THE DAILY HXASMINER, CHANLULTLETGWN, OCTOBER 17, 1299: _ _ ane yaar? ne hee ed te aoe ANT ook ST ET eee a - ~_ _ _ . on “Tay: $998 were.» ~< side na Under Ditheulties. CMA MPM MAY CS f . (eon memes”, Strawherries For the Gouty. rand Story Beth Cut “Thou « I 4 } . Lat Lad Wot WU Me Wie Wa Wd Neg Si Lh] " : “we . ‘ ‘ i . ' es ” - = ——— Px, of ”~ 5 = Be on ty ar A writer in Nature spe aks of t iif | mashel is ol f i : ‘ O"-55 $8 om is a ag ee RO oa = yw £ ™~ ‘ your | eruel medical tyranny which banishes |{ ‘ » SBnoyauces that % [ : TP seal thy “ LGA UML hag sae py >» , eA ' } X a) i , . : ; elists have to contend \ } ‘ ’ co 4 GU ft VY, LOGE 4 WN «=e , = , _ oo une’ uy [ | the strawberry from the diet of the re end with, «A Ciricase She loa ‘ a, 4 WEP Ea <4 | e ei disnos : "i » iO ' i a “zz Lg i’* ‘ : 5 oa | | gouty and quotes what Linnaeus hae | - ae ae SSeS ni 1 ¢ Wi) TM h Ye 1 po ; ia 2 ae , p | GE cOd VAUMLLVEA ED : f Oe, shy tne an Mie ap |i to say about the curative propert of}. ; ew - i vt | | e said, t ly the i pet pe i ut Tir”, Sa Th b a og ie { t delightful fruit. This great nat- | ewe 2 BN that | Cou” ‘ n@ of Ng . { ‘ ’ ' é %* . : 4 si i . 4 W s } | | ) \ ad 2 Nee he bb 9 ~ ae Un uralist was persuaded to take s st a | bred ’ ( ! ries a : ire attae!] f | a | \ 5 vs Lins tlong ‘ | ? ‘ : i ‘ lik, «bk BOVOCIOC ALUICA 4 > | | . j Aarar : t ~ : » orang a m 5 . wi that a sweet sleep en- | ° oro ised her speed ‘ SOTE Farid . | ] zig] re . s l. and when he awoke the pain ha l - . 7 : : sh Citing His Authority. : tin . : » l¢ or ) TT 1m «ll 7 j , ’ f Nee. VS ee _ - Tle lic) — - = Pa } : ler Where's Mr. Hare? ; ~— if 1} aa hle di ! speak he co. : 1 S many strawberries as possible, ae ’ n = pe Lk ut oo coul I ! : SSrigrt Oftice Roy (witha crip) Can't mh ‘ Urevusoie e and on the following morning the pain ne yes fixed on her, 1 it made ‘ | Peru ; $s Gec iG | ‘ TOMS } Cad , y was gone and he was able to leave his | hervous, wry ; , “S pec ¥ a 7 |" rt : , Esc Why, | saw him ; be y pains returned at the same e rocge up to the « In é - iM 7 ‘VT ar ] t the re nt oy { ¢ ed t : i ty aa e next year, 1 eg were P a { i Well. sho ther ~ an” ‘a dis s soon as Linnaeus was abl ' I S ¢ ce x er. ina € G vel OE u ‘ec reg PREC ra +} ‘ ee : | TNS I e . To ty { } 7 7s ’ if t S ‘ ries ts er was at her ¢§ proffel — ‘ Nn Wt das J ; va itd 4 ns SR EFI VU 1y ‘i | <u « is is ¥ Although strawberries are forbidden | ®* | pend j i ay y a ae a a eo not. poosnrs Pp TT to the gouty by soine autborities, by } t ink he pedal is twisted,” ske ; on ‘ be ; JA PPT - ; ‘ ‘ : } . ‘ . said, “and I @ : : Ji we tid bie & Ff: fti fe rs they are permitted, the fruit be- aia, oh 1 don’t believe I have a | Ilian Position. | : ; _ . . a ” rey, oo . os oe g mate anna “ . f . ain ce 48 ing regarded as a useful food for | Wre™ h. he obliging young man ‘I didn’t say he was a fed 1 ¢ is specials made tor uss i roofs, barns, out-buildings, go persons on account of its rich- knelt down and examined the pedals, | ployee Y shops, briages and iences. it j them at the smallest s : ° mn t} bo , } tolzine « ripe nt ee Sti | ost A itlayv t 3h ] than ordi: . ‘ 3 , Din Dodd's Kidney Pt is. on aces in e salts of potash, soda and | “en, taking a wrench from his tool | understand you to say be was a ; on. It : han ordinary paints. It ts far cheaper im boxes like thi:, are widely lime its cooling, diuretie and laxa- | bag, he proceeded to tighten up the | department clerk than doing Williout any psit. : cure it’s THs Swerwin- ! i a $ ‘a the : lt rm : | arte . > | $ ef? : > xP ) > PeinT "7 } | sc ; ov ee eee the prom tive quaities, The analysis of the parts of the w heel. At the same time "ri@ Is, Ele has els ve of the button i WILLIAMS CRE2sore PAINT. a ash iaDCl 1S your safeguard. but eset. sdiiiaatis ee EE strawberry shows it to be particularly | §2¢ took from her hat a long, shiny | counter in Wholeblock’s department // Send for color « . . a i ” j San Ss : . =. s . “ @if/j' sS >a ™ 9 rich in soda salts, and in spite of the | Pin and jabbed it three times into the | store.’—Columbus State Journal. ee sare C2., PAINT AND COLOR MAKERS, "ei ir i ? anadian Dept -0-D-D-S high percentage of water this fruit | Tear tire of his wheel. When he had —______—_————_ 21 St. Ant ae Su Montreal ; “ - ‘a j we of AUUAll’l + 4 ‘*s peste wir excels all other common fruit in the | concluded his ministrations, she | The British museum contains a very Crue rw: POY BOON daa cA ST on amount of mineral salts. The chem- thanked him with a betwitching smilie, full collection of clay pipes dating 7 a : 2 , - - ole > ys , 2 > ~~ , ~ Ye. istry of the strawberry, therefore, | 224, mounting her wheel, rode slowly | back as far as the sixteenth century. For Sale Ly S W Crabbe PLANT LINE. EXCURSIONS CHARLOTTETOWN TO Boston AND RETURN FOR $11.00 Good for 30 Days: Commencing Oct 3:¢, the well known §_S. Halifax leaves Charlottetown every Tuesday nt nocn for Bo:ton, via Hawkes- bory and Halifax. From Halifax— Ever: pm. Passengers ticke Wedneedaye. From Boston every Tickets for tale at Railwoy. For tickete, a!) information apply H LCHIPMAN, Supt, Halifax. Wednesday at 11 Sigtions on P rates on freight an W W CLARKE, Agent whe SY EY Ne 52 i ae a li BR Herring Herri n Herring 300 Barels July Hearriaz erriverd J.T. Pearcon Lower Queen St. DANCING coceen db ND) -coces PHYSICIAL CULTURE. PROWSE BLOCK, SUNKYSIDE cdorald’s select Miss H. C. M ©chool opens for the season, October 3rd. Afternoon and evening classes now forming. Just time for one term before Rink opens, Choice of days to tnose who come first. Ar- rangements can be made for private classes and private lesscns on applic— ation. 233 dtf EVENING CLASSES For You Will be opened on the 16th inst., at the Charlottetown Business College and Writing Academy, where instruciions will be given in Book-Keep ing, Business Pract cc, Correspondence, Business Penman- ebip, Practical Arithmetic, Shorthand aod Typewritiog. Classes ogen from 7.30 to 930 p. m. Five sessions per week. Enter a. any time but NOW ie the beet. : Students may study any branches de~ fired. Individual instructions given by the following teacherr:—J Harry Will- | ‘ams (Penmanship); Wm Moran, Licensed | leacber of Phonography; A C McMillan, | ae ‘ iceneed ) , 4. B. MILLER, Prinic'pal Apply at College for partizulare, } } ' i i cece { | | i ed via Pictou on} , ; | Saturday &t nocn | | would teach that this frult is likely to be beneficial in gouty states.—Lancet. A Small Eater. The most impudent man who ever hit up these parts revealed himself the other day. He is a prominent New York patent attorney. He arrived in town on a hurry caveat case, ana bis one of the best known of the Washington patent at- torneys, invited him out to his Colum- bia Heights home for dinner. correspondent here, The citi- zen had telephoned warning to his |} wife, so that she had a chance to spread herself in preparing the meal. It was a swell dinner, bounteous and dainty, and the New York man waded into it with the appetite of a rescued whaler. From soup to nuts he was right there. He ate like a piano movy- er. He took a hack at each and all of the and he wasn’t bashful about the wines either. When finally it was all over and he had encircled his demitasse, he pushed back his chair, wiped his chin with his napkin, sighed contentedly and remarked to his hostess: dishes, “Now, who'd think a man could make a meal off a little snack like this!”’— Washington Post. An Exciting Race. “TIT reckon the most excitin race I ever see,” observed the man with the faded hair, after an interval of silence, *‘was between two Mississippi river “steam- boats. The engineers crammed the furnaces with bacon and everything else in the cargoes that would make a hot fire... The Prairie Rose was the name of one boat and the Minnesota Bella was the other, but everybody knowed it was a race between the en- gineers, fur the reason that they'd had a fight in St. Louis once. I was on the Rose, and we was chinnin the pas- sengers on the Belle. It wasn't more’np 40 feet away, an the boat that get around the big bend first we knowed would win the race’— “Which got there first?” asked one of the listeners, tired of the oratory. “Well, the engineer of the Minnesota Belle get there first.” rejoined the man with the faded hair. “Or parts of Lim did. His biler exploded.”—Chicago Tribune. The lips may laugh when the body itself is crying out in an- guish. When a wo- man laughs it does not always mean that she is happy. It isa woman’s province >, to please, and she Nae bravely en- ()\deavor to do this under the most harrowing cir- cumstances. Thou- sands of women who are considered happy, and charm- ing, and entertain- ing, secretly endure suffering that would drive the av- erage man to a mad- /7estouse. In almost 4every instance these sufferings are due to disorders of the distinctly feminine or- ganism. They rob a woman of her health, her beauty, her amiability, her usefulness as a housekeeper, her capability as a moth- er, and her charm and power in the social and religious world. There is a safe, sure, speedy and perma- ment remedy for these troubles. It is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It acts di- rectly on the delicate and important femi- nine organs that bear the brunt of matern- ity. It endows them with health, strength, vigor and elasticity. It allays inflamma. tion, heals ulceration, soothes pain and stops exhausting drains. It banishes the maladies of the expectant months, and makes baby’s advent easy and almost ainless. it insures the little new-comer’s ealth and an ample supply of nourish- ment. It fits for wifehood and mother- hood. Thousands of women who were almost hopeless invalids have testified to their recovery under this wonderful medi- cine. Medicine dealers sell it. Accept no substitute or inferior imitation. “For seven years,’’ writes Mrs. Louisa Ar- thurs, of Ostwalt, Iredell Co., N.C., “1 suffered untold agony from female weakness. I then commenced taking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- scription and improved very fast. It saved my life.”’ Only 31 one-cent stamps to cover customs and mailing of a free paper-covered copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. Cloth binding so stamps. Send t | to Dr. R. V, Pierce, Buffalo, N. ¥. i away. <A few minutes after he told the bicycle repair man all about it, and that’s how the story got out.—Chicago News. Caught by a Clever Doctor. A certain Dr. Stephen Peabody of Cambridge Center had a fine melon yard, so the story goes, and one morn- ing he found that his melons had all been stolen and the vines piled up near the middle of the yard. But near the heap of vines he picked up a gol¢ watch key and a seal. These he laid away, and at the hotel, some three miles distant, he posted a little paper, which read: NOTICE. Found, on Thursday last, a little above Cambridge borough, a gold watch key and seal. The owner can have it by proving prop erty and paying charges. STEPHEN PEABODY. In a few weeks a stout young man applied for the watch key, reporting himself the unlucky loser. The key and seal were brought forward, and the doctor said: “Is this your property? Will you take your oath that these are your key and seal?” “Yes, yes; I will do thnt.” “Well,” said the doctor, “that is all right, and now I want my pay for my melons.” Five dollars were handed over, and the young man begged for secrecy, but the doctor, with the money in his hand, declared that the incident was too good to keep to himself.—Vermont Historical Magazine. Marry and Part For a Year. Among the many peculiar customs prevalent among the people of Central America is that of parting for one year after the marriage ceremony has been solemnized. This custom has prevailed among the Jarnos from time immemo- rial. There is no courtship allowed to be carried on between the parties prior to the wedding. When a man selects a woman, he obtains the consent of the parents on both sides, and if this is given they are at once married. The reason, however, for their not living tegether as man and wife for one year after marriage is in order tc permit of the parties visiting and staying with their respective friends in different parts of the country, which is a customary thing and occupies the time specified. Ninety-nine out of 10€ of these marriages turn out well. Largest Grave In the World. The largest single grave in the world occupies just exactly one acre of ground, which is surrounded by an iron railing. This enormous grave is located at Pearto Cortez in Spanish Honduras and is the burial place of a woman. The tombstone occupies the center of the ground inclosed, and sev- eral wooden figures representing the deceased are arranged in statuelike form in different parts of the ground. There are no fewer than 16 of these figures, which in the evening give the place a ghostlike appearance. The deceased had died rich and in ber will had specified the amount of ground to be purchased for her grave and the manner in which it should be decorated. She had many curious no- tious. and the size and ornamentation of ber grave was one of them. The Phonograph In Tibet. The phonograph has been introduced into Lhassa. An instrument was pre- sented by a merchant to the Buddhist chief, who was struck with fright on hearing it declaim a chapter from a holy book. The chief afterward recited the Buddhist prayer, “God In the Flower,” which the phonograph re peats hundreds of times daily for the edification of the faithful. Acetyline Gets Tired. One pronounced feature in the use of acetyline gas is its tendency to lose illuminating power when left in reser- yoirs for several days. A loss is often incurred after a rest of from 12 to 24 hours. Experts call this condition the tiredness of acetyline, but they give no explanation for it, nor do they suggest a practical] cure. ~——_— The custom of waxing the pipe end, to prevent it sticking to the lips, was intro- duced by the Dutch about the year 1700. If you can’t possibly do a certain thing, try to do it, and people will ad- | mire you for being “ambitious.”—At- ehison Globe. EAK AND.... PUNY CHILDREN Become Strong and Healthy by using Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food. Children are frequently left weak and sickly as an after result of measles, scarlet fever, etc., and in this state are easy prey to nervous disorders, rickets, spinal disease, or consump- tion, diseases which do not affect robust, healthy children, The blood is weak and watery and the nerves tmproperly nourished. Feed the blood and nerves with Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food, and the pale, pinched faces will soon become rosy and plump, and tiredness and weakness will give way to strength and animation. Mr. E. W. Day, 62 Close Avenue, Toronto, writes: ‘‘My eldest daughter, aged eight, be- came very much run down. Her fretful, ner- vous, sleepless condition greatly alarmed her parents. She was taken from school, and in spite of the best nursing, the thin, weakened, bloodless face grew painfully worse. Fortun- ately we used Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. An improvement became apparent in a few days, it continued, and in a few weeks she returned to school built up anew, and greatly to our joy fully restored to health.” Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food, roc. a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co, Toronto Rraserasé; . --A ROYAL TRIO - sunlight and Lifebuoy SOAPS The ‘best laundry and tuileS soaps made in the world, guaranteed to be absolutely pure. “MONKEY ERAND” which cannot be equalled as a seour— ng and polishing soap. TRY SOME &= All are 5c large twin bar SALT! SALT alt new landing 12C09 Bags Common? 6000 . “ “ now dus 500 factory filled te arrive Buy rs ordering ex. ship save ccst cf stormng here _—‘ For sale low to tae trade. or prices write CHARLE? HAKPER, Shediac, N. B — 224 dlwk — St. Dunstan's College Classical and 0 ommercial. AFFILIATED TO LavAL UNIVERSITY The classes in St. Dunstav’s Colleg will be resumed on TUES DAY, the 12the September next. For farther particulars apply to A. P. McLEIJ.LAN, Rector St Dunetan’e College, Ch’town, Aug 30, 99 THE GREAT BAZAAR DAYS! Extraordinary Sale ——— Great reduction in Prices on Bazaar [ays Ready made Clothing in Overcoats, Uisters, Reefers and Suits, Underclothing, Hats and Cap\, Dry Goods and Boots and shoes. Farmersand then families visiting the city on Bazaar Days, will have an opyortunity of buying their wants at greatly rednced prices. Speciol lew fares by rail to the Bazaar. Special low prices for our goods on Bazaar Days, Come in anil see J B Macdonald & Cc LEADERS IN LOW PRICE “re You — TROUBLED WITH BAD—— ---FITS IF $0 CALL AT —aa> D. A- BRUCE'S And you will be cared, Consultation free. Victoria Row, Opposite Post Office Great rush at P MOW AGHANS, Quecn St. He w= is selling crockery, giass- ot ware and groceries at reduced prices. g ——e = a es Our Large Stock of Winte: Overcoating and Suitings... Mmme— JS NOW COMPLETE AWAITING YOUR INSPECTION JOHN MLEOD & CO oie 4 bei rE een ties Se ase 2 WR ate ae —S i GAA teat San BAe , ‘ . “~ 2B