re owt *" e The yo delight ar ing mother’s d joy in her & beautiful baby is always Maaccompanied by more eee OT less care and solici- yw tude, and a certain de- fr gree of drain on her physical resources. She needs all the strength- ening and help whi to be obt h is possible ined, in order The grandest help in the world for expectant mothers or nursing mothers Dr. Pierce’s in motherhood It rende:s the coming of baby safe and almost free from pai It transmits constityt:i onal health and hardiho to the child; promotes secretion a! t nourishment, and fortifies the mot! \ permanent vital energy \ s s of the feminine organism are ; completly cured by this rernarkable “ Pre- Sx hg No other medicine was ever ck for this purpose by an educated, s] phy in of thirty y< ars’ experience a ! pert in this particular branch of : } . tice ict I rvelous effects of this medicine 2 ully described in one chapter of i ive } lu irate ad b« k. Se e Medical Ad v1 1 Dook which every woman ought t ! 4 paper-bound copy will be sent al free on receipt of 31 one-cent st pay the mer st of ctusto?r : Address World's Dispensary M s tion, Buf N.Y. A hand- ~ Dv ) Slamps. M f nobel y County, Ar kK wT Ss) . ist uweh ~ took y c ? Vv vi “<r } lean e expt : «} ‘ had t { \ cl i v m..- ¢ ‘ re oO ‘ i h ~ 7 ‘ ? I a , . - : Lib ~ 2 2 7 ww. KHKABRARAK UF BAS Ww ~ © ) 5 — cP —_ Tf Ca = A> Premed = — Cf A man has showing only jewelry in his A ring, studs or stick watch chain. Jhe chain the conspicious item, Jt is impor tant, therefore, that its quality should be as good as the man can afford, and its style be dis- tinguished for taste and char- acier. I have taken special pains in selecting a large stock of men’s Chains, I am sure youwill say (hat the patterns are the most tasteful ever shown in this city and the prices have sufficient range to fit every pocket book. W. W. WELLRER THE GREAT WATCH HOUSE See SE PPR LS Se opportunity of arcicles of pal dress. pio, aod a these exte AARAAATARAAAAAAAAAAL AR Top Quality Bottom Prices Thereis no doubt about it when you buy KEROSENE Ctl The best is always the cheapest : WE SELL.... Pratts Astral and A&relight Oil at very low prices. Lower prices for 4 gal. lots. Sanderson & Co. Just Recelved a nice assortment of BLOUSE SETS the newest) designs in sterling silver and rolled plate, and selling very low, eno W. N. TANTON Opposite Crabbe’s Hardware Store sustaining | not to fall a victim to the organic weaknesses | incident to maternity. Favorit Prescription It impa: health and | streneth cirectlv to the } ’ : cit it organs and nerve-centers involved PREEPEEEEE EERE EE | TPE ie Se TE TEER AS TO THE LINKS There is no more ardent evolutionist in the city and no more persistent ad- yocate of Darwin's theory than Dr, d@’Ancona. His friend, Dr. de Marville, on the other hand, isa great bird fan- cier and devotes all his spare time to an enthusiastic study of ornithology. ‘*I have a splendid specimen of a monkey in my office,’’ remarked Dr. d’Ancona proudly. ‘‘Come in and see him,’’ he continued, being a firm be- liever in the object method of demon- stration. ‘‘You will admit that I have the missing link in a cage.”’ ‘**That’s all right,’’ replied De Mar- ville, absorbed in his own pet hobby. ‘*I have a cage at bome myself, and something in it too. You’re not in it, and neither is your monkey. Ican show you something much better than your missing link. i have got a bobolink.” —San Francisco News Letter. Prioleau and Calhoun. The Pendletonians were justly proud of Mr. Calboun and sensitive as to the impression which he made upon stran- gers. When Judge Prioleau became a resident, they were anxious to know his impressions of their Ajax. When they first met, as soon as Calhoun left | question was eagerly | the table, the asked, ‘‘How do you like him?”’ ‘**Not at all,’’ was the newcomer’s | reply. ‘‘I desire never to meet him again.’’ This was a sad rebuff, and an explanation was demanded. ‘‘I hate a man who makes me think so much,”’ the judge replied. ‘‘For the last three hours I have been on the stretch trying to follow him through heaven and earth. I feel wearied with the effort, and Ihate aman who makes me feel my own inferiority.’’ appeased. — Exchange. Good, but Not Intended. Now and then a man gets off a good | An in- | stance is noted by Sir M. Grant Duff in | thing and does not know it. his ‘‘ Liary:’’ We began to talk about the fog. ‘‘It was so bad,’’ I said, ‘‘a week or two ago that I hear Farrar preached against it at St. Margaret’s.’’ ‘‘It was at that church,’’ my friend answered, ‘‘that a clergyman, denounc- ing Mr. Tooth, the ritualist, said, ‘I will not name him, but his name is in everybody’s mouth.’ Then, seeing the smiles on the faces of his congregation, he turned scarlet.’’ ’ The Earth’s Shadow. The earth has a shadow, but very few ever see it, except in eclipses of the moon, or else few recognize it when they see it. Nevertheless, many of us have noticed on fine, cloudless even- ings in summer shortly before sunset a rosy or pink arc on the horizon opposite the sun, with a bluish gray segment under it. As the sun sinks the arc rises until it attains the zenith and even passes it. This is the shadow of the earth. — Dr. A W. Case EXPERIMENTING ON His {EMEDIES, HALF ROUND THE WORLD Distance no Barrier in Getting the Glad News of His De- light to His Friends. DR. CHASE'S CATARRH CURE A UNIVERSAL REMEDY. Gentlemen :—Please find enclosed $1, for which eend four boxes of Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure. We have used it, and find it an excellent re- medy, so we recommend it to others. Mr. J. M. Poorman, of Woodhum, Marion Co., Ore., got some and is de- lighted with its effects. Please send three boxes to Mrs. F. J. Edmunds, No. 401 West Part street, Portland, Ore., and one box to Rev. E. F. Edmunds, Sedro, Skagit Co., Wash. Be sure and send the blowers; they are so handy. Send at once. F. J. EDMUNDS. 47 Dr. Chase's Catarrh Cure Contains no Cocaine, DR. CHASE’S CATARRH CURE NEVER FAILS TO CURE Col4 in the head, Hay Fever, Rose Cold, Catarrhal Deafness, Foul Breath, toss of taste and emell, and Catarrh in all its forms. Contains no cocaine.’ Price 25 cents, complete with blower. Pendleton was | Nerenerasanen ONE DIVIDED BY NAUGHT ee Four men sitting together were con- Siding to one another their general ig- norance of the matter contained in text- books. One said he had studied algebra for three years, but he would find it impossible to solve the simplest prob- lem by an algebraic process. Another said he had been counted a good student in geology, and yet he doubted if he sould name the principal periods in their proper ordes ‘*Now let’s see how much you dc know,’’ said one of the men. ‘‘How much is one divided by naught o1 nothing?’’ ‘‘One divided by nothing?’’ repeated the man at his right. ‘‘ Why, that’s one. If one isn’t divided by anything, it remains one.’’ ‘*] think the answer is rothing.”’ said ancther. ‘‘One divided by nothing is—nothing. Sure, that’s right.’’ ‘*You're the worst I ever heard,” said the man who had given the prob- lem. ‘‘One divided by nothing—that means how many times is nothing con- tained in one. It iscontained an infinite number of times, and the correct an swer is—infinity.’’ Then he had to talk to them ninutes in order to convince Chicago Record. for five them.— The Heliograph. With all its superiority in distances the heliograph is too uncertain for sole reliance. A passing cloud is sufficient to interrupt the clearest signals, per- haps in the critical moment of a battle, or «sun haze may render invisible the rays from the largest mirror, so that at any time without a clear atmosphere the system is useless. It is not known that the heliographic system has ever been in use on ship- board, and the sea service has nothing for daylight signaling that approaches its accomplishment in dry atmospheres. For night service at sea the flashlight appears to be the best system of signal- ing in all weathers, though on rare oc casions the long beam of the electric searchlight thrown up on the sky has proved effective for communication when it was possible by no other means. An instance of such use was reported a few years ago by two British ships, which while on opposite sides of a high promontory nine miles in width opened communication with each other by means of dot and dash flashes on the sky from their searchlights.—Lippin- cott’s. Gladstone’s Doings and Undoings. Mr. Gladstone began as the defender of the Irish church; he ended by de- molishing it. No one ever opposed more vehemently the extension of British in- flucnce in Egypt, but it was under his government we bombarded the Alexan- drian forts, fought the battle of Tel-el- Kebir and reduced Egypt to the condi- tion of a British satrapy. He was the most conspicuous advocate of peace with Russia when Lord Beaconsfield was in office, until Constantinople was in danger. Five years later he left office, after having brought us to the very verge of war with Russia for the sake of Penjdeh One year he clapped Mr. Parnell into prison, the next he proposed to make over to him the govy- ernment of Ireland, and then again he deposed him from the leadership. Yet he was always consistent and anxious for hisconsistency. Circumstances alte cases, and Mr. Gladstone was not above being taught by events.—W. T. Stead in Review of Reviews. True to Principles. A New South Wales country school teacher recently gave a boy a question in compound proportion for home work which happened to include the sircum- stance of ‘‘men working ten hours a day in order to complete a certain work.’’ Next morning the unsuspecting | teacher in looking over the little pack of exercises found Jim’s sum unat- tempted and the following letter in closed in the page: Sur—lI refuse to let Jim do his sum you give give him last nite has it looks to me to bea slur at 8 hour sistum enny sum not more than 8 hours he is welcum to do but not more Yours truely, ABRAM BANE, Senr. Could Be Used Often. The following anecdote iilustrates Donizetti’s susceptibility and quick wit. During his long stay at St. Petersburg he played by command before the Czar Nicholas, who entered into conversation with a bystander in the course of the piece. Donizetti at once broke off the performance. ‘(Why have you stopped?’ asked the autocrat. ‘‘Sire,’? was the reply, ‘‘when the ezar is speaking everybody else should be silent.’’ Pessimism. ‘‘There is a great deal of difference,’’ she said with sarcasm, ‘‘between the way a man parts with his money before he is married and afterward.”’ ‘*Yes,’’ said Mr. Pennywise. ‘‘Be- fore marriage, when he gives ber a $2 bunch of flowers, she says: ‘Thank you, George. You are so good and kind and generous.’ But after, when he gives he three-fourths of his salary, she merely looks hurt and says, ‘Is that all?’ ’’— Washington Star. ——_—— Curea Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tabiets All druggists refuna the money ifi: fsilsto cure, 2c. Rubbers, rnbber-. all s yles, all prices at KR K Jost’, Staroper’s Corner. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 17 1898 en Sen ee oo = yan ee MekKays Just op caps, ties and staple goods. Inspect IA Juries In Mexico. There are no ‘‘professional jurors” in Mexico. Nine of a man’s peers try him, and a majority is a verdict. If the nine are unanimous, there is no ap- peal. Toserve on a jury one must have a diploma in law, medicine or some other profession, or au income of $100 a | month, or he must be a member of a family whose head hasan income of $2,000 a year. Dogs kept exclusively for guiding blind persons or for tending sheep o1 cattle on a farm or by shepherds are exempt from taxation in Great Britain. It only takes a woman five minutes to clean up a man’s desk so that it wil] take him two weeks to find anything he wants. —Exchange. HUMAN SACRIFICES On the Altar of Diabetes, Saved by Dodd's Kidney Pills, Only. Hardly a family in the country is free from Diabetes. Great thirst, failing sight, numbness in the thighs, vlog guuis, Swollen ankles, ema- clation, nervousness, pale or turbi urine, loss of sexual power, decaying teeth, pains in the loins or small of the back, are all positive signs that Diabetes is in the system, Do you know how it ends? IN xATH. A premature, horrible, agon- zed, pitiful death. ‘The victim has no peace, no ease in hfe. His days are filled with tortures. His nights are waking dreams of agony. Ie longs to die, yet fears the terrors of his end. He jies, a bloated, fetid, repulsive mass of corruption. ‘Phat is the only end of unchecked Diabetes. Dodd’s Kidney Pills will cure it. They drive it gut of the system thoroughly, create new, clean blood, rebuild the diseased cidneys, and restore rohyst health To Boston PLN RR SELON TE NS MERRIE SE ANN NPN TO tn OOO FN aR ened,---New Clothing, Hats and ion invited, RGAIN CORNER W. D. MICKA E Coan | apd to beal for the money J.RattraY &©. MontREAL. a Nee 2 TORONTO EXHIBITION RIMGVED To Charlottetown While in in Toronto attending the Fair we purchased the Entire Exhibit of ‘The Deminion Organ o | And bave them now on Exhibition in our ware rooms. ‘bey are beauties—each instrument finished and tuned with special care, No increase inprices. Call in and see MILLER BROS. Ths P. E. Island Music House Connolly Building, Queen St. ar a Happy Thought Range — PLANT LINE OF STEAMSHIPS: Charlottetown to Boston and Halifax $8.75 Passengers leaving Charlottetown on Wednesday morning connect with steamer “Halifax” at Halifax the same even:ng. Tickets for sale by W. W. CLARK, CARD. The undersigned wishes to intimate to the young ladies and gentlemen of Cnar- lottetown, tbat ic is her intention to con-~ tinue the dancing classes so succesefully conducted by her mother, for the past 50 veare at TERPSICHORE HALL, Great George Street. Classes will be opened for the season, or Tuesasy, Oct. 4th, at 4 and 8p. m. Private lessons given a¢ ueval. JANIE BURRIS. via., Pictou 228 dyid&w AND BE HAPPY Every Range guaranteed, A full stuck of all kinds of stoves SIMON W. CRABBH, STOVES & KARDWARE | Walker's Corner