i g*s uch gins om? ality \ ~ Mam, brs I beye found qit my mis oe NT LL EY | AN OLD TIME MISSISSIPPI] ROW | How Two Men Fought a Mob “oleh eaten mee remnant mage Sr cements rennet mare mt MR AE Se MT oN Ree tee THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JANUARY 20, 1859 take. What he stands most in need ol is plenty of good neighbors, and I find | that the thicker you put people the bet ‘*And sol do,’’ replied the maiden: **three times a day.’’—Ohio State Jour- | mal. ——>> 2 <<. Health and strength carry us through langers and make us safe in the presence of peril. A perfectly strong. man with ric! pure blood, bas pothing to fear | from germs. He may breathe in the 7a 2&8 Spo Wi ir i may fiod an fentrance to the tissues, tl the trouble begins. Disease germs propagate with lightning like rapidity. Once in the blood, the only way to get rid of them is to kill them. This is what Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery is for. It purifies the blood. bat means thatit kills the germs, but e ; LION A PITCHED BATTLE IN WHICH | SEVEN WE! KILLED And Whica Arose out of a Ver} Trivial Incident. Ww ni 5 ne that r hap] 1 along the Missis- 53 gan the man at the wy) xing shold on the tiller, which had | ard down, and per- mitting it to s around with the val vy OL. & k place out there, +30 years ago, when they burned t 1a p stoffice and the warehouse. ¥ ncan see where they stood by the piles of bricks there on the bank.”’ All admitted the ruins wer plainly visible, when he changed to the op- r of the wheel, and aftera spi made to counteract the of te of an impinging current that i i from her course he continued: - at that I was on had got caught in the fog, and we tied up un- der the point there about 5 « ‘clock in the after: and alotof us went on : @& iittl C61 It WwW on a Saturday, amd a good many peopl bad come in from the country to di their trading and get their mail. Some of them were pitching quoitsand others shocting at a mark when we ‘irst land- ed. but they quit when they saw the man carry the mail bag we bad brought and went in and stood around waiting for the letters te be sorted. Chey had ali been drinking and were pretty noisy. When the postmaster said there were only two lettersand that they were both for Bud Johnson, a colored man, a murmur of disapproval went around, and several of them insisted ona new deal. ‘* You can look for yourse! vee,’ eaid the postmaster, tossing them the bag, but after searching and findiny it empty they were in a worse frame of mind than ever. Presently one of the num- ber, a local politician, got up and made a speech derogatory to the a\iministra tion. He insisted that the government was prejudiced against white folks, and that be had no use for the office any- how. Several of the others present ex- pressed their approval of this senti- ment, and a general smashing up of ev erything at once followed. During the yow the coal oil lamp was broken, the house set on fire and everything burned Up. “Colone! B the property. noticing the fire, came uf from his plantation below and de- nounced the perpetrators of the outrage as vandals. The colonel wae a high spirited man and didn’t stand any fool- ishness, but was getting along in years now and couldn’t do much but talk, sc that when one of the men declared he could whip any Buych on earth. he looked like he felt himself °n a pretty close place, but the colonel stood his ground until] at last, when the contend- ing parties were about tocome to blows, his son appeared upon the scene, and, earning the cause of the trou le, sprang between the two, and, drawing his re- volver, said, ‘My name is Banch, and when my father gets to be too eld tc defend himself I can stand ip his tracks and take bis part.’ “At this juncture the shooting com- unch, who owned menced, and I made for the boat. Ev- ttybody seemed to take sid:s against te Bunches, and you would bave thought them a band of guerrillas from the way they kept the fight up. Pres ently | noticed the colonel rolj] dow» the bank and stop just at the edge ct the water, and then his son came stag- Bering down, too, and fel! nerr his side. They were both dead! We wanted te leave, but the men were afraid to go on shore to untie the lines, for the infuri- ated crowd was still calling for more Bunches and the colored man who had 8% the letters, but be had climbed a ee, and they didn't know where he Was. An hour or so later, when the crowd had dispersed, be slid down from bis hiding place, came aboard the boat fod we had him in the hold until we St away and he was over his fright. He said there were five meu lying on the bank that the Bunches had killed before they fel)."’ The boat at this juncture sbowing 8 disposition to become fractious, the Plot gave his undivided attention for a Moment to the wheel, when he went on: “Bet there is not much shooting tlong the river now, and you hardly ver hear ofa feud. When there were Saly about three families in a county, tWoot them were usually engaged in effort to extesminate the other op Mcount of some imaginary wrong, oF maybe prompted by jealousy. Since the *oUntry has been settled up they are all bt. I used to think myself,’’ he went Mtosay after a brief tussle with the tiller, “that what a man wanted was | the blood and 80 Supplies , wae al o ter they get along, human, and | It makes them more sides they come to know something, which is n the case when they live al I have learned a good deal myself by traveling around seeing What is In the world, for Iu ally go east every summer to swat malarias,’’-—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Caused the First Coolness, Mr. Newlywed (reading) — Nobody @ver yet saw a dead mule. Mrs. Newlywed (who is thinking of Ki mething else and not listening)— Don’t you think your life insurance premiums are a waste of money, John — {3 ton od ( u l Just Like Other People. ee You look nice enough to eat,’ ex- Claimed the youth. that isonly part of whatit does. It as- sists digest Y Stimulating th of digestive fluids, so promoting assimila- and nutrition ; purifies and enriches the tissues with the food they need It buildsup strong healthy flesh and puts the whole body in - e-Tes mt O a aise ing state. Send Sl one-cent stamps to of mailiogonly, andget his book, The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, absolutely ‘free. Address, World’s Dis- pensary Medical Association, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo,N. Y. To our Readers. The editor $desires to inform his readers that he is authorized, through the courtesy of N. C. Poleon & Co., Kingston, On., to offer each one suffering from catarrab, fetid breath, bronchitis. &c,, a sample outfit of Catarrhozone. Catarrhozone is aliquid which, when inhaled, reaches every disease spot, cleaning and invariably Ciring catarrh and aj] nasal and throat diseases. For ashort time these samples willbe given free. It never fails to cure, O write at onee to the abeve address. EPPS’S COCOA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in }-tb. tins, labelled JAMES PS & Co., Ltd., Homeopathic Chemists, Londen, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPSS GOGOA i ee : : : ADVICE ABOUT Spice. When ordering a packr ge Pepper, Ginger, Allspice, Cin namoo or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- ways feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for : : : Mott's ARTAN (Wf SMOKING TOBACCO Jj.Rarrray&Ce. MONTREAL Ca 2@e 2 020068 * O24 BAF TFT we ee =" “SG ese O@Ge + & 2200088 | | cover cost ELECTRICITY AND THE COMPASS —_——— How the Magnetic Needle is Affected SOMETIMES RENDERED USELESS — A CURIOUS DISCOVERY The Compass Very Often Not to be Depended on. A Val Althoug! } = +r) ‘ I int ann 1 Uae invention ana introauc- tion of the trolley tystem of street rail- | ways have been of inestimable value to civilization it has incidentally wrought tome harm here and there. Emphasis was laid on one of these drawbacks to electric traction in the address delivered by Prof r A. W. Rucker at a recent ‘ i : 4% lat the Advancement of Science. in varioms parts of the world observa- tories have been established for the pur- pose of keeping track of the changes in the direction in which the magnetic needle points. It was long ago discov- ered not only that the compass does not aim directly at the north pole, but that tx uns of vari®tion in its indica n true north undergoes s] alterations. Hence it is necessary to make fresh charts, showing the varia- tion for different parts of the globe every few years. Butin order to get the data for corrections—of the highest importance to the surveyor and mariner—it is requisite that careful ob- servations be made continuously at @ number of widely separated points. Two of the most famous and hitherte useful institutions of this class are situ- ated in Washington, in the grounds a the naval observatory and in Toronto. The interference of the electric currents that cun through the earth and the track of trolley lines which have been constructed near these observatories in- terfere so much with the bebavior of the instruments of both places that the records now obtained are practically worthless. And the experts are greatly puzzled by the problem of escaping from this vexatious interruption of their work. So delicate are the influences which the magnets in such an observatory arc intended to investigate that they can tbe perceived only when the apparatus it most serupulously guardcd. The room in which they are mounted is under- ground. Visitors are never admitted ex- cept under unusual circumstances and are required to deposit their jackknives, keys and all other metallic objects about their persons before entering the apart- ment. The magnets, generally bars of steel not over cix inches long, are poised above a scale that is graduated to the most minute fractions, and a telescope, onan adjacent pillar, is’ used to read the fluctuations, which are teo small to be discernible by the unassisted eye. A tiny mirror, as big as a dime, catches '# beam of light more elender than the lead in a pencil and reflects it away tc a sheet of slowly moving photographic paper, on which a permanent record # made. The arrangement of the apparatut is ench that the movement cf the mag- net is magnified many times in the reo- ord, im order to render the changes pet- ceptible. There are three sets of instrumente on duty in such an observatory. Oné swings horizontally, like a mariner’s compass. Another dips up and down. A third is designed to measure the in- tensity of the earth’s magnetism, which is a eeparate thing from the directios in which it acts. And so sensitive are they that their readings are apt to be interfered with by exceedingly trivial causes. It is customary for the superin tendent to inscribe on the scroll ‘‘ Visit- ors admitted,’’ whenever such a breacl of the regulations is permitted, so that if any abnormal fiuetuation is detected in the motion of the magnets a suspicion of its meaning will be excited in the mind of the scientist who afterward ex- amines the photographic trace. In spite of the delicacy of the appa ratus, it may seem surprising to the lay mind that the passage of trolley cur- rents at a distance of many rods from the observatory should be abie to affect the instruments within. But tbey do, and it is impossible to separate in the record the variations produced by genu- ine changes in terrestrial magnetism from those which are caused by the trolley. Professor Rucker said a few days ago: ‘‘From all parts of the world we hear of observatories ruined o1 threatened by the invasion of the elec- trical engineer. Toronto and Washing- ton have already succumbed, Potsdam, Parc St. Maur, Greenwich and Kew aré besieged, and the issue largely dependt upon whether these great national ob- servatories can or cannot make good their defense.” Although the practical service t¢ mankind which is rendered by institu- tions of this class is alone sufficient t¢ justify their maintenance and to war: rant alarm as to their future, there are¢ otber questions involved which possest profound interest for the philosopher. We know that the earth is a magnet, but as yet no one is able to say whal such makes it so. The fundamenta) secret 0} ! teliteuial MaApuetism bas MOG Decw solved. Then, too, there are various changes In direction which mark thé behavior of the needle that remain t¢: xplained. What influence is it that makes the needle swing to and fro toa scopic exteutevery day? Why is it the diurnal swing is gi ater ii of sun spot abundance than at th minimum stage of solar activity? \, by do the indications of the needle diffe: in summer from those of winter? What is the key to the inystery of the } np period movement that makes it neces eary to rechart the situation? What causes the convulsive behavior of the magnets for afew hours or days when there isa great outbreak of sun spots? And is there any relation between the i cay Ll, ° ar . ’ | Weather ai l the fluctuations in thi earth's mignetism? ‘There are’ theories on these subjects, but no generally ac- tepted doctrines, and the human mind is 80 constituted that it will not rest Qntil further light is obtained.—New gork Tribune. ANOTHER VICTORY. Mr, R Morrow Cured of Lumbago Dodd's Pills ™ Toronto, Nov 28.—Tae vast majority fTorontonians know and esteem Mr. R Morrow, the able and popular agent for the Toronto Auer Light Co. For this reason the following statement made in writirg by Mr. Morrow, possesses unusual s:gnificance. “Two years ago | was attacked by Lum~ oago aud Urinary trouble which caused intense suffering,I tock several differ- ent remedies without any beneili. Then I began using Dodd’s Kidney Piils, and was completely cured by them.” Lumbago is unusually prevalent this fa'l. All sufferers should know that Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the only known cure tor They never fail. rr) ¢ At Alma,Ont.a young sonof Robert Knox got hold of a bottie of strychine and drank a portion of the contents. He died a few hours later. Keep Minard’s Liniment in the House During 1898 the Pope received pre- sen of money and valuables amounting co more than $2,000,000. The Peter’s Pence fund reached $500,000, Dr. Chase Cures Catarrh after Operations Fail. Toronto, March 16th, 1897. My bey aged fourteen, has been a suiferer from Cavarrh, and lately we submitted him to an operation at the Central Hospital. Since then we bave resorted to Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Lure, and one box < this medicine has made @ prompt and complete cure, " , H, G. Forp, Foreman, Cowan Ave. Fire Hall. The village of Grand Blanche, France boasts of schoolboy aged twelve who weighs 140 ponndsand measures 41 inches around the chest. Up w_ the present time his knees have shown no sign of the weakness usual among giants, and he lifts 200 nounds with ease. Minard’s Liniment is used by Physicians Thirty expulsions ot Danes from North Schleswig have been ordered, it is said, in cousequence of the attendance of their employers at a meeting addressed by Herr Hanssen, a Danish deputy. — To ali who find themselves with health gradually slipping away, Kidneys and Liver s0 disorganized that they are incapable of keeping the system free Pe waste ~waterial, Stomach Disordered, Sowels Con- tipated, Head Aching, Back Paining, take vr. Chase’s Kianey-Liver Fills, The quick way they heip you back to health wiil sur prise you, = Chcliy—lm not & man ,with one idee, Miss Coliddea |!—No? Why don’t you try to get one? Mizard’s Liniment Lumberman’s Friend Little Waldo—Uncle what isa dys- peptic? Old Uncle Grout— A dyspetic isaperson with an optimistic appetite and a pessimistic digestion.— Rochester Herald. I was curep 6f Rheumatic gout by MINAKD’S LINIMENT. : Haliax, Anprew Kine. I was, cuRED of acute Bronchitis by MINARD’S LINIMENT. ; Sussex. Lz.-Cox. C. UrEwE Reap. I was curED of acute Rheumatism by MINARD’S LINIMENT. Marknam, Ut. C. 8. BILiine A congress to discuss the annihilation of tuberculosis will convene at Berlin, Germany, May 23rd. i Ask for Minard’s and take no other Beslin police pS and photo- graphing all known Anarchists. Chronic Eczema Cnred. the most chronic cases of Eczema nena is the case of Miss Gracie Klia Aiton, of Hartland, N. B. On &@ sworn state- ment Mr. Aiton says: I hereby certify that my daughter Gracie Ella was cured of Eczema of long standing by using tour boxes of Dr. Chase’s Ointment. William Thistle, druggist, of Hartland ajso certifies that he sold tour boxes of Dr, Chase’s Ointment which | oared wracie Kila, Paton’s Annual Remnant \ Sale now on, Men’s ulsters, one-third off, Men’s overcoate, one-fourth off, suits, 25 per c:nt oft, pew pants, , off —Prowse Bros- ! . 14, 3 : . cae, ELEPHANT BRAND Office for Maritime Provinces 7 & 9 Bedford Row, Halifax, N. 8. London : House. Ladies JACKETS Black and Golored --- About Fifty We do not want any at stocktaking Down go the Prices "lr. J:. Harris Sa LT nee camara a EE PROCLAMATION. We are now ready and willing to place any number of Hot2ls, Stores ar private dwellings ina correct sanitary, and consequently hcalthy cone tion; and this at short notice. We will furnish all who desire it with Baths, Closets, and lavi‘ories ct the latest and most approved patterns at prices consistent with first-class quality of goods and workmanship. Tne latest and most beautiful New York designs in electrolicrs. <A large stock of soil pipe and all plumber’s, steamfitters and engineers supplies now on hand, Call on us at the Masonic Temple Building. treatment whether we sell you or not. T. A. MacLEAN, MANUFACTURERS AGENT. eT : _ a wernt — You will rec2 ve ¢ urteow* List of Ratepayers sor the City of Charlottetors In default for Assessment due on Real Property, for the year ending 3lst Bec - ber, 1898, containing names of all such defaulters. and the anount due from G-« respectively, with a statement of the Number of the town Lot, Water Lot and Com. « Lot upow which or any part thereof such assessment is in default. N of te , Amount meme pease | midomas oc emcees Prgms wen'| feet ve & unps. : Butler Catherine House and Land on Town Lot No. 40—5th Hundred ie | Coyle Stephen House and Land on Town Lot No. 3~—2nd Hundred a7 Hughes Peter House and Land on Common Lot No. 22 6 7a Lowe Walter House aod Land on Town Lots Nus. 5&6 4th Hundred 22 = Lowe Waiter House and Land on Town Lot No. 49 4th Hundred 16 4 Lowe Walter House and Land on Town Lot No. 98 4th Hundred Sue Lowe Walter Vacant Land on Common Lot No 31 246 vr Purdie Jane phigh oa yp Trustees House and Land ou Town Lots Nos 97498 let Hundred 332% Ryan’ Deborah House and Land on Town Lots Nos §048i—4th Hundred 3325 Reid Richard B. Youse and Land on Town Lot No. 95—2ad Hundred 337 Williams John Vacant Lasd on Common Lot No, 27 4 Williams Jobn House and Land on Com:non Lot No. 24 1L26 Notice is hereby given that pursuant to the provisions of the Statute 51 Vietorse Can. 12, Section 91, after 30 days publication of the above liet, being 3 list of the Ratepayers of the City of Charlottetown who have failed to pay within the time pee scribed the Assessment severally Jevied upon their Real Property in said eity, I will make an application to His Honor, the Stipendiary Magistrate of said City, for Judge ment against each and all of the lands above described, for the respective amounar so levied against them, and then unpaid, and that upcn euch ‘ndgment being duly entered, I will further apply for a warrant for the eae of such jande. Dated this 20th day of Deeember, A. D. 1898. RUBERT_ VANIDERSTINE City Col! Deecmber 20, 1898, 1 mo. ae ea “Eee: ee ee ee oe, ei eo ee ne et etanti aihtim st tN, aE Mg em ning iiss weap get iP te se AP lh nt ein nine TI