avi DAinY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 4, 1899 oe . . , > yy ry i Ms, : st, ] ‘ \ if l R if \ : \ te ty ' had, one that I con!d very easily have The Change of Faces Tie K sy ' “8 , - 4 4 ‘ ‘ oh a . - 1c rainse ne ° a ' oo it dispensed with compared with those | _, seen Sr a te sv MENS ANd boys UiOUnls--= ‘ are its own style of face an Ss - =< } | that 1 lost jewelry? Money? Duds? I 7 es . ; va ay “a "| i 4 ORUMMER’S EXPERIENCE IN A BI Se ee amas: ra due poss! to the fashions of aMe SMe Mo Milo SMe ME Me ME NEY SY ME ME NE ME NE SE OM ‘ 4 t Li i = tN . ies _ ’ l " “ » " : . ‘ ‘ em Oe _ - Sot oe oe me = il wasn't thinking any more of them i day, which impress themselves even in AP AY BAP ASAP AY aid AY SiS MS AP US ANT TOW cev PLUMP while using Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food. t] a1 ght- will tel} 1 W., ( es ‘ Nerve Food, soc. a box, At all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Ca, Toronto, nev GO C68 & 6263648 060608 ADVICE AECUT pice. W en or ler Pepper, Ginger, Alispice, Cin INo & packege namon or Cream of Tartar fro ) your groce: you can al- ways feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for: :: Niott’s ORS “V0OBT F OBCE BOOETB KBLLY'S & COS. @ & GROCERIES Are always to be depende't on.... eo” ~Seere? 207 349879 @ @ 42087 #4466324" @ GS *%”* © * OO R® Only the best kept ir stock. Our customers are satisfied customers. If you want tobe satisfied with your groceries deal with us, Try the TEA we sell. tion was given to ite ee’ection. St ecial atteo-~ The same care is exercised in buying al! other lines 2 t Kt JAMES KELLY & (0 ear ia ndon House Corner. AND BE OA NSATISFIED (Jueen St., W hite’s and Snowflake Chacolates = Can be had any of the foilk wing tirst C.uss stores: T. J. Morris D. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. Beer & Goff FOR SALE sale mortgages, being 6 percent ; properties in some of the best nitoba. *s do not represent more than fthe property. If required we principal ana interest, the mortages are payable in. * We have for interest on far listricts in M The morte half the value guarantee bot) In most case instalments. Anyone wapb'ing a thoroughly safe invest ment having « good rate of int“rest snouid communicate with us. Wealse have alarge number of very de- sirable farms for sale in the Winnipeg Dis- triets, at prices which are bound to double in Very short time. Send for particulars, HASLAM & WRIGHT Private Ban«cers 320 McIntyre Block Winnipeg Man Caramels | | ING HOT EL. What He Had Planned to Do In Just Such a Contingency Did When Offered Ltself, and What tle 2 oe tently the Opportunit: “It’s queer—not tosay a sour } : rly . | t itior ind our pet man ‘ it Saida mercial travelez ! the l I 3 Ui 3 5 i =< l lad m ncludir } nd lars tn ~ i] get out v my it that first | { in Which I had f ] id often 1 y cali what [ sh ild do im case a which 1 wasa guest should begin ‘onflagrate. I was going to be th + est headed man with miles If the fire should break In the middle of the night while I was in bed, | intended to get up very cc« upon being awakened, deliberately slip on enough clothing to keep me out of the hands of the police upon making my appearance, get my money and thet pick up my most valuable sample case and the in Which I had packed articles of clothing in current use and | In a Taaius o} ont | valise walk out, leaving the rest of my gear | to take its chance upon the fire being squelched. On my way through the cor- ridors, in case I met up with any beau tiful, supplicating maidens or any aged, incapable women, I had it all pic- tured how I would drop my two grips and take them down the seething stair- one on each arm, presenting a heroic and inspiring spectacle as I emerged from the caldron of flame. ‘“‘Well, what happened? Luckily for | me, I had a third story front room in the Baldwin. The fire broke out in the basement along toward 8 o’clock in the morning. I snored luxuriously until about a dozen engines were throwing streams on the lower portion of the | structure. When I was in the middle of | a dream that I was standing in front of alot of big stores on a great business thoroughfare, throwing croquet balls through huge plate glass windows—it was the smashing glass down that got me into that strain of dream- | ing—I woke up. The glare in my room was something Inminous. Did I slowly stretch, say to myself, ‘Here’s that lon waited for fire. and it’s up to me 1 the man of the hour and the real thing? “Not much did I! I just hopped up } like a man who finds a family of centi peds in his bed. 1 grabbed case, | below a pair of rubbers that were lying alongside my | bed and put them on the wrong feet. | giving all thetime during the perform ance a realistic exhibition of a man! ondergoing a swamp chill Then I! snatched a mackintosh that I had thrown over my trunk on coming in the } night before and folded it after consid erable difficulty. owing to my chill } tremblings, over my pyjamas. Then] } reached for a hat, and of ‘1 about my luck to get the v t hat 1 | owned out of half a dozen sc: ed r | the room. Then I made for the door. 1 | want you to understand that [ made for the door in a hurry too “On my way to the over one of my sample cases and kicker door I stumbled { it over in front of [ had to } ; i | ; | i 7 i I the door 7 . qaoor pick it upin order to open thé and so | hung on to it and took it along with me lafterward found it to be the least consequential sam! | womlan, a nervous | yAwotman, a fretful woman, a woman | ‘ : Ne who suffers from :} os i weakness and cis east the delicate and import gans that coustt- | womanhood tute 1 i omed a woman da sae t ) childlessn ss prot a real wom: , The most glori duty and privileg of womanhood motherhood. Ti childless wom cannot bea happy | woman. A woman | who never knows the caressing touch of a first -born’s fingers, carnot know full measure of happiness possible to a woman. | hb» tine There are thousands of unhappy womet | who go throuch life without knowing the Sit ne happiness of motherhood, who go | y through a faithful but weary round of work, and live almost loveless and usu- elly pain-racked lives, because they neg- fect to take care of themselves in a wo- | manly way. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- | tion is the most wonderful of a). medicines | for ailing women. It acts directly on the | delicate and important organs that make maternity possible. It makes them well and strong. It fits for wifehood and moth- | erhood. # banishes the dangers of mater- } nity. It does away with the discomforts of | the period of anticipation and makes baby’s | coming easy and almost painless. It in- | sures the mew comer’s health and an ample supply of nourishment. Thousands | of homes that only lacked a baby as a final | binding tie, now bless this marvelous rem- edy for the ring of childish laughter. It soothes pain, tones the nerves and makes a woman's work easy. All medicine dealers sell it. “I miscarried four times,” writes Mrs. Flor- ence Hunter, of Corley, Logan Co., Ark. ‘' Then, after taking four botiles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription I made my husband a present of a fire, healthy girl.’’ Tiny, sugar-coated granules that always cure biliousness and constipation—Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They regulate and invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. All good medicine dealers have them. Nothing else ‘just as good.” + front rOULe ' down the first flight of stairs, from top | to bottom, then picked myself to the head of the second flight of stairs ' and fell down those. | , get my things and do the whole thing when I frantically unlocked and un- barred that door of mine than | was of taking a balloon before breakfast in the morning and st ing for the north pole I just wanted to get out, that’sall. The halls were filled with smoke, I found, but after ten years of stopping annual- ly at the Bal : lwin, generally in the same room, I knew the stairways and down to the lobby pretty well, and I just put my free hand over my mouth and nose and made the rush ‘‘D’ye suppose that if I had met 40 of the most beautiful maidens on the globe—supplicating. imploring maidens a there confused in that third floor hallway I'd have picked ’em up one in each arm and, permitting them te gently nestle u t h, have down the stairs and p against carried them triumphantly out into the street | and under the broad arch of heavenand | all that? No. 1 wouldn’t have It’s! grievous and grewsome to have to con- fess it, but_I’d just have yelled at them to follow my route and then have kept on getting over territory myself I fell up with the one idea of getting out, scampered lit on the flag- ging of the lobby, and in two more sec- onds I was in the street. When, a few minutes later, I reflected upon my loss and the general hamlike character of my conduct, did 1 want to go back and ' over again right and in accordance with | my preconceived intentions in case of 4 hotel fire? Nope. I was conterft to stand there in the street and figure how I'd perform the next time 1 got similarly caught.’”’ An Undertaking. ‘Isabel, does yonr husband get angry | when he tells you to wake him early and you den’t do it?” ‘‘No, dear. He knows that I know he doesn’t mean it.’”’ Action repeated becomes habit. Habit long continued becomes second nature. We are today what we were accus- tomed to do yesterday and the day be- fore.—Lyman Abbott. PoueveyuyW uve wi ewelb Webb Wve We rede y ured There are in the German empire about 490,069 perso: ; belonging to oth ' gt countries Td AT THE COMEDY. I saw you watch the play Wherein each hero won his love The old unlifelike way. (And, oh, were life their little scene Where love so smoothly ran, How different, dear, this world had bee old wor] Pince this i | | | Last night, in snowy gown and glove, | ; | t orld began!) For you, who saw them gayly win Both hand and heart away, Knew well where dwelt the mockery is That foolish little play. (“Tf love were all—if love were all!” The viols sobbed and cried, “Then love were best, whate’er befall,’ Low, low, the flutes repli And you, fond heart, did you forget i For all the changing year? 1 Since watching there your eyes grew wet «| With t an idle tear. ' (And down the great dark curtain fell Upon their foolish play, But you and 1 | —oh, too well!— i Life went another way.) —Arthur J. Stringer in Harper's Magazine. | nascamriptiit } A FAMOUS BLUNDERER. M. Calina, the Handy Andy of French Humorous Literature, . i M. Calino, the popular French simple- | ton who performs in the humorous liter- | ot truce much the same function | the ti onal Paddy does in Engl oe ‘ture. has been made the subject of a | : ' dy, in which his innocent stupid- | : ' . : } carefully anwiyzed rie 18 none | or thigem ae nient personi- | i y§ tne harmless bun | derer and co! 1t lack w found nj il ages and countries Ln ce his sity- | ines rei howe , oO! e of thea | it 5 iA istic of i a j re bl a ngs, it seems, br nat | ariy age He had not crait ougt 1a lie that would hold watcr fo! ! One day xt school ! into 2 h a companion and came home sh on his forchead ‘How did you get that cut?’ asked his her What cut, papa?’ Why. that great gash on your fore- ‘I bit myself there, papa. $ yout ' Why, you couldn’t bite yourself on your foreheaa " “I got up on a chair to do it, papa.’ Later in life Calino delivered himscl! following bit of Wisdom 4s for me. I don’t care so much for the :as Ido for the n You see, the sun only comes after it gets daylight, hoon. when we could see just as well without 1t, but the some use—it shines -at night.’’ ' Early ‘one morning, when Calino was out with his gun, he saw a robin in the garden of his friend Camille. He aimed at it, but it dropped below the top of the wall. Then Calino went into the house, crept up stairs softly, stole into Camille’s bedroom without waking Camille, who was in bed, pointed his gun out of the window at the robin and fired—bang! Camille leaped out of bed in wild con- fusion and alarm. ‘* W-w-why—w-w-what’s the matter? “Oh, did I wake you up?’ said Calino. “J pulled the trigger just as softly as I could.’’ woon $ my mackin- | ‘ ther changed years ago and see how altoge is this ‘‘eternal feminine.’’ In time there will be produced ‘““beauty,’’ but one ventures to predict it will have as t the beauty which commands our admiration in the portrait exhibitions of the present day and which shows that fashionable painters are slaves to their will.—Bostcn ‘“T2nscrivt. 50 years another great sameness as ; subjects iinet EGconomical Weather Comfort. Thirst and heat cause ad temper and ill-health The more one drinks the thirst- ier one gets. <A teaspoon- ul of Abbey’s Effervescent Salt taken in a tumbler of water *. is unequalled for quenching § the thirst, cooling the en blood, and invigorating the ec, far surpasses 8G It iT} = ee & f~ = oO hese rt warm days. evucvevwewvebeudyel * & =, AARARARARARPAARARARAAARARAAR ARAN S AARARE \ y A Aaa y 5 ae ET SN ea 2 Aa ap 6 system. any mineral or aerated wa- a ter, being more healthful, ox and having the advantage © of being cheaper in price. Abbey’s Effervescent Salt is § recommended by physicians and @& medical journals, and is sold by all druggists at 60 cents a AAA vy large bottle. Trial size 25 cents. x a # x AARADARARARLUNS. Scld by Geo. E. Hughbe | Photographs that Cive | rileasure are those mede hy G. H. Cook, Wueea Street. BA Se, Having the «advantage of the beet [ight in Charlottetown, ois it Witla witha tf a6 i and being provided with all fae ilities tor up-tcsdate work, it foliows that my Photcgraphs give entire satirfaction. They are acknowledged to reach “the highest pitch of excel- Ca!! acd examine and arrange a a ae G. H. COOK Hub Cafe ‘ Ke-opened Meals and lunches served at short notice, Alsoa choice line of Cigars, Cigarettes and Ginger Ale. Open from 7 a. m:; till 12 pm. - Don’t forget the place next door to R. B. Norton's Hard- ware store. «w=hub Cafe Le t ressions of the human untenanc No om who studies modern portraiture © 9 os il eo pe a ; = = ; erred on , LSke UMA paint - It is not merely their charec- teristic style, but the type which they have | transferred to canvas and which almost & st : h ; : ke as peas 1 cael han a ly | vary in degrees. Of course the arti 7 z “idpelioes,"” | He would nit: be ams REGS Walues that we wish you to see when we peep tegcermseibenpestege echogenic ast you to look at cur Ready-to-Weas ee ee ree eee: ad Clothing. Ordinary values you can see odes; 1m exxprenicn, there is tencoabia. aety anywhere, but it’s a saving ofat least 35 this one woman of the end of e century, a creature of superb physique, clothed, oF per cent. on your purchase. How can 1 unclothed, like aroyal princess. Compare — j her with the pictured woman of 100 or 200 we do this? #ecause we bought the goods that .nuch less, at the Doull and Gibson great retiring sale, and we give our customers the benefit of the low price paid for the goods. We always make it a rule when we bought at a bargain to sell at a bargain. J B MCDONALD & Cd LEADERS IN LOW PRICES, [MiGh CLASS Light Summer Coats -and Vests fom — ULUSTRE AND CRASH JOHN McLEOD & co Ce Ealsomine, Alabastine Petrol, Magnite and all other requisites for house cleaning es px 4 A es E | <=f oe A <= px ee HICH CRADE Englisn Manures CON TAIEN...--- \ IFROGEN Pros. ACID POTASH MORE MORE HORE sme ppm qeaarataaatiniaatan alte CC lO PRODUCE... | | BETTER CROPS LASTS LONGER | More (RELIABLE Fertilizer eve BRO- And are cheaper than any other sold on P. K. Island, AULD Charlottetown, May 27th, 189-9.- so ~ a) Six piece Glass Table "Sets selling at 26c, regular price 25 cents. 100 Flower Pots from lc up 1900 Teapots from 10c‘up. 1000 Jugs very low erry Fets, 7 pieces, 21c P. MONAGHAN QUEEN STREET Offer “Buildnig ee ans one Groceries, ¢ Crockery ¢ and , Glassware - Retail at Wholesale Prices—————- La agape en eC Sra te a i pon me