ee ee a re Se Ss . 4 : r 4 ; ‘ | al * a Sr hag. RE es : ; o . se . : “a cf x f Yi eS TLL ? — - CALENDAR, NOV. 1897, MOON'S CHANGES Ficst (Quarter, Ist. 10h. 24.5m, a. m. Full Moon, 9th, 5h. 37.6m., a. m. Cast Quarter, 17th, 9h. +9.6m., a. m. New Voon, 24th, 5h. 6.3m.. a. m. First Quarter. 30th, 10h. 2m, p. m. Dav of Week Sun Sun High Rises | Sets | Water h. m. | morn 1 | Monday 647] 441] 249 2 | Tuesday 19 39: 350 3 | Wednesday 50 37 5 15 4 1} rsday 52 36 6 2 5 | Friday > 35 | 1 @& t} rday »4 33 } s 71 Sunday . DO 32 §) 8} Monday 56 SO 1G 9 | Tuesday 58 m) Is #0 | Wednesday a 3; ee al | Thursday z L <4 a on | eZ} Friday 3 4 13 24 £3 | Saturday o 24 03 14! Sunday ‘ - a KS | Monday 8 2 I 8 16 | Tuesday 9 i a 4 a es hi 8 3] 17 W ednesday 10 m8 1 28 13 | Thursday I a = 48 19 | Friday 1s AS 4 54 > AD | Saturday 14 | Li 2 (ys Al Sunday 16 4 oe - is Monday 7 lo | {) li 23| Tuesday 1) i 30 24 | Wednesday 20) 7 12 27 1 Thursday 21 ° = = { — Ly 2 12{ 132 77 | Saturday 24 It 2¢ r ¢ »)* ll 0 we a Sunday on 10 1 35 2 | Monday _ 9 4 50 | Tuesday 728 | 410) 4 40 pe & P & Island Railway On and after MONDAY, 4th Oct, 1897, the trains of this Railway will run daily, (Sun- days excepted,) as under. “rain: t- Trains In pe Read STATIONS. ward. Read down. up. w. M.JA. M. pM. A. M 3 20) 6 15) - Charlottetown ...| ¢ an 9 4@ 3 52) 6 29)..Royalty Tunction., g 16 9 19 4 42) 7 03|.-North Wiltshire. | 5 42 8 30 4 58) 7 13|..Hunter River... | 5 52 8 15 h 34 7 37|..Bradalbane...... 5 08, 7 37 5 44, 7 43|..Emerald....... | 5 02) 7 28 5 50) 7 53)-. Freetown ....... | 452) 7 14 6 0) 8 07 one ' 14 38) 6 54 655 8 BOAT L org; Lv.| 4 15.6 20 140 8 isi } S'side | “| 4 ooj11 00 2 02 8 59|--Miscouche ...... | 3 42:10 37 2 39 9 17\.. Wellington...... | 3 28 10 10 ‘ 13 9 45|.. Port Hill ....... 3 00, 9 21 4 3,10 35). -O’Leary besusenas 211,88 5 01:10 51|-- Bloomfield ...... 1 55) 7 38 5 4911 15 . - Alberton nied awe 1 20 7 02 6 45.11 55|--Tignish .... .... 12 50 5 55 ®. MIA. M. Pp. M.jA. M. A. M/P. I4. lA, M.|P. M. | 6 20) 3 10)..Charlottetown... 9 10) 4 10 é& 5 8 24 feo 8 Junction! g§ 59| 3 50 7 28) 3 47|..Bedford ........ 8 321 3.17 8 25) 4 15)...Mt Stewart...... «| 8 10) 2 45 8 45) 4 43)..Morell........-- 717| 200 9 14] 5 O4/..St. Peters ....+-| 7 15} 1 @ Ol) S88). . Bear River ......| 6 41|12 43 St 7, cscs 06200. 6 1012 00 A. M.|P. M. A. M|P. M. A. M./P. M, A. M.IP. M. $ 10| 4 15)..Mt. Stewart ....) 8 05) 2 35 22) 5 O8|..Cardigan........ 7177123 @ 45, 5 20|..Georgetown ....| 6 55) 1 Oo A. M./P. M. A. M.|P. M. Pr, M. A. M. 5 5 | eee 7 20 ‘6 40 ..Cape Traverse . 6 3) PrP. M. A. M. Yrainsare ran by Eastern Standard ‘Time. GA SHARE. orn. e . MG atten WB Kalway Office,Ju e.., 1897 Wants, Lost, Found &¢ BOARDERS WANTED,— Four Bosrders ean be come accommodated, Appl to Mrs Agnes eill, Hillsborough Stree novli—d&wtt WANTED.—A girl for general housework. Must be well recommended, Apply to Mra. Geo. Carter. AGENTS get fifty cents on each dollar; no experience necessary, Write for agent's outfit, Address The Catholic News, 5 Barclay St., New York. Oct 23 41 _ -—-— WANTFD.—A servant for general house- work, reference required. Appliv to Mrs Geo, E Full. nov 3eod tf WANTED. —At once, a boy for restaurant Apply to A. N. Large. nov 1—tf WANTED —A cook; $7 toa competent per- eon. References required. Apply at this office, nov3—tf FOR SALE CHEAP,.—4 Mason & Hamlin Se atyle ©, has two sets of reeds, in good r. Apply at the Examiner Office. ‘ e127 — eod 2wks Tenders for Lease —Or— Hillsborough Skating Rink For ensuing Skating Season, from Nov. 20th, inst., to lst of May, next, will be re- ceived up to 15th November, inst, at noun. Addresses voder cover, marked “Tender for lease of Skating Rink ” D. C. McLEOD, A. A McLEAN, Q. C. ‘Barister, Etc., Browe’s Block Charlottetown ———— Money to Loan. Becotry and Prejudice Must Be Buried With Their Countless Crimes. vi AN AGE OF ENLIGHTENMENT Poisonous Drugs and Dangerous Mcstrums Must Give Way to Advanced Science. HUNDREDS ARE BEING GURED if You Are Ailing, No Matter Whatthe Disease “is or How Many Doctors Biave Falied to Cure You, Step inte the Nearest Drug Store, Ask fora Guide to Health, Buy a 25-Cent Remedy and Cure Yourself, Mr. H. Manning, 450 Dorchester street, Montreal, Qnebec, Canada. Says: **1 was troubled with a sever> cough, accompanied by pains in the chest, shortness of breath, night sweats, expectoration and loss of flesh. This continued for some time. [ had ivst my appetite and was greatly debilitated. After using Munyon's Remedies for three weeks my cough is better, I have no more night sweats, no pain, my ap- petite has returned and I sleep well. | am feeling very much stronger after being confined in doors most of the winter.” Munyon’s Rheumatic Cure seldom fails to relieve in one to three hours and cures in a few days. Price 25c. Munyon's Dyspepsia Cure positively eures al! forms of indizestion and stom- ach troubles. Price 25c. Munyon’s Cold Cure prevents pneu- monia and breaks up a coldin a few hours. Price 25c. Munyon’s Cough Cure stops coughs, night sweats,allays soreness,and speed- ily heals the lungs. Price 25c. Munyon’s Kidney Cure speedily cures pains in the back, loins or yroins, and all forms of kidney disease. Price 25c. Munyon’s Nerve Cure stops nervous- ness and builds up thesystem. Price 25c Munyon’s Headache Cure stops head- ache in three minutes. Price 25c. Munyon’s Pile Ointment positively cures all forms of piles. Price 25c. Munyon’s Blood Cure eradicates all impurities of the blood. Price 25c. Munyon’s Female Remedies are a boon to all women. Munyon’s Catarrh Remedies never fail. The Catarrh Cure—Price 25¢.— eradicates the disease from the svstem, and the Catarrh Tablets—price 25c.— cleanse and heal the parts. Munyon’s Asthma Remedies relieve in three minutes and cure permanently. Price 25c. Munyon’s Vitalizer, a great tonic and restorer of vital strength to weak peo- ple. $1. A separate cure for each disease. At all druggists, mostly 25 cents a vial. Personal letters to Prof. Munyon. 11 Albert street, Toronto Ont., answered with free medical advice for any disease. LO OE Oysters Oysters Oysters JOY) JOY! JOY! Victoria Cafe, Great George Street. Oysters served in every style; Lunches and dinners with despatch. As usual, I am prepared to deliver Oysters in any quantity to customers to any part of tne city. Cebu Telephone Connection. — JOHN P. JO Victorta CAFE Gt George St..... Weural gia In the head is aJmost invariably caused by decayed and apscessed teeth. Don't sufler lessly when you can be releived in a few hours and cured in a few days by the careful treatment we will give you. DENTIST. Painless extraction of teeth ererccrccsecoes: -- Miss, DONALD FANCY DANCES, including Highland Fling, Flag Dance, Strathspey, Spanish Dance, Sailors Hornpipe, May Pole and Villiagers Dance. Skirt Dance, Audalucia, etc. For this seeson ouly these dances $5 each, being one third of priee. Rooms in Maconic Building. ee pt30 ; POLLY’S DANDER UP. Inflamed at Sight of an Cffensive Bird # Visitor Wore on Her Hat. A bridal couple who put in several days recently taking in the sizhts of the capital enjoyed themselves im- mensely until the day preceding their departure. It then occurred to the bride that she had not called upon ‘‘dear Fanuy,’’ who had been her chum dur- ing her days at the seminary. Now, Fanny was still enjoying single blessed- ness, and this may have had something to do with the anxiety of the bride to yall upon her maiden chum. George de- ? murred feebly, but at last consented to pay a formal call. The bride dressed herself in a fetching gown and placed upon her saucy head a Parisich dream in the way of a hat. The hat was one ef those indescribable creations of the milliner’s art, a mass of flowers with a bird or two partially concealed in the foliage, so to speak. The pair went gayly forth and ina hotel coupe were soon at the door of Fanny's residence. Their cards were taken and they were ushered into the drawing room. While awaiting the coming of her friend the bride’s atten- tion was attracted toa large cage con- taining a splendid parrct. She chirruped cooingly to the imprisoned bird and wished she might take him out of his cage and caress him. George remarked that he looked tame enough and sug- gested the opening of the door of the cage. Suiting action to the word, he opened the doer and the released bird calmly walked forth and strutted about, blinking his beady eyes know- ingly. The bride, with usual calls of ‘*Poll, pretty Poll!’’ coaxed the bird to- ward her, and poll proceeded to climb up the rounds of the chair upon which the lady was sitting and perched herself upon the arm of the chair. The parrot uttered guttural cries of ‘‘ Polly, Polly,’’ this word seemingly comprising her en- tire vocabulary. The bird accepted the caresses, and apparently all was serene, but without an instant’s warning she uttered a scream of rage and flew at the lady’s headgear, alighting fairly thereon, and then for a few minutes the air was fill- ed with flying feathers and bits of flow- ers, while the atmosphere was fractured by screams from the bride and discord- ant cries from the parrot. George at- tempted to come to the rescue and had his face badly scratched for his pains, The lady finally shook the bird loose from the flower garden she was wear- ing upon her hat and made one wild dash for the front door, followed close- ly by the bridegroom. Once on the pave- ment, they became somewhat composed and determined to return to their hotel to repair damages. They did not tarry long enough to see ‘‘dear Fanny.’”’ The sudden wrath of the bird was evidently cnused, George thought upon reflection during calmer moments, by the fact that amid the flowers in his wife’s hat there nestled a stuffed Caro- line parrakeet, which the parrot took to be a real live rival and proceeded forthwith to demolish. The bride is now a thorough convert to the teach- ings of the Audubon society.—Wash- ington Post. Heirs Afraid of a Bomb. By way of illustrating the nervous- ness which the recent explosions have revived here, a queer adventure which has just befallen the heirs of a house owner may be mentioned. They had met at the dwelling of their departed uncle for the purpose of drawing up an inventory of his effects in company with a lawyer and had nearly completed their task when one of them pulled out of a cupboard a metal box, which was laid on the table and which the man of business was about to open, when one of his nieces cried out in horror: “Don’t touch it! Look, that isa fuse.’’ Sure enough, there was a little something popping out of the cover. ‘‘It is a bomb!’’ exclaimed the panic stricken heirs in chorus, and then they proceed- ed to remark that their deceased rela- tive had been a moody, silent and re- served sort of individual, and thence they inferred that he might possibly have been an anarchist. Two of the nephews had had put on their hats and were on the point of rushing off to the office of the nearest police commissary, when the lawyer, who had been quietly inspecting the box, calmly suggested that it might simply contain some pre- served fruit. This theory somewhat re- assured the men, but the ladies would have their way. The commissary was sent for, and the mysterious box was soon on its way tothe municipal labora tory. It was found to contain a pine- apple, the stalk of which had been mis tuken for a fuse. So the good old uncle, who had been so ungratefully maligned, had not been an anarchist after all.— Paris Cor. London Telegraph. Early American Bishops. Before the war for American inde- pendence the Americag Episcopalians, who were connected with the English church, were never suffzred to have @ bishop among them, but remained um der the jurisdiction of the bishop London. The rite of confirmation wes anknown, and every candidate for or- dination was obliged to travel to Eng- land. Out of 52 candidates who came from America for ordination in 1767 10 died on the voyage. At length, after the United States had been declared in- dependent, Dr. Seabury was ordained bishop of Connecticut by the primus and bishops of Scotland, the prelates of the English church having refused to consecrate him.—Londorn News. TAIREAE —NERVOUSMED} FREQUENTLY BRINGS THE VICTIM TO THE VERGE GF INSANITY, The Case of a Young Lady in Smith’s Fatis Who Suffered Severly--Given Up By Two Dectors —Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Have Re stered Her Healih. From the Smith’s Falls News. Many cases have been reported of how invalids who had suffered for years and whose case had been given up by the attending physician have been restored to health and vigor through that now world famed medicine. Dr. Wiliams’ Pink Pills, but we doubt if there is one more startling or more con- vineing than chat of Miss Elizabeth Minshull, who resides with her brother, Mr. ‘Thos. Minsbull, of this tewn, an employer in Frost & Wood’s Agricul- tural Works. The News beard of this remarkable case, and meeting Mr. Min- sbull asked him if the story was corre«t. He replied: «*All 1 know is that my sis- ier had been given up as incurable by two phyricians. She is now well enough todo any kind ot housework and can go and come, as she pleases,and this change bas, it is my honest convic- tion, been brought about by the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Jils. Mr. Min- suujl then related tbe following story to the News:—**My sister is twenty years of age. She came frow England about ten years ago, and re- sided with a Baptist minister, Rev. Mr Cody, at Sorel, Que. In April.ef 1896; she took il] and gradually erew wor-e. She was under a loca! physician's cui for over five months. ‘The doctor said thut she was suffering from a compli- cation of nervous diseases, and that he could do little for her. The minister with whom she lived then wrote me of my sister's state of health, and I had her come to Smith's Falls, in the hope that acbhange and rest would do her good. When she arrived bere she was ina very weak state and a local physi- cian was called into see her. He attend- ed her for some time, but with poor re- sults, and finally acknowledged that the case was one which he could do very jittle for. My sister had by this time become a_ pitiable object; the slightest noise would disturb her, and the slightest exertion would almost make her insane It required some one to be with her at all times, and often after a fit of extreme nervousness she would become unconscious and remain in that state for hours. When I went home I had to take my boots off at the door-step so as not to disturb her. , When the doctor told me he could do nothing for he, I consulted with my wife, who had great faithin Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, a8 she knew of several cases where they had worked wonderful cures, and I concluded it would do no harm to try them anyway and mentioned the fact to the doctor. The doctor did not oppose their use, but said he thought they might do her good )as they were certainly a good medicine. In September of last year she began to use the Pills, and before two boxes had been used, she began to show signs of improvement. She had continued their use since andis to-day a living testimony of tre curative power of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.” Mr. Minshull has no hesitation in sounding the praises of a remedy that has worked sucha change in the health of his sister and cheerfully gave the «*News” the above particulars, and when asked to do so most willingly signed the following declaration :— Smiru’s Fauxs, Sept. 11th, 1897. I thereby make a declaration that the statement in above as to the condition of my sister, and the benefit she receiv- ed from the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are absolutely correct. THos, MINSHULL. Witness, J. H. Ross. ae = FOR SALE. RARE CHANCE The property occupied by J.J, Gay and so situate in the village of Pownai, 7 salen tecen vharlottetown, is offered forsale. The pro- rietors have carried vp a large market gar- en aeerz and see! business for thirty years, and the purchaser will no doubt retain a large share or the localtrade. The prem- ises compiise a large dwelling house, s‘ore warehouse, barn, shed, orchard, and about J5 acres of the most fertiire land on the Iniand This land hasbeen manured year after year, for so long that as an wid man said the other day.; “It isall abed of manure and could be uled for topdressing.” This would be an ideal spot for a country merch- ant. or it would be admirabie fora summer resort, The situation is one of the most beautiful on the Island. Good bathing, fishing. boating, shooting and within easy distan churches, Office schodi ae an —— he at the door, or terms an rther ie Von Clure Gay, J J Gosh tama = JOHN T MELLISH Solicitor Charlottetown d&w oct7 F, ‘i j= Vy se iS « No Tailor coylg ]} P - make, and trim to BE "> order, a suit equal tog | 4% $10.00 “Fit-Reform f § 7x for less than $50.00, D even if you furnished | § ™ T B No one knows better than the Tailor that he | -* can’t compete with these garments in value, ang BE " none can less afford to admit it. , Not made like other “clothing”—but warranted tp | § ” fit, to wear, and keep its shape till threadbare, | -F Makers’ price and brand sewn * ape . “4 ' into left breast pocket REE of of every genuine “Fit- a aa “ Reform” coat. ol - FIT- ; ; . Qe mo ; et 7 ay r=FORM & ce! $10, $12, $15, $18, $20 Per Suit. se ut Catalogue from tt Fit-Reform Clothing Co., “hs Montreal. DTN ye : A ead him free with the ¥ | $1.50 per yard cloth put into that grade. yt Marine Insuran The British and Foreign Marine Ins. Co., of England, The Empress Marine, Ins., Co.,of London England, — The General Marine Iusurance Co., of Dresden. 4 r UL SeS@aPtewse|sas sage areeree The undersigned represents the above first-class Comp Cargos, Freights. carried at lowest rates. Sterling Certificates i ueen Stret — — , — Matai OF Nay YORE RICHARD A. McCURDY, pie - - (THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPANY). Has more insurance in force, a greater annual income and more anany ther company inthe world. It is the oldest active Total Assets, - . : $234,744,148.42 . Invested in Canada, - . . 4,257,520 ATS . Total Surplus, nearly - . . 30,000,000.0 Insurance in force, . . . - 918,698,358,00 Income in 1896, $49,702,695/27, being TWELVE ont more than the total Revenue of the Dominion of Canada, . Issues the most liberal policies and pays larger dividends, on all pol han any other company, and is beyond donbt,, the wealthiest | greates. company ir the worla. All policies payable in gold, Agents Wa in unrepresented districts, 4 JOHN MACEACHERY, — Agent for P.E. come And §@¢—..w- How Large Your Dollar Is To-day. Never in the history of Furniture buying, Wa# © purchasing power so great, as at our store now, | Especially is this true in buying fancy rockers,our line! Beautiful Cobbler Seat Rockers. , Rattan Rockers and reception Chairs, fancy upkolster@® Oak Rockers, is the best money can buy, and they™® marked at the price of cheap goods. é We Furnish Homes. 4 JOHN NEWSON. habeial Block, Victoria Row o ew