THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 28 1897 an as C The Daily Examiner | The Examiner Publishing Company RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION LIN ADVANCE) @re Your .. 84.00 Bix Me ths 2.00 Taree onthe 1.00 @ae Mouth 0. t paid to any part of Canada or th 7 li tates = WEEKLY EXAMINER emery ‘ry Friday morning. It is made up of ‘which has appeared in the Daily au i« s firstciasss newspaper contain) ig all th eat news Subscription $1.00 a year THE DAILY EXAMINER OCTOBER. 28, 1897. IES. anne ae = ae NOVOMSER LADISS' HOME JOURNAL. . . * i i rst “Lilie Thanksgiving Dinner,” Seli’s First Days in London” and “Woeu Ur. Whitman Added Three Stars to Uur Flag” are among the leading feaiure- of the November Ladies’ Home Jourou [he first tells of the most his- toricallv imgortant dinner in America, at whict Iodian chiefs were guests, and at which oysters were first eaten by white mew. Liss Bel! finds much in Londorc to inspire ber pen to ite smartest activity, anu ii descriptions of her sight-seeing four, ber impressions and experiences fairiy +; arkle with wit. Dr. Whitman’s service tc the United States in saving Orego.., Washington and lidaho from the Brivi-!, are acknowledged in an article wiich fuilows the first women across the cootin-nt and the first whites aver the Rocky Mountains. Magician Keiler writes on “How I Do My Tricks,’ showing bow simple is their solutivg when it is known. The -econd article on‘ ‘Inside of a Hun- dred Humea” is more attractive and rich in sugyestions on furnishing and fitting up a home than was the excellent inugural ene of tie series. It presents fifteen views. Eedwari W. Bok advises young married ple against living in a hotel or boarding yousé, ).0ints out the beauties of the smail ‘Gourtees of “life, and expresses hearty approv.l of the renewed interest in sewing —wouen’s truest accomplishmeat, Aliéé. Wellington Rollins iniroduces a new acd charming character in fiction in the fir-t of her Philippa sketchese—“The Mistaxes of Philippa”—and Clara E.Laugh lin countributes “The Revelation of Christ’ pher,” a story of strong buman intere-t. Pianists will be delighted with the mu:-ics! feature, “Poets Dream Waltzes,” by Reyinald de Koven, auther of Robin Hood,” etc., and pesple who are home- secki vy, with the Jovrnal’s special architrct’s plans for a $2200 house for a sma!) square lot. Mrs. Rorer tells how to ceok eggs andto handle the family wash, «nd other articles give hints for churc» sociables and parties. Suggestions for Christmas presents that can be made by the giver are timely, asare articles upon dress, needlework, and the various departtuents coverings nearly every phase of home life and of woman’s work. The November Journal is interesting, instruc- tive aud practical. By TheCurtis Publishing Company, Philadelphia. One dollar per year; \en cents per copy. LN MACAULAY—CROKES, A very pretty wedding took place this moromgat the Immaculate Conception churen, the contracting parties ing Augu-iue Macaulay, of Springfield and Miss Sadie Croken, of this city, daughter of Berva d EB. Croken, of Norboro, Prince Edward Island, The bride was attended by Mies Rose McMahon, cousin of the bride, sud the oo was George McGillvery, of Springfield. The bride wore a becoming gown of white silk and wore » tulle veil and carried a white pearl prayer book. The bridesmaid wore white woul over piox silk and carried a be quel of pinks. Mr. Macaulay isawell kuown young man of *pringfield and is one of the foremen ot the New England Telephone Co., of that city. Afterthe ceremony the wedding party repaired to the home of the bride’s uncle, James McMehov, of Whipple street. where a wedding breakfast was served by Caterer Mills. Guese were present from Spring- field, Beverly aud Lynn. The happy couole left on the noon train for Newport, w er- they will take the beat for New Yorw. After an extended tour they will reside in Springfield. The wedding pre- sents were, numerous and costly.- Fall River Herald, Oct. 12th. —_--—_—— According to our commercial adyices from New York, the business situation is fair'y -atisfactory, though not as good as was expected in many lines. Business is irreguiur, and there isafalling off in demand that has not been made up by speculative activity. Warm weather has interfered considerably with the movements of seasonable goods. Collections are re- ported as “weak” in several directions. Prospects are generally encouraging. . ees TP ea —— G rt Pousse Pate... ~ And why not a pie-pusher » as well as acoffee-pusher? It’s far more wecessary. Do you suffer with dyspepsia? Ayer’s ) Cathartic Pills will cure you, ' Take a PILL AFTER PIE. a Large and Respectable. In Hannibal Hamlin’s earlier days, at a certain caucus in Hampaen, the only attendants were himself and a citi- zen of large stature. Mr. Hamlin had some resolutions to pass which began by representing that they were present- d to a ‘‘large and respectable’’ gather- ing of voters. ‘‘Hold on!’’ cried the other man. ain’t true! It ain’t a large and respect- able caucus! There's only two of us.’’ ‘You keep still, brother,’’ commanded the wily Hannibal. ‘‘It’s all right, for you are large and Iam respectable. You just keep still.’’ So the resolutions were passed without further demur.—Argo- beaut. An Appreciative Reader, Newsboy Jimmie—Say, I gness all dem jokes is new to dat fellie. Newsboy Johnnie— Whatjergivinus? Don’t yer know him? He's de fellic what writes 'em.—New York Journal. If men would only realize that ill-health robs them not only of life, but of their fortune as well, there would less widows and orphans to drag out cheerless lives. When @ man holds a dol- lar close up toe his eyes, it shuts out the light of good judgment, and looks bigger than life or death, or wife or child. The facts are that ill-health very soon puts a stop to a man’s money-making powers and turns them into money-losing dis- abilities. When a man’s digestion is out of order and his liver sluggish, his brain gets dull his muscles sluggish, his blood impure an every organ in the body—brain, lungs, heart, stomach, liver and kidneys—becomes crippled. A man with a crippled lung, liver, heart, brain or kidney, is a worse cripple ten times over, than a -uan who is minus a leg or an afm. The man who is crippled ontside may live a long life but the man who is crippled inside is taking a short cut to the grave. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- ical Discovery cures indigestion, makes the appetite keen, the liver active, the blood re, and every organ healthy and vigorous. t makes blood and builds flesh up to the healthy standard. Honest dealers don’t recommieud substitutes. “I wish to say to those who sufffr from kidn and bladd-r trouble—take Dr. R. V. Pierce's Goiden Medical Z'tscovery,"’ writes Dr. Anderson, of Carthage, Jasper Co..Mo. “A patient of mine says it is worth $50 per bottle to any one who is afflicted as he was. Shree bottles cured him en- tirely. Perfectly miserable he was, befure taking the ‘@®iscovery’ and now is one of the happiest men inthis County. Prof. Chreine would gladiv sign this if he were in town. He requested me to write a testimonial and make it as strong as the Engiish language could make tt.” A $1.50 home doctor-book FREE. For a paper-covered copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser send 31 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of customs and mail- ing only. Cloth binding 50 stamps. Ad- dress Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. HOME DRESSMAKING. Do not set your belt up so high on a waist that it feels as if it were short waisted and pulling up. All cetton and linen goods are apt to shrink ; therefore do not forget to turn down an extra inch atthe topof the skirt. Do not forget that a better shape can be given to a cotton dress by cutting it off and then facing the lower edge rather than hemming it. Bent whalebones, the genuine article, are straightened by soaking them in boiling water for a few moments and then ironing them straight. Stockinet and good rubber cress shields can be washed in warm scap- suds, pulled into shape and dried by nanging them in a window. Use small hooks and eyes for the front of a dress and the extra large for the skirt, which is fastened without seeing and needs larger catches. Do not fail to run a skirt braid along the under edge of street skirts of linen or heavy cotton goods unless you prefer to see the edge cut out after wearing them + few times. . Do not work buttonholes with too coarse a thread. D twist for silk and woolen goods and 45, 50 or 60 thread for cotton materials are of the correct thickness.---American Queen. ‘*We can't pass that, for it | be fewer penni-° The old gentleman in the checked shirt and runover boots stood his whip in the corner of the phonograph parlors and said to the attendant: **T jes’ sold my hay, and I want ter have atry at one of these here machines —'scopes, or whatever youcall’em. I've been readin in the papers about ’em, and how they repersented things jes’ like they happened. I want yer ter fix up that ‘un ‘bont that actor feller— whet wuz his name?—the feller that’’— ‘ch, I know whom you mean,’’ said the «ttendant. ‘‘Sit downand put these tubes in your ears,’’ The attendant started up that blood curdling imposition known as ‘The Ravings of John McCullough,’’ and the old man sat holding the tubes in his ears, listening with great intentness until the conclusion. Then he arose, gave the attendant his dime, and picked np his whip in a thoughtful manner. ‘*How’d you like it?’’ asked the at- tendant. ‘‘It wuz pretty well,’’ said the old farmer, rubbing his ear dubiously, ‘‘and I guess it wuz all jes’ like it happened, but I must say I wuz a leetle bit disap- pointed. I couldn’t tell which wuz Cor- bett and which wuz Fitzsimmons.’’— New York Truth. Not Entirely Satisfactory. ‘ g An Ominous Phrase. ‘‘Thope you will excuse what may seem to you to bea liberty,’’ said ithe young man. ‘*Certainly,’’ replied the merchant. ‘‘IT am sure that you will not presame on your position as a trusted em- ployee’’— ‘It is just that that I desire to men- tion. I heard you speaking of me to one of your friends the other day as ‘a trust- ed employee,’ and I wanted to ask you as a special favor to call me something else. After all that’s been happening I can’t help feeling that it causes me to be regarded with a suspicion which I do not deserve. ’’—Washington Star. ‘ Two Kinds. “IT knew Jagway had once lived in Colorado, but I didn’t know he had ever been worth $50,000. How did he run through it?’’ ‘*Sunk it in canals.’’ ‘*Irrigating?”’ ‘*Yes, and alimentary.'’— Chicago Tribune. May Be So. “I don’t know what I would have done if it hadn’t been for you!’’ ex- claimed the discharged prisoner. ‘‘Well, you probably would have done time,’’ said the proud lawyer.— Yonkers Statesman. Romance Versus Reality. She (after the quarrel)—And must we part forever, Harry? He—Well, at least until tomorrow Bight, Maude. —Philadelphia North American. The Enchantress, She played upon her sweet guitar. She smiled at him the while. Emboldened then, she sang a bar Or two in awful style. He yawned—his larynx was displayed She dropped her sweet guitar. “Perhaps,’’ exclaimed the angry maid, ‘““You know what manners are. **But if you do I must declare You must have concealed the fact.’’ He went and kissed the maiden fair~ He was a man of tact. “Sweet little sorcerese,’’ he said, “T fell beneath a spell, And so I nearly lost my head, For you performed so weil.”’ Ah, woman, woman! Flattery Goes straight ints thy heart. It dries thy tears, it comforts thee, It soothes thy keenest smart. Bhe gave her hand tc him, and so She never plays today. Whe first thing that he did was to throw Her sweet guitar away! ~—Cleveland Leader, ee i ee 10,000 Housekeepers Say Royal Oak Soap is the best Soap in the world, for the Laundry. Clothes are made beautifully white and ciean by using this great Soap. For sale everywhere. TO LET. A comfortable dwelling on Dor- chester St, containing eight rooms. {mmediate possession given. Rent moderate: Apply to ARTHUR G. PEAKE, Office on Peake’s Wharf. oct 21—— FOR SALE The surcribers have been instructed to offer for sale, part of Town Lot No 96, in the 2nd Hundred of Town Lots in Charlottetown, kaown as the “Jakeman’ property. This Lot has a frontage of 70 feet on Grafton Street, and extends back therefrom 100 feet. IJtwill be sold en bloc, or can be subdivided if required For terms and other particulars, apply at the office of, DAVIES & HASZARD. C’htown. oct 1 2a w4i mein me STAGE GLINTS. J. C. Dut has plucked up the neces- sary courage to take ‘‘Shamus O’Brien’’ on the road this season. In her 29 years of busy stage career Sarah Bernhardt has played 112 roles, of which she created 88. Olga Nethersole has secured Sardou’s newest work and will try it in London before playing in America. “Two Little Vagrants’’ has reached Cape Town, Africa, and has been play- ed there to large audiences, Klaw & Erlanger have agreed to bring ont ‘‘dJack and the Beanstaik’’ in Engisnd with a cast composed exclu- sively of American players. Ethel Barrymore will play the part of Exphrosyne, who betrays Alexis to his father, in Sir Henry Irving’s pro- duction of ‘*Peter the Great.”’ Adelina Patti has expressed a desire to oriyvinate the title role in Leoncaval- lo’s opera ‘‘Trilby.’’ Emma Calve is eaid to have expressed a similar desire. Italian actress Eleonora Duse cannot positively give the name of her place of birth, for she first saw the light in @ railway carriage between Padua end Venice. The Henrik Ibsen is breaking up his home in Christiania, Norway. He will first go to Copenhagen and about the end of the year will permanently settle in some Italian city. Harry B. Smith has finished the book of ‘‘Peg Woffington’’ and handed it over to Davis & Whitney for Camille D’Arville’s starring tour. The music is by Reginald De Koven. Epeveraeserre ee PRPPPTFSPSPS 444464464646 46446 *A Protection... * Baby’s Own Soap is something # more thanacleanser. It is a protec- tion against the annoying and irritat- ing skin troubles so often endured by # infants. ‘> @ = It makes Babies happy and healthy, s and keeps the delicate skin rosy, pink and clean. ~ wit = Altai + : Fragrant and pure, it is a perfect . SOap. neta NOE ees @ THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., Mfrs. Ad nome Montreal. ~Fa. CAUTION.-Many of the imitations of Basy’s ¢ Own will burn and ruin the skin, 75 Vnhhheeneeeenneene —— ee AE4KAEEAAECEKAEEGEEG If You are Going —_TO— BOSTON Or any part of the United States, the cheapest and best route is via the Flant Line, THE POPULAR SUM- MER ROUTE DIRECT - SERVICE FROM CH°TGOWN. The favorite 5S. 8. “Halitax” wil. leave Cb’town for Boston every Friday at 1 p. m. Returning leaving Boston every Tues~ day at noon. Steamer calls at HAWKS: BURY and Halifax both ways Via Picton & Halifax Passengers leaving Charlottetown Saturday mornings, via Pictou make close connection at Halifax with steam~ er“Halifx” for Boston direct Satur- days 11 p.m. Tickets for sale at stations P.H.I. Railwav, Ch’town Nav Co, and Clark tieket office. H. L, CHIPMAN, Can. Agent, Halifax, N.S. dAw WANTED TO RENT For six months a smal] furnished e mfortable house. Apply immediately at this office. oct20tf a ‘Tailors are not Mind Readers mH You select the cloth, see the fashion plate, and form a men- tal impression of huw a chosen stylewould look on os The Tailors idea differs, and the suit, when finished, looks as he thought you wanted it to appear. It bears his individuality not_yours. It may lack the little characteristics of shape you fike—-possess those you would avoid. “Fit-Reform” suits (ready made’ in nine shapes) permit you to see just how they look on you, just how they fit your ideals before purchased. You know what you get, pay half the tailor’s price, a have no further “fitting on” and the suit is sent home at once, Makers brand and price , in left breast pocket. : se SF ae $10, $12, $15, $18, ij $20 per Suit. ; « a Catalogue from | Fit-Reform Clothing Cop Montreal. : GLOVES---Macdonald’s for---G LOVES. 4 WINTER CLOTHING — We have a fine range of Men’s Warm Ulsters with Fibre Chamois lining—wind proof. You can make your selectionof § © lines —33.95, $4.50, $5, and $6. Boys’ Ulsters, $2.50, $3 and $4. Boy? Overcoats, $2. Men’s Pants from 752. Men's Odd Vests from 50c each. Our Men’s Underclothing is acknowledged to be . the warmest and best value in the city—-goin, fast. Buy now at J.B. Macdonald &Ceo } MARKET SQUARE. * See our Waterproof Boots. egret ng 200 Bicycles Wanted To be stored (free of charge) for the winter, and cleaned repaired, nickeled or enameled, thoroughly renewed, for spring. ENAMELING We use the highest grade Enamel (black or colors) that money can buy in New York, and éafe it on in a manner the most fastidiovs cannot criticize, and the cost is the same as others charge for ordinary paint, See sample at shop. — 2 W. P. DOULL, Kent Shes * CHEAP FOR SPOT CAS iz TONS BEST QUALITY HAY BALE WIRE Cut 104 feet; gauge 14, at the CITY - HARDWARE - STORE oe» QUEEN STREET... ee i j é POE ke Pronounced best quality by all who have used it. R. B. NORTON | J. F. Norton Propvietor. :