e 8 @ © Cor a= Ww * ~* gwhat of the first term of this long cor = ; * L. sf the number's rot. Gill: he t and ind for aye Sey. sweet, look up! You think ycu'll Jota? Oh, bliss that crowns my life! ou shail be all the off od be, besides—my wife Harper's Bazar. ucers A GREAT PROBLEM. Missing Link Between Inorganic and Organic Life. One great life problem remains which » doctrine of evolution dees not touch. Se origin of species, genera, orders i dasses of beings thr.agh endless smutations is in a sense explained, w? Whence came that primordia! nism Whose transmuted descendants ke up the existing faunas and floras the globe? here was a time, soon after the doo- of evolution gained a hearing, sien the answer to that question seem- to some scientists of authority to been given by experiment. Mecur- sto a former belief and repeating e eatlier experiments, the director | the museum of natural history M F. A. Pouchet, reached the melasion that organic beings are spon- generated about us constantly the familiar processes of putrefac- which were known to be due to agency of microscopic bacteria. But #862 Lovis Pasteur proved that this ing spontaneous generation is in ity due to the existence of germs in sir. Notwithstanding the conclu- of these experiments, the claims Pocbet were revived in England years later by Professor Bastian, then the experiments of John Tvn- i fally corroborating the results of gave a final quietus to the claim ontaneous generation’’ as hitherto tlated. for the moment the matter But the end is not yet. Fauna fora are here, and, thanks to La- and Wallace and Darwin, their pment, throngh the operation of “secondary causes’’ which we rs of uature, has been proximal- plained. The lowest forms of life been linked with the highest in en chains of descent Meautime, th the efforts of chemists and the gap between the inorganic the organic worlds, which once i almost infinite, has been con- narrowed. Already philosophy row a bridge across that gap. But ive science, which builds its own has not yet spanned the chasm, Mithough it appear. Until it shall done so the bridge of organic evo- is not quite complete, yet even ttands today it is the most stupen- Mientific structure of our century. Smith Williama, M D., in yr's Magazine. Tempered by Mound Kuilders. A. Schloth has received from a in Savannah, ls., a long and ‘spearhead, a smal] knife, an awl Saeedle taken from one of the pre- Mmounds near that city. The tools e all of tempered copper, and when aed by a thread ring like steel. been hammered out and tem- and after having been buried in for no one knows how long Swain their temper. The mound i, Who had disappeared from the the earth before Columbus dis- this country, knew how to tem- vet, an art which no man on 4a8 how, although many have en- i for years to discover the proc- Specimens are found in but of the mounds opened, the imple § fornd being generally of stone. ot has a fine collection of rel- mound builders and of the aborig- of this coast andl values these tem- 4, eer articles above them all. — ad Oregonian. i esenae _— PHOSPHODINE Great English Remedy. Weakness, Emissions,Sperm atorrhea, Impotencyanda efectsof Abuse or Excesses > Mental We rry, excessive use end Afte ©f Tobacec, Optumor Stimw - , _ lants, which soon. lead to In ; wanity, Consumption and an early grave. is the Se wis © Wood Company, Boly . Windsor. Oat., Canada. tghes Charlottetown Gro. by titties aed 0 r arrister, tc., Siz Packages Guaranteed to Promptly and permanently Cure all forms of Nervous over SS years in thousands of suly Reliable and Ilonest Medicine for Wood's Phosphodine; If Wie — mecicine in place of this, Price, sand we will send by return 9 package, ¢1; six, ¢5, One will ure. Pamphiets free to any address, McLEAN, 0. ©. SeLate aead, Rovin “This CHARLOTTETOWN. P. There is a saying Opinion it goes TQ NTIS OF LT PE See eae towards is True Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise t well fitting apparel is most marvellous. clothes that ctothes, are uot low. wear and clothes Men's Clothing, AD ] worth $5.50. now §3. heavy blue black Ulsters, storm collar, tweed lining, »0 all- wool fibre lined Waterproof Ulsters, shades, worth $6.75, now $4.50. J50 Ulsters, mixed shades and qualities at a big dis, 24 blue beaver Overcoats, very fine; d. b. worth $12.54 ind $13, for 9. Men’s Pants, 75c. $1, 1.50, 2, 2.50, 3, 3.50, 4,4.50. These are no old shop worn out of season kfo themselves r | that do | | | he Public, may speak free.”—Evripipes. TTT are PLE NI ae it shough, It represents not; the s ; between good clothes We keep the good kind only, but that doesn’t mean that the prices You can easily realize that by a glance at tlese offerings Single Cepies two cents, 8 | i a Ot fo” o . co i od 9 %, 8 aw that “the coat doesn’t make the man.” a long way But in our humble The transformation made by difference between and. poor Youths’ and Boys’ Clothing 30 youths’ Overceats, mixed shades and qualities, from f. $2.90 to $7.00. Children’s Overeeats.and Ulsters. Sach a variety prices we cannot enumerate them, but we promise they a the best values ever shown in Charlottetown Youths’ Ulsters, heavy all wool chameis. fibre lined } storm collar, worth $5 50, now $3: 50 Boys’ Knicker Pants, 45¢ Girls’ heavy blue serge Reefers, $1 50: goods, but just the goods the season demands and the prices—well, McKay Woolen Company LEADERS OF VALUE Fat is absolutely neces- [memes vseesuesessecen sary as an article of diet. If it is not of the right kind | it may not be digested. Then the body will not get enough of it. In this event there is fat-starvation. Scott’s Emulsion supplies this needed fat, of the right kind, in the right quantity, and in the form already partly digested. Asa result all the organs and tissues take on activity. 50¢. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto, 50 YEARS: EXPERIENCE DesiGns CopyrricHTs &c. nyone sending a sketch and description may a ~ ascertain our opmion free whether am invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strietly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. recetve special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, mely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- ape ot ay scientific journal. Terms, $3 a Mil + four months, $L by all newsdealers. UNM & Co, 2s) mosern ew York Italian Ware House Cor. Crafton and Grt. G22. ts North side Queen Squarre De Kupyers and Herman Jansen Gentine Rottercam GIN. JGY & DAVIES, | roel Wine Merchants. a ; IF 11 INCHES MAKE ONE FOOT, 95 Feet Make (00. 900 Feet Make (000. > and it requires 18000 feet to build a certain house How much, 12 inches per foot, and like measure, would it take to $ build the same house? And what saving would there be if lumber were $ purchased at $10 per M, latter meas- ure iu preference to $8 per M of the first ? We sell all kinds of lumber by the latter table at reasonable pri es. TELEPHONE 181 JAMES BARRETT, Connolly’s Wharf. (nestion Now is where can we get a suitable Xmas present for the least morey. Below will be found a list of a fewof our cut prices for the Holidav Season only, which will enable von to decide at once, as the time is now short Eight day, half hovr, cathedral gong, striking Clocks, for $3.50 Silver Cake Baskets, (quadruple plate), 2.75 Napkin Rings, 50c up Spoon Holders and Pickle Disher, 1.50 A Waltham Waieh with Chain (good timekeepers) 7.50 Laates’ Genuine Gold Filled Walth am Watch, 15.00 Ladies’ Long Chains, warranted five vears, 3.00 Ladies’ Solid Gold Gem Rings, (heavy) 2.00 Breocher, Cuff Buttons, Stick Pins, Chains, Charm-, etc, at extraordinary low prices. R pairing promptly attended to by @ competent person. Clocks, Watches and Jewelry. c.G.J0RY JUBILEE O: A new and superior white soap — a mar- vel of beauty, pority and efficacy, the queen of fine Laundry, Toilet and Bath. Should you buy i. once you will always use and forever thank Jas D. Lepthorne & Co., Makers Makers of the Famous Royal Oak Soap. : {STAGE GLINTS:. **The Isle of Champagne, ”’ with Rich- ard; Go'den in the leading rale, has closed its season. Ferdinand Gottschalk has made a pro- nounced hit in London as Katzenjam- mer in ‘‘Never Again. ”’ The death in India is announced of Lizzie Byron, the only daughter of the once favorite dramatist, Henry J. Byron. Richard Strauss is the first German eom poser who will conduct works of his own at the Colonne concerts in Paris next winter. Meyerbeer’s ‘‘L’Africaine”’ is about to be produced at Alexandria by an Egyptian company, with an Arabic ver- sion of the libretto. Signora Duse is still in Paris, but will spend the winter in Italy, by ad- vice of her physicians. She will not ap- pear, it is said, until next spring. A new symphonic poem, entitled ‘The Corsair,’’ by Franz Kessel, was performed with much success at the niuth Gurzenich concert in Cologne. ‘‘Magda,’’ Sudermann'’s best play, was recently produced for the tirst time in Spain at the Princesa theater. in Bar- selona, in an excellent trauslation by- MM. Costa and Jorda. A very remarkable theatrical per- formance took. place the other day in, St. Andrew's hall, at Berlin. The play- the actors were deaf mutes. Mme. Rejane will appear at Berlin, in: Donnay's. ‘‘La Donloureuse,’’ in the original, unaltered version, the censors. having given, their consent for one per- formance of this drama obly. (OK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills, They <‘so relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Mearty Eating. A per- fect remeay for Dizziness, Nausea, Dr wsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They { Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable / Small Pill. Small Dose, Z _ Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills, \ ‘ * was Schiller'’s.‘*‘ Maria Stuart,’’ and alli’ WHALE HUNTING. First American Whaler Was. Accused ‘af! Soreery—Valuable Catches. The whale fisheries pursued for many years with great profit to the whalers of Massachusetts and Long Island are now: but a shadow of their former proportions. Forty years ago nearly 600 whaling ves-- sels sailed from: New Bedford, Mass.,, and returned with oil and whalebone: worth nearly $7,000,000. Whale oil then sold for:$2.75 a gallon and whale-- bone was worth $6 a pound. Now:that the whaling grounds have been denuded. of their riches, the docks of New Eed-. ford are almost Geserted of whalers, for few fishermen are hardy enough to ven- ture inte. antarctic waters, where the, rempants of formerly vast schools- af whales fled.for security. The whaling industry is; one of: the oldest in America. It was established in 1755. It reached its most profitable period 94 years later. Since 1860 it has been decreasing in importance and profit. Today it adds very little. to the wealth of New Bedford. A writer in The Fishing Gazette says: “One William Hamilton was the first person who killed whales on the New England coast. He was born in Scotland in 1643 and, coming to this country in the early part of his iife, took up his residence at Cape Cod, where he was persecuted by the inhabitants.for killing whales as one who dealt with. evil spir- its. Whaling was.afterward. carried on by a Mr. Paddock, who went to Nan- tucket about the middle of: 1680 for the purpose of instructing the English in the art of whaling in boats from the shore, which business continued good and profitable till the year 1760, when it diminished in consequence of the _ searcity of whales.. In 1718 whales were pursued on the ocean in small sloops and schooners of from 80 to 50 tons. The blubber was bronght home and tried or boiled in try houses. A few years later vessels of larger burden were employed and the oil boiled out in try works at sea. ‘“‘The most valuable catch ever made by a whaleship was that of the Onward, Captain Allen, which arrived in New Bedford after a 41 months’ cruise with a cargo worth over §275,000, of which the captain’s share was $33,000. The total value of the whole product of the whales brought into New Bedford dur- ing the 52 years for which a record has been kept is more than $145, 000,000. “The average ship, carrying a crew ‘of 30 hands, used to cost about $85,000. The ships were owned by companies, which supplied provisions and clothing and allthe necessaries of the voyage and advanced certain sums of money for tne captain and his crew to leave for the suppart of their families while they were away. No wages were paid to either the officers or the sailors, but each had his share in the proceeds of the voyage, and the balance was divided among the stockholders when they re- turned. The captains and mates were hardy New Englanders, but the crews were mostly Portuguese from the Cana- ry. Madeira and Azore islands.’’ CROFULA in its worst form yields to the biood cleansing power ci Hood’s Sarsaparills. Thousands ot cases have been perfectly CURED. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBEP 22. 4897. | LS eT el CS N©®: 20/- COR PTET pram, ¢ BE RSONAL. CHATS. Mine: Woltow of St; Petersburg is tryirg to found a new club which is to be devoted entirely to the hygenic de- velopment of woman. The Empress Eugenie lives in the most complete retirement at Farns- borough. She is much crippled by rheu- matism and very devout. The mikado of Japan, though pas- ' sionately fond of horse racing, allows 1 i Oooo no betting on his track and pursues the sport purely for sport’s-sake. Lerd Braxfield, a. Scotch judge, once said to an eloquent culprit at the bar, ‘*Ye’re a vera clever chiel, mon, but I’m thinkin ye wad: be nane the waur 0’ a. hangin.”’ Miss:Helen ¥. Boswell, the organizer and head of the Woman’s Republican movement in New York, is a mining engineer and ranks high asa mining draftsman. George W. Stephens, who made a great reputation as a war correspondent durfng the Greco-Turkish war, is a graduate of Balliol college, Oxford, and is not 28 years of age. So.Mayen is the first heir to an Afri- can throne that has graduated from an American college. He has received a diploma from the Cobb University school at Lewiston, Me: A Maine woman who. asxed the Rev. Elijah Kellogg hisage the other day was quickly answered by the author of ‘‘Spartacus:”’ “‘I do net tell my age. I say: lam.38. I am sure: of that.’’ Collis P. Huntington, the noted rail- Way man, maintains three palatial resi- cenees, which are kept in such perfect rnnning order that any one of them is ready for occupancy by his family at a moment’s notice. Professor Mahaffy of the University of Dublin said the other day that he ‘*doubted. whether, as the result of the educational movement of the last 30 years, the people of England are either happier or better.’’ Abraham Crabill, a sharpshooter in the Stonewall brigade, died at his home in. the Shenandoah valley recently. It is a well established fact that he fired the shot that killed: General Sedgwick, near Spottsylvania Court House. George Sand, tae noted Frenchwom- an. and writer, was really Mme. Dude- vant, and her relatives were so proud of hen literary success that they had the family name changed from Dudevant to Sand—the only instance of a nom de plume legally ousting the real name. Archduke Joseph, a cousin of the em- peror of Austria, not long since gave a banquet to his schoolfellows who at- tended the grammar school with him 50 years ago. There were nota great many of them left, but those present represented every walk in life, froma major general to a harness maker. The salt contained in pure, fresh fruits is bene- ficial to the system. The scarcity of fresh fruits in the winter time is often a cause of serious illness. The »* basis af ABBEY’S EFFERVES- CENT SALT is the salt ex- tracted from the juices of fresh fruits. It keeps you in excellent health the year ’round. All dreggists sell this standard English prepara- tion at 60c a large bottle; trial size, 25c, Give The only food that will build; the Baby up a weak cons;. a titution. gradu-~ 3 Chance ally but surely & ¢ Martin’s :Cardinal Food a simple, scientific and. highly nutritive preparation for infants, delicate children and, invalids. KERRY WATSON 4 CO., megenicrons, “ MONTREAL. © SOS OEhOSOGD Toe 7 WARE - HOUSES TO LET PEAKE'S WHARF (TO 1) ' Wharfage storage and yard- age, at reasonable rates, Nov. 4 a” TT: i, CC , ee eR eae nee ae ae 2 pee * AG te a SMG POLE iB = Meet = oo sg age * FIR IT BC DEI 1 ee 7 ef ee = mS - _— SERS My LO ram ae