—ae o i a” — Terms, Four Dollars per Vear. VOL 37 ———Serate read. room ee “This is True Liberty, when Free Born Men, havingt> advise the Puvlic, may speak free.”—Evripipes. THE DAILY CAAM. > ocean SSRN ’ Single Copies two cents. 88 reese HOMEMALE ELECTRICITY. fome Simple Methods by Which It May he Generated. that if a steel rk be inserted in a It has been discovered knife and large orange an lectriec ct generated If the end of the theend of the knife sti king orange be connected with an electric measuring Imstrums nt, quite a percepti- $e current will The game kind of a battery may be made by gabstitutin . fact, any acid fruit In order to make : only ! ure pieces inch square, the game 0! s Of copper and a like number of | sof paper. The gaper skould be thoroughly soaked in vinegar. First take a piece of zinc. On it place & piece of vinegar soaked paper, then put on apiece of copper, then a piece of paper, then another zinc and then paper, and so on until all the pieces of zinc, copper and paper have been used. It is important that a piece of zinc should be on one end and a piece of copper on the other. After the pile is completed again soak the whole slight- ly in vinegar; then clean it off on the outside. If the forefinger of one hand be held against one end and the forefinger of the other hand be held on the other end of the pile, quite a perceptible current will be felt. If several persons clasp hands and the perscus on each end of the line touch the voltaic pile, the cur- pent will flow through the bodies of all those in position. The thermopile is wnotber electrical current producer that may be made in any household at a trifling expense. The electric curreut is generated in this case by heat, and anything from a can- die to a live ccal muy be used to pro- duce the heat. Take a lot cf German silver and copper wire and cut it into @xinch lengths. Then take a Germezn silver length and a copper lere¢th and twist the ends together. You will have a V shaped arrangement of wire. Take another length of German silver wire and twist one end of it tightly around the copper end of the V. Continue the process until you have a long sucecssion a@ what might be called W's or double Vsarranged with alternate pieces of copper and German silver wire. Now take two large curtain rings. Bend your string of wire lengthe until it has assumed the position of a star and clamp. it between the two curtain rings. One end of the string of wires should be copper and the other German silver. You will find when these are clamped between the curtain rings that the in- ner points of the star form a small cir- cle in the middle of the rings. The rings should be placed on uprights and a candle should be lighted, so that the flame will play between the inner points of the star.—New Ycrk Herald. : io a “au slivel ié be found to pass. g a cucumber for the orange. may be used. pile it is ten or Te Ataic more MODERN NEV/SPAPERS. There Are No Prejudices In the Way of the New Journalist. The new journalist has no prejudices that interfere with bis business ends. The founder of his school was the first man to make ap absolutely uc npartisan paper, and the successful men I talked With declared that the best way com- Mercially to make an editorial page Was to turn it over to some man with waind and character who wovld direct its policy indeperdently and in good faith in the interests of the community & a whole, ryurdless of parties, cliques, advertisers or any other inter- ests, however powerful. But while this is being done the business man who Ptopeses to conduct the enterprise Would have an eqrally independent Rew: department, and, having the most intelligent readers to begin with, he Would broaden the news policy from their point of view, spending as much us seisationalism costs for more important, written news. In short, the con- Mercial ideal contains distinct apprecia- tion of the power of opinion, but it tes just as highly the value of the authoritative statement of all the news. There's not room for many such ROWspapers, but that’s the kind that Would live and pay forever,’’ said my Rew commercial journalist. —J. Lin- Cela Steficus iu Scribner's. irrent will be | fork and | § from the | § C HARLOITETOWN eee CHARLOTTETOWN, Flannels, Yarns. — eee ee ~~ One reason why Scott’s Emulsion cures weak throats, weak lungs, makes rich blood, and strengthens puny and delicate children is be- cause all its parts are mixed in so scientific a manner that the feeblest digestion can deal with it. This experi- ence has only come by doing one thing for nearly 25 years. This means, purest in- gredents, most evenly and delicately mixed, best adapted failed or whose digestion would repel an uneven pro- duct. Pore \e by all druggists at gece. aud §:. GOLD MEDALS aud highest awards at the Expositions have always been awarded to ADAMS’ Toftitrutti See that the trade seiiiaiiahs: Aeab mark name “Tutti . a | Frutti” is om each 5c. plain! ro. amen package. s , rn & 13 Jar-| vis St., Toronto, Ont., All others are} ss oe te rie imitations. : 35 ceive two beautiful pa- dolls with movable | sand bodies free For Sale. SCHOONER “SAN JUAN,’ now lon her way. from St. Jchn’s New- Buy your tickets for Boston by the, foundland to Charlottetown; built: in t Steams }\alifax. Ww. W. CLARK, Ticket Agen 1#89, registered tonnage 94 tons; has a good outfit. Apply to PRAKE BROS & CO. NovilC—tf for those whose strength has _ —_— P. FE. ISLAND: WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBEP 24. 1897. onal a ot Going to be } - - - = Undersol Any Line tf Goods 1a. W Far Caps, T Nae All our winter goods must be sold, and cash customers will find our prices are the lowest in the city; Overcoats. Ulsters, Caps, Fur Coats, Robes, T weeds, Every article in our realy to to wear departments —_ eee ee ee McKay Woolen Company Che Big Store—Bargain Corner, every article in our stores, will be sold at a low price to clear. Bar | gains may be expected; come all. ee a ee MUNYON CURES CATARRH DEAFNESS Ie your nose stopped up? Do you have difficulty in breathing? Have you hoarseness or loss of voice ? Have you pain in the eves or forehead ? Do you have trequent colds in -the head ? Have you deafness or difficulty in hearing? Have yeu dizziness and pressure in the head ? Have you discharges from the head or throat ? Have you red,inflamad,blurred or watery eyes? Have von hawking or spitting of mucus or elime ? Have von a stupid, dull, tired or dragged out feeling ? Have you ulcers in the nose or bleeding from the nore? Have you buzzing, roariog or whistling noises in the ears? Have you pain in the back ? Have you cold hands and feet ? Have you aches and pains all over? Is your sense of taste and smell im- paired ? Is there an offensive or fou! odor in the breath ? Have you soreness, scrb-, crusté or plugs of mucus in the nore? Have you dryness, rawne-s, soreness or tickling in the throat ? Avy or all of these means that von have catsrrh. If you have any of theee symp- , toms you have:caarrh of the nose and throat, snd thers isvanger of the direase . extendi' vy «oa! tie organs of the tody, producing acatness aud in the lang: consumption, or to the #tomach, produc- ing the distress ef dyspepsia, indigestion, constipation and biliousness, followed by nervous prostration and genera! debility. Munyon’s Ca‘arrh Remed es never fail. The Catarrn Cure— rise 25c—rral cates the disea-e from the *vacen, and the Catarrh Tahlet —, ree 25: cleanee ane heal the parts: A seperate cure fur eaeh d s-ase. druggists, mustly 25c a vial. Pdrsonsl let'ers to Prof. Munyon, 11 ard 13 Albert street, Luront», answered, | with free medical a*v ce for any disease, At all An Inexpensive Pleasure, Judge Peterby i. ...: and stingy. In the event of his death his son is to in- herit his property. A friend of the fam- ily said to the old gentleman: ‘‘I hear your son is going to marry. On that occasion you ought to do some- thing to make him kappy.”’ “Twill, I'll pretend thatI am dan- gersasly sick.’’-—New York Sunday World. No Time to Study. Father (severely) — You know, of course, that a girl has taken the highb- est mathematical honors at Cambridge? Son (undergraduate)—Oh, well, you know, the girls have nothing else to do but study. We fellows have really so much else to attend to that we don’t get much time for books. —Tit-Bits. Of Course. ‘*Bobby says he knows why people always throw old shoes after a bride.’’ “Why is it, Bobby?’’ ‘*So she’ll have something easy to wear when her new ones gits to hurtin her. ’’—Chicago Record. Where Nights Are Six Months Long. First Eskimo— What time of night is it, Bill? Second Eskimo—About three weeks New York Journal. The Place For Him. ‘Bliss Carman, the poet, says he never reads the daily papers.”’ ‘‘Heavens! What an ideal juryman!’ Cleveland Plain Dealer. FCONOMY in taking Hood’s Sar- saparilla, because ‘* 100 doses one dolla>” ‘5 peculiar to and true only of the Une True BLOOD Purifier. A few very choice vamed Hyacinth h JUST AND TTUE CLAIM. Diamond Dyes Alone On the Top Round of Periect on. Tae Fast Diamoaod Dyes for Wool, Silk Co'ton and Mixed Goods :re wonderful triumphs of science, and embody new discoveries that are unknown to the mak- ers of imitation and soap urease dyes. Able and expert aualytica chemists have made severe chemical tests, taking in all known makes of package dves, and have established the fact that Damowd Dyer, being the only pure make will dve more goods with a given quantity of dye than any other make in the world. Being the etrongest in coloring power, the Diamond Dves are by far the cheapest for home une, If you wonld dye with ease, pleasure and satisfaction, and keep your temper unroffled, you must u-e Diamond Dyer, No adulterations to make bulk, no soap grease, no impurities in Diamond Dyes. —_—_— ope Precocity. Mrs. Figg—Tommy swore today. Mr. Fige—Where is ber [Th fix him There’s time enough for him to begin swearing when he is grown up and mal ried —Lndianapolis Journal. The Yellow river is styled the ** Sorrow of China."’ It is estimated that its loods in the present century have vost Chine 11,004, 000 lives. The consumption of soap in India ualy reaches the modest amount of one ounce per head annually. Health and strength carry us through dangers aud make us safe in the presence of peril. A perfectly strong man with rich, pure blood has nothing to fear from germs He may breatbe in the bacilli of consump- tion with impunity. Ifthere isa weak spot where the germs may find an en- trance tothe tissues, then the trouble begins. Disease germs propagate with lightning-like rapidity. Ouce in the blood the only way to get rid of them is to kill them, © This is what Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medica! Discovery is for. It purifies the blood. That means that it kills the germs, but that is only part of what it does. It assists digestion by stimulating the secre- tion of digestive fluids, so promoting assimilation and nutrition; ;urifies and enriches the blood end +0 +nupplies the tiseues with the food they need. It build- up strong, healthy flesh and puts the whole body into « disease-resi«ting state. Send 3! one- cent stamps to cover cost of mailing on/y, and get this great book. The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, absolutely PRE. Address Werld’s Dispensary Medical Association bulbs still ou hand at Carters’ Book-tore. No. 663 Main Street, Buttslo, N. Y. NO: 2795 ° PHE PILGRIMS. ag “Whither, pilgrims, whither bound Passing slowly with no sound?” One by one they journey by, Gliding, gliding silently. Slowly, slowly, dim and gray, Hold they on their ghostly, way, ‘‘Hither, children, making May Of the solemn autumn day. Who were they but now went by While the dead weeds gave a sigh? Who the pilgrims, dim and gray, Stopped and looked upon your play?” ‘‘We have wandered many hours Here where some one hides the flowers; We heard laughter in the grass, But we saw no pilgrim pass.’ Whispers one--pale cheeked is she: “Shapes went by. They beckoned me.” —John Vance Cheney in Century. HEROES OF BUENA VIST Yheir Sadly Neglected Burial Ground Near Saltilio, Mexico. The hardy young Americans who left their comfortable homes in the United Ktates more than half a century ago and came to Mexico with General Taylor to fight against the people of this country probably did not think that should they fall in battle their bones would be left to crumble to dust in an unmarked spot in thisdistant land. Put today the dead heroes of the Buena Vista battlefield lie under but a few feet of earth in a neg- lected place just outside this city. At the time of their hasty burial their de- voted comrades evidently sought to make the spot somewhat sacred by con- structing an adobe wall around it. This wall is fast succumbing to the ravages of time, and in places it is completely gone. I visited the burial ground of the dead heroes today. A tram car took me as far as the pretty San Francisco plaza, and from there I walked throvgh a dirty, narrow street until I came to an arroyo, on the other side of which the faint marks indicating the cemetery may be seen. Had I not received care- ful directions I should have passed the place unnoticed. On the side toward the city the wall is entirely gone for the most part, and a much traveled wagon road passes through the place and over the sacred dead. The place which had once been inclosed by the adobe wall embraces probably two acres, but inves- tigation shows that many were buried west of the wall and up close to the ar- royo. Some time ago the report was pub- lished in the press of the United States that the bones of the buried soldiers were protruding from the ground, and that the place presented a sickening spectacle, This report was not strictly true, but it is undoubtedly a fact that parts of many of the skeletons have come to the surface. The ground is strewn with fragments of bones, and it is evident that they come from the men who were buried there. None of these bones is large, as the heavy traffic through the place has broken them up into small pieces. If any skulls came to the surface, they were no doubt quick- ly taken by the Mexican children who were about and made innocent play- things of. Had they ever appeared they certainly would not have remained in- tact on the surface long. In the arroyo, through which floods of water pass at times and wash one side of the burial ground, there are also many pieces of bones among the rocks, and auong them I saw an unbroken rib bone y, hich looked like that of a human. There is not aspear of grass nor a sign of vegetable life within the in- closure. It is perfectly barren. The place should certainly receive attention at the hands of the United States con- gress, even if nothing more isdone than to take such steps as will stay the rev- ages of time and weather on the treach- erous soil and permit the bodies lying there to rest undisturbed. It could easi- ly be made an attractive and even Lean- tiful place by laying it out in walke and planting trees and plants. Th» rav- ages of the floods in the arroyo on the soil of the cemetery could be checked by the building of a substantial wall along that side. In addition to the sev- eral hundred who were killed in battle, all of the soldiers who died in the hos- pital here were also buried there. —Mex- ican Letter in St. Louis Globe-Democrat. .__ Cee New Crockery Store All kinds of First-class crockery, in- cluding Dinner Sets, Tea Sets, Chocolate Sets and Chamber Sets, Batter Coolers, Pitchers, Bowls, Pie Plates, Butter Crocks Cream Crocke, Cake Pots, Bean Pots, Teapots, Milk Pans, Churns, &c. Also, avery fine lot of Glass, in Tumblers, Goblets, Water Pitchers, Six Piece Sets in Colered and Plain Glass, Preserve Dishes, Bread plates, Celery Dishes, Butter Coolers, Cake Stands, and a lot of other articles toc nmerons to mention. GIVE US A CALL, We are sure to suit you, both in price and quality Cc. LEWIS, Grafton Street, exactly opposite North Side of Market House. —g 9 Bidy wy ee SG he ID Oak ip eign ig \ z é y * 6 aEIN AN TA, 0 a PRs S F5 ener Gok ~ tea * 9g EB iss om & ee OM a GE OMG NAA AR ry FARE ED GS Dey etnies seh maar apes woe arth a mei Me NN ARE OOL PB AA em Septem OAT oom A a 6+ SES eae Ze sot eee nd: