> SURE CURE ay FOR ALL SKIN DISEASES During Seventy years NY-AS-SAN has never MEDICAL ADVICE. e a ; ta: failed in si any case. POSTAL), WWanted--The address CARO | » : FOR of every suflerer in socLeT@) Ame ica THE NYASSAN MEDICINE CO.,, rRURO N. 8 Mention this paper when you write. 56 & w Pp E Island Railway Oa and after MONDAY, 4th Oct, 1897, th. trains of this Railway will run daily, (Sun lays excepted,) as under. , frains Out- : Z Trains In ward. Read STATIONS. ward. Read lown, up. e. M.jA. mw. P.mM.iA. M. 3 30 g 15 - Charlottetown ... ¢ an 9 40 3 52) ¢ mM) -- Royalty Tunction. 616919 4 42) 7 93 --North Wiltshire. | 5 go 8 30 4 58) 7 19 .. Hunter River 5 | 8 15 & 34) 7 97,.-Bradalbane. 5 Ogi 7 37 5 44 7 43 (NE oo évine 5 0) 13 5 SO, 7 5g .. Freetown ....... 452: 714 6D sa7 x ee: 4 oni 6 54 65g an AP oc, v. 4 15) 6 20 1 40 g a5.be F PO UE 4 oot 00 02) g ag'--Miscouche ...... 3 4210 87 2D, 9 17)- . Wellington ...... | 3 28)10 10 3 18 9 45 -- Port Hill ......-) 3 00) 9 21 4 33.10 25): O'Leary eevereees 2 11! 8 Oo 5 01,10 51)° . Bloomfield ...... 1 55| 7 38 5 on 15 .-Alberton.... eoee) 1 20) 7~Mm 6 4511 55 oo BUND coce woes 12 50 5 55 ae eS Pp. M.|A. M. A. Mir. Mw. A. M.|P. M. 6 30. 8 10) Charlottetown . 910 410 6 3). 3 24;.-Rovalty Junction § 59| 3 50 7 23 2 473|.-Bedford ........ 8 32) 317 $ 25 415 «Mt Stewart......./ § 10) 2 45 8 45 4 45 Morell 7 17| 200 9 14) 5 04 St. Peters ....-- 7 15) 1 30 5 O01 & ax|..Bear River cooeee, 6 41/12 43 1@ 45, 6 10 -Souris.... .. 6 10)12 00 A. M.iP. M.| A. MIP. M. A. M./P. M. A. MIP. M. 810 4 15) :Mt. Stewart ..: | 8 05) 2 25 & 22. & OR|..Cardigan....... 71312 © 45 5 20)..Georgetown ... | 6 55) 1 Oo A. MP M.| 14. M.IP. M, re. ¥.| — ot. 5 ._Emerald ..... | 72 840 |.-Cape Traverse ..| 63) e 4. , A. M. - i re ee ee “alnearerun by Eastern Stanctar’ Time. G A SHARP. D.POTTINGE, Superintendent, Gen Mer Govt. Rvs. Charlottetown. Voncton, N B. Railway Office,June., 1897 HORSE TALKS. During the season just passed Joe Patchen has traveled 11,000 miles by rail. The California 83-year-old pacer Ar- thur W, 2:15 54, stands 16.15, hands high. Ethel Downes is the first direct de- scendant of Goldsmith Maid to break into the 2:10 list. The crack 3-year-old trotter of the Pacific coast in 1597 is Nordean,.2:17%, by Norris, 2:2:214. During her racing career Ella T has been shipped over 30,000 miles, and in 67 starts has won. money 60 times. If you think we have mot come very near reaching the speed limit, consider the fact that not a single new 2:04 pacer has appeared this year. Pearl C, 2:061,, while dethroned as queen of the pacing turf, still holds the champion half mile track race record at 2:08, made at Muncie, Ind., the past season. Rilma’s winnings the past season foot op $14,262.50, and a mark of 2:10, not to mention those sums which came out of the pool box at Detrvit, Readville, Lex- jnogton and elsewhere. Grace Hastings, 2 “US, is to be perma- pently retired from the turf and Will be | it | bred in the spring to Baron Wilkes. is. said sbe will be trained and driven gainst her preseut mark while she is vith foal Old Esther, thoroughbred mare, by 2x press, dam of the splendid campaign- ng 3-year-old Expressive, 2:12',, suother representative in the 2:30 list, her son Kelly having recently taken a mark of 2:27. Julia Coulter, 4. by Wilkes Boy, and Kitty L, by Lancewood Chief, are the trotters that will scon cross the Atlantic. ¢an trot in 2:12,,while ber record is slower than :20. 2:183 among —_———— iTEMS OF INTEREST. As many as 36,000 people have been accommodated in~St. Paul’s cathedral ou festive occasions. The county of Lancashire, England, has 1,700 firms engaged in the cotton business, with 72,000,000 spindles. Ia a provincial town in France a strange marriage took place recently. Every one interested bore the name of Desplas—the bride, bridegroom, the mayor, the witnesses and all the brides- maids. | i ) | i THE DAILY EXAMINER, MADE THE EARTH TREMBLE. A Meteor That Left Three Giant Inter- locked Cloud Rings In the Sky. Some interesting information con- cerning the recent fall of a big meteor is furnished by R. L. Fisk, who recent- ly returned from a twe months’ trip in- to the game districts on the Blackfoot 1 Flathead. Speaking of the occur- nee, Mr. Fisk had this to say ‘We were bound igfo the Flathead courtry in search of bi¥rgame. The par- ty consisted of George Miller, postmas- ter at Lincoln; my brother and myself. We broke camp above Ovando on Fri- day morning, Sept. 17, and took what is known the ‘falls trail’ up the south fork of Montour creek. The trail is an awful one for pack horses even, ind progress was very slow. Just before mrt r as 6 o'clock in the afternoon we halted at ! some old elk wallows direetly on watershed. Here we unpacked, built a fire and started to cook supper. ‘*About 20 minutes past 6 the ground underfoot shook and vibrated, and we heard distinctly three reports, the first sounding more like the crash of some falling monster cliff weighing thousands of tons from some one of the numerous the | peaks surrounding us than anything | else, and the other two the ringing ech- oes sent back from the steep mountain sides. The horses even noticed the trem- ling of the earth and stood with point- ed ears and dilated nostrils, uttering startled snorts. somewhat facetiously : My brother remarked ‘**Get down on your marrow bones, | you fellows; the mountains are turning over.’ ‘*We stood awaiting the next act, dis- cussing the prebable origin of the strange noise. Happening to glance sky- | ward, straight north of our camp we | beheld a peculiarly shaped cloud whit- | | every woman ish gray in colour and resembling three interlocked rings. es we could make this out ever so clear- ly. ‘*We suddenly tumbled tothe fact that we had witnessed or rather felt the results attending a meteor’s fall. Mr. Miller looked at his watch and an- nounced the time as 6:23. From our camp it appeared to us that the meteor had fallen on the range we were then on. We didn’t know any one else had witnessed its fall until we got back in- to civilization about a week ago, and all of us counted on giving the interest- ing occurrence to the press. The smoke cloud was discernible as long as day- light lasted. With our fieldglass- | ‘‘The next day, just after we struck | Salmon Trout creek, a tributary of the north fork of the Big Blackfoot, we en- countered a bunch of Flathead Indians. They were Louie Ashley, a half breed; Kootenai, a stepson of the old Flathead chief Arlee, and anther brave whose Indian name meant coyote or some other of the wild beasts of the region, I have forgotten what. They had their squaws and children with them, All were ex- cited, and Ashley remarked: ** ‘Indian much scared. Think world ming to end. Get away from here.’ ‘*They were unanimous in the opin- ion that the meteor, for we told them that was what it was, had fallen on the range or watershed between the North Fork, Willow creek, a tributary of the South Fork of Flathead and Montotr creek, and I believe such was the case. ‘It is easy to account for the story that it strack near Hay Stack Butte in this county. A circle drawn with a cir- cumference of 50 miles with its central poiut on Willow creek will cover the headwaters of a dozen different streams flowing in as many different directions. It is but eight miles from Willow creek over on to the headwaters of Sun river. “If the formation of the country counts for anything in deciding just where it fell, it was somewhere in the range I have referred to. Iron predomi- nates, with considerable slate and lime and other baser rock. I honestly be- lieve if any one- wants to discover that meteor that the place to look for it is in the big range situated as stuted. I do not believe that the meteor as a whole landed anywhere. The first report was in midair and then rained its broken fragments on all sides. We estimated the smoke cloud to be about 50 miles above the range and compasses placed it directly north, From the vibration of the ground we coneluded that some of the fragments struck within a few miles of our camp. **Several days later we met two white men named McKnight and Betts, both well known at Ovando, who were cut- has It is said the latter ting hay in a big meadow on Willow creek expecting to winter stock on shares, though they had not solved the problem as to how they were to get the witnessed the strange scene'of the Fri- day befcre, and that it appeared south- west of their cabin.”’ Mr. Miller and R. C, Fisk both con- | } stock in there, and both said they had | very lear, as if the meteor bad exploded | vortnbpern racic pa HeraRi. eon the la.—Hel lou of Arle west of Missor An Obliging Ex-President. A story the rounds that a few days ago M. Casimir-Perier and his son while cycling between Sens and Mon- tereau stopped at a village inn and ask POEs HUES ed for lunch. ‘‘Nothing to give you,’ said the landlady, ‘‘but sardines and es.’’ **Can you not add a beetst ak?’ “Tmpossible. If we had acycle and somebody to ride it, I could send fi the meat, but you know that 1 woul take: an hour to go to the butcher’s and back.’’ ‘‘If that’s your only reason,’”’ said the sident, ‘‘we can ovcr ue the difficulty. In a moment ! 1 Master Casimir-Perier were agai i their stee! horses, and the ex-presi- dent in time fetched back a succulent loin steak.—Paris Letter in Londap hews Was there ever a women in the wide world CHAKLOTTETOWN, D&eCEMBER who did not yearn to be the mother of a | bright faced. happy, healthy, laughing, rol- licking child? If there ever was such a woman, she was a bad one, and while there are many thoroughly bad men, there are very few thoroughly bad women. It was God’s and Nature’s intention that shoul be the mother of healthy children. Tens of thousands of women defeat this beneficent design by their ignorance and neglect. from weakness and disease in a womanly They suffer | way, and take no measures, or the wrong | measures, to remedy it. vorite Prescription is a sure, speedy and permanent cure for all disorders of this description. It acts directly and only on the delicate and important organs that are the threshold of human life. It makes them strong, healthy, vigorous and virile. It heals ulceration, allays inflammation, soothes pain and tones and builds up the nerves. It banishes the trials of the period of impending maternity and makes baby’s entry to the world easy and almost pain. less. It does away with the dangers of motherhood and shortens the period of weakness and lassitude. It insures the little newcomer’s Health and a bountiful supply of nourishment. It transforms weak. sickly, nervous invalids into happy, healthy wives and mothers. Thousands of women have testified to its marvelous merf- its. A dealer is nota physician, and has no right to suggest a substitute for the prescrip- tion of an eminent specialist like Dr. Pierce Dr. Pierce’s Medical Adviser sent for 21 onex<ent stamps to cover customs and mail- tage eniy. Cloth binding 50 stamps, Ad- dress Dr. R. V. Pierce, Duffalo, N. _ oo iTeMS OF iNTEREST. Vesuvius being in eruption, a young German undertook to be cremated free by the voleano. He placed himself close to the crater, in the path of the lava, and then shot himself through the head. His body was found, however, before the lava reached it. Baden-Baden, having given up its gambling tables, is offering stringent Sunday laws as an attiaction to visit- ors. The police stepped two old gentie- men who were buying flowers oi} Sun- day recently. One was the ober%urger- meister of Frankfort, the other Prince Hohbenlohe, the chancellor of the empire. The Changing Leaves. It is one of the marvels of trees that every species bears its own mark in every part, root and branch, bark and leaf, as well as fruit. A wise elder told us the other day the species of oak from which an acorn came by the fine tracery on the acorn’s cup. Such a riot of col- ors and tints there is in the falling leaves that one might think the colors are accidental, but the keynote of color } is constant in any species, with ouly ex- ceptional variations. The mistress of a manse in the Vir- ginia valley once went into the woods and selected her young trees by their colors, and those colors they still wave in each returning fall. The birches are a golden yellow, while the oaks vary through yellow orange to a reddish brown. The red maple sheds at the last a dark red leaf and the tulip tree a light yellow. The hawthorn and the poison oak are violet, while the sumac and the wild vines take on a flaming scarlet. Soil will make some variations, and a dry season will almost take the color and beauty altogether away.—Rich- mond Ceutral Presbyterian. SN Paris, Dec. 17.—M. Daudet died sud- denly while at dinner last nizht [tis said that about 50.900 people will firmed the above. The Indians named, Jeave Boston for the Klondike in the when at home can be found as tze cta- SPS: We Me Mb ME NL MWe Ne MN Sn SNE NEN WS UP AS UP UN MS AP > US AS AP A The Verdict HAS BEEN CIVEN and enstained onanimonsly by the court of Appeals, that THE.... . Se Quebec Heater: (REGISTERED) 3: [2 Ws a ra ~ Me has no equal fur heat giving sod economy in fuel. Ee a CARRIER LAINE & CO., Levis, Que. R. B. Norton & Co., Ltd, Char ; lottetown, Sole Agents. 50% Dr. Pierce’s Fa- | an ai PERSONAL CHAT. Mrs. Susan Hawkins. an aged negress living in Kentucky, was once owned by the Washingtons. Senator Mills of Texas has struck more oil on his property in that ss.te, and it is said that his latest strike is richer than any of the previous ones. J. H. Carroll, recently appointed con- sul to Messina, Italy, is a descendant of Sharles Carroll of Carrollton and is said to be the only one of the family who was ever a Republican. Theodore Delyannis, the late prime minister of was left ] while at school. He obtained a govern- ment clerkship and on a small salary educated his two younger brothers, Greece, nniless Alexander Milton Ross, the noted scientist who died in Detroit, was a compesitor in New York when William Cullen Bryant, then editor of The Post, discovered his talent and became inter- ested in him. Judge Gray, while officiating at a marriage certmony at Bowling Greon, Ky., the other day, was so flustered by the beauty of the bride that he asked her if she would ‘‘solemnly promise to love, support and protect this man.”’ The late General Bourbaki was once urged by his friends to be a candidate for the crown of Greece, to succeed King Otho. ‘*When a man,’’ he wrote in re- ply, ‘has become a general of France, he does not care to accept a second rate throne. ”’ Senator Mason, in speaking in Chi- cago of the United States senate a few days ago, said: ‘‘The word ‘parliament,’ you know, is derived from ‘parley,’ to talk. I have often wondered why the United States seuate was called a senate instead of a parliament or a ‘talka- ment.’ ”’ Professor Mahaffy was once traveling in England, and inthe same compart- ment with him was a melancholy gen- tleman dressed in black, who inquired of Dr. Mahaffy, ‘‘Are you saved?’ ‘*Yes,’’ was the reply, “‘but it was a very narrow squeak, and I don’t like talking much about it.”’ Austin Collaher, the old boyhood friend of Abraham Lincoln, said recent- ly: ‘‘Abe always remained at the head of his classes. His studious habits made him a favorite with the teacher, which caused a great deal of jealousy among bis classmates toward him, and, not be- ing generally liked anyhow, it made him very unpopular. ”’ Fifty years ago Mr. and Mrs. Jarr Haynes, who were the pioneers of Pa- ducah, Ky., and each of whom is more than 90 years of age, planted a walnut in the yard, from which sprung a tree. It grew to be a large tree, and a year or two ago was cut down and sawed into timber. The lumber now at the Haynes home and is being saved to make the coffins of the eccentric couple when they die. tt is f ES Are much tn little. always gg y ready. efficient. sa ‘xfae- fF ) 3 A tory ;preventacold or fever, Lu is i eure all liver ills. sie! end eche, janice, cons ion. ete Prive | es FARMER AND MEGAPHONE. How a Pilot on » Boat Stopped a Horse in a Cornfield. I was on the upper Ohio once when the river was low, and was much amused over the use to which a pilot put a megaphone. He bought the thing to call ashore any message that might have been given the boat to carry. ‘This was to save time, for those little boats in the local trades are a great deal like the old fashioned mail car- riers—anything to accommodate the peo- ple along the bank. ‘We were in the pilot house, and the boat was running up a shoot near the West Virginia side of the river. In a corn- | field was an old farmer, who was follow- ing a plow behind an old, flea bitten gray that only needed a half invitation to stop at any time. The pilot put the megaphone to his mouth and shouted ‘Whoa!’ and the old gray whoaed. thought, evidently, that a neighbor was there or thereabout, for he looked around fo see whence the sound came. Then he tossed a clod at the old horse and started him up “ ‘Whoa! said the pilot, and again the old horse stopped. Then the old Rube went to the river bank and looked down in the willows, but not a soul could he see. He looked up and down and then at the steamboat and scratched his head in surprise He couldn't afford to waste any time in looking for the ghost, for he went back to the plow and started on with his job. **Once more the joking pilot said *Whoa!l and again the horse stopped dead still, You could see from the boat that the old fellow was all mixed up, for he looked up and down the river and then at the hill- side behind him to see if he could find the man who Was working him and his old horse. He made up his mind that he would take it out of the old yray, and to fix for the cccasion he went to the under- brush and cut a stick that was 10 feet long. He started the horse with a venge- ance. When the pilot hollered *Whoa! again the old man gave the gray a lick that sounded clear to the boat. We could almost hear him say: “ "Thar, gol darn you! I’li teach you to stop when you hear a spook hollerin at you ‘But the pilot kept up the good work and hollered ‘Whoa! Whoa! Whoa!’ and again and again the old man hit the gray. Finally it looked as if he had caught on, for he let the old horse stop while he watched the boat. “Then the pilot thought he had had enough fun and he called out: “ *Feed the old gray! Feed him! He's so hungry that he can’t work. That’s all - matter with him.’ “Then old Rube got his voice and we heard him say: ‘You go to thunder with your old voicet It'd stop a railroad train anywheres!’ " — Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. 2 Ib. tins of English sale at Beerk Geoff's, plum yndding for “The farmer heard the sound, and he a gl ait aif) aff] «i(f} ) afl «(||| | ait] i th, | «ill at{l| -«{{l “ GRANBY . —_————— —<——— — RUBE tia vane! Are cut again this season in new styles and in all the new Shoe Shapes, right up to date, but with the same old “wear like iron” quality that has always characterized them, because they are honestly made of pure Rubber, ; BE SURE YOU GET GFANBY'S THIS YEAR mxamine Our Stock of all Wool Beaver Overcoatin All well made and first class trimmings. Those in need of a winter overcoat, shouldjcall and see these wonderful values before purchasing- JOHN MACLEOD &CO PIANOS Now Opening Prices o!4, $16. $18 and up- MERCHANT TAILORS. ——— PIANOS PIANOS | & —Fali Stock Big Values, Low Prices, Honest Good, Best Style You are thinking of ordering Overcoat, Suit or Ulster from us, and expect to have it for Xmas Eve. DON’T DELAY | We are extremely busy in our tailoring department always busy—and if you expect to have clothes made by us for the time mentioned above, please order soon as possible, the price we will ask you for a good tweed or serge suit. $14. $15, j $16, $17, is the price at which we will make you a first-class Ulster. I $16 is the price of our leading overcoat, made from blue beaver, indigo dye, made double or single breasted. silk velvet collar, made to fit. and fit to wear, will wear longer thanany 3 readymade coats at $10 that are advertised. Beautiful Gents’ Furnishing opening every day, Prices in everything at our store away down. High Class Tailors and Furnish«rs. In new and elegant designs of cases. Aj] prices. ' C. P. FLEICHR ; i a » . | Opera House Buildin. ( ] ES SS A SS a ae ‘ < EAI | 4 ] For tle Holiday Season with a vomplete stcok of nice lines of Footwear. We have all kinds of Shoes; low Shoes, honest Shoes, dancing Shoes ana Temperance Shoes (that don’t get tight). Slippers in great variety, Rubbers, Overshoes Gaiteis, ete. Will make almost any cne tapyy. We are more than happy to think that we have pleased you in the past, and know th»t we can do so now better than ever. Weeks & Warren e Know ~~ oe Amt & 2 ae Oh bs -cood tailors art $14, $15, $16 is McKay Woolen Co., | Ba § : Pa