—————— igh A i A A A, > sin esas Aiemacnanseseancine sie es + : pee _—— ——= THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN,MAY, 30 1898. — —_——/ S-SAN | CURE FOR ERYSIPELA S. Mrs Thos. Trahey of Parrs- | =boro, N. S., Bays: —“In the Ei ys var 1892 I was in bed five JE weeks with Erysipelas, swol- len out of all human shape a oe fast sinking and given up todie. At this erisis Nyassan was used and I was cured in a few days DOCTORS GAVE Wanted —The Address of every sufferer in , America. NYASSAN MEDICINE CO., TRURO N.S. Mention this paperjwhen you write. WARE - HOUSES TO LET PEAKE’ WHARF (VO 1) Wharfage storage and yard- ag? at reasonable rates. Arthur & Peake. THE We he e commenced burn ing, and. an supply any quan tity ot best quality ot Lime, for farmiz g and building pur- poses. (. LYONS & vo 85—pat. guar. ] mo DO r T YOU aa r , KNOW? That we are selling Wall Paper cheaper than ever. All new and pretty patterns. Call and gee samples, and be convinced that this is the place to buy Wal] Paper. Also;—a new and splendid stock of China, Glaas and Crockery ware, Dinner and Tea Sets combined, from $6.00 up- wards, Don’t make any mistake, this is the place to buy Crockery Ware. C. LEWIS North Side Market Square, Grafton Street. Before have good Watches been so low in price as to-day. We have them recently | bought at the latest re- duced rates , and will sell low. G. H. TAYLOR Jeweler and Optician. Charlottetown, Hard Coal. Landing to-day, per Bar- quentine ~ Matilda, 450 tons hard coal, in chestnut, egg MONTAGUE BRIDGE and furnace sizes. This property y consists of a commo- dlommeeniteainy dious store and dwelling, heated with hot water, and said to be the best business stand in Montague. Titie Guaranteed. Possession immediately. Apply to E. H. BEER, Ch’town, : 63 2awkwtf. IE i TE Se earth the | THE PLAN ET VENUS WrY WE KNOW SO LITTLE ABOU? THAT HEAVENLY BODY. Differing Theories That Have Been Ad- vanced Since the First Observation by Cassini In 1666—The Opinion of Camille ¥Fiammarion. The planet Venus is our nearest celestial neighbor, the moon alone excepted. And yet our knowledge of Venus, as compared with that of Mars, is cornparatively small. This is not because of the lack of effort to increase that knowledge, but to other causes beyond our control, which are ex- plained by Camille Flammarion in Le Bulletin de la Societe Astronomique de France. M. Flammarion writes as follows. “When Venus is nearest to us, with a telescope magnifying 80 times only it ap- pears as large asthe moon as seen with the naked eye. An instrument which magnifies 300 times exhibits Venus to us ten times longer in diameter than the moon, and a magnifying power of 600 makes Venus 20 times larger than the moon. Instruments which magnify tus give great opportunities for telescopic study, and they have produced marvelous results in the case of Mars, a planet both farther from us and smaller than Venus. In the case of the latter planet we are as yet not sure of anything. ‘“Whe reason of this is the difficulty of observation. In the first place, since Venus revolves around the sun in an orbit in- terior to ours the time of its greatest proximity is when it passes between the sun and us. Its illuminated hemisphere is naturally always turned toward the sun. There result phases analogous to those of / the moon. The nearer Venus comes to the less we see of its surface. The farther it gets away from us the more we see of its surface, but the planet is reduced to its smallest apparent dimension. A sec- ond circumstance, not less deplorable for the success of our studies, is that Venus ia surrounded by an immense atmosphere, twice as dense and much higher than ours. The effect of this is that we never can be sure of anything we see on Venus.”’ To demonstrate this M. Flammarion gives a summary, which cannot be read without amusement, of the results of ob- servations of Venus during nearly 250 years: ‘‘The first observer was Dominic Cassini, at Bologna in 1666, who observed what he believed to bea brilliant spot on Venus, and this spot he continued to see until his death in 1726. By the recurring Appearance of this spot Cassini calculated that Venus turned on its axis once in less than a terrestrial day cnd reyclycd in its orbit in nearly 23 days. Cassini's ; 74 years later, thorg sht that he too sav i, spo-s em the planet, Hig calculation was that Venus rec.cea Gu Mts axis id avout 23 hours and 2° minutes. Early in the seventeenth ¢cniury another Italian astronomer, Bianchini, thought ke discoy ered a new set of spots, and he lengthened the time of the rotation of Venus on its axis to 24days 8 hours. Then Johann Hieronymus Schroter (1745-1816) declared that he had discovered on Venus moun tains six times higher than Chimborazo, and he fixed the rotation of the planet on jts axis at 23 hours 21 minutes, Sir Wil- liam Herschel in his turn finally became convinced that no one had ever seen spois on Venus, that what they believed to be such were optical deceptions. He declared that it was impossible to discover the length of time taken by Venus in turning on its axis, and he ceased to make observa- tions of the planet. As for the high moun- tains found by Schroter, Sir William laughed at him. Father de Vico and his colleague, Palomba, of Rome in 1839 made more than 10,000 observations of Venus and ended by stoutly asserting that there Were spots on Venus, and they made the nme Woon’s PTTOSPHODINE. The Great En ae Remedy. Siz Packages Guara itced to map a 1 permanent'y 1 aATe + W k incs of —_— of Nervous L il€ r¢ } \ a at age Weaks isotons,Sperm- | Wheels, CORY MBIAS and all IF oe + on Te -, others. Columbias are in a BRGRDS Menicl Worry. caveman | C1288 bY th: mselves, Prices Befor and A fier. ; ia waisle » soon lead Sap De 44, 60, . 5 and 140 dollare i ee Cae ‘ we scores tn teomaeri Gore Goer wheel is cqua! se is the only Ieticdle a 1d Iloncst Medicine : . or .dé . eo n. AS eta - stfor Wo ods Phosphodine; il to the best hi gh : gr. de bI- | he offers some worthless me ae na . 7 cycle on th e mal ket of any clos yrice in letter. and we will sen y return co . ome can packa sey €25 six, A. oe other muke. EK: ic ‘h W heel gruar- please, six will we —? = eae 6S, anteed by a compa ny Ww ho do e Voc , i Vs Windsor, Oat, Canada. | not know how to make slop goeds. Lhe purchaser of a Sold in Charlottetown by George E bicy cle frem me will be taught Hughes, Druggist to ride fae, TAKE NOTICE. I inform the or persens are allowed fishing Jonn White's Mill Pond, premission from me. JOHN WHILE, public, that no persor wis VALU 4 BLE BUSINESS STAND o AEs } fime or rowwuva «vo LOUrs 21 minutes and “19845 seconds! Se of our day bpiis nang ip bdeuwthat Venus tables w-: Gays uu ly hours to turn on its axis —that is to say, it takes the same time as to revolve in its orbit round the sun, presenting to the sun always the same face. ‘*While, however, Schiaparelli hus been observing Venus a host of observers in various parts of the world have also been observing it. The list of them would be long. One of the most recent is Mr. Bar- nard of the Lick observatory, with its im- mense telescope. He declared that he has never been able to distinguish any certain spot on Venus, save once, on May 29, 1S5¥. Phe combined result of all these observa- tions is to demoljsh completely the thecry of Schiaparelli. According to all proba- bility, the globe of Venus turns, invisible to us, under its atmosphere, which turns with it, but does not offer any fixed point which will permit us to determine the time of this rotation. ‘*The atmosphere of Venus is so dense that its action is manifest when the planet makes a transit across the face of the sun, ander the form of a black disk. By the observation of a transit at Pueblo on Dec. 8, 1874, it was found that Venus has an atmosphere five times higher than that of the earth. Tosum up, 1 affirm that we can know nothing about the rotation of Venus on its axis, because the absorption of light produced by its immense atmos- phere certainly prevents us from distin- guishing any detail on the surface of the planet. The gray spots that are perceived from time to time on Venus are effects of contrast due entirely to solar light and in- distinct shadows of an atmospheric nature, incapable of furnishing any serious ground for calculation as to the rotation of the planet. No one on earth has ever seen the surface of Venus, and no one ever will. Na one has ever scen a clearly defined spot like those seen on the disks of Mars or the moon. ‘The maps of Venus which have been made up te this time are pure illu- sions.’ ‘Literary Digest. Nerve Siti The question of the susceptibility of the nervous system for training has recently been discussed. It is believed that nerves can be cultivated. According to the must comprehensive opinion, a great deal de- pends on the owner of the nerves. If is possible to train certain classes and condi- tions, while others are hopelessly unsus- ceptible. The will of the individual, the pliability, or rather the impressionabiity, has everything to do with successful nerve training. Asa matter of fact, the desire to be trained must be present first of all. It comes from within and, prompted by the desire of the individual, a course of training may bring about the happiest re- gults. Training neryes against the will of the patient reminds one of the old adage / of the second, not making allowances | for the peculiarities of temperament, | ored of the medical profession than he of convincing aman against his will— “he jis of the same opinion till, All the servants Who Were in the queen’s household during the lifetime of the prince consort receive each Christmas pieces of solid silver in any shape they prefer up to a certain value. They are sent with a large black bordered card inscribed, ‘‘ With good wishes from her majesty and the prince consort.’’ traveller's aa They are a OC {nvaluable when the stomach PE E E is é Colurmbias Should be in er family is out of order; cure headache, biliousness, and “ an ASPs. de ee medicine che and every el! liver troubles. Mild and efficient. 25 centa in Mr. without Wheatley River FOR SALE i a ieee aes R. M. YOUNG, reli Beales Corne Grafton and Gt. Geo. St. —— We still have some extra brands of French Cham pagnes in #7 ck. Grand Mousseux, Chateau de Pierland, Gieslen & Co. a Avize, Mum’s Extra Dry. Alfred Greatier & Co’s, BOeOe®@ SOU ® . or. BY Petre o™ very Tila end Temecies. Lord Byron, 1 his reported converss- tions with the Countess of Blessington, remarked to her that ‘‘medical men do not sufficiently attend to i .iosyncrasies. on which so much d-vpends, and often hurry to the grave one patient by a treatment that has succeeded in anoth- er. The moment they ascertain a dis- ease to be the same as ove they have known they conclude the same remedies that cured the first must remove those habits and disposition, which last has a great influence on maladies.’’ These re- marks are simple exaggerations of fecl- ing and fact. Byron was no more enam- was of professors of divinity, but he was an acute observer, and it was inter- esting to read his views respecting idiosyncrasies. He judged rightly, very rightly, of their importance in connec- tion with the practice of medicine.—~ New York Ledger. SAVE THE MOTHERS Dodd's Kidney Pills Their Only Safety in Female Diseases. You have seen a flower nipped by frost, fade and die in the flush of its beauty. ‘hat is how women die when attacked by any of the diseases peculiar to their scx. Woman's burdens heavy. Her sufferings are agonizing. Her patience ts gr and. Disease preys upon her. ‘The light dies out of her eyes, her steps become slow and dragging; she loses flesh; grows sallow, listless, droops like a flower ‘Then she dies. Her family is left to the cold mercy of the w orld. “ Mother's dead!” What a piteous phrase. What sufferings have been endured before it was used. Why uld mothers, wives, sisters suffer They need not. Dodd's Kidney Pills wiil quickiy and thoroughly cure all cases of Femaie kness. They never fail. They give health, strength, courage: a new lease of life. are woefully sh so ? 3 + gee V¥ea ®wW SMe 2PSDBTBt BOF C6220 when those old jobs must be done. ¢ | Maybe its a root to be repaired, ora é barn to be built, cr perhaps your thinking of a house. We Have a Word to say You will want shingles; Boards: etudding, Laths. You will want some Lumber, we have just what ur adyvan-~ us. We Lumber, ata Inves- p The Time a . Eas Come | you need. It will be tu ve teve if you buy froin offer you first class very ema!) advance of cost. tigaic. It will pay you. TeverHoxe 151 J AME mS ‘s Connolly’s Wharf. DB wd ®e De nae? @ OB SLERETT, Valuable FOR SALE The Whice House, Dundas Esplanade is offered for sale. This desirable property combines the | aivantages of town and country house. Good bathing and boating at foot of gar don. F'rst rate stables, ccach-houses and lare e vard room. Flower and vegetable gardens and con- carvaioty. House contains about 12 rooms, and is heated by hot air; with marble mantels down stairs. Large drawing room length of honee; bath room with hot and cold water. The situation and sea view, are unexcelled in P, Bs i. The eLore front is also owned in con-~ nection with the property, for several hundred feet out. For particnlars apply to J. 8. MORRIS. FOR SALE OR TO LET: | That most desirable businesss stand, situated on Kent Street, be- ween Prince and Great George. This property was ovcupied for so ne years past by the late J. A. Cameron, as a watch and jewelry store and dwelling, For partic -ulars apyly to D. STEWART, Baker. Kent Str ee Building Lot 50x100 Fest FOR SALE. >free a a SARTORIAD, 7} a No Tailor could make, and trim to order, a suit equal toa $10.C 00 “Big Relorny” for less than $10.00, a even if you furnished ? him free with the ‘: $1.50 per yard cloth put into that grade. No one knows beiter than the Tailor that he can’t compete with these garments in value, and none can less afford to admit it. Not made like other “clothing”—but warranted to fit, to wear, and keep its shape till threadbare, ~ Makers’ r price and brand sewn into left breast pocket of every genuine “Fit- Reform” coat. & $10, $12, $15, $18, $20 Per Suit. tn ates et Se Scat) Srampen oy ec maners ALA Catalogue from fe 3) why, iaswo bf Fit-Reform Clothing Co., cS sh 2 Montreal. MAS LEER FII LD gs ne me SOLE LOCAL AGENCY PROWSEH BROTEERS. i Property | This ie ove of the most desirable jlote | ia the city, being on high dry ground;} Yon the east side of Upper Prince St. Apply | ei a aa JOY & DAVIES at the CITY HARDWARE STORE. AAARAARARARAAAANANS Dentistry A WORD TO THE CARELESS Many persons do not value their teeth — If they have the toothache their first and only thought isto have the tooth extracted; Justa few words on that point, they go and haveit taken out, that is t xe last of that tooth; they cannot get it back again, Another) tooth wi'l begin troubling; out it goes, t ‘0, and roun after a while the person cinnot mis icate fod; conse qunce is their hevlth becomes impaired; then they pay doctors bills, buy medicine, ete. and asa fast veal they g-t artifijal teeth. Now look at tie questiony from a business standpoint. In the first place what would be the cost to save the tooth and keep it good fur a lifetime? Perhaps $1.00, and you will have your owa teeth in your heau, and they were most certainly put there for use how think of this—f you had a wart on your fi ger, ‘hat troubled you, would you have the rer cut off to remove the wart? W hy certaintly not rie. why louse a tooth to remove an ache. We cat stop t thache and save the tooth, and garantee them] never the again. Artificial Teeth actory. We guarantee money. morning fir ger 10 ac must be good +o be satis! satl*- faction or we don’t want your You can call inin the teeth same day. BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS, Over Store and have your of Prowse Bros. Open evenings 7 to 8. 3 | ASAAAPAARASASATH SHEARS A Lady Desires her wedding ring to last a life. In order to do this. itmust be well made, sufficiently heavy and of the right quality. We have just such Rings Dont be afraid to ask to see them. It’s onr business to show them. 8. F. HUToHe The Queen St- Jeweller 3 | DECANE ON Fe EEN EON, € ~ Cs. wie ee es ee ee ee ee ee lll lO