankets till I came here.” “The more’s the pity. Il hain’t been used to good housekeeping in your mother’s home. Our family wuz brung up to be neat, but when Brother Beza married your ma he had to say goodby to a neat house.” “My mother was as good a housekeeper as ever I want to see, and she made a happy home for pa and me,” said the girl, coloring angrily. Taking no notice of the girl's remark, Mrs. Plummer said, “After you suds ’em don’t forgit to rinse ’em, and’— But she broke off sudden)r, exclaiming: “Well, I never! Ef Jake hasn’t gone and left the print of his big, ugly boot on that outer doorstep!” ‘I hope he'll leave a good many more,” muttered Hepsey under her breath. Her aunt swept off the step and then, with a pail of warm water and a scrub- bing brush, restored the outraged door- step. “Now I'll do the cellar stairs,” she said, “and do you git them blankets cut before the sun’s high.” In a few moments Hepsey heard her calling, “Hepsey Barney, you come here.” The girl wiped her hands on her calico kered ones ise said cne’s ” apron and went as she was. bidden. Pointing to a spot on the stairs, her aunt exclaimed: “Didn't you serub them stairs down on Wednesday ?” “Yes,”’ replied the girl. ‘Well, there’s that stain where your uncle spilt cider Sunday night. I guess it’s time you larned that spots ain’t to be left a week on my cellar stairs. Why, I wouldn’t hev slept for the night ef I'd a-known I hed such lookin steps. Git me the box of sand. Mebbe the grit will take the spot off.” Hepsey obeyed and, returning to her washing, rinsed and wrung out the blan- kets and carried them to the clothesline back of the house. Jake was near there, making a bed for “garden sass,’’,as that the One of a healthy woman’s princi- pal charms is her vivacity of car- riage—the dainty, springy steps witb which she walks. The woman who suffers from weak- ness and disease of the distinctly feminine organ ism, who is troub- led with back- aches, stitches in the sides, drag- ging down or burning sensa- tions, sick head- aches and the multitude of other ills that accom. pany these diser- Py ders, cannot have the dainty, bound. ing carriage of a healthy woman. She will show in every movement that she is a sufferer. There is a wonderful medicine for troub- ies of this description, that has stood the test for thirty years, and has been used suc. cessfully by many thousands of women, It is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It scts directly on the delicate and important organs concerned and makes them strong, healthy and vigorous. It allays inflamma- tion, heals ulceration and soothes pain, It tones and builds up the nerves. It is the discovery of Dr. R. V. Pierce, an eminent and skillful specialist, for thirty years chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hetel and Surgical Imstitute, at Buffalo, N. Y. This is one of the greatest medical institu- tions in the whole world. During the thirty years that Dr. Pierce has been at its head be has gained the unbounded respect of his fellow citizens aj Buffalo, and they showed it by making him their representa- tive in the National Congress, from which position he resigned to give the remainder of his life to the practice of his chosen profession. He wil] cheerfully answer, free of charge, any letters written to him ty suffering women. Address, as above. “A few years ago,” writes Mrs. W. R. Bates, of Dilworth, Trumbull Co., Ohio, “ I took Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, which has beer a great benefit to me. I am in excellent health now. I hope that every woman, who is troubled with ‘women’s ills,’ will try the ‘ Prescrip*ion* and be benefited as I have bees.” 25 are — —'e oar Raw guess you | or r ~%> , ‘GE DalLY EXAMINER, ‘ ‘ ‘ i k ont ib n Lem } mf yer,” 2B } nt Lhe air a ht too j rou ta I : 1 tl k so } vou'd }t i-wash ’ epiied the ais t etch them on the ' VV") : MM r hand at 1 he i | rey narked THe I na by dt it i ) thers tT 1’. r ‘ aunt, | ig finished the had ¢ to 2 look at the } house and ascertain whether ti neatness and der had been vic “and you had er do up the porch now. There'll be no time before we sets to the bakin and gittin dinner.”’ Hepsey turned to go, but said tly when her aunt was out of hearing. “What will you think of having to wash the garden tools and everything used on the farm oncet in two weeks?” “The land’s sake!” bursting into a laugh. “Hush—she’ll hear you,” said the gir). smiling at him as she turned back toward the house, Farmer Plummer had driven into mar- ket that morning, but returned home in time for dinner, which Hepsey and her aunt promptly placed on the table at 12 o'clock. Jake and Lloyd, the hired men, sat on one side, with Hepsey opposite, while Mr. and Mrs. Plummer presided at the head and foot of the takle. “Your dinner smells right good, Mrs. f.,” said the farmer, as he cut off large slices of corned beef and passed the | plates to his wife, who piled on cabbace. ‘turnips and with gener nd, for stinginess was not one of her fau!ts. “It tastes as good as it smells,’”’ | mented Juke, lifting his broad bladed knife, on which were balanced the vege- | tables the aroma of which was so appe- tizing to the hungry workmen. Hepsey had taken off her soiled calico apron and replaced it with a neat white one and fastened a blue bow in her hair. This change in her attire did not escape | Jake’s notice. |} One day Mrs. Plummer went to a chest of drawers in which her linen was kept. A cry of horror rose to her lips and star- tled Hepsey, who was preparing to set Jake, exclaimed beets us ha com- away the milk, which Jake had just brought in. She ran to her aunt, and ' even Jake turned back from the doorstep | to see if he weve needed. “Oh, what is it, aunt?’ cried the giri Almost speechless, her aunt pointed to a linen sheet which had a small brown | spot on it. “Look at that!” she gasped. “Hepsey Barney, tnat’s some of your work! trusted you to do ’em last week when I was to Neighbor Worth’s fu- peral,”’ “Why, i thought it wouid come out in the wash next time. It was only a spot from the iron,” “T’rom the iron!” exclaimed Mrs. Plum- mer. “Didn’t you rub them irons before you tetched ’em to the sheets?’ “I didn’t think of it,” said Hepsey, wondering if Jake thought she was a slack worker. But Jake said nothing and turning away went to the barn, for some- how he never could bear to hear Hepsey scolded. The next morning when Jake came down stairs before sunrise he was sur- prised to find the fire made, the wash boiler on and all the tubs in formidable array. As he went toward the barn he saw on the line in the back yard sheets, tablecloths, pillowcases and napkins flut- tering in the mild spring breeze. At breakfast, which was ready at half past 4, Hepsey said timidly, ‘Aunt, would you like to hey me to wash out that sheet today?’ “No,” said her aunt, “I got up at 2 and washed everything from the chest’ that hed a spot in it. Only next time hev a care that there ain’t no spotted cones put away.” That was the beginning of Mrs. Plum- mer’s new habit. Every few weeks she rose early and, taking the clean linen, washed it over again. The deep frown between her eyes was intensified, and the hard lines about her mouth became like furrows. It was now scrub, gcrub from morning to night, until Hepsey’s arms ached, and nothing but the fact that the girl was de- pendent upon her atfnt kept her patient , under the new rules which were con- stantly made. One hot summer day Mrz. Plummer said: “Them horse blankets must be washed today. It’s been kinder neglect- ed of late.” “But. aunt,” expostulated Hepsey, “the horses don’t wear ’em now in this boiling weather. They are just put away in the carriage house.” “IT know it, but the dust gathers on ’em,.” said her aunt, fixing her eyes as if looking at something in the distance, with the tense expression they now wore. “IT tell you I won't hey them blankets washed again this summer. It just wears ’em out,” exclaimed Mr. Plummer, “and there ain’t no use in scrubbin and washin one's life away.” “IT don’t keep the house half a ways decent,” replied his wife, bursting into tears. “I’m ashamed of myself, but most of the cleanin falls on me, for Hepsey’s that slack.” “I wonder that she lives,” muttered Jake so that no one but Hepsey heard him. When the men went out to the barn the next morning, all the blankets were hanging on the line, for Mrs. Plummer always carried her point, and she had been to the barn before dawn, found the : blankets and washed them. The sun rose red and fiery that morn- ' ing, and not a breath of air was stirring. } The last acre of grass was to be cut down that day, and the men set off early for the fields. { About 11 o’clock Jake was startled by the sudden appearance of Hepsey in the hayfield, her face locking white and scared. “Oh, Jake,” she cried, seizing his arm, “vo for a doctor! Aunt went up to scrub the roof of the south piazza, and the mo- ment she came in she fell in the upper ball in a dead faint. You call uncle, while I run back." — —— eo ~~~ a ner ns Ce Jue Bave cae qiarm, ana wale he ivue for a doctor Plummer lifted his wife, with the help of Hepsey, and Jaid ber on the bed. The serubbing brush was still clutched firmly in -her hand. They bathed ber head and her poor, rough hands and succeeded in restoring her to conscious- least partially, before the arrival _ When he came, he ness, at of the physician. ‘ear mal } SDE it is a sunstroke or apoplexy, must be kept very quiet. Has e been out in the sun all day?’ ‘was on the roof of the south piaz- sir,” said Hepsey, “and when she had shed serubbing it she climbed back he hall, but fell on the hall floor th th the nd of a faint.” “Qut on a tin roof such a day as this!” ex med the doctor. “It is a pure case of nstroke,”’ [fe left remedies and gave directions that she should be kept quiet and in a d om. Poor, frightened Hepsey pre pared the dinner as best she could, and r tha . saat 2 ig ; rtae men returned to the hayfield she kept watch over her aunt, who slept most all the tire. That night about 1 o’clock Mrs. Plum- mer roused and asked her husband to eall Hepsey. When she came, her aunt snid: “I guess I'll clean the roof to the south porch, and there is a spot on the window sill in the upper hall. rub it off,” “Oh, no, aunt, I'll do it. enough,” said Hepsey. “I will do it myself,” said the sick we man, rising up in bed. l‘earing to cross ber, the farmer and Hepsey were silent. “Git the brush and some water, and be spry now, Hepsey, she said, with some of her old decision. Mechanically the gir) obeyed and tak- ing a candle went to the kitchen and re- turned with the desired articles. As her aunt saw the brush her face lighted up with a look of pleased recognition. “Mrs. P., don’t git up. Jest let Hepseyr fix it all right.” “No, no. Help me on to my feet,” she said to her husband. So, leaning on his strong arm, she managed to go into the hail. Hepsey went before them with can- die, brush and pan. As the light of the candle fell upon the spot on the window sill she gave a faint ery of horror and, reaching for the brush, fell back into her husband’s nrms, gasping for breath. They carried her to her room, and Jake was sent for the doctor, but as the physician’s step was heard she breathed her last, a victim to neatness, » . I must git up and You ain’t well . ~ * . s Years after, when Hepsey and Jake had a little home of their own, over which she presided as nicely as any houseckeep- er in the district, Jake would frequently “TIlev a care, Hepsey. Don’t git too neat and make an idol of that there scrubbin brush,” And she would pleasantly retort: “There ain't no danger that I’ll be toe neat, with four tearing boys to look aft- er.”—Caroline Frances Little in Chicage Record. Taking No Chances, Jones—Goodness, but Levy is slow} Johnson—Yes; somebody told him that “haste makes waste.’’—I<ansas City In- dependent Doctors said Incurable But the Notary, Mr. Lemire, was cured of Kidney Disease in two months by Dr. Chase’s Kidney- Liver Pills. It is only when thoroughly convinced of the superior merit of a remedy that public men will give their sanction, Mr. E. H. Lemire, Notary Public, 31692 Notre Dame Street, Montreal, tells of his re- markable recovery from a severe attack of kid- ney disease. When doctors had failed, Dr, Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills saved his life. He writes: *‘ 1 give this statement, first because it is only just that the merit of DrChase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills shouldwbesmade known, and again in order that. others may profit by my experience. For years 1 suffered with kidney disease which coctors pronounced incurable, Thanks to Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, which I have used for two months, 1am com- pletely cured. They helped me from the first, and the cure is now perfect.” Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills act directly on the kidneys, and through their combined influence on the kidneys and hver, cure the most complicated diseases of these delicate. organs, One pill a dose. 25 cents a box at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Ce., Toronta SALT! SALT 12C09 Bags Common fF alt new landing 6000 : e “ pew dua 500 factory filled te arrivey Buy rs ordering ex. sbip save ccst cf storing here For sale dow to tre trade. Yor }rices write ; CHARLE: HAKPER, Shediac, N. B 234 dlwk The Greatest Snap PN\ia (] FERED We have placed in our window a line of Gilt Edge Glassware, which we are eell- iog at. prices that defy anvtbing in thi- city. Former prices from 35 to 40c, Any piece now in the window for the emall sam of 19c. Comprising Cream and Spoon Trays, Goblete, Tumblers, Pre rerve Dishes, Vases, &c, at the Modern Jewelry and Fancy Gocds Stor Ops. P. O. Sunnyside JURY & COY.., CHARLOTTETOWN. —-— A a sage sete eenmeniennna meme. Mii Lae x Stee ta NS. AS x (eA Castoria is foi ants and Ciiilidren. Cast 5 harmicss subs * for Castor Of, Paregor as OP and Svoth-ng yrups. Es contains neither Opium, Niorphine nor other Narcotic substanee. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty ycars’ use by Milliens of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- ness. Castoria cures Diarrhauwand Wind Colic. Castoria rclieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Fiatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach enc Dowels of Infants and Children, giving healthy and nacmrai sleep. Castoria is the Children’s Panacca~The Mother’s Friend. Castoriz. Castoria. *“‘“Castoria is an exce thnait’ medicine for! ‘**Castoria Is sc wai adapted to childrem children Mothers have repeatediy told me | that I recommend it as superior to any pre of its good effect upon their chileren.’”’ scription known to me.” DR. G. C. OsGoon, Lowedi, Mass. | H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, NN, ¥ THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF —_— SS meriagen ne nn re You ——TROUBLED WITH BAD——- --- FITS IF SO CALL AT a> | D. A- BRUCE'S And you wili be cured, Cousultation free. ‘ FOUR .. INTERESTING -- «. THINGS The Transvaal War The Big Bazaar The Yacht Race The Highland Rance Wefcan tell you a/l abcut the last, FENNELL axp CHANDLER No More War Swords will be beaten into plough shares later on; but th armers do not need to wait till the ‘* Peace{Conference’’ is over, before buying their plough rhares, as they can do so at orce, by calling at the Masonic Temple Store, where the share, or other plough extras can be had for Jess money, and setter than any imported. Prove this at once, by trying them. USES Tee SS T. A. MACLEAN WANOFACTURER Of ALL KINDS OF DAIRY & FARM MACHINERY, Esdale Foundry and mechinery Depot. . Office,Masanic Temple, Charlottetown, P, E . Victoria Row, Opposite Post Office oe s al] : § ; ; : aA a 2 x ‘s if = - bf , ee ee eee ‘3 e : f F ‘he : = . | k * } @ f t 7 = ; ‘ ¥ } { t i Tw ; ia 3 - a hed Lo Bik as ay 4 ~ ‘= i” + a = i y 5 i v "i ¥ is S #3 = a # _ “ Ps a 4 H # te } r 1 s I € b ; : “ . - + 4 = i? ine ‘a Si i - Ba: 4 _