al sc ag ena ee eee itt Aig oie ig ee ne - SEE o- . rs + * e = a a a . " o ” + v + ¥ *A Protection... ¥ $ Baby’s Own Soap is something : # more than acleanser. It is a protec- # tion against the annoying and irritat- S ing skin troubles sq often endured by @ #@ infants. € # It makes Babies happy and healthy, ? . and keeps the delicate skin rosy, pink : nA oe @ and clean. + @ Fyvagrant and pure, it is a perfect : Soap. oAg's ; oo CN tugg 2 : # THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., Mfrs. @ + etter Montreal. + ¢ + CAUTION.—Many of the imftations of Basy’s ¢ > Cy rill burn and ruin the skir oe ? WN Will DurNn and ruin the skin, iu deh eA BARA EEAABAAEAEEA YK NOVA SOTIA'S rion PROVINCIAL EXATBITION —AND -- INDUSTRIAL FAIR HALIFAX, N. Sept, 29nd, -- - Sept. 29th, 1898 _ £16,000 in Premiums $16,000 By 25 per cent. th> largest Prize List of- ferid in Eastern Canada. Improvement in Every Department Wonderful Special Attractions At Great Expenseithe Commission have secured the Grand Historical Spectacular Drama. The Relief of Lucknow Magnificently mounted with beautifu! Costumes, employing 4 full Batallimn of Troops and Bands Produced under the management of Hana & Teale, of Hamilton, Ont., with display of Fire Works surpassing any- thing ever seen East cf Toronto. To- gether with numerous other new and original amusements from London and New York, Superior in every way to the Great Show of 1897. For Prize Lists and al! information, addrese, J. E. WOOD, Mgr. See’y City Hall, Halifax, N.S FOR SALE Dwelling House and Water Front opposite Park Boulevard We are instructed to offer for sale that desirable and beantifuliy ing house and premises lately ocenpied by Simon Davies, facing West Street, and lying between the residence of Sir Louis Davies ar Benjan Heartz Keq. This property can be had ata bargain aud porsession can be given at any time, withina month from purchase. Terms of purchase easy and reasonable Particulars and to inspection on appire alion DAVIES & HASZARD, Solicitors &c. sv 1 New Table Delicacies Van Camps Tomato Catsup Van Camp’s Tomato Soup Van Camp’s Macsaroni Cheese Cairn’s assorted jams in 1 lb pots Baked beansin Tomato Sauce (Ehicur Brand) English plum pudding in 2 Ib tins. American Ox Tonguein 2 and 23 lb tins. Dried Beef in 1 lb tins. Just received at SEER & GOFF S.| situated dweli- | and | THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 2, 1898 ~~ RS eee HER CAT IN HER POCKET. Bismarck Travels In State Wherever His Mistress Goes. A woman walked into the breakfast room of one of Chicago's swell hotels, dressed in traveling costume and carry- ing on her arm acape of plaid cloth, which she hung over the chair next at table, disposing of it with some care, as if it might be of value. Then ake gave her attention to the menu and discussed a service of fruit while she waited for her order. She was roused from a pleasing study of her plate by a series of ‘‘Ohs!’’ and ‘‘Ahs!’’ and ‘*What a darling!’ and a hasty glance showed her a big white Angora cat seat- ed gracefully on the vacant chair at her side. ‘Oh, Bismarck, you dreadful cat!’’ she said, as the head waiter approached with a look in his eye that boded no good to the cat. ‘“‘I mus’ put him out, madam,’’ he said, with the assurance that goes with head waiters. But his mistress clicked her fingers and the cat disappeared. Every eye was upon him, yet no one saw him go. The waiter looked on the chair and under it, but pussy had vanished like a dream. ‘*Find the cat—he is in the picture somewhere, ’’ remarked the owner of the pet, as she buttered her toast. But the cat did not come back, and it was not until the woman had finished her break- fast and was leaving the table, with her traveling cape thrown over her arm, that the mystery of the animal’s disap- pearance was explained, and pussy’s head was allowed to peep from a ca- pacious inside pocket in that cape. ‘*He has traveled in that pocket from the Pacific coust, and this is the first time he has given away his hiding place,’’ said his mistress. ‘‘He will not pur for fear of being found, but he is near his journey’s end now and is get- ting tired. This cape is his exclusive property, and the pocket is his private ear. ’’—Chicago Times-Herald. wwe eee a Dangers From Violent Exercise. There is considerable opirion as to the safety with which wo- mer may indulge in violent exercise in views of possible injury. As regard the heart, there appears to be but one opin- ion-—namely, that that organ, accus- tomed to a quiet life, may be danger: ously and permanently crippled by the excessive strain in athletic sports. Ex- perience in medical practice, says an eminent authority, teaches that the pa- tient with a weak heart must be ex- tremely cautious in his exercises, and the demonstration of a dilatation of the healthy heart under sudden, violent, exhausting effort which has been made was of a surprising nature. Many clin- ical observers in Germany and in this country have detected by percussion and observation of the changes in the heart beats that there is under strain and exer- ticn considerable dilatation, which con- tinues for a shorter or longer time after the exertion is over. Ocular proof of this has been afforded by the Roentgen rays. This shows not only the need of caution by those in good health, but more particularly so in the case of those who suffer from any weakness, consti- tutional or otherwise, in this organ.— New York Ledger. | diversity | j | Avevst tue llrs.—Don’t forget that the greatest night’e snort ever held in the cite will he celehrated hw electric » the new grounds of the Athletic All the in the . wil] take nart. oo i light « Association fasteat men | provinces If you cannot get beef, mutton will answer. You may choose between milk, water, coffee or tea. 3ut there is no second choice | for Scott’s Emulsion. It is Scott’s Emulsion or | nothing. | When you need the best | cod-liver oil, the best hypo- phosphites, and the best glycerine, all combined in the best possible manner, you have only one choice. It brings prompt results in all cases of wasting, or | loss in weight. | All druggists; goc. and $1.00 SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto, o- nent -_—_—— NOTICE tte eee The annual meeting of the Liberal Conservative Party, of the First Electoral District of Queen’s County, will be held in Bradalbane Hall, on Monday, 15th August next, at 2o’clock p.m. The presidents of each polling division will please have public meetings called, and delegates ap. pointed to a.tend the convention. 5 dele- gates from each polling division. WM.CAMPBELL, MICH. READY, President Secretary Wky & Wat. 3i —— 20 net eee asain 3 a tig A Mate lly al aT hl i 5 of | | | THE BLACK DEATH. - THAT FEARFUL PLAGUE THAT FOL- LOWS IN THE WAKE OF WAR. In the Fourteenth Century It Swept the Whole of Europe, Killing Twenty-five Millions of Peopie In Three Years—The Pestilence In London, The plague, or pestilence, that mys- terious and fearful visitation which has moved its hosts in the wake of armies to slay more than waritself, is supposed to have first originated among the dense masses of people whe crowded together in the great cities of Asia and Egypt, or who formed the encampment of Xerxes, Cyrus. and Tamerlane the Tartar. It probably sprang from the impurity which must have existed in the midst of such vast gatherings and in part also from leaving the unburied dead upon the field of battle. At any rate the germs of this fearful human poison have always been most active where condi- tions similar tothose have prevailed. It has always been war and the march of armies that has spread it broadcast over the world from time to time, and as var became less frequent and less worldwide the frequency and extent of these ravages have lessened also. The first recorded outbreak of the plague in Europe occurred in the six- teenth century. It came from lower Egypt. This was the first lapping of the wave that reached into the east again, there ¢- stay its movement so far as the west wus concerned until 544 A. D., when the returning legions of the Em- peror Justinian brought it again into the western world from the battlefields of Persia. Constantsnople was the first place it attacked. Here in a single day as many as 10,000 persons are said to have fallen victims to it. But the plague did not stop with Constantinople. It had found a too congenial soil in En- rope, which was little else than one great battlefield at the time. It was carried into Gaul, where it followed close in the wake of the Frankish armies, and from Gaul it moved into Italy, with the Lombards, and so devas- tated the country as to leave ‘t entirely at the mercy of the invaders. The various crusades, which extended over a space of about 200 years, no doubt did much to hold the pestilence in Europe, for they served to keep open the channels of intercourse between the east and the west. Periodic epidemics were common during their continuance, znd these seem to have culminated in the fourteenth century with what is known in history as the black death. The black death was more fatal to hu- man life than any other single cause since the world began. The havoc of war was nothing in comparison to it It | swept the whole of Euope, leaving in its path such misery and destitution as the world had never known. It killed in three years some 25,000,000 of people. Such figures stagger the comprehension, but the records of the tin.e cannot he doubted. The entire population of Eu- rope is estimated to have been about 100,000,000—key#t down as it was by the constant warfare—and of these 100,- 000,000 at least a fourth perished. The ravages of the plague in Italy, where it came in the track of the war of the Guelphs and Ghibellines, was particularly disastrous to mankind. It raged with terrible fury in Naples, where 60,000 persons are said to have died. It fell upon Pisa and seven out of every ten perished. It utterly and for- ever destroyed the prosperity of Sieaa. Florence also suffered severely, while 100,000 of the inhabitants of Venice were literally wiped off the facerof the earth. From Italy it moved into France, where the mortality was almost as great; in Paris alone 50,000 people died from it. One of the worst features pre- sented by the history of the black death was the cruel persecution it aroused against the Jews. They were supposed to have infected the air in some mys- terious manner, and they were accused ef having poisoned the wells and WoonY’s PILOSPHOPDINE. The Great English Remedy. Six Packages Guaraniced to promptly cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Ervissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotency and all effectsof Abuse or Excesscs, Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opium or Stimu- lants, which scon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an carly grave. Has been prescribed over 35 ycars in thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine known. Ask druggistfor Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail, Price, one package, $1; six, $5. One will please, six will cure. Pamphicts free to any address, The Wood Compary, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Sold in Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggist.- Photographs Photographs We are making all the latest styles of Photos finished in a superior manner, either on Glossy or Flat paper. At the ola stand Grafton St. We have also a new and splendid stock of China, Glass and Earthenware, fine goods at reasonable prices. C- LEWts. Graftoa St. Norih side of Merket House. and permanently | ) springs. In Strassburg 2,000 of them were buried alive in their own burial ground. The order of the Flagellanto arose at this time, coming from the belief that the sinsof the world had at last brought down the wrath of heaven. It was the beginning of the so called Hundred Years’ war that carried the black death into England, where in London its vic- tims numbered 100,000. When at last the plague had worked its ravages, it doubled back over its course, to disap- pear in the east. In 1845 it appeared again in England, first among the sol- diers of Richmond after the battle of Bosworth Field, and when the victo- rious army marched to London the plague went with them to work its havoc there. As long as it lasted the mortality was as great as that caused by the black death half a century be- fore. Five thousand people died in five weeks, and then the plague left London as suddenly as it had appeared there, to sweep over the rest of England. In Scotland the plague of 1568 came immediately after the battle of Larg- side, when Queen Mary was dethroned, but no records of the mortality it occa- sioned seem to have been preserved. The plague visited London in 1675. This followed after the civil war which ended with the death of Charles II, but so many years intervened that,it is im- possible to trace any connection between the two events. In modern wars danger from the plague seems gradually to have lessened, perhaps as a result of better sanitary conditions maintained by the armies of today.—Philadelphia Press. Politics by the Forelock. The Denver Post takes time by the forelock and launches the fo!!owing: For President, Teddy Roosevelt of the Texas Terrors. For Vice President, Colonel Torrey of the Wyoming Wildcats. Platform, Tighten yer cinches, hit ‘em with the spurs and git there! —Dallas News ~ Weil Made Makes Well Hood’s Sarsaparilla is prepared by ex- perienced pharmacists of today, who have brought to the production of this great medicine the best results of medical re- search. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a modern medicine, containing just those vegetable ingredients which were seemingly ine tended by Nature herself for the allevia« tion of human ills. It purifies and en- riches the blood, tones the stomach and digestive organs and creates an appetite; it absolutely cures all ecrofula eruptions boils, pimples, sores, salt rheum, an every form of skin disease; cures liver complaint, kidney troubles, strengthens and builds up the nervous system. It en- tirely overcomes that tired feeling, giving strength and energy in place of weakness and languor. It wards off mataria, ty- os fever,and by purifying the blood it eeps the whole system healthy. Sarsa- Flood’s parilla Is the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. ie Pills care all Liver Ils and Hood’s Pills Quy weaaiche. e. Fruit Jar Kificlency — The jar that will keep*the fruit costs no more than the jvr cf doubt. Use the “Canada” Jar When you put-up fruit, and you’) lose no preserve by*fermentation Special low prices this season on fruit jars. SANDERSON & 0O DR CLIFT treats CHRONIC DISEASES by the Salisbury method of persistent self-heip in removing causes trom the bicod. Continuous, intel- ligent treatement in person cr by letter in- suresMinimoum of suffering and Maximum of cure, possible in each case. MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION BLOOD, SPUTA, URINE, &c, Avoid Attempts Unaided. Graduate of New York University And the NEW YORK HOSPITAL years practice in N. Y. City. steredin U.S, and Canada. Address: Charlottetown, P.E.I., Can, OFFICE: VICTORIA ROW. Acccn modations reserved for patiexts. References on application: a Man Wanted. Apply gat Large’s Livery Stable. 151 tf OF Twenty Diploma reg- ~ Strong Healthy Boys should never be put into WEAK, ILL-FITTING CLOTHES Bad for the boys : Bad for the clothes rs iia Bad for the pocket-book %e is made in almost as many sizes andg i Shorey S proportions as boys are—and thous | : READY TO WEAR they are stylish, smart and nptodate 3 Cora cil they are made for Boyish Boys, fo hard wear and will last until the boy {FOR Boy$, grows out of them. 3 Shorey’s do not ask people to buy “one particular shop. That system es the garner & cost more. Every good dealer sells Shorey’s “ Reac ve « to wear Clothing” and guarantees it to give satisfaction, - You will find the Guarantee Card in the pocket, _ ~<a, Ch ah Gh Ge 2 te ae eee ke OK EE Sonne a noon ; —— —— a Cheap Pianos Built on the patch-* ork 8 * plan, cases made at one place? MEINtZMAN & Co works at another,than thrown $ together by a selt styled man $ gs oat ufacturer are offered daily, at Piano prices so ridiculous as to con- vince any intelligent per-on¢4 of their utter wothle:ness $ Which are remarkable } for tone, touch, finish, and} ‘durability, rs well as prices ¥ ¢ Come and hear them and im} € vestigate not only the inst eee but also our plan of easy payments. We are not here tor a month or two, but Fe cad ie and just and sat- isfactory treatmentcan be rez lied upon, -~ oo oe oe ee oe oe oe 4 A Go 4 4D A. bergers Pure Paris Green | In one Ib Lever top tins, Cycloren bug Machine Insect powder distributor, the latest bug killer, Wholesale and Retail, SIMON W CRABBE Walker s Corner STOVES & EARDWARB. Liat | Ladies’ Capss 44 Blouses sallor Hats At greatly reduced prices. on A eT TJ HARRIS, London House |