wea - ito MET “ " a ’ « — NY-AS-SAN CURE FOR —S = . ~~ ER YSPIELAs cry, Mr. Tarhey of Parrsboro N,S. :ays:—‘‘In At the year 1892, 1 was in a m« ‘. : ; ; ped with KE ry sipelas, swol len out of all | . DOCTORS GAVE human shape . HER UP fast sinking anc given up todie. At this risi N vassan was used and FREE 4 I was cured in a few day , mai 2 S2nb) Wanted—The Address Postaj ft every auflerer in / CARO ’ ooh m erica. (BOOKLET, THE NYASSAN MEDECINE CO, RURO N.S. Mention the paper when you write, _— ae - Cheap Crockery Store. JUST RECEIVED A beautifal lot of Dioner Sets, Tea Sets, Glass Sete, Chamber Sets. All kinds of fancy china and glass —ALSO— Lamps of every Style and Price. Liberal dis- counts for cash. This is the pace to buy. No trouble to show geods. Wall Paper AT LEWIS, LARGEST AND BEST VARIETY PHOTOCRAPHS We are now makingal] the latest Styles of Photos, finished in a superior manner, either on glossy or flat paper. At THE OLD Sranp, Grarron Street, North Side of Market Square. To Boston PLANT LINE OF STEAMSHIPS Charlottetown to Boston via. Pictou and Halifax $8.75 Passengers leaving Charlottetown on Wednesday morning connect with steamer “Halifax” at Halifax the same evening. Tickets for sale by W. W. CLARK, Agea LECURSIONS TO > BOSTON. *—#11.00—% PLANT LINE. Excursion ‘lickets will be issued by lant line of Steamships, from Sept 20th to October 20, Charlottetown to Boston and return, good to return by any steamer within 30 days from date of issue. RATES — Charlottetown to Boston and return $11.00. W.W.CLARK, Agent. Valuable Lots For Sale IN CHARLOTTETOWN. Not having been able to dispose of “Sidmont” the late residence of the Hon. Frederick Peters, ew bloc, I have been in- structed to sell a large portion thereof in blocks of acre lots. Roads have been laid off for this purpose and in this way some of the most beantifal lots in Charlottetown will be disposed of. Sale will take place at “Sidmount” on Wednesday the 2lst day of September instant at 11 o’clock. ROBERT BEARISTO, Auctioneer, Ch’town Sept lst 98 205 dtd was vez-vous une idée? Sioni, demandez notre “Guide des Inventeurs,” pour savoir comment Wobdtiennent les tentes. Informations fournies #ratultemeat. MAK ren ag yy one eo tg reaux: Edifice New York Life, Montréal. Be : 1 et Atlantic Build, Washington, D.@ MOLASSES AND SUGi Now landing ex scooner “MARY P’ direct srom Barbados, 500 barrels bright Barbadoes sugar, 200 puns choice Bar- badoes molasses. N. RATTENBURY. 193 2 mos THE DAiLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWX, SEPTEMBER 21 1898 OMENS ON WARSHIPS The most picturesque superstitions of the seas are those which govern a mod- ern man-o’-war. Tvery old salt in the navy believes in and spells which may work all sorts of evils on his ship and must be carefully guarded against. The powers of a ship’s hoodoos com- mence before the ship has entered the water. It is a generally accepted super- stition that if the first blow which is struck the keel brings sparks the ship is destined to suffer from a raking fire from the enemy. The old time practice of stealing a piece of wood and imbedding it in the prow for good luck is, of course, impos- sible in the case of steel ships, though it is considered lucky to have a piece of stolen wood on board. Another old superstition is satisfied by placing a silver coin in some crevice of the fighting top of tke mainmast or some place below decks where it touches the steel mast. Originally it was a very common custom to imbed a silver coin, and preferably a Spanish coin, in the wooden steps near the mast. Figureheads have been in high favor with sailors from remote antiquity. Originally they were carved to repre- sent some god or saint. Even today a sailor would hesitate to sail on an iron- clad without such protection. The ceremony of launching a ship is merely a concession to an old supersti- tion. The various formalities of ship christening have been followed with littie variation for centuries. In the early days of shipbuilding it was the custom fce the captain and the crew to eat their first meal stowed away in the mold loft. Their meal invariably consisted of eggs and sulphur. From this custom hus come the present day practice of providing cakes and wine for the crew. And the old libation which the priests used to pour over the prow of the ship as she slipped into the water has been repjaced by the break- ing of a bottle of champagne. The modern misi-of-war dashes into hoodoos SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, indigestion and Too Hearty Eating, A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsl- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. Substitution the fraud Uf the day. } See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter’s, Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Piflg, _—- eo 0000000060002 6000000:60 $ MONEY TO LOAN. On Farm Property also on Real Estate within the limits of the city in sums of from two to five hundréd : dol'ars at a reduction on current rates of interest. J. H. Reddin, Solicitor Cameron Block, O08 06690000 © 00006000 000 Just Received a nice assortment of BLOUSE SETS the newest designs in sterling silver and _ rolled plate, and selling very low, a W. N. TANTON Opposite Crabbe’s Ha riware Store TO LET That centrally situated house on Prince St., near the Methodist Brick Church, containing nine large rooms, in good order with stable and coach house attached— Possession given the 15th of October next. Apply to Thomas McQuaid, lower Queen St, Ch‘town. "215 | a meer [f you are ill you need a doctor in whom you have confidence. It you need a remedy you want one that has been tested for years; not an obscure, un- tried thing that is urged upon you, or on which you save a few cents—that Is no consid- tration as against health. For wasting in children or adults, Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- phosphites has the recognized remedy for twen- ty-five years. 50c. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists. Toronto. the water with flags waving trom every masthead. In order to gratify this old superstition it has been necessary to ex- pend hundreds of dollars for the chris- tening of a single ship. But no one be- grudges this extravagance. In a way it is necessary. The good or ill luck of certain days is still a belief among the sailors. Fri- day is a day of ill omen, and Sunday is usually a lucky day. A superstition about women is a relic of the old belief in witchcraft. It is thought that a woman by throwing sand in the air on shipboard can produce violent storms. Not many years ago some women who traveled on English warships were tortured during a storm tu make them quiet the waves. These barbaric beliefs, however, are partially compensated by the supersti- tion which sailors bave held for centu- ries that beautiful children bring a blessing to a ship. The Neck was a handsome boy with golden curls. It is said that he is always accompanied by a black lamb and carries with hima golden harp. Ourold salts have especial confidence in @ ship which is christened by a child. The average sailor is superstitiovs about the r™ging of the ship’s bells In olden times the bells were blessed before they were used. At present, if a mistake is made in striking the hour, the sailors insist that the bells at once be struck backwards to break the spell, and if by any chance the wind should catch the bells and swing them all the way around, or if they strike nine bells, it is believed that it will be the last of that ship. All good warships go to the ‘‘shores of Fiddler’s Green’’ asa final resting place. Just where this mythical harbor is situated no geographer has yet decid- ed. It is in every way the antithesis of ‘‘Davy Jones’ locker.’’ A warship which goes down in battle with her flags flying, as occurred several times during the civil war, goes to ‘‘ Fiddler’s Green. ’’ The tattooing habit is, of course, very common in the navy. Itis believed that au arm ora leg decorated with the de- sign of a gun or a sword or some such design will never be lost in battle.— San Francisco Call. A Real Utopia. Dunwich, Moreton bay, Queensland, consists of about 1,000 inhabitants. In four years there have only been two births and two deaths. There are no streets, no omnibuses or trains, no soldiers, no police, no shops. There is a beautiful theater, and every one is admitted free. Clothes are free, and so are food and lodging. Very few do any work, and there are no hotels. Very little money is required, and med- ical attendance is free. There is a lockup, but that is not used. There is also a postoffice, and if short of money the letters are stamped free. There is also a free hospital and library.—London Tit-Bits. been WooD’s PHOSPHODINE. The Great English Remedy. Siz Packages Guaranteed to promptly. and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Evvissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotencyand all ~ r effects of Abuse or Excesses, Ss = mm Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opium or Stimu- B ef oreand Af ter. lants, which soon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine known, Ask druggistfor Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, $1; six, $5. One will please, siz will cure. Pamphlets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Sold in Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggist. 2 HOME WORK F2Srre = @ We want the services of a number of @ @ families to do work for us at home, @ whole or spare time. The work we gend our workers is aycky and easily - @ dene, and returned varcel _ § finished. Pay $7 to $16 per week. For @ parti ready tO commence, send pame and address. THe S. A. Sup- $ PLY CO., Box 265, Lonpon, ONT. VEGETABLE GEMS. Among ether encer things found in Philippines vegetable gems. ‘ere are not mauvof them, though Lue ban.boo is empty mcrmally. One btcut cpen a jungle of the giant rass and fud Itcred hollowucse ein a million times or more a lent brings to ligkt in the bamber stem agcem. Nature bas molded into a lump a littie of the flinty materiv] which ma! t! outer stem so har The n Ne present: LPN nce of an opal, and several specimens in the museums which 1 oducs the characteristic lines of that gem. ‘These nodales are krown as tabace: It is interesting to noto that tho first chemical and mineralogical examine- tion of .them was made by the Jamas munificence establish- ed the first of the scientific bureaus of the American government, In the condition in which the fruit is known in the United tates the milk in the cocoanut is considered its only content. The really ripe nut, however, is filled with a white spongy mass, rich in the finest oil which the nut produces This sponge is exposed to the hot sun for two or three days in a wooden trough until thoroughly pulped. minithson whose squeezing the soft sponge in the hands. Very rarely this careful handling has developed the presence of smal] spheres which have much of the luster of the pearl. Eight or ten of these cocoanut pearls, all discovered in the Philip- pines, are treasured in European muse- ums. They range from the size of a pin- head to that of a very simall pea.—New York Sun. The English Flag. England’s national flag has been called ‘ta triplet of crosses,’’ for it is composed of the cross of St. George, the cross of St. Andrew and the cross of St. Patrick. Thus: The flag of ‘‘St. George for merrie England,’’ a red cross on a white ground, the red lines drawn straight from top to bottom and from side to side; the flag of St. Andrew for Scotland, a white cross on a blue ground; the flag of St. Patrick for Ire- land, a red cross on a white ground, the narrow red lines drawn from corner to corner. By placing the cross of St. George on that of St. Andrew we have ‘the Jack,’’ as ordered m 1606 by James 1, whose signature was always ** Jacques ;’’ hence the expression, ‘‘the Jack.’’ By laying the cross of St. Pat- rick over that of St. Andrew and then placing that of St. George over both, we have ‘‘the union jack,’’ as borne since the union with Ireland in 1800.— Boston Transcript. DYING BY INCHES! But Dodd’s Kidney Pills will Yet Renew Life. Thousands of persons die in the prime of life because docters think Bright’s Disease and Diabetes incura- ble. But Dodd’s Kidney Pills cure them both. They Aave cured thousands of cases. These diseases and other Kidney complaints are as common as ordinary colds. But people don’t realize that they are afflicted till the disease has eaten deep into the system. Even then, Dodd’s Kidney Pills will posi- tively cure. Thousands of people are dying on their feet, but do not realize tt. ey notice one or more of these symp- toms: shortness of breath, loss of memory, failing sight, ravenous appe- tite, pale or reddish urine, with brick- colored deposit, scalding when urina- ting, constipation, nervousness, pains in the loins. Their only” hone is Dodd's Kidney Pills. They won't fail. ‘They never do. simplest, Lightest Plate Camera Eastman’s No. 2 Eureka Jr. Takes pictures 344 x 314 inches; weighs but re ances, Meniscus lens, rotary shutter, three stops, view nder, socket for tripod screw. Perfectly adapted 2 Snap-shots or tjme *xposures and equally con- enient as a handor tripod camera. rice with plate holder, - - - - omplete developing and printing ovifi oT 82.50 1.00 wlalogue of Eurckha Cameras and Kodaks free at agencies or by mail, EASTMAN KODAK CO. Rochester, N. Y. HENRY R. LORDLY C. E -M Can. Soc . ©. E. Graduate College of Civil Engineeriag Cornell University. Cansulting Engineer for General Work, Specialties: Hydraulic, Sanitary Engineer- bog and Bridge Designing. Offices at Charlottetown and St. John. Island correspondence addressed to sharlottetown, The last of the oil is then extracted by |, a f LS : — LLP AO OE Baw ew ee - COO AU eee yeyeterriet J mata fiiityd shi ROFL E, a v JUL << eee A pe We; oe =. *, ius hem Ae a/ RD Te oF a, uk oe : Se P SA ‘ba ed ee oe 4 ly f s hs ae ay Oe &/ . ‘ aon ts 4 prs - Je tera gS Ms 4 ys j \ Ley Ee \ : hin Pe y - 2 Ae ae) By pe Gly a ON ee ¥ 5 Oe aie Nd eee | Ris) Coo / TREETA 4 bog fated ee Fahd Lh tye CLELLCS a tae t u rr i om A” sry ; =F a YrePRyY reererem wii; eels. iii, “teen ie ae ; : r i : - . yj a A te’ 9 5 i ! aN i rT u t ‘ied C eo . oa Si aed’ on nm oh Pr saga rl FT . 1 . wi i [ ’ belie) s Ele; 3a t Lrai Ae \ ul 5] O} is &20 = > 21 ORCS: 7 ’ , } "T' : ad at : 4 11CS5C 1 Cas C . 3 >» CSDECIA f ya {a eet b ag \ . ‘ ] lend se we Le ene ‘inn {I 4 “— \e ¢ use —Wrapped im ticht lead packets, the flavor i. aud purity in ensured to the consumer, who 1s also ey . + ~ of 7 5 3 > smeere , 1 protected as to the correct value by having the / e e RETAIL Prick PRINTED ON EVERY PACKET. 3 - J oe. = sf f Sold by most grocers in Canada and tic United States. . } . o 25c. to £4.00 per Ib. Ia 15 o=4 1 >. Packets, . ve 4 ‘4 " en — tt co ‘ sour grocer cannot supply you, write us and we will J _ v = : . mae o sec that yvur order is filled. 3 C i ae a ili 3 5 JOSEPH TLOTLEY & CO., London, Eng., Conadian Head Office: 14 Lemoine t., 2"or*rect, r GIUIUUUUU nao we ue toe Ge A Perfect... | Wood Furnace? | 2s -OUR. o ol Y “Famous Magnet” Made in 8 sizes, using 3, 4 and 5 feet wood. Will heat from 10,000 to 100,000 cubic feet. Heavy fire-box, with corrugations, increasing the heating surface. Extra large firing door and ash pit. Heavy steel flues with cast heads that will expand without cracking, Bolts on outside away from action of the fire, ’ Instant direct or Indirect draft. Firing, regulating and cleaning all oar from the der : Dampers can be operated ¥ from rooms above. Made for = brick or galvanized casings, You Can keep your house warm from cellar to and Do it Cheaply. HIGHEST TESTIMONIALS FROM ALL DEALERS AND USERS. —— The McClary Mfg. Co., LONDON, MONTREAL, TORONTO, WINNIPEG and VANCOUVER. If your local dealer cannot supply, writes our nearest house. ¥ ab al Oe - > 20 = LONDON NEW CLOTH FOR FALL AND WINTER We have opened a fine line of Nobby Cloths in suite ings, Overcoating and Trousering, Call now and get first choice—a full line of gcn:s fur nishings always on hand. John McLeod & Co., Sartorial Artists. GRAND _ OPENING DAY is Of the New Jewellery store, and Fancy goods store in Prowse Bros New Stone Block. This event takes place on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday next, the 14th, 15th and 16th. Remember the date, for there is to be given away 100 purses at 25c each, and a chance of getting a Waltham Watch free. New Store, New Goods, New Firm, New prices. We have much pleasure in anncuncing to the public that we are now ready for business i our new store, in the old stand. Our line of goods and the prices we ask are a guarantee of quick sales. Below will be found a list of a few of our lines, Watches,— Walthams and Elgins, etc., in gold, silver and nickel cases, a lar.e variety to select from. CLOCKS.—A large assortment in Onyx, Marble and Marbleite, Oak and Walnut, eight day clocks, besides nickel alarms and musicial clocks. SILVERWARE.—We have a choice selection of cake baskets, berry dishes, fruit dishes, castors, spoon holders, and butter dishes, ec., everything new and sparking. JEWELLERY.—Finest lot of rings, brooches, stick pins, cuff bub tons and links, watch chains and drops, etc., in the city, FANCY GOODS.—-Our line of fancy gcods are new and there ## large variety to select from. Latest in fancy vases, fancy ornaments, oriemr tal vases, photo albums and stands, card cases, whisk holders, fans, purse fancy pipes, opera glasses, musicial instruments, toys, games, etc, Also fancy gilt silverware suitabie for wedding presents, Our stock is too large to pul lish in full, but we will find it no trouble to show the goods if you call. Patronize your Island poys and get the worth of your money. Our Motto—Quick sales, and small profits. JUREY & CO, Prowse’s New Block, Sunnyside of Queen Square, Charlottetown, Visit the Modern Jewelry and Fancy Goods Store.