A woman's work is hard. The mother who has to attend to her household duties, look after the chil- PX. dren and the wants a7 Moff her husband needs to be a strong woman in every way. A wo- man who suffers from weakness and disease of the deli cate and important organs that make wifehood and motherhood possi ble cannot be well ind strong in She will suffer from headaches ins in back and sides, and lassitude and pond ncy. A woman in this condition nnot be There is no necessi LW fer in this way. Dr ce’s Favorite P1 scription is the best of all remedies for ail er ways. . WT emial | lnurniate a capa © i a a neipmlia ‘ y ing’ women It acts directly on the tin ‘tly woranl\ rein 7 : : makes it ct * and | ' ] heals tlce 8s pain, stops d Manitoba \ : gy unt wind relief and cure i: Dr. Pierce’s | write Prescriotion.”’ ter su fte ring ure remedy for bili- Dr. Pierce’s tsewife recog reod home mmo ; 1 book and ths +7 * sell for €1.* medical Sense Med ’ Now a big ‘dition is being given AWAY FREI For paper-covered copy. send nt LTT Ts » 4 t ustoms and ” { indine So stamps I Have Just Completed My iwew Oyster Place. Call and eve the brilliant display of beautiful oysters on and off the ehell. Onur Oyster king i+ standing in the window. Bee him, and then you will eat Uy sters. John P. Joy, VICTORIA CAFE Great George Stree EECURSIONS 10 ~BOSTON. %-$11.00—3% PLANT LINE. Excursion Tickets will be issued by Plant jine of Steam+hips, from Sept 20th to October 20, Charlottetown to Boston wend return, good toreturn by any steamer within 30 days from date of issue. RATES - Charlotietown to Boston and returo $11.00. W. W.CLARK, Agent. Soap! soap I Use Kionprxe Bar the great Laundry and scouring soap marvel of cheapness unsurpassed n excellence. Use Royat Oak in the Laundry Happy homes, easy quick work, snow white clothes. Use Juprire for the toilet and light Laundry. Makes child’s play of washday. "1D LAPTHORN & CO. Charlottetown Soap Works. — — ee ees o SSE New Goocs New Goods Li the Cheap Crockery Store Just received a new and beantiful lot of Cuina, Glass, Forcelaine. all kinds of Crockeryware. Rt 4! the latest novelties in China. Also cy goodein Albums, ases, Necktie Boxes, rchief Boxes, etc., etc. Call and see a large stock of fa Frames, Dressing and Handke Dolls all kinds and prices. them. No trouble to show ‘goods. Handsome articles for Wecding Presents c. LEWIS PHOTO GRAPHS. We are now making all the latest styles of Photos, finished in a superior manner. ; fylioves either on gloswy or flat peper At tbe Old Stand, Grafton St. North Side of Market Square. OCTOBER 10 1898. A CHOLERA FIGHT. {A horrible story of the sea by W. Clark Russell, «ken from the San Francisco Examiner. ]} HE Justitia was a smart little bark of 395 tons. I had viewed her with something of ad- miration as she lay in midstream in the Hooghly somewhere off the Coolie Bazaar, | think it was. There was Calcutta, though not us steam now is. Very little of it was in any t » very best of steam then coming to sense palatial, and some of the it was to be as promptly distanced under given cemditions of weather by the clippers, studding sails and flying kites outton yuuded with the starry s of their skysail mast- heads, as the six-knot ocean tramp f to- day is to be outrun by the four masted le- vidthan thrashing through it to windward with the yard: ‘ore and sft I represent ng in those days v large Bit ningham fi n f dealers in the fallal in- lustries—had wished to makie my way from Caleutta to Cape Town. I saw the Justi- tia and took a fancy to her; I admired the as she hawsepipes on the rush- long, low, piratic run of her huli, with straining stream of the Hooghly ; upon which, as _ 2 the space of an hour some half-score at least of dead natives made ghastly canoes of by huge birds, erect upon the corpses, bury- beaks as they sailed along. i found out that the Justitia was one of the smartest of the Thames and East India traders of that time, memorable on one oc- casion for having reeled off a clean seven- teen knots by the log under a main ne lay ing: you watched there might yo by in ing ther | lant sail, set over a single reefed topsail. I ' called upon the agents, was told that the Justitia was not a passenger ship, but that | L could hire a cabin for the run to Cape | Was named. Town if I chose ; a sum in rupees, trifling compared with the cost of transit by steam, l went on board, found the captain walking up and down under the awning, and agreeably killed an hour in a chat with as amiable seaman as ever it was my good fortune to meet. We sailed in the middle of July. Noth- ing worth talking about happened during our run down the Bay of Bengal. ‘The crew aforemast were all of them Englishmen ; there were twelve, counting the cook and steward. The captain was a man named Cayzer ; the only mate of the vessel was one William Ps The boatswain, a rough, short, hairy, immensely strong man, acted as second mate and kept a lookout when Perkins was below. But he was en- tirely ignorant of navigation and owned to me that he read with difficulty words of one syllable and could not write. I was the only passenger. My name, I may as well say here, is Thomas Barron, Our run to the south Ceylon parallels was slow and disappointing. The monsoon was light and treacherous, sometimes dying out in a sort of laughing, mocking gust till the whole ocean was a sheet calm surface, as though the dependable trade wind was never again to blow. “Oh, yes,” said Captain Cayzer to me, *‘we’re used to the unexpected hereabouts. Monsoon or no monsoon, I'll tell you what, vou're always safe in standing by for an Irishman’s hurricane down here.” ‘‘And what sort of breeze is that?’ I asked. , ‘**An up and down calm,” said he; as hard to know where it begins as to guess where it'll end.” .iowever, thanks to the frequent trade uffs and other winds, which tasted not ke the monsoon. we crawled through those rains. i - - —_ -- , . , i aH SS Mil WJ AWN SEs SP |7" SUCCESSFUL MEN MANY OF THEM ARE HANDICAPPED WITH CATARRHAL DISEASES. Dr. A. W.CHASE COMES TO THEIR AID, fueccess in lifé ie aimost impossible for a man with bad breath. Nobody wants to do »business with him. No- body wants to associate with him. He is handicapped everywhere. Offen- sive breath comes from catarrh; some- times from catarrh of the stomach, sometimes of the lungs, sometimes of the head, nose, and throat. It is from catarrh somewhere, and catarrh is an- other name for uncleanness., Many men understand this, and make every effort to cure it, but it is be- yond the reach of ordinary practice. No self-respecting man can ignore ecatarrh. If he has it im any form he makes constant effort to be rid of it. There is something about the man- ner of life and the climate of Canada that seems to breed diseases of the mucous membrane. Medical science ordinarily doesn’t try to cure catarrh; it “relieves” it; but Dr. Chase has been curing catarrh for over thirty years, and hjs name is blessed by thousands who have ‘shaken off the insidious disease. dealers, price 25 cents of this by all grasp Sol d | per box, blower free. latitudes which Ceyion spans, and tetche:! within a few decrees of the eqi ator. Ih this part of the waters we were to be thank ful for even the most trifling donation of catspaw, or for the equally small and short lived mercy of the gustof the electric cloud. I forget how many days we were out from Calcutta; the matter is of no moment. I left my cabin one morning some hour after un had risen, by which time the decks id been washed down, and were already y, With a salt sparkle as of bright white ind on the face of the planks, so roastiny Ls it I went into the head to get a bath under the pump there. I feel in memory as | write the exquisite sensation of that lux- ury of brilliant brine, cold as snow. melting throngh me trom head to foot to the nimble plying of the pump brake by a seaman whom I regularly employed for this job. It was a true tr ; uc morning. The sea, of a pale lilac, flowed in a long drawn, gent le heave of swell into the southwest; the sea went working to its distant reaches and floated into a dim blending of liquid air nd water, so that you couldn’t tell where the skv ended; a weak, hot wind blew over the taiirail, but it was without weight. The courses swung to the swell without re- sponse to the breathings of the air, and on high the light cotton white royals were scarcely curved by the delicate passage of the draught. Yet the bark had steerage way. When I looked through the grating at her metaled forefoot [ saw the ripples plentiful as harp- strings threading aft, and while I dried myself I watched the slow approach of a piece of timber hoary with barnacles and venerable with long hairs of seaweed, amid and arouiid which a thousand little fishes were sporting, many colored as though a rainbow had been shivered, I returned to my cabin, dressed and step- ped on the quarter deck, where I found some men spreading the awning, and the captaim, ina white straw hat, viewing an object out upon the water through a tele- scope and talking to the boatswain, who stood alongside. ‘‘What do you see ?” I asked. ‘Something that resembles a raft,” an- swered the captain. The thing he looked at was about a mile distant, some three points on the starboard bow. On pointing the telescope I distinctly made out the fabric of a raft, fitted with a short mast, to which, midway, a parcel was attached. A portion of the raft was cover ed by a white sheet of cloth, whence dangl- eda short length of something chocolate- colored, indistinguishable even with the glass, lifting and sinking as the raft rose and fell upon the flowing heave of the sea. ‘*‘This ocean,” said the captain, taking the glass from me, ‘‘is a big volume of tragic stories, and the artist who illustrates the book does it in that fashion,” and he nodded in the direction of the raft. ‘‘What do you make of it, boatswain ?” I asked. “Tt looks to me,” @e answered in his strong harsh, deep voice, “‘like a religious job—one of them rafts the Burmah covies float away their dead on. I never see one afore, but I’ve heard tell of such things.” We sneaked stealthily toward the raft. It was seven belis—half-past 7—and the sailors ate their breakfast on the forecastle, that they might view the strange contriv- ance. The mate, Dr. Perkins, came on deck to relieve the boatswain, and after inspect- ing the raft through the telescope gave it as his opinion that it was a Malay floating bier—‘‘a Mussulman trick of ocean burial, anyhow,” said he. ‘‘There should be a jar of water aboard the raft and cakes and fruit for the corpse to regale on if he ha’n’t been dead long.” The steward announced byeakfast. The captain told him to hold it back awhele. He was as curious as I to get a close view of the queer object, with its white cloth mast and parcel of chocclate colored frag- ment half in and half out like a barge’s lee- board, and he bade the man at the helm put the wheel over by a spoke or two, but the wind was nearly gone, the barr scarcely responded to the motion of her rudder, the threadlike lines at the cutwater had faded, and a roasting, oppressive calm was upon the water, whitening it cut into a tingling sheen of quicksilver with a fiery shaft of blinding dazzle, solitary and splendid, work. ing with the swell like some monstrous ser- pent of light under the sun. The raft was about six cables’ lengths off when the bark came to a dead stand, with a soft, universal bellowing in of her canvas from royal to course, as though, like something sentient, she delivered one fi¢al sigh before the swoon of the calm seized her. But now we were near enough to resolve the floating thing with the naked eye into details. It was a raft formed of bamboo canes. A mast about six feet long was erected upon it; the dark thing over the edge proved a human leg, and when the fabric lifted with the swell and raised the leg clear we saw that the fgot had been eaten away by fish, a number of which were swimming about the raft, sending little flashes of foam over the pale surface as they darted along with their back or dorsal fin exposed. They were all little fish ; I saw no sharks. The body to which the leg belonged was covered by a white cloth. The captain called my attention to the parcel attached to the mast, and said that it possibly contained the food which the Malays leave beside their dead after burial. “But let’s go to breakfast now, Mr. Barron,” said he, with a slow, reproachful, impatient look round the breathless scene of ocean. ‘‘If there's any amusement to be got out of that thing yonder there’s a pre- cious long, quiet day before us, 1 fear, for the enteriainment.” We breakfasted, and in due course return- ed on deck. The slewing of the bark had caused the raft to shift its bearings, other- wise its distance remained as it Was when ‘we went below. ‘Mr. Perkins,” said the captain, “ower a boat and bring aboard that parcel from the raft’s jurymast, agd likewise take a peep at the figure under the cloth and report its sex and what it looks like.” I asked leave to go in the boat, and when she was lowered, with three men in her, I followed Mr. Perkins and we rowed over to the raft. All about the frail bamboo con- trivance the water was beautiful with the colors and movements of innumerable fish. As we approached we were greeted by an evil smell. The raft seemed to have been afloat for a considerable period ; its sub- merged portion was green with marine adhesions or growths. The fellow in the bows of the boat, manceuvering with the boathook, cleverly snicked the parcel from the juryimast and handed it along to the mate, who put it beside him witlout open- ing it, for that was to be the captain's previkere. - THE DAILY HXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, — NN — _- CLOTHING. Wehave made up frm ourown Cloth— Suits for men and boys put @sainst anything made tor hard wear. Any man buying this class of goods always comes back after another suit. they wea. tov long for us. Imported clothing we keep a good range, and our prices ate right, These gocds we wil Also pants, we can guarantee them every time. The on'y tanlt But as long as they give satisfaction we aint going to kick. We can ¢a‘e}) ‘ ow say, no better value is offered in this city, Hats and Caps We are right in it—let us fit you this fall, Give us a you your furnishings. In fact, we can and would like to sel all at the BARGAIN CORNER ‘VF with that cloth,” said Mr. Perkins, ‘“‘and then back water a bit out of this.” 1 ne bowman jerked the cloth clear of the raft with his boathook ; the white sheet floated like a snowflake upon the water for a few breaths, then slowly sank. The body exposed was stark naked and tawny. wasamale. I saw nothing revolting in the thing ; it would have been otherwise per- haps had it been white. The hair was long and black, the nose aquiline, the mouth puckered into the aspect of a hair lip, the | gleam of a few white teeth painted a ghast- ly contemptuous grin upon the dead face. The only shocking part was the footless leg. ‘Shall I hook him overboard, sir?” said ‘the bowman. ‘‘No; let him take his ease as he lies,” answered the mate, and with that we re- turned to the bark. We climbed over the side, the boat was hoisted to the davits, gnd Mr. Perkins took the parcel out of the stern sheets and hand- ed it to the Captain. The cover was a kind of tine canvas, very neatly stitched with white thread. Captain Cayzer ripped through the stitching with his knife, and exposed a couple of books bound in some kind of skin or parchment. They were pro- bably the Koran, but the characters none of us knew. The Captain turned them about fora bit, and 1 stood by looking at them. Hethen replaced them in their can- vas cover and put them down upon the sky- light, and by and by, on his leaving the deck. he took them below to his cabin. (To be Continued.) It | Blue Flare cain, StO¥8S SAFE AND DURABLE. 2 Gr 3 Burners, Burns with a clear biae flame, without smoke, and’ a beat of the pointe Burners wc rass, and so made thet wrk can be replaced in a few minuies asin an ordinary lamp. Wick are 10 inches in and should last one year. Patent WickA ustment keeps the wicks from being turn- ed too high or too low. Oil Tanks situated away from burners, connected thereto with small tubes ; the oil is thus con. tinually cool and prevents odor. Frames and Tops are mace of steel and cannot be broken. No perforated plates or braces surround the burners to retain any char or cil soakage, thus preventing odor. Q Boils one quart of water in four minutes. 22 THE McCLARY MFG. CO. LONDON, TORONTO, MONTREAL, WINNIPEG, If your local dealer cannot supply, write our nearest house. DYING BY INCHES!) But Dodd's Kidney Pills will Yet Renew Life. Thousands of persons die in the prime of life because doctors think | Bright’s Disease and Diabetes incura- ble. But Dodd’s Kidney Pilis cure them both. They Aave cured thousands of cases. These diseases and other Kidhey complaints areas Common as ordinary colds. But people don’t realize that they axe “afflicted till the disease has eaten deep into the system. Even then, Dodd’s Kidney Pills will posi- tively cure.” *” | Thousands of people are dying on their feet, but do not realizeit. They notice one or more of these symp- toms; shortness of breath, loss of memory, failing sight, ravenous appe- tite, pale or reddish urine, with brick- colored deposit, scalding when urina- ting, constipation, nervousness, pains in the loins.’ Their only hove is Dodd's Kidney Pills. They won’t fail. They never do, Se > OYSTERS— We have had long experience in haindlitig Prince Edward Island’s famous Oysters, and solicit your consignments. We have facilities second to none for handiing same #te John Caldwell & Co., Produce Commercial Merchants, Impeorters’and Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Fruite. References Bank of Toronto 171 to 175 McGill Street Monvtreal and Commiesion agencies. Correepondence Solicited. Cable addresses Fruitcald, 107 3mo dy&wk eas ee mae Direct from London Received to-day 2 cases Suitings, Overcoatings and Trouser- ings, fntered under the preferental tariff. Elegant patterns and extra values. . a . 44 a - wey fs Call early and get first choice. FLOUR. D. A. BRUCE Every week or so we are receiving Flour by the car-load direct from the Mills in Ontario. Always buying for cash we are able to offer Flour to cur customers at the very iowest rock-bottom prices, We keep in stock such well-known brands as Beaver, Monarch, Puritan, Five Roses, Queen City, and Parkdale * See our prices before buying else— where. Beer & Goff Se It is easy to love your neighbor as yourself, When your neigh ‘or is a pretty girl, And it is just as easy to have good music When your piano is a\“Bell” The pbove may not be very good poetry, But it is a fact, all the same. New sto:k Bel] Pianos and Organsfnow opening a. FLETCHER'’S :PIANO2 WAREROOM'S Opera House .Building