arrewaer oe Yr” — sme en Modern Languages, History, Philosophy, Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Botany, 4otlogy. Geology. These c urses are open also to P- RTIAL otUDENT without Mrtric- ulation. tin the Facuity of Applied Seience the ‘ courses in Civil. Meckhan tl. Electrical, and Mining Engineering. Ch stry, and Archi- tecture, are also oper PARTIAL STU “4EN Ts withort Matriculc tion sExaminations for 20 FIRST YEAR EN TRANCB EXHIBITIONS it he FAOULTY OF ARTS, rangivg trom 86). 0 $200. will be heid on ihe i5th September at Montreal. St. John, a B,, Halifax, Char.ottetown, st. John’s, THE DAiLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, SEPTEMBER 14 1898 — There is a star that points every woman to the path -// way of happiness. It is the “Star of fealth.”” It is the luty of every mothet o point out this star wend indicate this pathy There are too many un healthy women in th appy-——too many un. world. At every women meet alone, the ss and nervousness srathering where story is heard of sickn and despondency The woman who suffe a mistake to c sin this way makes 1e average obscure elt msuit physician. If she does se, the « hances ate that she is told that her trouble is nervous- ness or insomnia or indigestion or heart trouble. It does not happen very often that this diagnosis is currect When by some fortunate chance she is cold the truth, that she is suffering from w akness and disease of the distinctly feminime organism, she is told at the same time that she must submit inations and local ing to a sensitive cessary. seek the advice of i wide reputation. to the obnoxious exan treatment so embarras woman. All this is unr The wise woman will seme spectalist of wor av to her daughters. , for women known *rescription. This n the delicate and ake maternity pos- kness, disease, in- lammation and de- that wonderful medicin as Dr. Pierce’s Favorite medicine acts directly « important organs that n sidie. It cures all we: ternal ulceration and in bilitating drains. Jt has transformed thon- sands of weak, suffering women into healthy, happy, robust wives. It is for sale by all good medicine dealers. Never fail to cure constipation — Dr. Pleasant Pellets. Pierce's Dr. R. V. Pierce issuch aman. For thitty vears he has been chie! consulting physi- ; ac? TE ad ' i cian to the Invalids fotel and Surgical | Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y¥ During that | time, with the assistance ofa staff of emi- | nent physicians, he has treated thousands | of ailing women. He is the inventor of | } McGill University, Montreal JS-9 SSE SESSION ] Matric ulation Examination, preliminary to the various Courses of S:udy, will be held as under: *Faculty of Arts (includir g the Donaida = -speci:l Course lor Women. +Faculty of Applied Scien e} Faculty of medicine. Faculty of Law .. . Faculty of Com~arative M edi cine and Veterinary S« ience, Sat, 17th Sept Thurs, 15th Sept Tues. 6th Sept. *The Revised Curriculu'a in the Faculty of Arts comprises cowrses 1 Classics, English, Nfid., aud other centres: The McGILu NoSMAL opeurd on Ist September. Particulars of Examuin¢ the (aleadar, containing t» Conditions of Entrance Courses ef Study, Regulations for Degrees Exhibitions and Scholarships, Fees, ete., may oe obtained on application to W. VAUGHAN, Secreta “cHOoOOoL will be re- ions, and copies of ull informat on as wed&sat OOO O88 OO08 <>» 6906 0004 00 3 MONEY TO LOAN. : On Farm Property also on Real ; Estate within the limits of the city In sums of from twote five bundred doi'ars at a reduction on current rates of interest. J. H. Reddin, Solicitor Cameron Block . COME OO HO OL OO T. 00-00 008 S060 NEWFOUNDLAND The Most Picturesque Summer: Resort in Anierica SPORTSMAN'S : PARADISE. THE : i : a “very river and lake along the line of the Newfoundland Railwav abounds with trout and salmon. The Shortest Sea Voyage. | Quickest and safest ronte to any part is | via the KOYAL MAIL STEBMER | “¢ et UE Classed A 1 at Lloyds) At Leaves North Sydney every | <s FP. Tuesday, Thursday and Satur- } San day evening on arrival of the | 1.0.R.express. Returning leaves Port Aux Basque every Monday, Wednesaay ®nd Friday evenings on arrival of St. Jchn Cxpress, FARE: Charlottetown to St.John’s, Nfld. Pirst Claes $20.05 Second Class 10.36 | Returp 33.81 ! Through tickets on sale at all stations on the LO.R.,C.P.R. and Str. Nav. Co. | The seu trip will be only 6 Hours. For al] information apply to R, G. REID, St. Jolun’s Nfld,; or ARCHIBALD & CO., Agents, ii North Sydney, C.B. | being laid, housebolders would greatly LINCOLN’S GIFT TO A FIRE BRIGADE The Sons and Daughters of Illinois held a mee?ing in Boston at which Vice President Henry Haynie told this story of Lincoln: ‘The fire hose company of Spring- field was very proud of its well equip- ped fire apparatus, and, desiring to pro- cure some extra supplies, subscription papers were sent around. The small boys, myself among the number, were given a share in the work. I went up to some dusty rooms over @ grocery and entered the law office of Lincoln. He asked me numberless questions, and I had to tell him all I knew of this fire brigade and ite members. Then he said: “Well, I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll go home to suppes— Mrs. Lincoln is gener- ally good natured after supper—and then I'll tell ber I’ve been thinking of giving $50 to the brigade, and she’ll say, ‘‘Abe. will you never have any sense? Twenty dollars is quite enough.’’ Se tomorrow, my boy, you come around and get your $20.’ ’’—Chicago Times- Herald. Cabs In Berlin. When an American enters a cab in Berlin for the first time, he is said to be absorbed for half an hour in studying the impressive notice hung up there- in for the benefit of passengers. It reads, literally translated, thus: ‘‘No passage money has the passage guest to pay, if to him not on the mounting of the cab the valid passage tiekets, on height of the for a simple passage to be paid pas- sage money, by the coachman down reached become are.’’—Chicago Inter Ocean. Not His Fault. ‘‘Fweddy, why don’t you let your mustache grow?’’ ‘*Why don’t I let it? Good heavens, deah boy, I do, but it won’t.’’—Chica- go Record. The natives of Siberia prepare a sin- gularly intoxicating beverage from @ common mushroom. Good cooking was introduced into Gngiand by the Normans. Dr. A. W. CHase aT Work on His Last GREAT REMEDY. DOCTORS FAIL WHEN THE CREAT PHYSICIAN CURES. THREE YEARS IN BED From Kidney Disease—Although a Man of Three-Score and Ten, Dr. Chase’s Kidney - Liver Piils Gave Him Back Perfect Health. This is to certify that I was sick in bed the most of the time for three years with kidney disease. I took several boxes of pills—different kinds —and a great many other kinds of patent medicines; besides that I was under treatment by four different doc- tors during the time and not able to | work. I began to take Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, and since that time have been working every day although | @ man nearly 70 years of age. Dr. | Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills have cur- ed me. JAMES SIMPSON, Newcomb Mills, Ont. If the Kidneys are not in a perfectly clean and healthy condition, the blood becomes impregnated with impurities and a decay of the Kidneys soon takes place. Bright’s Disease, Dia- betes, Gravel, Stone in the Bladder, Inflammation of the Bladder, and a long List of Kidney diseases become seated, and sooner or Jater in so many instances end fatally Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills cure all Kidney troubles. Sold by ell dealers, price 25 cents per box. “_ Notice to Householders. Along streets where Sewer Pipe is oblige by informing the Engineer or In- epector of the Commissioners in charge, by pointing out the place verbally or by a mark where they would prefer the con- necting pipe to enter their premises, should they afterwards decide to make application therefor. By order D. McLEAN, Secretary Office of Commissioners of Sewers and Water Supply, Sept. 7th, 1898. 206 2i CAPTURE OF A VETERAN —_——- ““Say, mister, have you seen a mean lookin little cuss with a blue suit an brass buttons on hangin raoun here this week?’’ said a tall woman to the clerk at a Lewiston hotel Friday. **Don't know that Ihave. How mean does he look!’’ was the reply. ‘‘He pertends to be a vitran,’’ con- tinued the woman regarding the clerk over her glasses, ‘‘an ginrally about Grand Army time he disappears from his wife’s bed an board an goes off an licks the hull south. I want to see him. I want him to come home.”’ Up the corridors came the sound of laughter. A party of veterans were telling tales of war. A familiar voice smote upon the air. The woman’s lips closed tightly. **I tell you, comrades, I jes’ enjoyed that air fight at Chancellorsville more’n I did the hull durned muss from fus to las’. You see, Gin’rul Jackson was off on to our lef’ a-trampin like the very devil to outflank the Union lines. That air mornin my cap’n he sez to me, sez he, ‘Jake, you take a detachment o’ five men an go aout an see what Stonewall’s doin! Ef you suspect—ef you suspect,’ sez he—‘that there’s any kind o’ sneakin er beatin aroun the bush goin on, you jes’ lay low an kyhoot for the Union lines.’ ‘Well, sez I’’’— Just then a woman shoved through the throng and linked her arm in his. The words died on his lips. The fight died out of his eyes. A spasm passed over his countenance that left it asickly green, the color of the hide of a sour cucumber, ‘‘Jabez,’’ said the woman, ‘‘be you here a-lyin ag’in? What made you take that air hoss an drive him here to this G. A. R. spree? Hev you been a-drink- in? Hev you been a-forgettin of your commandment not to lie? Did you tell these gentlemen that as fur as you got to war was to Augusta, an thet you got so feared over there thet you was sick for three weeks? Gin’rul Jackson! You little lyin thing you! Did you tell the Grand Army men that you was drafted an thet they couldn’t find you fer six weeks where you was a-hidin in the woods? ‘‘Come home, Jabez—the caows and the pigs need you.”’ And the little old man in the blue coat looked up into the woman's face with a gray, misty, tearful look in his eyes. The glad light that had been in them was gone. His little bit of glory was at an end. Poor old fellow—after all!—Lewiston (Me.) Journal. BONAPARTE’S DAUGHTER. The Princess Charlotte Spent Many Happy Months In America. ‘*Queen Julie never joined her hus- band, Joseph Bonaparte, the fugitive king of Spain, in this country,’’ writes William Perrine in The Ladies’ Home Journal, ‘‘but late in 1821 their daugh- ter, the vivacious young Princess Char- lotte, determined to console her father in his exile. She arrived at Philadel- phia in the ship Ruth and Mary, com- manded by Captain Mickle. The ship's wharf was covered with a crowd anx- ious to see her. Only 19 years old, of highly animated temperament and de- lighted at the ending of the 40 days’ voyage, the young girl was in an ecstasy of pleasure. She waved her fur bonnet at the persons on the wharf with such careless delight that it fell from her hands over the ship’s rail and into the river. In her transport of enthusiasm she snatched Captain Mickle’s hat from his head, gayly placed it on her own and saluted ber admirers anew. ‘‘Joseph was highly pleased with Charlotte, whom he lmd not seen since she was 13, and tried te give her as much compensation as he could for the pleasures of the continental life she had left behind. He took her to Long Branch and Saratoga, but he soon discovered that her chief taste was for painting. At the old gallery of the Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia were exhibit- ed several studies and landscapes from her brush.”’ a Ay Oup Axnp Weti Triep Remepy.— Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething with perfect succes. It soothes the child softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind, colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Is pleasant to the taste. Sold by druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrap, and take no other kine Soap! soap! Use Ktionprke Bar tle great Laundry and scouring soap. marvel of cheapness unsurpassed n excellence. Use Royvat Oak in the Laundry. Happy homes, easy quick work, snow white clothes. Use Jupitre for the toilet and light Laundry. Makes child’s play of washday. J.D LAPTHORN & CO. htown So Works. one M ACB Ax Mid Summer Sale. _ No exaggeration, we both talk and give Sargains; with this special list of goods and prices we have no occasion to exaggerate, as a call wiil convince the most fastidious. 1¢:0 gloves Better glove Sunshades, former price Silk cord for fancy work worth 10c, now 2c Fancy black braid for dress trimming le, 3c, dc per yard, worth from Ladies undervests, Hooks and eyes Silk dress laces worth Table doyles worth Colored Trimming silk from 10c"to 25¢ yard worth double what we ask for them, Black sewing silk Colored twist worth from 4c to 6 per yard, now 2c. H2mstitshel hdkfs Lace trimmed 10, 18, 22, good value 10c, worth 20c 12c, for 5¢ 25c, for 12c 90c, now, 25c Prints 5c per yd Black and colored sateens, former price => now 12 to 15c per yard Colored and black vsilk elvet $ pric 50c for 25¢ yard 75¢ for 25c yard 1.00 for 50c yard 1.65 for 80c yard 10 to 25¢ le card Aberdeen skirt cleser 10c, now 2c : : ~ | Dress Goods-—see our prices on a few lin ss 10c, now 5c 33¢ for 1l5de yard 36c for 19c yard 55¢ for 29¢ for 30cyade fur 32c yard 63c for 40c¢ yard 1.45c tor 75c yard le skein 4, worth 10c DPD. MACKA Cost ef Getting Kiondike Gold. What does an exodus of 100,000 to the Klondike mean to the business of the country? I have figured it out on the basis of cost and proportion as as- certained, and it is this: That each man of them would average first and last an expenditure of $600, making a grad total of $60,000,000. The United States railroads would get $5,000,000 of this; Seattle merchants and hotel keep- ers, for outfits and transient guests, $25,000,000; the prospector’s home town aud towns en route to Seattle and other Pacific coast points, $5,000,000; ship companies, for transportation to Alaska, $10,000,000; for the transpor- tation of freight over passes and in Alaska, $15,000,000, This would represent only the actual needs of this number of prospectors and would cause a large increase in other businesses directly connected with it. It means that in 1898 $60,000,000 will be spent in search of gold in the yellow creeks, and in the same year not more thau one-fourth of that amount will be produced. But the output is likely to come nearer the expense as each year goes by and in a few years to exceed it. — Review of Reviews. Cure all liver ilis, bilious- es ness, headache, sour stom- a ‘ Is tion. They act easily, with- out painor gripe. Sold byalldrvuggists. 25 cents, ach, indigestion, constipa- The only Pills to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla ae — LACURSIONS TO ~> BOSTON. as S11.00—% PLANT LINE. Excursion Tickets will be issued by Plant line of Steamships, from Sept 20th to October 20, Charlottetown to Boston snd return, good toreturn by any steamer within 30 days from date of issue. RATES - Charlottetown to Boston and return $11.00. W. W.CLARK, Agent, Teeth-«= Should be brushed thoroughly, care- fully, regularly, then can the owner de- »ctreadily and more easily, in its inciep- mtstage, the deadly decay which soover o: later attacks nearlyeverybody’s teeth. When you discover the cavaties don’t delay, but come at once and have them filled at Sunnyside Dental Parlors. DR. AYERS Shaw & Beairsto The Practical Plumbers Are prepared todo ali kinds of j»bbing and wil] be pleased to furnish estimates on al] branches of the trade. 1f you are building it would be well to get their prices They are the practica) plumbers. CITY - HARDWARE - STORE THE GPAND SOUVENIR we Keep out the flies with our wire, Buy General] Hardware, Stores, Paints, Oils, Glass, Paper, Fence Wire, Farming Tools and lots of other lines in the Hardwere Trade. Ca — we -¢— ’ DES ot GE wee Don’t forget the Que- a a = —_ Ye a | lew S SD e- fo ; ! bec Heater, but, and a great big but, you must buy for cash. Stoves, Paints, Hardware, 0vV—V—_— Oils, Good Goods, Low Prices, Courteous Treat- ment, Prompt Attention Alero a full line of steel and Full line of Oxtord Stoves Ranges iron stoves and ranges, ) BR, KB. NORTON & CO LTD We have had long experience in handli i : 2 idling : : Cetus: ead anaes - : P nant we Prince Edward Island’s famous ysters, and § your consignments. e have facilities second to none for handiing same wém John Caldwell & Co. Produce Commercial Merchants, Imperters and Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Fruits. References Bank of Toronto 171 to 175 McGill Street Montreal and Commission agencies. Cerrespondence Solicited. Cable addresses Fruitcald, 107 3mo dy&wk os New this Season a ee ama ema MADE TO WIN They are great sellers; the way they are made makes them sell; all solid leather, full ot style and beauty, unsurpassed for the money. Dongola buttoned Oxfords, Box Calf Boots. These shoes are built on the—most progresive lines and are gems for the price. Weeks & Warren reer eae ges mgm pt a agenda ennai Ul ’ } nom A A a Sac Lanse agpENNNNRMRe es ST