: 3. e n * - hs ale eae, re as’ ia it | : sii : a 4) ' i eek ett i oe eae a PS on Ps wee e ta i, i / 2 ieee oti itt te kel ign Ma ot oe ‘wall, ae se ees THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN OCTOBER 21, 1897. The Daly Exam " r 1.7 . The Cxaminer Publishing Company RATES OF SURSCKRIPTION iN ADVANCE) Que % r 4.00 six Wenths 2.00 Three ‘enths 1.00 One Month 0.35 | t paid to any part of Ca da or th | vc ' tates THE WEEKLY EXAMINER , writ , ’ in + basic very Friday morning. It is made up of rwhich has appeared in the Daily | apa % first classs ewspa per containing atl tea? news : ription $1.00 & year Hi, DAILY EXAMINER » a ) tui i i, isvi i , | develop heat enough to me!t ard vaporise the hardest rocks. It- the ce@met were | composed of smal! meteoric pagticles, the |} result would be a brilliant shower, exceed- ing euch showers as we have seen only in degree. Were the c lliding Lody a hy- | drogen comet of sufficient size toi encom- pacs the entire globe, it might ed mingle with the oxygen of our a mosphere as to form such an explosive compound that the lighting of a single match would produce a mighty flame which, in an nstant, ‘vould consume every living thing on the eurface of the earth. Still further, since water is the reealt of burning hydrogen gas in oxvgen, this same fierce ard terrible flame would be as Spee lily followed by a nu ighty Jeluge of water, enveloping the entire surface of our own panet. If the body of the comet were not of av inflammable vature, but com- | posed of noxious gases, it would poisen | Our atmosphere, render it unfit for re®pir- | ation, and thereby entai! the most serious consequences. Were it an invoxions gas- eous body, owing toitsextreme | ghtnese, | it woul i fi at in erupon our atmosphere as do the clouds, without reaching the | surface of our globe. ” But the actual risk of the destruction of the earth by a }; comet is very small indeed. | collision of the THE EARTH IN DANGER a, sation as to the Collision with a , Cometin LSvv, Prof sor Falb, of Vienna, announces | tha November i3, 1899 acomet will eurskke » earth, and that the end will be the sult. Meaowhile (writes Miss Py laughter of the late Richard A. s : Pro , be is probably making calcula- liot ssoertain whether the violence of the < will reduce our planetto dust, ih ba or w ner it will be enveloped in an at- » » 17 mosplire of poisonous gas, which will kill w | .iving beings. Fortunately, science reas *susasto ourp yssible fact, the chauc:s beg one in the fifteen millions tha: the earth will be destroyed by collid- iogwith a comet, Ii has also taughi us to look fo. ward to the night of November 13, 1599, as the date of a reguiarly—Occurring eveut every thirty-three years. Oo tuts might the earth will encounter myriad,» of meteoric particles travelling aloug tue same path as Temple’s comet of i865, and the two are probably closely arsocimied; We shall be undoubtedly treaed io @® grand display of celestial firewo: k~, and the history of their appear- ance iu [s33and in 1866 bas prepared us for the glorious spectacie we may look forwar. to iv 1899. At \weir former appearance the uncult- ured, tar from beboiding the sight with admiration, cousidered it @fearfai portent, beraidiog the ead of the world. This fear ji to Many quaint scenes and say logs on the eventful night of November 13. 1835. Probably no display of falling slers bus ever aliracted greater attention taan that Which took place in 1866. At times tue Whole heavens seemed ablaze with siars,@nd those who witnessed the shower deseribed the meteors as “great balis ut tire failing from the sky. At present the greater meteor-shoal--of the Levu'de has uearly accomplirhed its long j uroey, aad/the year LsgY will again | briug 1 so the eatth’s track. The suoat is uf euco enormous lepgth that it walk take wore than year for the mighty process un t pass v#yood the eurth’s wack, sy thacin 1900 another brilliant wetevii: suower tay be considered baile. Se i +42 some of the people of Paris were uw wost frantic Wilu eaxciiement in cous qience of the announcement that a come. was about to destroy the earth, aud time aud time again the danger of a comets culliclo. with tue earth hes been seriously cousiucred. The great Preach astronomer Aragy, estimated tat out of 231, 000,v00 chauc-- there was Only une single chance turn cviiteioone «This smounis to litte more uso @ bare powsibiiuy. Suvuit @ collision take place, evil results mn ghi or might LOt follow. “ if the puc- jeusc.cvantered Wa Ju mass aod eolid- ity +qs 1 to that of Dooati’s comet, as €s- tinct ad by M. .Preze end Professor bicice, to compact with the earth woud a Before Retiring.... take Ayer’s Pills, and you will sleep better and wake in better condition for the day’s work. Ayer’s Cathartic Pills have no equal as a pleasant and effect- ual remedy for constipation, biliousness, sick headache, and all liver troubles. ‘They are sugar-coated, and so perfectly prepared, that they cure with- out the annoyances experienced in the use of so many of the pills on the market. Ask your druggist for Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. When other pills won’t help you, Ayer’s is THE PILL THAT WILL, - A ecientist admits that the event of the earth with a comet * In fact, if the earth laste long enovgh, it is practically sure to hay pen; for there are several comets’ orbits which Is possible. pass nearerto the earth’s orbit than the semi diameter of the comet’s hea i, and at rome time the earth and comet will certainly come together. Such encounters will, however, be very rare, ” en, —Ottawa Journal: The Dominion parliament and the public interest will sustain @ serious loss if Sir Charles Hib- bert Tupper’s removal to British Columbia should banish him for any length of time from the Hoase of Commons. Sir Hibbert Tapper has had many a hot passage with political opponents, but one and all of them will cheerfully concede that a man of his force, ability, public experience and clean personal record is a marked gain to public life, ' sniahbdidilibihaeactsice LAMPS AND THEIR VALUE. They Are Less Injurious to the Eyes Thar Other Artificial Lights, Even young eyes suffer by tho use for reading or working of flickering gas. The lamp flame i# steady, sofs in color and grateful to the eyes, Formerly the clumey student lamp was the only really reliable one for reading, but the “‘Jamp craze’’ has evolved a multitude of new patent burn- ers, all of them good and all of them rea- senable in price. Foran couple of dollars one can buy an excellent lamp complete with green porcelain shade. For three or four dollars a really handsome one may be had. Whatever the quality, in shape the reading lamp should be low, with a goed broad base, so that it stands securely. There is no one article tn the house, ex- cepting perhaps good beds, that ean give ras much solid comfort as lamps for read- ing and working by. «Every grown mem- ber of the family should possess one. There be one cf extra lighting power on he children's study table, the library and sitting room tables. ~~ : We all do without-many things that would add to our comfort in life, not be- cause we are obliged to do so, but from lack of Knowledge or thought. I¢ is not wise to coddle oneself, to search for mew wants, to make new necessities which an- chor us to one place because we cannot be comfortable clsewheré, but @ ‘personal lamp {s a sensible luxury of indulgence, and the sooner it becomes a necessity the better is our prospect of continued \zood eyesight, not to mention the splendid rev- enue of comfort enjoyed through all the evenings of our life.—KMa Mortis Kretseh- mar in Woman’s Home Companign. ~ A Good Exercise For the Back. A good exercise for the spinal muacles consists of the following movements: Stand erect, with the feet together, and rise upon the toes; then gradually sink down by bending the knees until the thigh and calf are doubled upon! each other. The trunk should be erect all the time and especial attentipn paid to the spine, keep- ing it straight. If a person will remove the clothing and hang by the arms, all tension is removed from the spine, and a second person can determine if the spinal curvature can be removed or not. If, when hanging in this position, the spine is straight, there ig no reason why it can- not be cured, but if it is crooked when hanging there is little hope of doing more than keeping it from growing worse, and this is very impertant. In the department of medico gymnastics ina large gymna- cium this is the way they examine such cases. A teacher says, ‘‘Any movements which do not present any resisting force (meaning apparatus) can be safely taken to benefit slight spinal curvature. ’’—New York Ledger. Gentlemen In Court. At an assize court the late Justice Manile was engaged in passing sentence on a pris- aQner when one of the officers of the court annoyed him by crossing the gangway be- neath him with papers fur members of the, bar. ‘‘Don’t youknow,”’ cried the judge, severely addressing the official culprit, “that you ought never to pass between two gentlemen when one of them is ad- dressing the other?’ Having thus relieved his mind, the judge proceeded to pass sen- tence of seven yeats’ pefin) servitnde on the other gentleman.—Household Words. The hair on the heads of most of the hundreds of thousands of dolls now being exhibited in shop windows is made from the hair of the Angora goat. This product is eontrelled by an English @yndicate and is valued ut £80,000 a year. After the hair is prepared it issent to Munich and made into wigs by giris. Losing Flesh ? Are You Then something is wrong. To the young italways mears trouble. It is a warning to any one, unless they are already too fat. Scott’s Emulsion checks this waste and brings up your weight again. ; | BURGLARY IN 1745. No Wonder a Neward Was Offered by tho Suffering Citizens, The protection of rroperty, real and per- sonal, in this city in 1745 was less thor- ough and less systematic perhaps than i is in these days when the maintenance of the police department costs $6,000,000 a year and the value of property delivered to the precinct houses and to the property clerk at headquarters is more than $750,- QOOU a year, but whatever the local arrange- ments were for the protection of property, they were, if the statements of the local chronicles of the city are to be believed, inadequate in the case of Patrick Phegan, a resident New Yorker, who offered a re- ward of £38 and all reasonable charges for the recovery of property taken from his residence under the flagrantly indefensible conditions following, as recited by Phegan in a proclamation addressed to ‘‘the good people of the king’s colony:’’ Whereas about 12 o'clock on Saturday night last one Timothy Long, jeyne7, aged about 4) years, hes a dent on his upper lip under his right nostril, a sear on his right cheek, is apout 6 foot high, wears a blue coat, a black crape jacket, a light colored wig, in company with Thomas Powle, a lusty young man, be- longing to the garrison of New York, with the aid and assistance of Judith, wife of Patrick Phegan, the undersigned, did rob the said Phegsn’s house of several sorts of goods (the said Phegan then lying dangerously ill of a violent fever and sickness), among which were a good feather bed, a chest with sundry sorts of foods, a teakettle, a frying pan and many other things. As may be seen from this, Patrick and Judith were engaged in what in these days would be described as light housekeeping, bué the traditional affection of many weak inembers of the fair sex for a soldier in wuiform led toa larcenous partiality for Powle, a Tommy Atkins of the city garri- son. Phegan’s recital of the details of the robbery and the personal appearance of the male conspirators against his frying pan and teakettle does not include a descrip- tion of the wife of his bosom, Judith, but his apparent deficiency 1s supplied in the second half of the proclamation, which is as follows: The said Judith is a thin, lively woman, with hazel eves, a small scar on her face: wears sometimes a short scarlet coat, at other times a long black cloak, and has taken her son with her, aged about 4 years, a handsome, lively boy, with his hair eut off lately, only a little lock behind. Whosoever secures the said persons so that they may be brought to jus- tice will have £3 and all reasonable charges paid by PATRICK PHEGAN, It is not stated whether Long junior, Powle, soldier; Judith, the thin, lively woman, or her son, with his hair cut, was apprehended by the local constables, but it is evident at least that Mr. Phegan recoy- ered from his fever and violent sickness, and the action of Judith seems to have re- lieved him from any possible charge for alimony. Phegan was a grocer, and in an old copy of one of the loca) newspapers there appeared this bulletin, over his sig- nature, one year after.the departure of Judith: *“We hope all our kind customers as are upwards of ope month in arrears will think that it is now a good time to discharge, the severe and the grocer is but illy provided to stand the brunt of a long winter if he baye mapy scores.""— New York Sun. Death Pulls the Trigger. A man doesn't have to pull the trigger himself in order to commit sui- cide. He doesn’t even need a gun or any kind of weapon. All he need do is work hard and at the. same time neglect bis health. Death, will do the rest. Men nowadays are all in a hurry. They bolt their food, and get indi- gestion and torpid liver. The blood gets impure. When the blood is impure, sooner or later something will ‘‘smash.” The smash will be at the weakest and most overworked a In a marshy country it will probably be malaria and chills. A working man will probably have a bilious attack. A clerk or bookkeeper will have deadly consumption. A business, or pro- fessional man, nervous prostration . or exhaustion. It isn’t hard to prevent or cure these dis- @ases if the right remedy is taken at the right time. Dr. Pierce's. Golden Medical Discovery makes the appetite keen, diges- ‘tion and assimilation perfect, the liver act- ive, the blood yore and the nerves steady ard strong. It drives out all disease germs. It makes rich, red blood. firm flesh, solid muscle and healthy nerve-fiber... It cures malaria and bilious attacks. It cures nervy- ous prostration and exhaustion, It cures 08 per cent. of all cases of consumption, bron- chial, throat and kindred affections. Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser contains the letters of thousands who have been cured. * * I have been one of your many patients, by taking Dr. Pieree's medicines,” writes Mrs. Per- tia Cook, of 149 W. 3d St., Covington, Ky. “ Your ‘Favorite Prescription’ and ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ have saved my life when it was de- spaired of.’’ Send 31 ome-cent stamps, to cover cost of customs and mailing only, to the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y., fur a paper-covered copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser; —cloth binding 50 stamps. A whole med- ical library in one 1000-page volume. —_—— BAGS - BAGS BAGS -- 15.000 secoud hand, 19.000 new, at current prices, lowest Carvell Bros, same as the weather continues to be very. THE BICYCLE Ae seem GIRL, Lovely summer now ia gone Winter’s coming hurrying on, And the maiden aoon will fel Chilly perched upon the wheel, Joon she'll lay her bike aside For ’twill be too cold to ride, Yet there’s something else, ‘tis true, Can be found for girls to do. Now fair maid, I would euggest, Let your mother have a reat; Your attention von might turn, lo the artof cooking. Learn How to roast the beef and lamb, How to fry the steak and ham, How to bake the pies and bread, And the cookies. When you’re wed, And your husband comes to tea, You will wan* to let him see That his little wife can bake Pies like mother used to make. Tam. _—— he £3" SIGK HEADAGHE Positively cured by these Little Pilis, They iso relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Mearty Eating. <A per- fect remedy for ‘Dizziness, Nausea, Druwsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mout, Coated Tongue ain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Bose, Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand carter's Little Liver Pills. GLOVES We have just received one case Gentlemens gloves, in Mocho, Im’t Mo cho, Napa, Heavy Kid, wool lined, Woolen Knit Gloves. . - Brae.See our Men’s Heavy Kid Gloves, wool lined for, 65e a pair, Bargains in Underclothing. The very lowest prices ca Boots and Shoes. J.B. Mactoalt Hid Stade Opposite west end Market. nee aeeTajaatiny Aaa ang 10,000 Housekeepers Say » Royal Oak Soap is the best Soap in the world, for the Laundry. Clothes are made beautifully white and clean by using this great Soap. For sale everywhere. | TIME! Try: a Good Time to Buy Watches NOW. tr ee In spite of the advance in price at the Factory, I h, been able to bey, and will sell a nice lot of new Watches the old rate, the order having been piven before tha rata , Call and see them; also our new Rings, i E W. TAYLOR, ameron Block, Jity. TTA c A TH — T st tion | poss the » teinpi plu . count: appes suppo i porn | guests Misso direct robbe! equal: have practi it had gister joker length mai | appro’ Whe cugh ing m Gettin the ca and o1 Flagst gettin, in the thinki result- concer The ing, b Grand arrive: by thi tioned either been 1 frcm tft ordere was < He to shots : my ce Thr Coy NOW OPENING | LADIES BATS P TAGEETS ee oh UP a T J. HARRIS Herring, Herring Large, fat Herring in half barrels, barrels and quart. barrels, from Sydney,Cow Bay, Madalene and Arichat. _ will warrant every package we eell, or refund the mae For sale wholesale and retail by oe CRANT & COo., Queen Street, Charlottetown English Man Landing to-day ex Steamer “Irene Morris,” direct from Liverpool,. be aa: = 1 thi SUPERPHOSPHATES, NITRATE OF SODA, MURIATE OF be POTASH, BOWE MEAL, ETC. a Iq oe HOUSE leased All genuine, and of guaranteed analysis. The oniiy reliable, best, andat least 20 per cent the cheapest fertilizer on the market. ; AULD BROS. ‘he = Pltris pres asn’'t * By vn: —— - aeons ee — a — a Oe That's All Right, Er: ES Sir—* es t bon lig tinir was ould airie- BUT—a great big BUT—we don’t sell goous on credit er th but sell HARDWARE very cheap for cash at the arter CITY - HARDWARE - STORE > e++sQUEEN STREET.... Call and see,...... But Don’t Ask For Credit. R. B. NORTON & CO, R, B. Norton, Manager. J #. Norten- Propriator. We will give you a {six hole Highland Range with all the cooking utensils and warranted, ‘aby We have the latest Range and best one on the market BD bai It is called the | ) FAVORITE DODD & ROGERS lik Wholesale & Retail