“at wee eg tage GCARNRADIAN NEXT TO MURDER PACIFIC RAI. WAY. a tient at home, when he ought QURIS ST SLEEPE RS to send him away-——for money MORTREAL —ought to be held responsible. TO \ doctor, who keeps his pa- | So ought we, if we mislead. = ; Our offense is greater than PAGIFIS GOAST es = his, because we endanger Every Thurs aay thousands of lives by one ad- vertisement-—millions read it. Some few for a io rtic Sas tO must g§O f< ‘ Lin rvic » 4 on > ‘oO ie . - ° - see ee = t fone. 1 Seen of climate, or die; but, “Was! yn. Oregon ad to thousands, Scott’s emulsion ; CALIMORNIA of cod-liver oil is cure at home. i ‘oe We'll send you a little to try if yon like. leg for 1 S nd namnhie+ et A . : map and pampniets SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists Toronto, gecriptive of journey, etc., write t A, a HEA i rH, > =o TIME TABLES. D. . A... P: R. st John \ B. (LOCAL TIME) : Arrival and Departure of Trains | and Steamers. TRAIND. Express leaves for the west....... 8 35a m * | Express arrives from the west......9 50 pm) Sight Accommodation leaves for the WES ess 5 ee pesden » eepnesth 10 DP Hi Accommodation leaves for the W > , . 7 Weld. vce: <s0ks ae evece.0 0 pm hen you are compelled to | Accommodation arrives from the - | W2St cece esevcecs ‘cc cnkeaeens MSS 0: Ol hold the new spaper away | Accommodation arrives from the WOE 6 kc oS 6. <a eh ee 68 5 EE 8 Re 225 pm = = Express leaves for the east .. 7 05a m 7 + | off know th it 5 oure yesi ght | Express arrives from the east....--9 10am | Accommodation leaves for the ey “away off ’’ and gle iSsse -O60t oceensauae is. 3 cope | Accommodation arrives ‘from “the ’ + - | CASE eee eee eseeeeeeeee er acres: 45 m should be procured at once. | “* 4 50P . STEAMERS. Consultation free. il gr | Princess leaves for Pictou every / PN Ot cs cac ced: eeesese 9 30a m! Satisfaction g Jaranteed, + Arrives from Pictou every evening ie Oe ei ot ivetwe re 30pm Cn ee man ; \a. 7. Huteneson, | TNE CAMPANA |Is due at Charlottetown from Montreal and OPTICIAN AND JEWELER, | Quebec every alternate Friday evening, and on Tuesday she leaves Charlottetown | | leaves on return the following Saturday even- Charlottetown. A . ng. i THE CITY OF GHENT | Isdue from Hlalifax and intermediate ports on Thusdaynight of cach week, sailing on a ) return the follow’ ng day. , | Is due from Bostcn at four o'clock every | Tuesday mo ning, «nd will sad on return at } one o'clock *same afternoon. THE JACQUES CARTIER 8 ’ ; | Leaves Charlottetown fcr Vernon River when | | tit suits, returning Tuesday, a.m. On Tues- , Wednesday and Thursday at two o’clock +h Saas tis Oc eel ; on Thursdav even- : } “ [-n@ She re‘ irns From Orwell ahe at edght, Oh a a i eT tras Porting ats B deloek 2%d onSd cer- - | “riday mortiing at. f TO Bas E Or | lay morning at nts ve sails for Crapaud, | re urning same afterncon at four o’clock. x THE SOUTHPORT : Pt. Commenci ne ct. 16¢ } Gees up east River on Monday afternoon at 5 i ‘our o'clock returning the following Tuesday « wi [EO | norning; C } xt three o’clock, returning the same evening. TH E S. HALIFAX | The steamer leaves for West Kiver on Thurs- lay afternoon at ‘riday morning; on Friday afternoon at four clock she also. goes to West River, returning ‘ | the same evening. Charlottetown om 4Wed-j— - ee THE ELFIN ke close connection at Excursions. being issued at noon on} | Char] Tu Passengers leavin; neglay mornings m Halifax for Boston. Autumn > pecial Return Tickets nov ttetown ssday. Will lea ve Leaves for Rocky Point each week day at 7, 8.30, 9.30 and II a. m., and I, 2, 4 and 5 30 | p.m; returning leaves Rocky Poiut at 8, 9, 10 and 11.30 a. m; ard 1.30, 3, 4.30 and 6p. at reduced rates. For tickets, rates and all} ™-, Se el information apply to [on wee ey BOC 12.45, 3 See Pe Ms W. W. CLARKE. Agent. | leaving Rocky Point at loa. m., 1.15, 3.15 ~ J 2, Agent. = H. L. CUIPMAN, Charlottetown | #045 P- ™- : Manager, THE HILLSBOROUGH Aplagii | Leaves Prince Street ferry wharf for South- ort every half hour. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN four o clock returning cn | On Sunday’s the Elfin leaves for Rocky | NOVEMBER 19, 1900. | POM PEI AND GALVESTON | remained in the city to get away. Re- peated shocks of earthquake contri- vuted to the horror of the scene, in- Destruction of the Former Not |cidently demolishing the bridge over So Serrible as That of the Latter, | ‘P© Samo and so shutting off escape in yhat direction. Meanwhile, rivers believed to have had|of pumice mixed with water flowed |rather more than 20,000 inhabitants. |down the slope of Vesuvius on. the The city stood on an elevation over-|cther side and overwhelmed © the looking the sea, the whole of the bay | neighboring town of Herculaneum. |of Naples being in view, while ir the | ‘The pumice fell in Pompii until the ‘background loomed grim Vesuvius, | Streets of the city were covered eight ‘the destined destroyer. Close by | ‘to ten feet with it. Its weight broke flowed the river Sarno, which was |'n the roofs cf many of the houses, cressed by a bridge. The volcano ‘and the destruction of lives must have was supposed to be extinct, and its | already been frightful. Nevertheless, | sides were cultivated all the way up to Pompeii is = many of the people still survived, seek- disappeared under the streams of mud sixty-five feet deep in spots, which’ had flowed over it. This mud, being a sort of natural concrete, soon hard ened into stone, which iS today o' such solidity asto make excavating — extremely difficuit.— Washington ost ABSOLUTE — SECURITY, Cenuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. i : : ‘the summit. Grapes were largely | ioue in cellars and other such grown, and wine-making was an im- |}? retrea int Nave | portant industry in the neighborhood, | '8!Ned that th re LOp.s4 iwhich likewise prod cabbeves ven early in the Moramny of toe nex: , | ramous for their excellence. (Fc, 267 4ner in a vreal ; Itwas in the city of the clan of | kK, and ashes Began faling in a the Pompeys, founded by the aeans, | Oana ses shower wl he rain. ;}an ancient Ltaiian iribe, in the sx nough day had arrived had grew }century B. C, or earlier, afterwards | iti ker than ever, if posstoic, a ccud of |conquened by the Sami ites, a iva) |! ght blackness sett wn over | tribe, and eventuaily absorbed by a/|the land, while the lightning and ;mighty Rome. The culture of the | t@under were appaling Hck tol- | people was very Greek : they wor | wed shock, and the survivors must | shipped various Greek gods and used | t least have concituded that teeir last the Greek names for their weights a: d| hour was at hand. Such was in truth | measures. Being so beautifully situated, | he case. ‘The storm of ashes lasted }and having a delightful climate, Pom | nearly a'l day long; they drifted in | peii was a favorite resort nrcugh the windows of the houses | Romans, many of whom had villas | «nd suffocated all who remained alive. there. Cicero had a hand:-ome “he y covered the whole cii y with a | ‘cottage” as it would now be called, | sheet of death six to seven feet thick. Thus was completed the destruction of Pompeii. If the estim.t sof fatali- | ties above quoted be fairly correct, the loss of life was not more than one-third as great as duting the recent hurricane }andthe imperial family maintained a palace close by. The villas were / mostly on the high ground back of the town, toward Vesuvius and facing the | of wealthy r is sea, Small earthquakes were frequent, | Galveston, whose terrors may be but not much was thought of them, |Said t> have fairly equalled those of On the fifth day of February, in the his ancient Catastrcphe, though so year 63 -~. Se there came a tremen- | different In kind \\ hen it was all | dous shock, which was a warning of | over, the roofs uf many of the h uses | what was to follow. It threw cown a Is tilt emerged a ove the volcanic de- | large pirt of the city, including the! bris nich had overwhelmed the city. | beaut iful temples of Jupiter, Apolla| Hercu'aneum, however, had wholly _and Isis, but most of the damage was repaired by the time of the saa catastrophe. | The eruption which was destined to be so memorable began early in the | morning of Feb. 24, 79 A. D. Specta- | tors looking from a great distance saw | /a mighty cloud spread and overhang) the city like a vastand ominou; ux brela. There was still plenty ¢f iine) to get away in safety and doubtless a | majority of the people did escape be- tore the impending volcanic stormle gan. Ju?ging from the number of | skeletons thus far discovered, it seems | probable that not more than abcut | | 2,000 persons actually perished. How | ever, a great many who attempted to | leave in boats may have lost their | lives. ‘ Felis. Adiniral Plinw - na fleet, was not: In the six day bicycle races the pace * a” aor - : | tells terribly at the end. Man after ar away, and letters brought by | man falls out exhausted. The victor mounted couriers reached him as ear'y | wabbles wearily over the line. In the as 1 p.m. that day begging him to) busitiess race it’s the same. Man after | come as quickly as possible with his; man drops out exh: austed. The success- ful man is often a dyspeptic, unable to | enjoy success. When the stomach is | diseased there is not enough nutrition assimilated to sustain the body and re- pair the daily waste of tissues. The result is weakness, tending to collapse. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other | organs of digestion and nutrition. It enables the perfect assimilation of food by which the body is lt up with sound, healthy flesh. “I have taken one bottle of Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for indigestion and liver complaint.” writes Mr. C. M. Wilson, of Vadkin College, Davidson Co., N. C. “Have had no bad spells since I commenced taking your medicine—in fact, have not felt like the same man. Before I took the ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ I could not eat anything without awful distress, but now I can eat anything I wish without having unpleasant feelings. Last | ships and help to rescue the pe ple Le set sai] immediately, and, a-riving ‘within sight of Vesuvius at nighif« lI, ran into the rainof pumice that was then falling. It was impossible to make a landing at Pompeii, and so he ‘| disembarked at Stabiae, where it was hailing cinders at such a rate that dur- | _ing the night he was obliged to leave | | the room in which he slept for fear | ‘lest the door might be blocked up. On | ihe following morning he died, being | | suffocated by volcanic fumes. Early in the afternoon of Feb. 24, the hail of pumice began to fall upon _doomed Pompii, the pieces averaging + 113 Juil | tourists. Must Bear Signature of See Fac-Simile Wrapper Below, Nothing on Barth will do it like Sheridan’s Powder. Thousands of successful Poultry- Keepers all over the country owe no grnall portion of their success to the practice of mixing with tLe m ast food given to their poultr every day, 2 smal uantity of SHERIDAN’S ConpDITION Powpb tt has been used and indorsed by Poultry-Rai ers ever thirty years, ,and for al kinds of poultry. ny can't ct t the F Powder | send to us. One 4 ack, 25 cts.; five, et b $1.26. q six a oxp: raid, oe San minte copy bes be st Po ates FOR HEADACHE, paperfree. 1.8. JOHNSON & CO m. Mase FOR DIZZINESS, FOR TORPID LIVER, E . FOR CONSTIPATION, ee ‘Sites FOR SALLOW SKIN, \ FOR THE COMPLEXION We do not mean furniture or timnware | a Fearn rg “ : but we co mean LOr d. pure groceries, = | and are cont-uuallys pp ying house keepers with the class o! goods that | make the m-mbers of the family good natured and happy. Our . prices are ; Within the Reach of Every Workingman’s Purse Driscoll & Hornsby QUEEN STREET. P, E, ISLAND... Commercial College CURE SICK HEADACHE, Celery USE We are making a special effer for this month tefore packing away in green house, and it will be tothe advaniage of ony one requiri ing a supply of celery to secure it be- fore the price goes up. The same celery ‘\anot be beucht later on for anything less han §0 percent more. We have it bleached ' present use or green for winter keeping, ur price for November month only—§$2,00 The attention of those who desire a thr ouzh and pract cal prepara‘ion for an active bu-iness life is called to the advantages offe: ec by this college. Bookk eping, Commercial Law, Arithme ic, Penmanship, Engtish, Correspondence, Business Methods, Shor hand, Typewriting‘ etc., are taught in 1 most direct and practical manner. Spxci attention is given to locaing graduates 1 | good business p sitions. Newterm opene: yn Monday, Augrst 2oth inst., at 9.30 p. n r barrel, or three barrels for $5.00. We S end for pros, ec.us. BP. O. Box 242. so have | eets for $1.10 per barrel; carrots, $1 25 ,;er barrel; onions, turnips, 6§¢ per large sngar barrel, 1.15; parsnips, :.§0 of 160 Ibs in barrel; ir el; cabbage, 9oc per Address— J. J. GAY & SON, *harlottetown. ISAAC OXENHAM, no— f Principa’ and Propriet«. PICTURESQUE Prince Edward Island NIGHT CLASSES. —AT THE— 25c at all ay | FF 5 Sessions per Week Bookstores An illustrated book on P. E. Isl- OPENED ON and. An interesting souvenir for Monday, Nov. 22, 1900 it 7.30 p. m Charters! I have severa! new schooners seek- ing precuce charters from Is!and Ports to “Nova” scotia, United States or West indies. Thorough instruction in B ook Keeping, Business Penuans hip, Arithmetic, Corimercial Law, hert hand, and Typewritinu. Inten ding students are asked to enter ato nce, summer our baby was teething and was so poor he was almost a skeleton. We gave him your ‘Golden Medical Disovery’ and now he is as healthy and well as any child. I will — a good word for your medicine whenever I have an opportunity.” Dr. Pierce’s Pellets cure sick headache. about the size of a walnut, together with torrents of rain. It must have | been almost too late for anybody who | DENNIS MURPHY. | °F * soonas p ssible. Terms, € te., * | on application to COMMISSION MERCHANT, | HALIFAX, . N. 8 L. B. MILLER, P..O. Box No. 8. Principal. GREAT SING OUT SALE From y eee Tai women ie QUEEN STREET. 5 to 50 per cent Discount. eadymade Clothing AT SLAUGHTER PRICES... Gents’ Furnishings Boots and Shoes Buy from us and Save Money J. B. MACDONALD & CO.