: ; ; : A : FP a PE eee “ Te aE rN ‘ eg Re, THR DAILY BKAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER 15, 1908, CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY. TOURIST SLEEPERS MONTREAL TO PACIFIC COAST Every Thursday For full particulars as to passage rates and train service to Canadian Northwest, British Columbia, Washington, Oregon ad CALIFORNIA Also for maps and pamphlets de- scriptive of journey, etc., write to A. J. HEATH, oF. aA. GP. Ri. OF. dean. Be APPLES 175 bbls of first-class Northern} Accommodation _ lez.ves ‘Spies and Baldwins just received in stock. If you wanta barrel of nice apples for house use or for retailing | g call and see our stock. MINCE MEAT Our stock of mince meat has just arrived. It is put up ia one and two pound tius and also in ten pound pails. Itis very nice stock and is put up by a good reliable firm. + HFRS: : Our Layer |igs are very fine stock this year, being large and very juicy. The cooking figs are also very good and cheap. BEER & GOFF, Grocers T Why pay hich prices fora name when ve give you ;Qualitv at low/“;". . . | E5urists. Footwear | Our Lines are. Ail Right. price; ? Gents Box Calf, lace, Goodyear | welt--- ; $2.80; | Gents’ Donvola jChocolate. lace— year welt, F-- $2.75, i : rs ae 3°07. (ants’ Box Calf, Black and}j/Tan, | Goodyear welt--- x $2.75. “=Ti+Ics | Gents’ Box Calf, sO.- best value in the city--- $4.00. J. H. BELL The Popular Shoman. Black, Rogers’ Boker’s Etlin’s Taylor’s volinson’s CELEBRATED GUILERY BOKER’S WARRARTED SKATES An Immense Assortment evenings. To Choose From. inf. An 1 Most Reliable &2.25. Gents’ Dongola Black, 'lace,Good- | double | Goodyear welt, rubber heel, | DODD & ROGERS '_NERVOUS | PROSTRATION | ‘is only a failure of strength. | Ittakesstrength to getstrength. | Get strength of stomach first. ' Your stomach will then look out for your body. Scott's emulsion of cod-liver oil ena- bles your stomach to get it from usual food; and this 1s the way to restore the whole body. We'll send you a little to try if you like. | SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronte TIME TABLES. (LOCAL TIME) ie. Arrival and Departure of Trains | and Steamers. | TRAIND. | Express leaves for the west........ 7 35am Express arrives from the west.... 9 20pm | Accommodation leaves for the eo eoseese§ 10D @ for Cape incuesssiguae Oe Pe arrives from the west.... Traverse... Accommodation re ee ee 10 40a m } Accommodation arrives from the WEEE cc ccwe se cccccenccoeneceses I 50 pm Express leaves for the east......-- 8 0cOa m | Express arrives from the east.....- 10 00am Accommvudation leaves for the a) a 3 cOopm Accommodation arrives from the WEE dink cand eddee baer ueruns 4 50pm STEAMERS. THE HILLSBOROUGH Leaves Prince Street ferry wharf for port every half hour. South PICTURESQUE Prince Edward Island 25c at all Bookstores An illustrated book on P. E. Isl- interesting souvenir for eee ee ee s Place to have ycur repair work done is the place that tahes the most In- terestin your neels. We strive to accommodate all who leave any work with us, by prompt attention and quick despatch of same. We have the reputation of being ‘‘O. K.” on repair work. Give us a rial and be convinced that what we say is BRUCE STEWART | & CO., Founders, Engineers, Machinists and Boiler Makers. Steam Naviga- tion Co’s wharf, Charlotte- town, Pee te F phone 125. Tele- | ATTEND } } gE Haszard & Moore’s | BIG HOLIDAY _ SALE | Immense Stock of Books, ; | Dolls, ‘Fancy Goods, Games and Toys. | Liberal discounts to during the big holiday trade. Store open until 9 o’clock in ; Haszard & Moore Sunnyside. ae everyone EDUCATIONAL COLUMN. (Continued from page 3.) This little book is divided into four parts. Part I. consists of seven Lessons on Definition and Phon- otypy; Part Il. contains forty-five lessons suitable for pupils in the Second Reader and Third Reader; Part II. contains ninety-two lessons suitable for pupils in the Third and Fourth Readers; Part LV. treats on the derivation of words, prefixes and suffixes. Most educators consider that a spelling-book is a necessity, and it should be used every day in every grade of school, keeping pace with advancing reading. No _ study is of more importance than the study of words. It includes enunciation, pronunciation, Qreading, conversa tion, writing, a knowledge of the meaning of words, and accuracy im using them. There are certain dit ficulties in spelling which are well known to be common and almost universal. So far as these difficul ties are, or should be, in the pupil's vocabulary, it is surely better to meet them directly and persistently than to await for them to occur in- cidentally and at long intervals in general composition. What is need- ed is more TKACHING spelling, not merely spelling PRACTICE. Suitable lists and exercises upon words ef similar sound but different spelling and sense are given in this speller. It also contains the few REALLY GOoD spelling rules. Pupils will find the exercise in word-building both pleasant and valuable. HASTY JUDGMENT. Hasty judgment is dangerous, even when one relies upon evidence of one’s own senses. The Cornhill Magazine says that aschool inspect- or was reading a piece of dictation to a class under examination, when he noticed a boy behaving im a man- ner that suggested underlvand work. His head was bent low, and _ his was underneath it. Feeling sure that the passage was being copied froma book hidden on the seat, the inspector pounced upon the boy with all the severity that he deemed such a piece of cheating to merit. The next mo- ment he wished he had been less hasty. To his astonishment and sorrow,he found that the little fellow, upon Clerking Looks more attractive than housework for a woman, but it is also even more exhausting. The work is often done under high pressure, and the brightness of the eyes and the flushed cheeks of] & the attentive clerk indicate nervous- ii ness rather than Hee health. If this is true under most favorable condi- tions, what shall be k, said of those who}:. suffer from woman- k.’* ly diseases, and who} \/ endure headache, backache, and other pains day after day? No sick woman Kea should neglect the mieatns of cure for wonianly diseases iim offered in Doctor preg Pierce’s Favorite 9% Prescription. It f regulates the peri- Ag ods, dries enfeebl- Rg ing drains, heals istnemmetion and ulceration, and == cures female weakness. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. tA heart overflowing with gratitude, as well as a sense of duty, urges me to write to you and tell you of my wonderful recovery,” says Miss Corinne C. Hook, Orangeburg, Orangeburg Co., South Carolina. “By the use of Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescription I am entirely a new being compared with the poor miserable sufferer who wrote you four months ago. I remark to my parents almost every day that it seems almost an impossibility for medicine to do a person so much good. During the whole summer I could scarcely keep up to walk about the house, and yesterday I walked four miles and felt better from the exf@rcise. I now weigh 125 pounds. Mine was a complicated case of female disease in its worst form.” Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure biliousness. Dentistry... BY SPECIALISTS Pa'tNiuess DeNnristRY by use of electricity , or by the Berlin Method. i 4 ey Wi . ODERN DENTISTRY, crown and bridge | - work. (Both without pain. ) s AKTIFICIAL TEETH.—We make all kinds. Teeth extracted wxhout pain. BERLIN DENTAL slate, instead of resting on the desk. | PARLORS SUNNY- spe DENTISTRY Office in New Prowse Block First door to the right up stairs. Telephone connec- DR. AYERS CAN YOU BLAME THEM. Suicides are so Often Martyrs to the Terrors of Dyspepsia. To Many ina state of Debility so great, Death in almost any form seems Preferable Dyspepsia more than any other Disease Affects the mind, and Brings on ‘The Blues.”’ This is not written todefend those who commit suicide. They are in every case cowards, and yet perhaps |we do not always stop to consider | the extremities which these poor 'unfortunates have reached, before the temptation comes to raise their hands ayainst their own lives. Do you know the torture of Dys- pepsia ? How it torments the body 'and depresses the mind, till life it- self becomes a burden ? But even then, there is no excuse for suicide. True, the nature of the disease is such that it affects the mind, but to all so affected there comes the message of hope in Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets, the remedy that has always relieved, and has never failed to cure permanently any case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heart- burn, Sour Stomach,or other Stom- ach ‘Trouble (except cancer.) The large, white Tablets will di- gest all the food, rest and tone up the stomach,and bring new life and | health to the system. er of the elder brother. ‘‘But amidst all the rejoicing,’’ be said, ‘‘there was one to whom the pre~ paration of the feast brought no joy, to whom the prodigal’s return gave no pleasure, but only bitter- ness, one who did not approve of the feast they held, and who had no wish to attend it. Now, can any of you tell me who this was?” There was a breathless silence, followed by a vigorous cracking of thumbs, and then from a dozen sympathetic lit- tle geniuses came the chorus. ‘Please, sir, it was the fatted calf.’ | Onedaya master at a_ big public school accosted a new boy with : cm McEachen & McCabe, BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS NOTARIES PUBLIC, & Offices—McDonald’s Block, Char. lotte Street, SYDNEY, CAPE BRETON, N, § Special attention to Collect and Real Estate. on HOUSES and LANDS rented bought and sold for clients, and monies invested or borrowed ag clients may require. |‘* Well, what is your name?” \‘‘ John Walden.’’ ‘‘Sir!’’ yelled | the master, horrified at the uncer- ‘monious answer, ‘‘ John Walden,”’ ‘innocently repeated the culprit. ‘* Well, sir, | want you to puta ‘sir’ onit.’’ ‘Sir John Walden,’’ was the calm reply. His class burst in- ‘to roars of laughter and the new boy was dubbed ‘“ Sir John’’ ever after. | , A Frenchman intending to com- pliment a young lady bo calling her a gentle lamb, said ‘‘Sheis one! tame mutton as is small.”’ ce } Teacher—‘‘Fritz, tell me the name | of the animal who furnishes us with hams?’’ ‘‘The butcher.’’’ | The most costly jparliament in| Europe is that of France. The sen- | ate and,chamber of deputies cost | annually $1,500, C00. | 7-7 The smaller, brown Tablets act! as a cathartic, stimulating the ac- | tion of the liver and bowels, and | thus assist in the work of restora- | ‘tion. Together they form what is jabsolutely the only reliable treat- | 'ment for Dyspepsia, or diseases of |the Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Al- | {in one box. Fifty cents at all deal- ers. | Don't be despondent. Dodd’s Dys- pepsia Tablets will make you well. whom he had come downsosharply, |had lost both hands; and was work- |ing with might and main to get the | passage down with the toes of his | right fc ot, THE SOURCES OF TIN. | During the closing half of the) | nineteenth century, Cornwall,which \from ancient times hed been the |world’s greatest source of supply | for tin, has last that distinction. | Even as late as 1859 Cornwall sup- | plied one-half of all the tin produc- | ied, but now the Malay Peninsula! stands an the head, having in 1898 | turned out more than 60 per cent. of the world’s total production. The | Dutch East India stands next, with 19 per cent, while Cornwall turned |out only about 5,000 tons, not quite | 'sevon per cent of the whole. } JOKOSERIO. | ' ‘}] know you don’t want to go to schoo., Billy,’’ said the parent. | sat it’s acress ever'body has to | take up---it’s a duty you owes to the |] choolmaster, who has got to make | | . liven. I felt jest like you does sbout it, ‘fore they run me down ind collared me and shod me an stropped a shirt on me and fired me} iwhole into the middle of a school- | | house.’ Inspector.---Suppose I lent your | father £10@ in June, and he promised 'to pay me back £10 on the first of 'every month, how much would he ‘owe me at the end of the year? | Now think well before you answer | Pupil.---‘* £100, sir.’’ | Inspector.—‘* You’rea very ignor- ant little girl. You don’t know the a eS ae others because they don’t want it) | this. | — | One of the prettiest fashions for! winter isto have hat and muff to’ match. a ee Some people give good advice to themselves. Catarrh can be Cured. | Japanese Catarrh Cure is the | ony « ermanent Lure ever | discovered for Catarrh. | SAMPLE TREATMENT FREE. | There are a thousand and one so-called cures for catarrh. Most of them contain dangerous | | | narcotics. They relieve at the time, but it does not last. Now that is just where Japanese catarrh remedies. It cures and the patient stays cured. It performs when others pramisc. Japanese Catarrh Cure is absolutely certetn in its effects and has never yet failed to cure any case of catarrh, when persistently used. It is | Catarrh Cure differs from ai! other so-called | a soothing, refreshing and healing ointment. quickly breathed up to the seat of all the trouble, purifying, healing and vitalizing the diseased membrane, and the trouble won't re | turn. We do not ask you to take our word for | We can prove it by recommendations | from physicians and thousands of testimonials. We want you to prove it by sending for a | | which is inserted up the nostrils, when it is | ’ i ’ } | sarmple box, which you can have absolutely free of charge. Send 5 cents for postage, etc., to | The Griffiths & Macpherson Co., Limited, 121 | Church St., Toronto. Sold by all druggists | Price, 50 cents. : | : ; ’ TENDERS! — For Hardwood Timber Land. | Sealed Tenders addressed to the| undersigned and marked ‘‘Tender’ | will be received by the undersigned | up to 12 o’clock noon, on Thursday, | December 20th, 1900, for the pur- | chase of 100 acres of Hardwood|} Timber Land, near Selkirk Station, | most elementory rules of arithmetic.’ Pupil.—‘* Ah, sir, but you don’t know father.’’ Teacher.—What is quantity? Coal dealer's son.— What you get when you buya ton of coal. A little girl is reported to have written in her examination paper, “The Arctic Ocean is chiefly used for purposes of exploration.”’ The lesson was from the ‘“‘Prodi- igal Son,”’ and the, Sunday School ‘teacher was dwelling|on the charact- ROTIGE! an unknown of Charlottetown, in County, merchant. Notice is hereby given that Thomas J, Morris, of Charlottetown, in Fueen’s County, in Prince Edward ‘Island, merchant, has by an assign- ment bearing date the 27th day of -November, A. D. 1900, assigned all his estate to me, the undersigned, George E. Auld, of Charlottetown, ‘merchant, for the general benefit .of his creditors. Queen's 'In the matter of Thomas J. Morris, Lot 42, formely owned by John| Dingwell. Itis one of the few re-| |maining tracts of heavy timber lland in the Frovince. It is well, | watered by an excellent spring at | the southern end. A main road bounds it both north and south About 12 acres of it are fit fo clearing. Terms cash on delivery of Deed. EK. WALKER, P. P. d12 d&wt9th AMONGST AN ARMY OF COMPETITORS We can compete with any in Style, Quality and Price XMAS STOCK. nel pic: Dated this 28th day of November, | A. D..1900. GEO #. AULD. } ATTORNEY AT LAW Aftheoffice of A. A. McLean, Q C., Brown’s Block, Ch’town Watches, Jewelry and Novelties. } i | i } { _- ooo. ; G. H. TAYLOR, SUNNYSIDE. Rollo Bay. | See our newly Imported John J. McCabe AJ GMcEachen EWEN MACDOUGALL General Agent, Commission Merchant and Auctioneer. OFFICE AND WAREROOMS 73 GREAT GEO. ST., Charlottetown, P. E. IL re. oO Box 333. Reference, Bank of Nova Scotia. GEO. CARRUTHERS. M. D.C. M., L. R. C. P., London, Eng. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and residence—Kent Street, opposite Mark Wright's factory. Office hours—8 to 10 a. m., 12to? p.m., 7 to8 p. m. Telephone communication. ‘HL. Dickey, M.D. (Late ef London Hospital.) Eye, Ear, Nose_and Throat. Tlours—@. 30 to 1; 2 to4. Eyes tested ard fftted with glasses, ‘DR. J. H. BRADLEY PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Graduate McGill University OFFICE AND RESIDENCE. Taose lately eccupied by Dr. Hand- NIGHT CLASSES —AT THE— | C.B.C., > Sessions per Week OPENED ON Monday, Nov. 22, 1900 at 7.30 p. m. Thorough instruction in Book Keeping, Business Penxcnship,. Arithmetic, Commercial Law,Short hand, and Typewritinu. Intending students are asked to enter at once, or as soon as possible. Terms, etc., on application to L. B. MILLER, Principal. A GHANGE OF A LIFETIME To secure one of the finest properties in P. E. L. his farm cont. ins 130 acres of exeellent land, 8o acres cl ared and im prime condi- ticn. There is a fine belt of hard and soft wood (which is very vuuable, now that coul is so high) oyster mud within a tew rods Of the shore, abundence of marsh mud, well: watrred, two mills near the house, god buildings, basement stable, 6 miles om | town, ont mile from Pownal vil age, school aext the farm, three churches within a radius of 1% miles, chezse and butter factory mm reat of fann, a large and heavy bearing orchard of varieties of apples and plum tees, strawberries, etc. For location best raspberries, ind beauty of scenery this property is unset passed by any on the Island. It gs a daisy ofa place, fut there is not a dary on it. Only reason for selling— going imto business: n the Northwest with ny sons. Sold w th « without crop, stock, and im siemenits. “ermé en applic. tion to my solicitol, A.. A» / Mclean, Barrisier, Charlottetown,ot to ye owner, A. A. MOORE. t.n5—d25&w Now For Hockey ’ cold weather, good ice, -verything points to a 10! - ‘ hoe rey lx OTS, Lots of 1 season. - and | You ll want gox ce : ve've got just what you walt. ' 9 Maly . -le Men's tan and black, anlkic &2. D0 support Soe eg _S BR y : } : : ou DpDOVS do do...-.: > an Men’s tan and black.......... 3. Bovs’ do, d0..-..---- €1.75 and 1.50 1 vs’ 1,30 Small boys ..---- RK. JOST, Stamper’s Corner.