Vere SSS SSF BSF VIS BAF BES BES VCP BES AVS VES BES BUS BEF BEF BEEP VEY Ves VN AEP STSs VE BVP Sle Swe See Bes Bie wre ew T WT __ THE BEST Is always imitated, : 3 "s Kidney Pills, sold only | ja boxes like this, are wively imitated, because they are the best Kidney cure. Take none bat ee. snes vinidasiaial a 4 o«2e 2™ Oe © © @ Murine! The greatest remedy for sore and inflamed eyes, is meeting with wonderful success, It affords almost in- stant relief and in many cases complet- ely cures. 50c Bottle G. F, HUTCRESON ¢ Jeweler and Optician = @ @ Gee eet 2808 qe =] «= eo »>eia ea @& @ @®* Fe ® @ @ @ @ 0660. =. a= & a | ! | | 500 Improve Milk Cans By the introduction of mechinery, we have overcome the trouble complained of in the slopping over of milk cans. Ail orders fo- NON-SLOPP- ING MILK CANS _ filled promptly, wholesale or retail, r A McLEAN, Masenic Temple, Charlottetown | | The Big Maritime Fair Kova Scotia Provincia! Exhibition SEPTEMBER 23rd to S0th, 1899 Vi'tt— (fad ip Prizes Increaeed prizes in Cattle, Sheep, Poul- try, Agricultural Product», Flowers and Fish. Improvep Faciiries 1x Every DararTMENT. sa W rite for Prize List. Four Day’s Racing—Sig Pur- ses—for Trotting & Pacing SPECIAL ATI RACTIONS surpassing the splendid programmes of previous years The world’s Greatest Artists in Marvel- ous Feats of Dexterity and Side Splitting Specialties. Concluding every evenire with a realistic Pretntaiicn cf british Scldiers in Actual Varlare, - pam, ge" atin {tle als ke RST, ET. ar With the Afghans ;20"2., starch to dsbar.” end “ibe Storming of Peiwar otal.” a noted Atghan Stronghold, produced *ith over two bunared Bi itith Sailors axtd iers from the arrisco, a number of Vhom actually took parti» the Afgben War Fireworks Galore. Magnificent Display ‘ery Evening, For trize List and all inf: rmation apply to - J,,E. WOOD, (dw Man. and Secy eee Printer Wanted at Once Foreman Printer ior book, job and ‘wepaper office in Trvuro. Aleo young ™&nto make ready and feed newspaper Sud job presees, having some experience _ Slpesetting, Apply e:ating wages by Or telegrapb to TIMES. GUARDIAN, Truro THE Widow Tilley's Ouling, “f'd"ought to be,” said Mrs. Mix. “‘after the way she nursed my little Freddy with the diphtheria. ‘I’m out st Ap -—-———-— ra, tf you dicand leave me, P'U never POrueve You, of a job.” says she. ‘it ain't costine me nothing,’ as if that was all. and it kent her out of a job for two weeks long: narsing him And i couldn't de nothing for her to pay!’ “She wouldn't come anigh me al!) that tir said Mrs. Tilley. **feared of giving me the infection. ’ avin . Mrs. Mix prattled on, and Mrs. Tilley listened, but she was thinking with a strange moving of the heart how glad Eliza had seemed that day when at last she could enter her friend's room. ‘‘I've scrubbed and scrubbed,”’ she had said, and had choked as she laughed, poor simple Eliza, who admired her so! *‘] ain't going to get another friend like her, soon,’ she thought, and snddenly came to her the senseof Mrs Mix’s words. ‘*Yes, 1 do s’pose Eliza Merry would jump into the fire for you. and J Wish you'd speak to her to have her go to a hospital while there is a show." Mrs. Tilley looked at her A change came over her face. It was no longer a commonplace, pretty, elderly face: it was alight and aglow with a solemn radiance; it was the face that had been lifted years ago to John Tilley when she promised to marry him. “I ain't got anything but love to offer yon,’’ he had said, ‘‘but love’s worth something.’ She seemed to hear his voice. ‘*I will.’ said she. Eliza was sitting up when Mrs. Tilley appeared with broth and whisky. She made light of her illness. Mrs. Tilley did not contradict her, but when she went away, she came up to the bedside and said, ‘*‘ "Liza. I got a little present for you, and I can’t tell you how glad | am to have it to give yon.” With that she slipped the envelope under the pillow and had gene to the door before she stopped. came back and with a choke in her voice added. ‘* "Liza, if you die and leave me. I'll never forgive you,”’ and hurried away ‘I'm glad I did it!"’ she cried defi- antly in the hallway. ‘‘What would be the use of going to the fair if she wasn't here to tell it to?’ Every time she woke up in the night— to be sure, not often, for she slept well —she said, *‘I'm glad.”’ She went up to Eliza’s room in the morning, only to find her gone. Then she went back to her own rooms and put away every book or picture that she had so prized which told of the fair. She put them away with a little auiver of the mouth. but she was glad °F Serer Nee poe If life is worth J , : \ having it is worth s , taking care of. I Recklessness does not pay, either in our work or ‘ Mad #6 4 x 0 : our pleasure. ri} When people s read of a young man who has been killed while perform- ‘mg some reck- less feat on a toboggan or at some other haz- ardous_ sport, their sympathy is mixed with surprise that any human being should thus care- lessly risk life. There are thou. "is sands of men who are recklessly risking their lives while they go about their common every-day avoca- tions. They over-work, they do not take sufficient time from business or labor to eat or sleep or rest, or to care for their Lealth. Outraged nature throws out danger signals, to which they pay no heed. They suffer from bilious or nervous disorders, from gick headache, giddiness, drowsiness, cold chills, flushings of heat, shortness of breath, blotches on the skin, loss of ap- petite, uncomfortable sensations in the stomach after meals, loss of sleep, lassi- tude and trembling sensations. These are the advance symptoms of serious and fatal maladies. All disorders of this nature are cured by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It restores the lost appetite, gives soun and refreshing sleep, makes the digestion per- fect. the liver active. It purifies the blood and makes it rich with the life-giving ele- ments. of the food. It is the great blood- maker and flesh-builder. It makes the body active and the brain keen. It is the best of nerve tonics. Thousands have testified to its merits. No honest dealer will urge upon you a substitute for the little extra profit it may afford. The man or woran who neglects consti- pation is gathering in the system a store of disorders that will culminate in some serious and possibly fatal =aey- Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are a safe, sure, speedy and permanent cure for constipa- tion. One little ‘‘ Pellet’ is agen’ ¢ laxa- tive, and two a mild cathartic, + o * DuILY EXAMINER. CHARLOTTETOWN, SEPTEMBER 13, 1299 ~ vil the time ‘The last ptcture was gone when there came a tap toor She opened to Eliza ‘**Well, you bad woman to be out of on the « bed, I'm glad to see you!’ she cried | | : : shoe crabs, toadfish, sea anemones—in heartily There cheeks were tears on Eliza’s She thrust somethinginto Mrs Tilley’s hand. ‘There's she eob} ] ped the money,’ **Oh, God bless you, Mrs Pilley, for caring enough for me to give up your great time for me! light up the dark old arches cf the mar- silver SYalés“and their rainbow hues thin | | Magazine I'll never | cease to be proud you were willing to | rive fi r me; money something too! ' Larrabee him all ab that up take the me ! I ean give up I went to Mr the office, and I told down to serub ut how Was, not thinking it cern but mineif |] mean and prov lived or died, and how you was so noble, and 1 said. ‘I! she can give up her visit to the World's fair for'me, 1 can give up my pride for her, and if the ladies will be kind and take me in for what work I can do they can call it a charity patient or anything they like And he was that good he's got me in and I'll go gladly!"' She went. Mr. Larrabee managed it But Mrs. Tilley was not quite to be cheated out of the luxury of self sacri- fice. When she went to the fair, Eliza went with her for a day of paradise. and they have talked about it together ever since. else First Names. In 1879 more than half the men were called John or William, while more than three-quarters were called either John, William, Thomas, Richard or Robert, which in common parlance must have been Jack, Will, Tom, Dick or Rob, since among the commonest patronymics are Jackson, Wilson, Thompson, Dixon and Robson. Other names are less usual, Henry and Adam being each 3 per cent; Roger and Hugh are only 2 per cent, while Walter, Si- mon, Ralph and Nicholas are 1 per cent. Still fewer are Geoffrey, Alan and Stephen. Denis and Jacob occur only once in 400 names, Martin and Peter once in 800. In the thirteenth century William is the commonest name. [In the fourteenth and following centuries Jchn is first, with William second. Thus in Bishop Hatfield's survey 40 per cent of the men are named John, followed by William with 22 per cent, while if we add Rob- } ert and Thomas 80 per cent of all the 2en’s names are accounted for From the willsit appears that in 1636 John heads the list with i6 per cent William follows close behind with 15 per cent. Thomas is 12 per cent, fol- lowed by Richard and Robert with 8 per cent each. Henry and George are only half as numerous. Still fewer are Roger. Ralph, Nicholas, Edward. James, Charles, Francis, Humphrey. Anthony, Gilbert, Lawrence and Jo- seph. —Notes and Queries. Unneighborly London. London life drives people in upon themselves. The first thing that strikes a newcomer from the provinces, partic- ularly from the north, is the unneigh- borliness of London. Among the mil- lions here you can live a more lonely life than in a remote country town People don’t know their next door neighbors and don’t want to know them. Not only that, people dwelling in the same house are frequently stran- gers to each other. Often you knock at the doors cf houses and find that the oc- cupier of the first floor dvesn’t know the name of the family on the third, though both may have lived there for years. When the spirit of neighborli- ness is absent, the spirit of citizenship suffers, In the slums it is different. The slums of London represent about the only place where neighborliness pre- vails. In the back slum courts you will find a more genuine neighborly spirit than anywhere else in London. The lit- tle community knows itself thoroughly. They quarrel one day and help each other the next. They pull each other throngh hard times, they nurse each other, feed each other, clothe each oth- er, shelter each other.—London News. Pleasant For Mamma. “We expect to educate Mabel very highly,’’ said a clever matron recently toavisitor. ‘‘But I don’t want to be educated,’’ came the unexpected voice of Miss Mabel, a tot of 4, from an ad- joining room. ‘‘l wants to be jess like my mamma is.”’—Chicago News. a The Streets of Gibraltar. In Gibraltar fans old and new, silk and laces, are the principal staples of the native trade. Streets are thronged with Spanish, English. East Indians and Moors. Follow these last across the narrow strait to their homes, and you are in a different world. From Gibral- tar to Tangier takes you back centuries. But these centuries do meet in Tangier. where Europeans jostle orientals, and the scarlet uniform of Tommy Atkins appears amid a group of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves. whose profession ficurishes as of yore’ The first sonnd that smote the ear of our traveler from this part of the world vas the strain of a band organ grind ing ‘Sweet Marie.”’ and only a step be yond a performance by native mm sicians carried one into the very hear of Africa The fish in the mearets Algiers make one think of the fish which the princess fried in ‘‘Arnatis Nights” Such gorgeons celors wri never seen. hor such queer vesortinen of rewarkable creatures. Theu sul. .... »* ; Ivo, Gon t ston |} i lJ) Was anybody's con- | I've got and the! «et places, and literally all's fish that comes to the net of the Algerian fisher- man. Limpets, snails, mussels, horse- fact all things that come from salt wa- ter—are bought and eaten, principally by the French population. —Donahoe's France and Colonizing. The French cannot colonize, and they know it. Their population is, to put it moderately, stagnant. In 50 years’ time the laws of nature will have reduced them to the rank of a second rate pow- er, unless they meanwhile adopt and act upon the device, **Liberte, Egalite, Ma- ternite.’’ Meanwhile they have not a surplus population to be employed in colonization. Their colonies are not even self supporting. Leaving out Al- geria, they cost the republic 100,000, - 000 francs a year And concerning Algerta, one of the few Frenchmen who regard these ques- tions in the light of plain facts, G. Gar- reau, writing in the Siecle a few days agc, makes the painful confession ‘‘Duriog well nigh 70 years we have failed to make Algeria pay. Have we even striven to make it? During 20 years we have been pursuing Ahmadon cr Samory. What have we done with the Sudan? We have contributed to depopulate it. we have made waste, di- rectly or indirectly. immense territories, on Which a rich population formerly lived; we have extended the desert in- stead of reclaiming it Our soldiers have labored so well that they success- fully thwarted all useful beginnings and blocked the road to the pioneers of our commerce.’’—Contemporary Re- view a BRAIN. FAG Is the result of Overwork and an Exhausted Nervous System. Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food creates New Brain and Nerve Tissue. Business and professional men, accountants, stenographers, teachers, students and all brain workers know only too well what it means to have the brain so tired out that concentration of thought is almost impossible. One-fifth of all the blood in the human body fs found in the brain, and unless the blood is pure and rich the brain becomes exhausted for want of proper nourishment. Dr. A. W. Chase’s Blood Food creates new brain and nerve tissue, and produces rich red blood, ‘‘ the vital fluid” of the body. All brain workers quickly recognize the merits of this great food cure, and after a few doses enter on their work with new energy and ambi- tion. Brain fag is unknown to persons whose brain and nerve have been invigorated by the use of Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food, which is fur sale by all dealers at soc. a box. Dr. Chase’s New Book, ‘‘ The IIls of Life and How To Cure Them,” sent free to your address, Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Peeedrelecdediddtieided cde ely, = STYLISH, RELIABLE : ARTISTIC® Recommended by Leading Dressmakers. = They Always Please. <p> NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE GP These patterns are sold in nearly Uuned States -«. : 138 to 146 W. 14th Street, New York RRANCH OFTICES | 189 Fifth Ave., Chicago, and 105: Market St., San Francisco. every city and town in tie { If your dealer does nut keep them send direct tous. One cent stamps received. Adéress your nearest point. THE McCALL COMPANY, — MS CALLSA Brightest Megazine Published Contains Beautiful Colored Plates. Illustrates Latest Patierns, Fash- ions, Fancy Work, Agents waned for this magazine in every locality " Beautiful premioms for a little = work = Write for terms and other partic: ulars nonlvy 40e : ‘ SB inctuding a FILEE Matte age per year, ¥ aainess THE McCALL CO. =z 138 to 146 W. sgih St... New Yur TAPER PAL RADAR ADR PARENR DAT RAID IAP ARAE MS Watck Attention ‘Lhat will cause your watch to mark the hours and minutes exactly. Subscript DERI AAA As you value yonr time piece, do not allow it to run on without atten- tion from year to year. Such treat- ment will soon ruin the finest watch. It’s economy to have it examined at regular intervals. Iam sure I can do it to your satisfaction. E> Please call : UN 1 : a : fe | | | ; Qu een Stree Ch’town LEER EER alo What is SAN at a V9 ~a "hae Dd , Py rn I varey ae 4 ewes it bf a ie en 7 : 4 POT BAS 7 SS uN SONS 5 so i * . . , . Ova rd A 6 , ve tee soe te ad) 4} v “ Cast § tte for Castor Oil, Paregor__, Castoria is for nfants and Children. harmless subs Svothing Per) |) neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee thirty years’ use by of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria ‘clieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach ond Bowels of Infants and Children, giving healthy and naturai sleep. Castoria is the Children’s The Mother’s Friend. and Syrups. It contains SiLisions is ness. -anacea Castoria. Castoria. ‘“Castoria is an excelient medicine for| ‘‘Castoria Is so well adapted to children children, Mothers have repeatedly told me | that I recommend it as superior to ary pre | scription known to me.” H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N. ¥ of its good effect upon their children.” Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Lowell, Mass. | THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF & APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. THE CINTS SR COMPANY. Y7 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK Crry. 7 é ITE WE E Ce ee Sore REG ERS Ts » Ty ae Corsejs. Special Black. . Short. A New Line Usually Sold for $1.25, Our price SOc T. J. Harris Lonpon House a Da —_—_AND——_ PLATE GLASS INSURANCE — -AT THE —— CITY -HARDWARE- STORE We are agents for the DOMINION PLATE GLASS INSURANCE C) Don’t run the risk of having to replace oroken plate glass when you ca have +t attended to for a trifle. We buy and sell plate Plate Ginss, all sizes. carry a full line of Builder’s and Gen-ral Hardware at the CITY HARD- WARE STORE. R. B. NORTON & CO. LTD TR IMPORTANT TO THOSE WHO INTEND PUTTING IN SEWERAGE If you have to buy a stove to heat your bath boiler, get a Highland (made in Boston) and have satisfaction. For sale only by FENNELL sx-CHANDLER A PER ae. BAe, é PE RRR RET Re oe LN RC EE oa eaten ero Ei ' = tt } f 7 | : ' ii i ae : vet . i a ta . i . g ij . s , | . a . : 2 —6UwaelUr a 8 ' # ‘a q } t $) | : 2 Z| ; > mi . 2 ee see =e . by Vinee te - a a NER A SABRE A PGS es