ar teng Se Seo ¥ seit a a a | " THE DAILY “erate Read. Room EXAMINE a ~_—_— > le 7 ™ d) r Vear. G is : (ea RUE Et IN Oe aes ee re Tera Utes iniss1s “rue Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evripipes, Single Cepies two cents, —— —$—$—— . - . ys eee a a — —s — iF PR 1a e c VOL . CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, MONDAY, DECEMBEP OO. Taare. NO 284 REE eee = 7 =m 3 mors : : mE ere ms lenis x : , mt. * dun . rs mt A BE. ‘ 9 LESS Lif Gc. The Usual Way. There are some society girls who like fi Begins \ 3% mn fhree Days O13 to marshal together all the trophies of na ‘ aor five . : ) ‘ . . > ’ ‘ & season, In the shape of euchre priZés, G. W. Reynolds of L Angeles, a ai W oil german favors and invitations galore to ene of the oldest traveling men in the To t] aliiien » ne 1 ss : ' ; all sorts of functions, where they may (uited States, has a ranch of which he | o the careless reader, and to these wao have no idea of economy, if may seem a matter of little umportance that | be seen of men and bring green eyed . : va tan > st * : ‘ “ Els ed a it ks ee ete a enjoys telling even more than he does | we lead. But to those who believe that a dollar saved is a dollar made, it is ever welcome tidings. THAT WE eae S eeu? ry vay ee e * the ex} ices throug ‘hic > ae 1a ¢ a1 ‘ ; ; : ; . i - . wai " otner giris not fawgpred quite so much, of th ake | : th rina h he | LEAD isa truelsm, pronouuced as such by thousands of satisfied customers. Below we give the lines of goods IN | but the queerest effort of this kind that s passed Gu. Mis DAIL Ce? rv upon | — om - ; ie , . . " ~ " . - : : “1 road. The ranch is ne he re Boke. . which we purpose to lead at a lively clip for the balance of the year. ever came under the notice of the writ- a F Th ' ct is } die This | wer : : ; . . = : | er Was a pyramid of empty candy boxes ass is gained from two aniaries: | We will lead in all kinds of Readymade Clothing, We will lead in Cloth and Fur Caps. stacked up from fioor to ceiling ina om ; VUuUt t oy = 368 r : ant ei pvhe ’ BS, r ‘ : ° 7 ‘ : : ; . : s : ik : nv » Is hei ; s, which Mr. Reynolds visits every time | We will lead in Fur Coats and Robes, Ve will lead in Homemade and Imported Tweeds, pe ae ait = ese ae ne | We will leai in llannels and Blanketing. We vill lead in Staple Dry Goods. make and style, gradually diminishing —— apiaries, which are cared for | We will fead in all kinds of Gents Fernishings. to the top. This ae girl, with = pg « : es ee ae Im all thas . , ¢ . ye ea . immense capacity for destroying candy, by my son," said he, ‘there are 140 | In all these we will lead af the lowest prices. Tremendous stock and need of money are the causes that will. make | U™mc2se capacity for destroying candy : OO ee lt ot . 1 a : ’ Seg ; Pp ¢ excepted every male visitor to add to stand of bees. ihe honey season lasts | our étore for the balance of this year a veritable wilderness oft bargains. , the number as she started a plant in fom April te July. Last season my | 7 o bss 1g yielded 40,000 pounds of honey each of the other corners of the room. or aT, an Of course a tretnendous rivalry went on @bich sells in that country in bulk lots stdcentsa pound. Two of the hives gave over 500 pounds each. For ten sears I have been interested in bees in a gall way, and I take greater interest inthem every year. A hive or stand of bees is worth $2.50. Initare the queen, the drones and the workers, a total population of from 20,000 to 25,000 bees. “This very good sized colony,’’ he continued, ‘‘resides in a hive or wooden box. In the hive are a dozen framus 13 by Tinches. In these the bees make or deposit the honey, a foundation of wax having been first placed in each frame by the beekeeper, so that the bees may have something to build upon. The honey is taken out of the frames every other week during the honey season. While doing so there is little need of protecting the hands. The bees seem to be most inclined to sting one in the face. So, as a precaution, the man who isremoving the honey from the hives wears a straw hat, from the brim of which is hung a silk veil, like they have to do up -in the Klondike country to ward off the summer mosquitoes. “The queen is an absolute monarch within her dominions. She is the un- disputed boss of the job. An ordinary bee lives during the working season on- ly45days. Young ones are being hatch- ed ont all the time. A bee goes to work at the tender age of 3 days and hustl.. like a veteran for 42 days. Then it is just naturally all tired out, I suppose, for it dies. The queen lives longer, and When a young queen comes into exist- ence in the hive she drives the old queen out. Her loyal subjects follow her in her banishment, and that is what makes the swarm. **In southern California the bees make water white honey when the black sage is in blossom. When the white sage is flowering, the honey bas an amber tinge. In winter the bees make no hon. ey. Seventy-five carloads of the article are shipped out of Sanu Diego county in good years. '’—Denver Republican. ~ RAM’S HORN WRINKLES. A $20 coat often covers a 5 cent son. Truthfulness is the diamond of charac- ter. Hypocrisy is a cloak that is ragged in the back. A pious face is not infallible proof of a devout spiri-. The man who talks most about himself fays the loust. Character is what & man is, not what he Appears to be. All things were made for the good, and tome day they will have them. Smiling lengthens the mouth and the life in about equal proportions. He is more than half miserable who ia nothing to make *thers bappy. What if you have lost your ring? Be thankful that you still have your finger. Any fool can make money, but it takes Wisdom to know how tu spend it well.— amn's Hern. —_—— W20D's PIIOsPHODINE The Great English Remedy. Siz Packages Guaranteed to promptly and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions,Sperm atorrhea, Impotency and a effects of Abuse or Excesses. i Montal We rry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opium or Stimu- Before and After. lants, which soon lead to In- Armity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has bien prescribed over 35 years In thousands of Cases; is the only [Reliable and Honest Medicine Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if Reoffers some worthless medicine in place of this, faclose price in letter, and we will send by return Bell. Price, one packare, 21; six, $5. One will eRe, sic will cure. Pamphlets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor. Ont., Canada. Soll in Charlottetown Geo. E ughes. Druggi-t. a by ° Application to Parliament: Public notice is hereby given that appli- cation will he made ie Pasiiamene o1 os da, &t the nextsession thereof, for an Ha teeing the neme of The Domipion Iding and Joan «+sociation, tu that of oe Desainion Permanent Lowen Company. . ted at Toronto, this i7th day o1 Novem- vA. D. 1897, MACDONALD, BOLAND & THOMPSON 2 Toronto-street Torenta, Selictiozss for Applicants, Men’s all wool Sweaters, Men’s all wool Cardigans, Heavy all wool Underwear, Men’s heavy woolen Gloves, Men’s heavy lined Kid Gloves, . |Men’s four-in-hand Ties, Yen's heavy Ulsters, Mien’s heavy Ulsters, fibre lined, *®en's beaver Overccats, heavy, 90e a suit 2d5¢€ a@ pair O0¢ pr » for 25e. $3 95 4,50 4-50) Mfen’s extra weight all wool Suits. special value, Boys’ Overcoats, good and heavy, We want the money. Corner. Call and inspect. McKay Woolen Compan You want the goods. 5.90 2,50 70e) 70c Men's fine imported Underwear, the best at the least money on P. E. Island. Men’s Fur Coats, $13 50, 15, 18, 22. 25, 35 and 45, Ladies’ Jackets, 4 hales Misses’ Reefets, all wool serge, Ladies’ heavy Underwear, Boys’ Knicker Pants, Mlen’s heavy cloth cap All kinds of Men’s, Youths’ and Children’s Clothing, at prices that outclass anything on P E Island The odds are in the purchaser’s favor when buying at the Bargain LEADERS OF VALUE — - Which would you rather trust? An old, true friend of twenty years, or a stranger? You may have little health left. Will you risk it with . stranger? If you have a cough, are losing flesh, if weak and pale, if consump- tion stares you in the face, lean on Scott’s Emulsion. It has been a friend to thou- sands for more than twenty years, They trust it and you can trust it. Let us send you a book telling you all about it, Free for the asking. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville, Ont, Adams’ Pepsin Tuttefrutt An unfailing remedy for indi- ssestion. Recommended by the leading medical authorities. See that the trade mark name “Tutti Frutti” is on each 5c. package. ALL OTHERS ARE IMITATIONS. 153 For Sale. SCHOONER “SAN JUAN,’ now on her way from St. Jchn’s New- foundlana to Charlottetown; built in L289, regisiered tonnage 94 tons; has a good owtfit. Apply to PEAKE BR9O3S & CO Novl0— 11 a gy $2.90 150 22 4d Ss eo GS { GREATEST OF COLONIZERS. Much of the Earth Owes Its Settlement to the Finding of Gold. It has been well suid that gold is the greatest of coloniaers, and this has prov- ed especially true in the last half of the present century. To what lone regions the footsteps of man were attracted in the earliest times by the discovery of gold we may not know, but within the memory of living men great regions of the earth’s surface have owed their set- tlement and occupation solely to the finding by search or accident of a few shining particles in the earth. California was a remote and outlying province of Mexico, inhabited by Indi- ans, gathered in missions or scattered abroad, and cattle barons and their de- pendents, visited by a few ships each year in search of a freight of hides, when the picking up of a few grains of gold in the banks of a mill race called the gold seekers from the four quarters of the earth and transformed a wilder- ness into a populous empire. Australia was a corner of the earth selected on account of its remoteness from their former home asa place of banishment for British criminals when the gleam of gold illuminated it and filled the distant harbors with sails and their shores with cities, South Africa might have remained forever a grassy waste, the home of sav- ages contending with the Boers and the British for the possession of illimitable pastures, had not gold called the miner and these who follow him to build Jo- hannesburg.—Kansas City Times. The Sea. It is the sea which ennobles every- thing. Between the line and the surf there was but the ancient foreshore, covered with prickly tamarisks and mauve colored heath, with yellow sand conspicuous here and there. At the lim- it of the foreshore the rugged border line cut clear into a deep and somber blue. It is she—blue as any grape on this cluster which hangs in the cooling breeze. The azure deepens, filling up a | ANNUAL MERTING - _— - good half of the range of sight; the - white sail of a fishing smack floats ’ alone, like a hollow shell; the eternal ; monotone of ocean is borne upon the ear. Draw near and see the leaping sil- ver foam. Above this intense blne the sky is trans- parently, superbly pale, and the stars are hurrying to light theirlamps. There is not a living son], nor a plant, nor any sign of the hand of man. There might be nereids and fanns dancing on the strand, as in the days when the world was young.—H. A. Taine in * Journeys Throngh France.”’ Handkerchiefs here at 9 a. m., tomorrow See our ad.—Mocre & McLeod. i MERCHANTS BANK OF P. E, I) The Annual General Meeting of the shareholders of the Merchants’ Bank of P. E. Island, will be held at its Banking House, Gt. George Street, on Tuesday, the 11th day cf January, next, 1898, at the hour of 1] o'clock a.m. Proxies must be left with the cashier at least one day previous to the meeting. J. M. DAVISON, Cashier. nov29—15 &wtd New Crockery Store All kinds of First-class crockery, in- cluding Dioner Sets, Tea Sets, Chocolate Sets and Chamber Sets, Butter Coolers, Pitchers, Bowls, Pie Plates, Butter Crocks Cream Crocks, Cake Pots, Bean Pots, Teapots, Milk Pans, Churns, &c. Also, avery fine lot of Glass, in Tumblers, Gobiets, Water Pitchers, Six Piece Sets in Colored and Plain Glass, Preserve Dishes, Bread plates, Celery Dishes,Butter Coolers, Ceke Stande, and a let of other articles too n»merons to mention. GIVE US A CALL, We are sure to suit you,’ both in price and quality. Cc. LEWIS, Grafton Street, exactly opposite North Side of Market House. —g 9 3idy wy Beautiful That is what Everyone says of our Display of SILVERWARE —~*" New stock just: received. The latest povelties in artistic designs. QUALITY A | G. H. TAYLOR Charlottetown HEALTH HINTS. Many Inng troubles come from superfl- cial breathing. Deep, full breaths should be drawr and the lungs fully expanded. Every one with a tendency to neuralgia, rheumatism or sciatica should wear wool next to the skin all the year round, as in warm weather very lightweight flannels prevent chills after perspiration. When one is feverish, all drinks that are heating or exciting should be avoided, Pure, fresh water is best, then lemonade, orangeade or teas made from some simple aromatic herbs for quenching thirst in fe- vers. Never bite your lips or any bits of de- tached skin unless you wish to ruin your lips, destroy their color and vitality, and perhaps give rise toeruptions. The mouth, like the tongue, is one of the ‘‘ mirrors of bealth.’’ A Story of Thackera= Dean Farrar gives the following rem- iniscence of Thackeray in The Inde- pendent: ‘‘Dining with him at the house of Dr. Butler, I remember that he spoke of many things, but the only remark that I specially recall was one about himself. He said that he had re- cently sat at a dinner next to an emi- nent tragedienne, now dead, and that she had overpowered him with ecstatic compliments. A few days afterward he had sat next Jenny Lind, and the great singer, with a frankness which delight- ed him, said that she had not read a line of one of his writings and knew nothing about them. Of the two ladies, he greatly preferred Jenny Lind and enjoyed her frank indifference much more than the fulsome adulation.’’ And He Couldn’t Have Both. Stokeleigh—Why don’t you get mar- ried, old man? Brokeleigh—Debarred by custom. Stokeleigh—How so? Brokeleigh— Well, while it is per- missible for me to appear in public without a wife it is not permissible for me to do so withoué clothes. —Brooklyn Life. ~ Caught Napping. ‘“‘Where did the police catch their man?’ ‘*Found him asleep on a seat in the park.”’ ‘Oh, I see. Then, I presume, they arrested him ona bench warrant.’’— Philadelphia Bulletin. Nipped In the Bud, Mudge—Which is proper to say— **Lend me $10,’’ or ‘‘Loan me $10?’ Wickwire—It won't do you any good to say either.—Indianapolis Journal. among her visitors and admirers to get the finest and most unique native and imported boxes. Strange to say, she married a man who had never added a lone box to the pile, but he helped to destroy some of the most toothsome offerings of other fellows.—New Or- leans Times-Democrat. A Woman's Movement. The presidents of the 23 literary clubs which compose the Federation of Wom- en’s Clubs in Kentucky at a recent meeting which they held for the pur- pose of interchanging ideas upon club work decided among other things to en- deavor to establish a bird day in the public schools of the different cities of the state. This will be one effort ina movement to preserve the birds. Ths presidents will also use their influence to have literature upon the subject dis- seminated, as they believe women are ignorant of the vast destruction of birds caused by their feather trimmed hats. An English writer asserts that there never was any Grub street in London, the name having been invented by Pope. Hungry authors became identi- fied with that street because they were always trying to find it. In Mexico the school children who have done best are allowed to smoke cigars while pursuing their lesson peppnnenennnemmcemnerne— ] BUSY MAN. In your daily round of busy busi- ness you are apt to get out of sorts. ang. your regular meal hour often causes headache, or a harried lunch- eon brings on an attack of Indigest- ion. You can’t work when in this condition. You need instant relief to be able to continue your day’s duties. That is when it is good to have a bottle of Abbey’s Effervescent Salt in your office desk, This ration has a marvelious effect on Headache and Indigestion ; a t ful taken ina on water gives instant relief. Its daily use will prevent their return, Here is what those who know and who have used Abbey's Effervescent Salt, say: From Dr. Thos. E. Lovegrove, !Not- tingham, England, “Tl have great pleasure incertif ing that Abbey’s ervescent Salt is a safe and useful family medicine and is specially beneficial in cases of In- digestion and Rheumatism." From Coralie De Loraine, of “Le Folict,” Piccadilly, London, Eng. “J tried Abbey’s Effervescent Salt for a bad nervous headache, It en- tirely removed this in the course of a few minutes, and I have had no re- currence of it, andfrom what I know of its good effects on others for vari- ous complaints, it is a most valuable remedy, All druggists sell this standard Eng- lish preparation, Price 2/6 or 60cts, « bottle, Trial size, 25 cts, #7 Send for free sample. THE ABBEY EFFERVESCENT SALT CO., Lumen. MONTREAL, CANADA, Bottled Joy. Empty bottles wanted, cheapest cash price paid for all kind of empty bottles, JOHN P, JOY, Victoria Cafe Gt. George St Discounts are the or ler of the day. We are giving liberal disconnte on ali our beautiful stock of gonds at the cheap crockery store.—W. P. Colwill. * Se we a i li A a Te = So