ae ay SRNR hn BO Bi KNOWS A GOOD THING WHEN HE SEES IT. BABY’S OWN SOAP $$$ MADE BT THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO. MONTREAL, MAKEN S OF THE CELEBRATED ALBERT TOILET SOAPS. 86 =O es 6686S B& 6406606008, ADVICE ABOUT Spice. - When ordering a package of Pepper, (linger, Allspice, Cin namon or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can a!~ ways fee! sur? of securing the best quality by asking for : : : Mott's een 6420806240466 2 @ @™ 82* 428 6 a” 3% 84? £26364 28 ; 3 : : t , Mortgage Sale, To be sold by public auction, at the Court House, in Charlottetown, on Tues- day, the sixtn day of December next, A. D, 1898, atthe hour of twelve o’cloek noon, uader and by virtue of a power of eale, contained in an Indenture of Mort- gage, dated the ninth day of Auguet, A. D., 1879, and made between Joshua Thorne and Elizabeth Thorne, his wife, of the one part, and John Ings of the the other part: All that tract piece and parcel of land, sitvate lying ead being in Charlottetown, Queen’s Cousty, Prince Edward Island, Leing the southeastern oce fourth part of town lot number fifty-eight, inthe first bundred of lots, in said town, having a front of eighty-four feet or the whole breadth of the said town lot, in King Street; also a front of forty feeton Hills- borough Street, and is bounded oa the south east by King Street, on the south west by Hillsborough Street, on she north east by the )ine of Town |. sumber fifiv nine, in the said firet bunds d of lote, aod on the north west by a | « running parallel with King Street. at tic cistance forty feet from the said Stieet, and which raid tract or parcel of land ie more par- ticularly delineated marked and laid down on @ certain map or plan of Charlotte-~ town, kept in the office of the Survey or- Sjeneral , or of the keeper of plans of said Island. If the above described land is not sold, atthe time, und place aforeeaid ic will thereafter be sold by private sale. For further particulars apply at the ottice of Peter., Peters & lugs, Barristers- ai~Law, Charlottetown. Dated 18th day of Octoher, A. D , 1898 JOHN INGS, Mortgegee 243—6i law. tues MORTGAGE SALE, To be sold by House, public suction, st the Court in Charlottetown, on Tuesday, the sixth of Deceraber next, A. D., 1895, at the hour of twelve o'clock noon, under and by vir- tue of a power Of sale cOntsained in an inden- ture of mortguge, bearing date, the twenty- sixth day of April, A. D, 1882, and made be- tween John McQuaid and wary McQuaid, his wife, of the one part, and George Peake of the other part, which said noortgage is now inves- ted in Alice IK. cbecca I’eat:¢ as Administratrix of the estate o* George Pi ake, deceased, All that tract piece and parcel of land situate lying ued being in the Common Lot- of Charlotteto wn, Queen’s Coun'y, Prince Ed- ward Island, vounded and descrived as fol- lows:—comme ncing at a stake fixed at the coi- ner of the lane on the west side of the road leading by 2 “ing Park, thence running north fifty feet, thence running westwardly one hundred feet. thence southwardly fifty feet to the aforesaid liane, thence eastwardly along said lane one hundred ie t to the place of commenceme: t. if the above described land !s not sold at the place and tims aforesaid, it will thereafter be sold by privat« sale, > a — pesSentens apply at the office of eters eters ngs, rristers-at-Law Charlottetown. . oe Dated this 25th day of October, A. D, 1893, THS DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN. A NE TT A A Ee ae rt A A A ee A EN A AE, AS ND. IR ALLIGATOR MIMICS The alligator is rapidly disappearing ts the settled regions of Florida and becom- ing scarcer every @ay even in such remote regions as the Everglades, owing to the war of extermination waged against it by hide hunters, taxidermists and dealers in curiosities, These pursue it night and day year inand yearout. The little ginger- lings just out of the nest are in great de- mand, as they are worth from §2 to $3 per hundred in the local markets. The *“ourio’’ dealers who purchase them often resell them at $1 each to northern visitors, or else they kill and stuff them into card plates, cigar holders or whatever else their fancy suggests and dispose of them at good prices. The young are frequently lured from their lurking places by a poor imitation of the grunts of their mother, and men expert in mimicking her may capture a large number in a day, as they respond promptly to the calls and pour out of cavities in hot haste to see the caller. The most expert ‘‘gator callers’’ I ever knew were swamp rangers, both white and black, who were born and bred within a short distance of an alligator swamp, and therefore knew every intonation of the saurian’s voice. These men could make a matron charge wildly at them across a broad stream by imitating the frightened cries of her young or lure a decrepit old bull by mimicking the grunts of the fe- male. They could in fact delude both old and young and often earned good sums by their art. The “bellowing season’’ begins in May and lasts until the middle of July, and during that time the unmated bulls make night hideous. In fighting each other they use jaw and taii with the utmost fury. They must deliver exceedingly heavy blows with the latter, for the sounds can be heard at a considerable distance. When one gets a good mouth hold on the other, it clings likea bulldog, but as the body srmor is generally toothproof, except in special places, little damage can be done even in a protracted conflict. As the reptiles can only deliver blows at ob'ects a little to one side of the head, it is | amusing to see them try to get directly in front of each other and make circular sweeps with the tail in the blind hopethat , soine may prove effective. I have known | them to fight for hours at intervals with | great fury and have again seen a huge bull retreat in a most demoralized manner | after receiving a few blows. When the female is ready to lay her eggs, she retires to some secluded wet or | swampy place and builds cut of mud, de- | cayed vegetation and rushes a nest two or | three feet high and having a large, firm base. If she builds on tidewater, she car- ries her nest farther back—some years more than others~—as if she knew when tides would be unusually high, and the strangest part of it is that, asarule, ‘high nests and high tides’ go together. The receptacle for the eggs is deep and spacious and well made, She lays from 20 to 100 eggs in this, usually in July, covering them wiin light, loose material to give the young when hatched plenty of room, and makes the upper part solid by beating with her head and walking over it several times to trample it down. She frequently walks over it while the eggs are incubat- ing, in order to keep it-packed, for if it be- came loose the rain would enter and pre- vent the eggs from hatching. It usually takes 60 days for the young to appear, and she evidently knows the hour they should announce their presence, for she keeps passing around the nest the CREATED aoe day when they are expected, becomes nerv- ous, usually irritable, and so pugnacious that she is ready to fight anything from a moie toa man that approaches her nursery. On hearing the young give their first faint croak she begins tearing away the covering with claws and jaws, and on reaching them give several endearing grunts, then proudly leads them to her cave in the swap, stream or lake close by. From that moment forward she must vigilantly watch her progeny to prevent them fromm being destroyed by enemies, for everything that eats flesh seems to prey upon them Fishes, snakes, azvls, hawks, polecats ind . eo wo ~ Coughs and colds need not be endured; they can be cured, and that quickly. Many mixtures are tem- porary in effect, but Scott’s Emuision of Cod-liver Oil with Hypophosphites? is a permanent remedy. The oil feeds the blood and warms the body; the hypophosphites tone up the nerves; the glycerine soothes | the inflamed throat and lungs. The combination cures. This may prevent serious lung troubles. soc, and $1.00; all druggists, SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists, Toronto, turtles devour them whenever tney can, but their worst foes are the bull alligators, for they destroy them out of mere wanton- ness. One of the peculiarities of the eggs of an alligator is that they are generally of different shapes, although the ends are al- ways alike, They are about 14 inches in diameter, and the ordinary length of the newly hatched youngsters is four inches. These do not eat any food for several days after leaving the nest and make a begin- ning on larvze, water insects and frogs, gradually advancing to snakes, fishes and finally to anything edible. They cannot eat food that requires tearing apart, owing to the bluntness and irregularity of their teeth. An adult saurian possesses 80 teeth, if it has not lost any by accident, ' and no two are of the same size and shape except those opposite each other. ‘That is why it cannot tear fresh flesh and must allow it to putrefy before it can be eaten. | The teeth are hollow, yet strong, and are shed every year, so that the loss of afew in a contest produces no permanent in- jury. Both old and young catch their prey by lying in wait for it and striking it sud- denly with the tail when it approaches near enough to be hit. Mouth and tail | work automatically together, for the caudal blow promptly knocks the prey into the distended, awaiting jaws. That given, the saurian backs off into deep water and be- gins rolling over and over like a barrel, or spinning round and round in a circle for the purpose of suffocating its captive as speedily as possible. It then takes its prey to some favorite retreat and buries it until it becomes tender enough, through putrefaction, to be easily torn apart.— John Mertimer Murphy in Popular Science Nows. ¢ Great Smokers. Many visitors to Europe consider Ita high honor to be invited to visit the Rookers’ club at Bruges. At the smoking contests of this organization a stated quantity of tobacco is given to each mem ber, and the one who takes the most time in smoking his portion wins tho prize When the pipe goes out, the competitor is counted out, for no relighting is allowed The present record for a quarter ounce ol tobacco is #1 minutes.— London Letter A Case Calling For Discretion. Smith—One can't always judge a man’s patriotism by his conversation. Jones—No, I suppose not. Smith—Ta':e Brown, for Would you call him a coward? Jones— \Well—er---l mizht if I was sure he wouldn’t fight.—Chicago News instanco S. retary HB.» is prying tue perl v for his youthful indiseretion, It is estimated ihit at least nine out of cen c llers at the tate department suggest that he hold her nozzle to the bank.-- Exchange. Who does not envy a baby its soft velvety skin? How many suffer from distressing skin diseases—Do you suffer? Have you tetter—salt rheum—scald head—ring worm —eczema—ulcers—blotches on the skin— chronic erysipelas—liver spots and what not else of these distasteful and aggravating disorders which disfigure and. discourage? Dr. Agnew's Ointment allays the dis- tressing itching, burn- ing, stinging sensa- tions which are part and parcel of such troubles, and in a thousand cases where internal treat- ments have failed to heal and _ eradicate them it has worked wonderful and perman- ent cures—and no skin dis- ease, no matter of how long In cases of chronic eczema it has proved its great worth, and cases are on record where this dread affection has been the » birthright of its patient and constant com- A lady living in a northern County town writes that seventeen years she was troubled with salt rheum. She took doctors’ treatments and used many lotions without any permanent relief. Reading ofthe cures made by Dr. Agvew's Ointment, she decided to try it. The first application ailayed the irrjtation and she continued using it—the disease rapidly dis- appeared and now fur two years there bas been no sign ofa return of it. — - ' <= ~——oo SKIN LIKE BABY’S Skin diseases from the merest pimples to salt rheum, running sores, are quickly, cured by Dr. Agnew’s Ointment—35 cents. the most obstinate eczema, pleasantly and permanently panion until past middle life, and Dr. Agnew’s Ointment has cured speedily and permanently. It is a boon to mothers because it is a boon to babyland—scald head and its irritations, which are accom- paniments to the teething period, are quickly driven off and restlessness passes away-— and where torture reigned with baby this balm brought rest: and a cure—it affords in- stant relief from the itching distress. . . . Do you suffer from piles—itching, blind, bleeding or ulcer- ated ?—No remedy has brought so quick relief, spared painful surgical operations as Dr. Agnew’s Ointment —it has proved itself an absolute cure for piles in all forms and at all stages— standing, has baffled its curative qualities. one application will relieve the itching, irritating sensations in an instant—and long standing cases disappear after from three to five nights’ treatment—the pain and soreness quit you and the tumors vanish. The baby of another lady living on Pacific Ave. in Toronto, was terribly afflicted with scald-head and eczema—she tried washes yee by her physi- cian, and soaps advertised for such purposes, but the Cisease remained—Dr. Agnew’s Ointment was her ood friend; half a box cured the baby and cured Cooull of troublesome piles which had been the bane cf her life since baby's birth. ALICE REBECCA PEAKE, Administrairix of estate of Gev Feuke, deceased | OR. AGNEW’S CURE FOR THE HEART—Cures palpitation, fluttering, shortness of breath and all heart disorders—relief in 30 minutes. DR. AGNEW’S CATARRHAL POWDER —Has cured cases of catarrh of 50 years’ standing—relieves cold in the head in 10 minutes. DR. AGNEW’S LIVER PILLS—Stop sick headache—oure constipation, biliousness and liver troubles —pleasant little doses—4o in a box—zo cents, ~~ Seld by Dr. S. W. Dodd end Gio, E. Hughes, Druggisis, - << oe ew Heads to the North. The superstition that humah beings should sleep with their heads to the north is believed by the French to have for its oundation « scientific fact. They affirm bateach human system is in itself an ‘lectric battery, the head being one of the electrodes, the feet the other. Their proof was discovered from experiments which the Academy of Sciences was allowed to make on the body of a man who was ruiilotined. This was taken the instant itfeli and placed upon a pivot free to moveasit might. The head part after « ‘fiiilo sacillation turned to the north, and he body then remained stationary = It was turned half way round by one of the professors, and again the head end of ihe trunk moved slewly to the cardinal point due nerth, the same results being repeat ed until the final arrestation of organic movement.—LBoston Traveler. When they put @ man in jail, he canpot follow hi* natural inclinations. He can- not eat what he wants to—he is limited to avery frugal diet. Is it not equally true of adyepeptic? For all the real eojoyment he gets outof life, he might as well be in jail. He cannot eat what he likes, nor enough. He suffers much, gets little rym- pathy. At first, perbaps a little heaviness in the stomach, a little sourness, windy belchings aod heartburn; headaches and biliousness and a foul taste io ;the mouth in the morning. Chronic constipatios ts almost inevitable, and means that the body is holding poisonon, impure matter thet should be gotten rid of. The poison is being reab-orbed into the blood and the whcle body. Impurity in the blood may lead to elmost any disease. Constipation is the start of it ell. Dr, Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure constipation, cure it so jt stays cured. No other remedy inthe worli will do that. Send 31 cents in oa- cent Fiamps to World’s Dispensary Medici l Association, Buft-lo, N. Y., and receive Dr. Pierce’s 1003 page COMMON SENSE MEDICAL SDVi-ER, llustrated. M «8 Mollie Atchisson of Opdyke, Illes, wei bs 5() pounds and measures 4 feet 7 iocbes around the waist. She is a good cook, a ekilied seamsiress, 28 years wld, can pick up & 300 pound barrel of pork and put it on her shonider and wakes her- self generally useful. I was cvren of painful Goitre by MIN. ARD’S LINIMENT. Chatam Ont. Byarp McMvtuix I was cureD of Inflammation by MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT. Walch, Ont. Mrs W. W. Jounson I was cured of Facial Neuralgia by MINARD’S LINIMEN I’, Parkdale, Ont. J.H. Baitey Elizabeth Rider Wheaton, ihe well kno vn prison evangelist, has visited every prison in every important city in the world She has become kuown to mort railroad men and receives annual pasees over all te large limes in this country. Minard’s Liniment the best Hair Restorer Mrs Cetheriue Whitcomb,88 years old, a hile and hearty resident of Galesburg, Mich, and a bride of 1834, was with her father, a Mr Earl, when io 1832 his new log cabin was the first in the forest be- tween Kalamazoo and Goguac prairie. — ——— Minard’s Lipiment is the best Mrs Emily Warren Roebling, wife of Colone! Wash‘ngton A Roebling of Brook-~ lyn bridge fame, is attaining distinction as a lecturer on topics interesting to club women. Minard’s Liniment Cures LaGrippe Now W lliam Waldorf Astor is claiming to be an American citizen, This is one of the unpleasant results of the war. We were perfecily contented to have Whiiliam ashamed of us.— Washington Post. Minard’s Liniment for Rheumatism Arithmetic. Common School Arithmetic, Wm. T. Kennedy, Principal of Halifax byademy, & Peter O’Hearn, Principal AcSt.Patrick’s High School, Halifax. cf Part I l5c Part IT l5c Part It lic All three parts bound in one vol 40c Academic Arithmetic, being Part Four of the Prog ‘sive School Series of Arithmetics by W. T. Kennedy and Peter O’Hearn, Tenders for Lease ctl) Mime Hillsborough Skating Rink, For ensuing Skating Seascn from Noy 20th inst to Ist of May next, will be received uv to 15th November inst at noon. Address under cover marked “Tender for lease of Skating Rink. A. A, BARTLETT 254 2 weeks eod Sec Treas ~— NOVEMBER 8 1898 C9 9000000 0000000010000 OOH ~ -VOOCC-OD000019000089 FROM INDIA AND CEYLON ELEPHANT BRAND PURITY AND STRENGTH ee ee ee ee atin y%e Combined with flavour, make Tot/ey’s Elephant Brand Indo Ceylon Packet Teas, favorites the world over. ‘These qualities and the: iow prices have mace them known as Best of Tea Value Sold in lead packets only. Retail pri-~ on every packet, 0002) 25cC. TO $1.00 PL Lb, si your grocer cannot supply you, write us and we will see your order is filled oJ iw .. ; JOSCPH TCTLEY & CO., London, Eng., Canadian Head Office, 14 Lemoine WeGlaim To have a stock ot men’s Overeoats Ulsters, »na_ Reefers secondto none in the city, Our lines at $3.75 $4.50 $5.50 $6.00 are worth a great deal more as you will see if you inspeccour stock, Well trimmed well finished well made equal in every respect to Custam made at less than half the price. Moatrezl | | 4 J. B. Madonali & Best place to buy Clothing and Becots, Co J S242 444h44 4444444444464 SILVERWARE That Will Wear Right Tea Sets consisting of Tea Pot, Coffee Pot, Sugar, Cream and Spoon Holders. Trays, 2alad Bowls, Cake Baskets, Buiter and Pickle Dishes. ALSO IN SOLID SILVER, FINE 6000S 5 o'clock Spoons, Tea Spoons, Souvenir Spoons, Oyster Forks Cheese Scoops, Cold Meat Forks, Tea Bells, Thimbles, Hew stses2Z2Z24 Tv ” “: Baking The cheapest ladies’ Watch that we think would be worth buying, $4.00, better ones $7.50 to 350,00. Watches fer Boys, $2.75 to 16.00, Watches for men $5.00 te 100.00. Beautifal Rings Any Birthday Stone Ring mace to Order Nearly every one knows we ace the pioneers in the spectacle busines and in keep up to date in our stock of spectacles and eyeglasse Ii. W. TAYGOR, Victoria Jewelry Store Nearly opposite Post Office Charlotiretown, P. E. I. Pig FF SSE SSE ES ES ESE EEE EEE —— eee FF FV 99S FF HF EFF PTET TVET TTT TTY CAHAAASSASSAASPARSAARARA? ¥ \ ™ — * — iD! BoE NEW Coons Flannelletes Cloakings Hosiery Underclothing Dress Goods T J HARRIS LONDON HOUSE