; nied, stuck his nose against my body and 5° ( held up his left foreleg, Looking dows ? ‘ ; The Awtal Roast They Get From aq 1} discovered a larve nei} imbedded in the That New York mon who fa turning ; NS aati o% 5 gion! a: English Dramatic Crit , | frog of his hoof. This had evidently caus into a hedies seems to be playing in hand ety ra t I . l-liver or} ieee harmless, necessary operation ed the lameness, and I soon rei i ed tk e tuck.—Denver Post. : shaving. Says “ iNiam Archer, in a let- | interesting fact that the animal desired Guatemala now wants annexation to : art} , in) i com- ter to the New York Times. In a good | me to attend to bis foot. I extracted the the United States It might serve Un- , P* ‘ Enylish barber's shop it is a brief and | nail with some diffienlty, and the horse cle Sam a * wateb charm.—Topeka bin a |«OwS il\ POPMOS- | not unpleasant process, In an American | whimpered with relief and walked away Capital rc , ' \\ be a parlor” it is a lingering and 3 seing curious to know why the beast ‘4 Philadelphia wiaw claims that he ca: ph ostl; torture, One of the many reasons | had picked me out to attend to his tuanufseture ice at a cost of 40 cent ae | will make which lead me to regard the Americans | » 9und, I glanced at my fellow students aaa ‘This al - ‘ot ke. atnre att Pp | Wai a bi a as a leisurely people, rather than a nation | a @ found the solution to the problem pony ote ee ee cee the r iO the anemic | of hustlers, is the patience with which | Yt one of the sroup had his medica’ | “ Te ne an. ae they submit to the long drawn tyranny | > idge upon his coat but myself. The No “taffy,” please. The up to dat ae | Ci) of the barber. In England one grudges | I yrse had, therefore, plainly recognized | Moan says, “Settle the dispute by talkin 1. ‘nervous enere five minutes for a shave, and one pays | #e insignia and acted accordingly.”— ee tome ” om like, but don’t give ae Vi EMS SCHSTEY | from 4d to Gd. In America one can hard- | W ashington Star. | Ma-taafa.”—Hardware. to brain and ly escape in 25 minutes, and one pays | . “_ The polar expeditions, the relief ex) : , , i fi (with the executioner’s tip) from a. shil- American Heraldry. ditions and the expeditions for the relict ners It will add fle th to | ling to 15d. The charge would be by no A foreigner coming into England is } °f the relief expeditions keep the north ' ena ‘ ‘7. 4 means excessive if one enjoyed all the | amenable to the laws of honor of his | ('" Waters all churned up.—Minneapolis qe toin |! sa Ga Cillidi, ; « ess processes to which one is sub- | own country and the authorities con- Vimes. waste Bs § 1 fat-starvation ” ted, but for my part I would willingly | trolling them in that country so long as If we are not to have a slice of Chir * , pay double to escape them, we may at least sell the invading Chris- where acknow}- edged as The Standard of the World. goc. and Sr.0a, a!) drurefcte, SCOTT & BOWNE, Che nists Torenta They All Want It! Zi AFTER ONCE USING HOLLY Bright Chewing Tobacco NO OTHER WILL DO, it Elevates the Taste. Pure, Wholesome and Fine Flavored. DOMINION TOBACCO Co., MONTREAL. et a a THE QUESTION IS OFTEN ASKED, THE DAILY HKASMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DEVEMRER 9, 1899 AMERICAN BARBERS The essential portion of the business the actual shaving. ryentet rformed, with is, a8 a rule, badly a heavy hand and with a good deal of needless pawing about of he patient’s head. But when the shave over the horrors are only beginning. l‘irst your face is cooked for several min- utes in relays of towels steeped in boiling water, then a whole series of essences is rubbed into it, generally with the tortur- er’s naked hand. The sequence of these varies in different parlors, but one especially loathsome brew, known ag “witeh hazel,”’ is everywhere inevitable. Then your wounds have to be elabo- rately doctored with stinging chemicals: your hair, which has been hopelessly tou- sled in the pawing has to be drenched in some sickly smelling oil and brushed; your mustache has to be lubri- cated and combed, and at last you escape from the tormentor’s clutches, irritated, enervated, hepelessly late for an impor- tant appointment and so reeking with unholy odors that you feel as though all great Neptune's ocean would scarcely wash you clean again. Only once or twice have I submitted out of curiosity to the whole interminable process. I now cut it short, not without difficulty, before the “witch hozel” stage is reached, and am regarded with blank essences process, astonishment and disapproval by the ton- sorial professor, who feels his art and mystery insulted in his person and is scarcely mollified by a 10 cent tip. Amer- icans, on the other hand, go turough all these processes and more with stolid and long suffering patience. Yet this nation is credited with having invented the max- HORSE CHOSE HIS DOCTOR. finew Where to Turn For Help When Hurt. “One reads so many stories about. ani- mal intelligence that it would be hazard- ous for a doubter te express his Cisbelief in almost any gathering of mer at the present day,” remarked a well known western physician. “A little instance czme within my own observation 2 num- ber of years ago, when I was studying medicine, that convinced me that the members of the horse family should at least be credited with the possession of a very considerable amount of rezs3oning pow ¢ r “It was the custom for the students at the medical institution at which | pur sucd ty studies to wear a small badge upon their coats to distinguish them from others at the college. A horse belonging to the establishment was used a great deal about the medical department, and | RT NT dee RUIN he retains his original nationality. Those foreign laws registration and the laws of armorial and control vary consider- ably, but there is one fundamentai rule which is now and has been for some centuries admitted practically from one end of Europe to the other. With coun- tries outside Europe one need not trovu- ble. American heraldry is beneath con- tempt (I do not refer to the armory of American scioss ef English families}, and the barbaid \eemismof semicivilized countries, though the origin of our own heraldry is hardly sufliciently evolved to be considered as armory. The one funda- mental European rule is this—that arms are 2 matter of honor and that the con- ferring of honor and henors is a pre- togative of sovereignity.—Notes and WJ deries. A GOOD SERMON, Wat the Reporter Made a Natura) Mistake About Its Tepic. A well known Milwaukee newspaper man, the hero of the tale, was confront- ed one Sunday evening many years ago with a problem which the teporter fre- quently encounters—namely, how to get three half hour assignments into one hour’s time. To dispose of two within that period was not difficult, but when at 9 o’clock the task of covering a ser- mon deliyered some 15 minutes before presented itself the problem became more involved. The minister could not be reached, nor could any of the congre- gation be located: consequently he chose immaterial; the fact remains that he ex- amined the -files on his return to the office, found that the Rev. Mr. Smith would speak on “Gambling,” and set about to “fake” his story. Now, ordinarjly—that is, perhaps—a brief notice might be made with some degree of safety with the materia) at hand, but in this instance the stock theme of gambling proved too great a temptation to resist. With a laudable ambition to display his versatility, the reporter started to construct a sermon of his own, picturing the evils of the vice under discussion in a fearless fashion and even employing direct quotations to lend vividness to his account. The story when completed was a gem, and the newspaper man turned his copy in with an **I-consider-that-a-pretty-creditable- job” air. And now comes the pathos which this tale involves. The Rev. Mr. Smith eall- ed at the office on the following after- | give them a sensation for the dull season. AROUND THE WORLD. tian powers the locomotives they will need in their new territory.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Now that little Japan has been admit- ted into the senior class of civilization she must remember that dignity and self poise are traditional necessities of such a position.—St. Louis Republic. When it comes to trying to put a book into a single word, the Germans certain- ly take first prize. They have called their new electric cabs “automobiletaxameter- droschken.”—New York Herald. The kissing bug was invented by a band of Washington correspondents to They even invented its alleged scientific name, Entomologists say such an insect does not exist.—Pittsburg Dispatch, if the Pennsylvania professor who has discovered that asphalt can be made out of red herring would now turn the proc- ess end for end and show how red her- rings can be made out of asphalt, the process would possess an enhanced com- mercial value. NERVOUS... DEPRESSION Means Impoverished and Exhausted Nerves— Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food Restores and Revitalizes the Nerve Cells. tressing symptoms which make their lives miserable. The lack of nerve force results ina slow and sluggish action of the heart, impaired diges. tion, headache, despondercy, and a fear to venture, loss of energy, sleeplessness, mcapa- city for mental labor or business, With these symptoms there is usually melancholy and fear of death, which tends to increase nervousness, but there is every reason to be hopefui if the right treatment is used. Cr. Chase's Nerve Food contains all the nutri- tion required to create new brain and nerve tissue. It imparts to the nervous system that life-giving principle which sendsa thrill of new strength and vigor through the systein. Dr. A, W. Chase’s Nerve Food will cure by the building-up process, which enables the body to laugh at disease aed weakness. Face cut and fac-simile signature of Dr. A. W. Chase on every box of the genuine. sec. a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co.. Toronto, POPULAR SONGS Be 7 uy NUD MTITD LL e BOVRIL is a combination of all the nutritious constituents of Fresh /ean beef with the Stimulating properties of Extract of Meat. BOVRIL is infinitely more nourishing than Extract of Meat - Home Made Beef Tea. ) uction Sale Important Sony SPIN: : - | the one alternative open, which was to . ‘aie ; ; a el ; : im “Time is money” and is reputed to act | °”' Rp ane a gil a aye Mise t 3 I #m inetrucied to reli by Pr hiic Auction, at the Covrt House, in Charlottetown, up to it with feverish consistency, Oe dea a ild Hee Gee People who suffer from Nervous Depression | on Wednerday, December 20ib, 1899, at 12 o’clock, noon. that large four siory brick nema winlaseainibente Se ee ee ee ee ee and Exhaustion frequen.ly look healthy and / building on Grafion Street, now occupied by F. Perkins & Co., as a dry goods store. that. Whether or not this was wise is strong. They alone know the thousand dis- . * This building wae erected in 1896, and is one of the largest and most at‘ractive store buildings io the city; it is centrally Iccated, being immediately oppor ite the Post Office; and on therireet which moet persons trom the northern and eastern s+G- tions cf /be country ncw ase when driving into market, and which those from the sou. hern districts will use, after the bridge over the Hillsborough River is builc. This is ove of the rare chances to secure prope?'y in tae very centre of the busi- nes# pari Of the c ty. Terma: Ten per cent at sale; ba'ancec. . ciivery of deed within ten days. R. BEARIST“. Ch’town, Nov. 28, 1899-—~ Auctiuneer. SYNONYNNTNONNNNTOAPENEDETVEDDEDFTATOPESTOTONDD yrvnetyensTTenssyD en = The General Feeling is That the fal weather is coming on and you are feeling colder, aud there'is no time you fee) so Aes emcirmancanmaee Rae eum i56 with WorpDs and Music complete, teatly printed and bound in one volume. A grand collection of Musical Gems, sentimental, path- etic, comic ; a veritable treasury of the world’s popu- Price, 10 cents, postpaid, cold as when your feet are badly shod. Why feel miserable when you can get» good substantial boot that will keep your feet warm and Lot cost noeu and inquired for the man who had reported his sermon of the evening be- fore. Accordingly the reporter was sum- moned, and this is the conversation that the anima! seemed to have a special pref- dOW IS THE ASCENDENCY OF erence for the embryo doctors. Weil, one ROYAL day, while a number of us were gatbered ' In a little circle upon the lawn in the iar and beautiful songs. JOHNSTON & MCFARLANE, 71 Yonge St., Tordato, Can. OAK SOAP rccounted ‘for? The answer 3 simple enough, viz:—Be- sause there is none equal to it ‘or intrinsic merits, firmness, vurity, combined with great . : P the sequel to’the incident are tuo painful Th W h: l b rcs sasting and leansing pro- F . to detail. But to this day that newspa- e 0 e oer = O perties deem have ateng never et ee iad ind a the faintest Without an uncomfortable start. And, “oo Send for pre mum list. conception as has been -suggested, even reporters of what is sometimes make mistakes.—Milwaukee r ' the matter. Sentinel. B m : G O N A LE d S U J, D, LAPTHORN & C0., the matter. ee HT an ; ts worse, | A Dismal View of Life. Charlottetown Soap Works ge ae, and he final. , Ths aa cae ae Y . : cilaeaae ! . 1at a dismal old world this is, any- t S f pooner tient -aarmapiaeeene dy seatioen teat aU.) Zonet, © hemel Od word this ‘s, 07. A: USONME #7 DEFEATS ALL IMFORTED_«s i. health of some ."“: ee eee ‘ Meg & >) 0 for i0 cents sie eeinns Ge tae per ag in danger of freezing; in March we shiver i sane 20 hundred and ten description has : Y oo > if i Y of the best humo: 6 tae something to do and chill and are liable to contract pneu- Christmas i resent RY a2. Can be procured BS cinsecienin if salettbcl vines, 7 Sl ax haeeeraais ormnaaiiane with it, he callsin monia; in May and June there is liable : prose and verse, as \vell as humorsa OIT ons ’ . ay, sia} 4 * _ x “ . Stevery ow eon Deis ae eer p some obscure at any moment to be a deficiency of cy- @ vohaston & heFarigne, er i neighborhood doc- clone caves; before the danger of destruc @ for your wife wouild be one Bri hton Brewer W (ff ¢e NO 79 (ucen St . os aise, rer oe =e Rae met: tion by the elements is over gnats, flics | § of our high erade sowink J + ' . : aan . and mosquitoes arrive in unnumbered | » : 7 on m7 « says it’s stomach, or liver, or heart trouble. Rapa pT hae paper at i > machines.—- Sie would ap- j eee . W h t Ss Nine times in ten he isn’t within a mile of | Millions, and eac ee ee sate it ..... RELEPHONE NO, 92..... ‘ . 1 e right. He treats for these troubles and do business. With July, August and Sep- ® presiate 16, . charges big bills until the husband gets dis- tember come miasma and microbes and ‘ ld oa — ~ ee i sted : rs hi ; bleis gree rn, any one of which, if absorb- { @ f wou mea €S83 iabor oY. gusted and throws him out. The trouble green corn, } : ; : x * Be Caramels trully weakness on divease of the dis. Si'or taken in allopathic doses, wil pro [8 fer her. Si i Be Be PR POPE Ai Be Be Dh Be Be 2 Se Me ah Bi Be Be Bo tinctly feminine organism. | bie doctor. « duce a tired feeling with complications. : _Many husbands, after paying big doctor- October is a bad month for chills and } 9 Don’t you think it woult s an bills while their wives grew steadily worse, fever. It is also about the season of the | ® thanas ” have at last written to a physician of Tia. Cver. s $0 i : yes > * er i } ° be ‘just the thing. OU are nw £3 tional reputation and learned the truth, | year when the bedbugs assemble in all the | 9 sno w fla kre They have ome justly ee at oe oe ee oo = panitieoe : Let us quote you prices. , s who have experimente ar make a final and desperate assau : norant pretenders who h pe and ma p eg is : upon their wives’ health. By writing to Dr.) ):eparatory to retiring into a state of in- | ® To call and see our X WAS STOCK of Reed ard Rattan Chaire Chacolates = Can be had at any of the following ‘irss class store T. J. Marvis D. L. Wocser W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hiutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates hands and feet clammy and cold, stomach weak : ; ‘ 4 8 2 daz. Sa nderson & Co with great palpitation of the heart. I dreaded | by many dealers in photographic supplies = — Suen] colt, at sight, : é . for night to come, for I would suffer from nausea | and are sold te all who send a special or- write oad ob tend tn post J.D. MeLeod & Co ‘R. H, Hasor, rear of the colleze. the animal in ques- tion, which used to he turned loose to nip the grass in the location. came toward the group limping very badly. He came “Yes, sir,” not without a slight mis- ali 2N ann to a stop a dozen or more feet away from } giving. “Was anything the matter with LOWER QUEEN STREE the crowd, and, carefully surveying the lot of us, finally made up his mind what he wanted to do, and without any hesita- tion limped directly to. my.side, whin- ——— ee Segoe are When a woman geis sickly, nervous, fretful and oy despondent R. V. Pierce, any ailing woman may receive | the free advice of an eminent and skillful specialist, for thirty years chief consulting hysician to the Inyalids’ Hotel and Surgi- cal Institute, at Buffalo, N. ¥. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriptton is a marvelous med- icine for women. It enres all weakness and disease of the organs distinctly feminine. It heals all internal ulceration and inflam- mation and stops debilitating drains. Over 90,000 women have testified, over their own signatures, to its wonderful merits. ‘* For several years I suffered with prolapsus of the uterus,” writes Miss A. Lee Schuster, of Box 12, Rodney, Jefferson Co., Miss. “I had a fall from my horse, causing retroversion of the uterus. Our family physician treated me for kidney trouble and everything else but the right thin , I grew worse and worse. My body was emicate all night, and so I continued until I began taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and I bega nto improve right away. I am now welland happy.’ Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels, ensued: “So you are the young man who wrote up my sermon, are you?’ <r “No, young man, it was an excellent sermon, excellent, and it expressed my sentiments exactly. But,” and he laid a disagreeable emphasis on the word, “but there was one objection. My last even- ing’s subject was ‘Grumbliug,’ not ‘Gambling.’ ” The remainder of the conversation and nocuous desuetude for the winter. Fol- lowing this month comes the putting up of stoves and connection of pipe, payment of coal bills, winter clothes, ete. Innu- merable things, such as house cleaning and political campaigns, are not included in the list of tribulations. Flow so many people manage to run the gantiet and reach old age+is simply mar- velous, Spirit Photographs. “It isn’t such a difficult thing to make photographs of the spirits if you know one or two little secrets,” said a photogra- pher. “Prepared plates are kept in stock der for them. <A certain symbol in an or- der for plates means that ‘doctored’ plates are wanted. “A trick, of some mediums is.to tell chine,drop in and eae our large stock of musical instruments — 2 @ a a (4) o ® @ - you too much at If you don’t want asewing ma- the best in the city. MILLER BROs QUEEN STREET, CoxneLiy’s Britpixe SF 2O2S088C S 20002008 see FREE This beautiful little J Lady's Watch for selling 3 dos. of our full-sized Linen Doylies at 10 cents each, AAAAKAAAAARARA BA LINEN DOYLEY Co. SEPT. © i, TORONTO roverneenenvenerrnnvnvenenersony McQWATID’S BOOT(& SHOE STORE : SUPA LAL CAMAM AU AMLLAN AAG ARE GAM LMULGG 6d AUG cd SGkdbadbALdd GUbLMd dt ES AALAAMAAAAUAAAUAAA\LA 44d Sd dd te Lord Methuen Deteats — Cobbler Seat Rockers, Faocy Osk and Mabogany Tables, &s., &. Cur Rattan Goods are Particularly Fine PP eS EY RY Sue So are the prices. Call in and look round. Oar time is yours — we wiil be glad to show you goods, and quote prices. —Se!- ect'ons may be made cow, and will s:orejfor you and read home when you want them. ot JOHN NEWSON = COUPEE EEE EEE ¥# eet UR RPERT erent