iad AJ ENDAR, GT. 1897, AN Fi l 19.0m, a. m I i LGth, O aU. fa , 18th, 4h. 56 Sm } Ke 25th, th. 15.5 i 4 Week oS ri Rises Seis | Wa « tisa y ‘6 3] 5 1 29 2 t | 6 . i 6 | 10 \ y i $) t 16 5 | Tuesday S | 7 5 32 6 | Wednesday 10 | by 6 47 711 2] 2] 7B ‘ i LS 2] S of 9) S \ 15 oi Of 10 1 16 1s 10 45 7 7 61. 3) 37 2 ) 19 14 | 1222 3 =U MZ | 14) 7 y 21 10; 0 ¥, 5 S | () w 21 7.) 17 | “A D | 1 4 18 |) > 21 2a 19 28 lj 343 2) \ ty } 0 t ov * | 1 | 458] 617 Vn 33 B61. 42 zB | 34 Si 8a 241s . ae 53] 9 26 2B y 37 el | 10 30 B11 + 501 11 38 71 W | 40 43] 1231 6} Tin V 11 16 20t Friday | 438 i 015 3 | Saturday 44 isi. 08 3L | Sunday '646/ 4411 150 Y x ¥ @© ‘ ~ ~ Fesunes ol ¢ Wants, Lest, Found &e TO LET—Two new and ecomfortat te awe). ingson Allew street ard rear Upner Prince street, each containing six rooms Immodiate n*<session even. A poly at Coun: Cour office or to the subseriber—Georce Aller WA WTR 4 housekeerer for a tf milv oa two who live five miles from torn Protest ant preferred, Apply at this oe oec'S—2wks d&w RING FOUN ),—4 gold ring Arn'y a this offer. Owner mas cbhtain hr this advertisment. raving ft octs TO LET.—A honse fronting on Wevmonth St.. oppoite Prince Of Wales College Apply on the premises. oct 7 li pd CLASSESin Art Embroidery, have been reopened atthe Decorative Art Rooms, in the W. ©. T. U. building Grafton st oct 5 dy l wk WANTED 4n experienced saleslady want ed b7 James Paton & Co No other need an- ply. oc'2—tf LOST—The partv who ricked up ths um- bretle on King Square Thursdav pight or Friday morning will kindly return ittao W W Beer. W4NTED —A yonnge girl ahont 16 or 17 vearscfave. Aprly to Mrs A Fdmonds, Great Geo. St. sept 27 BOCRT And faepishet pape eer ig mivate femily, wanted hy 9 marri-d centle- man, nochiidren. Apply atthis office. sep 30 tf ART CLASSES,—Mrs MacNutt will re-oxen her art classes, October 2nd, at her residenca upner Prince Street. Lessons given in Mil, and Water Colors. from model and nsture. Special attention given to Persrective Draw- mg. sep 27 3i WANTED.— 4 first class Engireor, one who ean steam fit, and taee belts, must he active ani sober, One understanding: iee machines preferred. Gtve reference and salary expect- ed A.B. Examiner office, sept 15tf FOR SAL¥.—A three story bnildine situat- ed on Pownal Stree+—eontainine shop and I4royms. Gond stabling on premises. A desirable business stard. Sale made on easy terms. Apnulvto B. TRAINOR. sep 39 blw wll WANTE Rv ld Established House—VMan or Woman, good (hureh stand- ing, Willing to learn our business then to aet as manager on? Provineial Corre- sorndent here, Salary $90). Enclose self ad- dressed stamnel envlopa to C. A GREER, Generel Manager,—care Dai'y Examiner.8 oct4dy lwk pd TO T.=T—A Honse on Prince Street next to Mr. Thomas Alley’s, containing seven large room in first class order: thereis alenoa fine eeller under the whole of the house; there is a good stable with enach honseand yard The above property will be ready for a tenant the first of October next Itis So at present bv George Toombs Fi'sq.. who has lived in It fora number of vears Apply to MrT Mc- Quaid. Tower Queen Street, or to the owrer, Edward Keily, Southport. sept 8—eod tf TERPSICHORE ° HALL GREAT GEORGE STREET ‘Mrs Burris assisted by Miss Burris w reopen her dancing classes, for the seon on Tiinraday September 30th. "leg zs Adnits at 8 p. m. “T Juveniles and youag ladies at 4 p. m. Private lessons day or evenings. Satis- faction assured. Foe ‘S09 “= Es Emon tri sat tf ee, i. | AUER | bul Brahmi a shipment just received airect from the gardens, HORASETHASZARD Agent for*Canada Th’town, 25th Sept 2 w—eod i A COURTIN CALL. > ellscaldigtlabi- divas f Hm™ ! Be dressed hisself from top ter toe Ter beat the lates’ fashion. Hie give his boots a extra glow, His dickey glistored like the snow, He slicked his hair exaetly so, An all ter indicate ‘his passion.” He tried his hull three ties afore He kep the one on that he wore. I : All afternoon she laic abed Ter make her featur’s brighter, She tried an every geoun she hed, She raspef her 1 l they bled, A dozen tim ed her head, A ut on ke her whiter, An fussed ti ed, she said, Bat ld make | oye } so rec. a * * * + * THEM! They sot together in the dark "It ta licht, ex ) heir spark. An neither could have told or guessed What way che other un was dressed! —}. E. V. Cooke in Buffalo C purier. MINERAL WATERS, Why ard How They lenefit Those That ' Driak Them. When a patient reaches a mineral water health resort, he is examined by the resident physician and ordered to drink certain quantities of the water at certain times during the day. These are increased from day to day until the maximum quantity needed is reached. Ee is ordered to drink one or two glass- fuls upon rising, two or three glasses between breakfast and dinner, the same quantity in the afterncon and a couple of glasses before going to bed. The pa- tient is urged to take it whetber he Wants itor not. He muy say that he is not thirsty, but that makes no differ- ence; ke must take it as a medicine, The quantity is increased until we have known 30 glasses per day to be taken. A part of the benefit derived is be- eause of the rest and change of scene. A part, perhaps, is from the sma!) quantity of the ealts and other bases contained in these waters (we are not speaking of cathartic or chalybeate wa- ters), but the benefit from this source is very slight. The secret of the cure is in the quantity of water taken. If the wa- ter be pure, free from organic matter, and taken in sufficient quantity, the re- sults will be substantially the same, re- gardless of the ‘‘traces’’ of lithia and small quantities of sodium chloride and Other salts. You car perform these cures at home with the ordinary drink- ing water, if of good quality, if you Will require the patient to take it in the same quantity as at the springs. It is very easy to add lithia if desired, but you must not lose sight of the fact that the quantity of water (not lithia) taken is the important thing. It acts by flood- ing the kidneys, by washing out the bladder with a copious, bland and dilute urine, by unclogging the liver and clearing the brain. Tae patient feels better from day to duy; he is better. IrritabYe bladder is relieved, the kid- peys act freely—are ‘‘washed cut’??— and many eifete substances are carried out with the flocd. This clears the way for the liver to act freely and normally, for there is an intimate relation be- tween the liver and kidneys.—New York Ledger. Elephant Flesh an African Delicacy. The flesh of the elephant is eaten in its entirety by several of the African tribes, A detail of the process of butch- ering tne animals is not pleasant read- ing. The tools used are the assagai and hatchet. The rough outer skin is first removed in large sheets. Beneath thie is a subcuticle, a pliable membrane, from which the natives make water skins. The elephant yields large quan- tities of fat, used in cooking the na- tives’ sun dried biltong, or dried strips of the elephant’s flesh, and also in the preparation of vegetables. African ex- plorers of the Caucasian race agree that one part of the elephant's carcass, when properly cooked, is a succulent dish that will regale the most delicate taste. This part, very strangely, is the first joint of the leg below the knee, which one would suppose to be the toughest portion of the animal. To prepare the joint a hole three feet deep is dug in the earth, and the sides of it are baked bard by means of large live coals. Most ef the coals are then taken out, and the elephant’s foot is placed in the rude oven. The hole is then filled with dirt, tightly packed, and a biazing fire is built on top, which is kept replenished for three hoars. The foot is thus evenly baked, and when done, instead of strong, tough meat fiber, it ic of a ge- latinous consistency that may be eaten with a spoon.—Philadelphia Lancet. Effect of Diet Upon History. An eminent German scientist, refer- ring to human history, asserts that we may trace the cause of many evils in the dietetic character of the people. The rejection of flesh would give a new direction to human culture and indus- try. Agriculture would be greatly de- veloped. The pumerour diseases now traceable toa flesh diet would disap- pear, and with them the manifold cruel- ties of the slaughter house. The expense of living would be greatly reduced, and thus the poorer classes would be ele- vated. Nero and Big Noses. Néro never liked a person with a larg® nose. He flippantiy told the sor- z% relatives of Plautus—whom, it he kiiled—that it was only the corpse that he disoov- “Life with such @ Rose,’’ coolly added Nero, ‘‘would have been ample penance aa Newly Yo Giff if , 4 Ly Na J th Wii } / } rr LEG . 4 > o wane Orie oe General William W. Henry, whom the President of the United States has ap- nointed to be Consul to Qnebec, has been Grand Master of a Grand Lodge of Masons ia a member of the [. 0. F. and G. A. R.. having been the second to be elected d-partment commander in his state of Vermont. His war record was brilliant. Enlisting as a private, he was engaged in the first battle of Bull Run. He was promoted for bravery to first lieutenant, soon rose to be major, was promoted to a_ lieutenant coloneley, then became colonel, and in 1865 was breveted brigadier general for meritorious service during the war. He was wounded at the battles of Cold Harbor Monacacy and four times at the battle of Cedar Creek. He has been state senator from two different districts, was U. 8. marthal for sevea years and mayor of Burlington for two terms : Coming from such a man, snch aan in- dorrement as follows inust.be appreciated by anyone: Quebec, Sept. 7, 1897. To the proprietors of Paine’s Celery Com- pound : It gives me great pleasure to indorse Paine’s Celery Compound, both on account / LMU “by oe os of the reenlts ob:ained from personal use “Just as Good as Scott's mulsion” And iso’t the kind all others try to range up to, the kind for you to buy? Two sizes, 50 cts. and $1.00, 4. es ee EES a Appointed Consul to Quebec City Recom- mends Paine’s Cel OW ? am wee Pe iy, OS eae — SSS iN SOS SANG Ss SS Ny ~~ WS of the remedy and k owledgeof the re- markable cures it has performed. I believe it has no equal in curing d’seases of the nervous system and building up those who are weak and out of health. It has cured several friends of mine of rheumatism in its worst form, and I have no hesitancy in recommending it to all afflicted with that disease. Very truly yours, William W. Henry. Desperate diseases, such us rheumatism, blood impurity, neuralgia or nervous debility, that bring down the strength of the whole body, can not be got rid of as one does a scratch or a sprain, by letting them cure themselves. eart weakness, kidney disease, chronic headaches and enlarged liver and spleen are not self- terminating disorderss, Like all the des- perate diseases, they demand a thoughtful, scientific remedy. There never has been aremedy so thoroughly grounded in a knowledge of what the sick body needs in these diseases as Paine’e Celery Compound. Paine’s Celery Compound is the remark able results of profound investigatiou and close medical study by that eminent pre- fessor of the Darmont and Vermont medical schools, Prof. Edward E. Phelps, M. D., L. L. D. Actual Business, Book-Keeping, Arithmetie, Penmanship, Shorthand, Typewriting, al] thoroughly taught at the P.E. I. Commercial College: Our snt dents learn how todo business by actually doing it from the start. Best Work at reduced rates. We open this year, after the holidays; on 16th August. Apply at once, Send for our new prospectu “z ISAAC OXENHAM (Graduate of Montreal Business Principal and Proprietor, P. O. Box 242, Ch’town. July 30th—w2mos, dlaw 6 College Compound, | | | oe oor? - Tt is the greatest serve invigorator, blood purifier and regulator for the important organs or the body that has ever come to light. The languor, the nervousaes and the pain inthe region of the heart or the kidneys are cured by Paine’s Celery Com pound because the origiv of these disorders is easily traced to an impoverished conci- tion of the nerves aud 4 poorstate of te blood. This great invigorator does nothing at [haphaszard. Its aim is to feed the echausted nervous tissnes as soundly and rapidly as is consistent wita healthy digestion and assimilation, and step by step with this building up proces a)l over the body goes that other fully as vital work of driving out every trace of vicious coer and poigonous matter from the In everv case—and there are thovsands of such caes throughout the country— where Paine’s Celery Compound has cured cured rheumatism, nervous prostration, neuralgia or that very common “rundown” condition—in every case recoveay has been by this same building up process, ‘hat omits no step in making the cure lasting and for a lifetime. The Leading Bicyclists useAdams’ Tutti Some dealers a co Pp ry off imitations. See that the trade mark name Tutti: Frutti is on each 5c. package. Save coupons inside of ‘ am wrappers ~~ Aprons.—100 styles, choice novelties, on sale Bros. Ladies, the choice of the best jacket including many ‘omorrow.— Beer ARTY ST RL Ser ere am ~ INDORSED BY GEN. HENRY “CUBE ROOT MADE Easy, _ Fow Any Bright Scholar May Learn to Tell It Offhand. To find the cube root of any gi number of figures offhand saan pt gc St impossible feat, but yet it is sim- ple enough when one knows how to do it—so simple, indeed, that any bright boy can learn to do it in a few weeks, First he must know exactly what g cube is—namely, that it is the result of multiplying one number by itself aud then multiplying the preduct by the original number, Thos, 8 multiplied by 3 equals 9, and 9 multiplied by 8, the original number, produces 27, which consequently is the cube of 3. The cube root of 27 is the original number, 8, anu {3 find the cube root is the reverse of finding the cube. The would be adent| at this art should first study carefully the following figures: 1XIxi= 1 2x2x2= 8 8X3xt= 2 TXT KI =O48 8x 8X 8=512 9x9x A close study of thowe figures gh that 2 multiplied in this manner by it- self results in 8, that 8 multiplied by itself has 2 as a final figure, that 8 mul- tiplied by itself has 7 as a final figure, that 7 multiplied by itself has 3 as # final figure, and that 4, 5, 6 and 9 mr tiplied by themselves have their orj p nal figures as finals. Hence the “artis as a cube root; that if the final fignral” be 9, the cube root must be 9, and on. For example, give him the figures 74,088, aud he can at once tell that 42) 64, while the cube of 6 is 125, much more than 74, and 088 has 2 as a cube root. ; Or give him a more difficult problem, as, for example, the figures 324,369, figure of 369 being 9, it follows that cube root of these three figures is 9, thus the cube root of the six figures ha: Any one can test this method ; himself, and a little practice is all ¢ is needed to make one as deft in jugglery of figures us the best “‘lig ning calculator. ’’ Of ccurse a skilled arithmetician} could easily frame problems that could} not be solved in this offhand fashion,; but such difficult tests are seldom offe by public audiences, and, as a rule, the; “‘artists’’ are easily able to answer the questions asked of them.—} York Herald. ie if Ziow Cold Metals Sometimes Mix, Professor Roberts-Austen’s discoy- eries on the subject of the interdiffrsi- reading. The facts have been to some extent known io savants before the meeting of the Royal society, at which more clear. selves as if the atoms were living crea- tures. i Professor Roberts-Austen has, in fact, discovered pieces of metal engaged in one with the other, Of course the inter- which we speak has been found to take! place when the metals were cold, and, | though this property in metals, to be’ capable of attaching themselves one to the other when coid, has been talked | about before, nothing so clearly proved ¢ metallurgists and chemists as the facts | He shows that when clean surfaces of — % degrees for four days they unite firmly and can only be separated by a force! equal to one third of the breaking | strain of the lead. The professor bas _ also proved that if a plate of gold be. tenths of an inch thick 1m three days gold will have risen and diffused itself to the top of the other metal in very - appreciable quantity.—-Colliery Guar dian. ; Lord Palmerston, A minister who kept race horses. very blunt vernacular, who could uot. be got to admit that he understood’an j abstract thought, who always knew what he wanted and was determined to carry it out regardless of the opinions of others, who conceived his own ideas to be superior to those of other people, who never looked farther than tomorrow and much preferred not to think beyond this evening, but who at the same time was determined to establish the privi- lege of an Englishman to the sidewalk ail over the world, while men of otber nations might step into the gutter— this minister represented aspirations which had long ago sickened under the rounded periods intended to couvince humanity that bread and calico summed up their total requirements and were more sufficient for rational happiness. This was the popular conception of Palmerston when, in 1855, he became first minister of the crown.—“ Yoke of Empire,’’ by R. B. Brett. LOST,—Retween Charlottetown end Bmy Vale a fly wheel for. a Hall _Thrashing Mill, on the evening of Friday 17th last, any 1m- manufacturers, English sad German, are shown in our mantle room. 234 3i. ' fo-mation can be left at T. A. MacLean’s Office, sep3S d knows that any sum given to him the a final figure of which is 8 must have al Tats, adit is the cube root, for the reason that 74] hus 4 as a cube root, as the cube of 4 ig i Then he will see at a glance that 324 is} _ more than 216, which is the cube of 6,3 but is less than 343, the cube of 7, iad Therefore the cube root of these three)! figures is 6. In like manner the final] — the been shown to be 69. a a 1 bility of metals is most interesting | - more public attention was drawn, but |_ on that occasion the results were made! It was then shown that; — solid metals may be made to mix them-| the very act of mixing themselves up; — est of this is that the interdiffusion of | — + es S ae ae ‘ es has hitherto been at the service of adduced by Professor Roberts-Austen. | lead and gold are held together in the — R absence of air ata temperatureof 40° b: laid under one of lead about three- ‘ \ . and had at hiscommand a good store of aang 1 * ieelislh ube cuah cis Se ee Pee . fee Fer RR Be Ske + y 8; * TaN Soot. Sy NOG CGH sms re ge Se # . i, eos 4 é at Sse for aay crime." _ >