i phe a af wk ete SOOSOSSSSOSOSSEESSSSOSSS SOSSEEOS GE8E40 gooo TD VIVeyFy VTBee ASOUVEnI poF eee ‘P B Island A copy of ‘* Prince Edward Island Illus- trated,”’ is about the best thing for the purpose of giving strangers an idea of this beautiful Prcy-— ince. It consists of 100 pp. printed on the best paper, The engravings are nu- merous und = first. class. The price is 25¢ a copy. hey are for salea T the bookstores it all ar- lottetown, n Chm merside and Souris and on the train. They may be ob- tained at this office securely | wrapped, ready to mail to friends abroad. Write or call. EXAMINER OFFICE, > THE ccocceQ UEEN ST RERT::::z ~~ oo * a @® @ 2 2 es D> ee SUITABLE BOOTS For this time of year. We have a large stock of walking and Skating Boots. Is it something like this you want? : 2 | 7 Girls Oil Pebble Boots $1.00 -~ 4 os “Sp. Heel 1.25 Womens Oil Pebtle Boots 1.25 # “ “ © Linea 1.35 “ oa or Ty v7 1.45 «ae s¢ « oe “ 1.60 “ “ “ Oa ity 1.85 “* Dongola 7 AS 1.85 We want you to <all and see our goods, we know they will please you" Our prices speak for them- selves. R. be. Jost BPOSSOSOSOOSD 06600062 0000 EPPS'S COCOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possessas the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homcopathic Chemists, London, England. NiGaT SCHOOL The Hveninge Session —OF THE— Charlottetown Business College and Writing Academy OPENS ON OCTORPER ISTH INST. This Session affords an excellent opportunity for thhorewhvu canpot attend during the ory to *quire a business education. Its object isto assist those ip need of lielp; and the Work, ig so arra that no one, however Gactons, need feel 0000 ~“ 00 200060086000 DES 0 Sees 0004 y embarassment. INSTRUCTION NDIVIDUA SUBJ ECTS—Prectical Arithmetic, Writ- ing, easy and rapid) Business Cor: espopd ence s book xeeping by single ard Double Entry Actual Business Practise, not copying short hand and Typewriting. The Pepmapship Department is conducted by\r J. Harry Williams; for specimens of hiss udents’ work, see Geo, Carter & Co’s Window, Shorthand by Mr Wm. Moran, the 2 licensed public teacher in this Prov- Five sessions per week; hours 7 30 to 9 30 p 2 For rates and full information cail at €C,. B. C. or write to L B MILLER, tI ntendt Gas a - ntending students ma eup an branches desired. ’ ° ’ Oct. 8 dif ’ eaVva | otherwise, which old people often complain | of. and | comfort, result from disordered nerves.” ~-e ee 222 2% 4 @*e Ge 4 2 = = > & @® @ ® & @ 2 > S38 06082473007 2 Fe ~*~ 2 MANY OLD PEOPLE SAY —— That Paine’s Celery Com-| | pense. Nothing could be more beantiful pound is the True Frun- tain of Youth. The Only Medicine Tha Makes Gid Peeple Happy and Well, It shou'd be remembered that when the feeling of old age come; on it isduetoa weakened nervous system. One of the most promincat medical writers of the day : *The various pain’, rheumatic or which materially disturb their When you feelold, whether you are twenty or eighty, use Paine’s Celery Com- pound, as it will assuredly strengthen and build youup. The great medicine has edded years of peace, free ; from the infirmities of old age,to thousands | of lives. O'd people should bearin mind that Paine’s Celery Compound purifies the b'cod when it moves slowly and sluggishly removing rheumatism, neuralgia, heart palpitation, nervous weakness, sleepless- ness and troub'es wth kidneys, liver and stomach. In a word, Paine’s Celery Compound makes the old feel yigorous and youog. e-em Ranch Life. It isso difficult te imagine a yvorng American voluntarily choosing a ranch as a start in life that it is hardly worth while trying todo so. As a rule he either thinks of the country as the place where market vegetables come from and Thanksgiving turkeys are raised, or else it represcpés to him a large and expensive establishment at Lakewood or some such place, with a casino and bowling alley and poio team attached. And as for the most part the American does not play polo nor hunt nor shoot por fish with any real, genuine en- thusiasm, the latter view he takes is scarcely more alluring than the former. Down deep in his heart he knows that he would much rather be trying to ran an electric railway or a bank or bnild- ing bridges or losing money in Wall street than to be doing any of those things. But the young Englishman is entirely different. He has always known and enjoyed outdoor sports. It is the life he likes best, and he imagines that ranch life is, first and foremost, a sport- ing life. —Abbe Carter Goodloe in Scrib- ners. A Business Woman. Mrs. Emma Coleman Hamilton is the owner of a large coaland wood yard in Dunkirk, N. Y. She also sells drain- pipe, fire brick, tiles, cement, etc., has a trusty man in her office, but oversees ber books and the business generally herself. She was president of the Wom- an’s Educational and Industria) anion for three years, when she resigmed on account of business and family cares. She was one of the principal workers in organizing the Dunkirk library, which has been a decided success. ‘Hush Mouey.” : ‘*We'll call this hush money,’ said the druggist as he took a quarter from his patron and handed him the chiero- form. — Yonkers 4iazette. Made Him Propose, The diffident young man wanted to propose to his girl, but for the life of him he did not know how to go about it. He read books on the subject and sought information from men who kad experience, and while the theories were admirable in every instance he found that the practice thereof was a different thing. He was walking with her one evening, thinking over these things, when her shoe became untied. She stuck out her pretty little foot, with a smile, and looked down at it. He fell on his knees to tie the lace. Then he walked on with her. The shoe be- came untied again. The third time it happened he was ready as before. ‘See if you can’t tie a knot that won’t come undone,’’ she said, as he worked away at it. He looked up at her tenderly. “If I can’t, I know a man who can,’”’ he said. “Do you want him to tie it?” she asked coquettishly. **Yes,’’ he replied. 7 She jerked her foot away. He smiled to himself. a ‘‘It’s the parson,’ he said. And he rose to his feet and finished the pro- posal.—Strand Magazine. CHARLOTTETOWN ~~ | ray | Buy your tickets for Boston by the fast Steamer Halifax. W.W. CLARK, Ticket Agen | | | | . ENGLISH INNKEEPERS, faid to Be Wainly Boors Whé Treat Pae trons as Intruders. If your pocketbook allows or fate or the desire to see the country compels you to remain in England, there are parts where you can ride on your wheel with great satisfaction and at great ex- than the midlands, lovelier than the counties that surrennd London, but westward go no farther than Bristol or Truro, northward than Chester, avoid- ing Manchester—that is, unless you mcan to go still farther north into Seot- land, which at times will repay your enterprise. ‘Lhe southwest is largely to be avoided. Cornwall and Devon haves the worst roads in civilized Enrope—in fact, the roads and inns explain that the country is mot and never has been civilized. In the inns you are often treated as an intruder, and sometimes cheated in a fashion that would bring a blush to the cheek of a Swiss landlord, for the emptiness of the larder the bill makes up in lavishness. ‘There is hard- ly anything to eat save cream, but for thet and salt bacon and ancient eggs you are asked to pay as much as fora good dinner at the Cafe Royal. “ihe inn- keepers are mainiy boors. As for the roads, they go straight to the top of all the hills, as uncompro- misingly asthe roads of Bohemia, then drop down the other side and are unrid- able in both directions. When not climbing precipitately, they lie buried at the bottom of a ditch. They are shadeless and uninteresting, rarely ap- proaching the seacoast or passing near anything that is worth looking at, and yet we know Englishmen who are pro- foundly impressed with the belief that they are the best in England, and there- fore in the world. The roads, inns and innkeepers of Scotland are in every way better, but the fact that fhe average Briton spends his holiday on the conti- nent when he can proves not only that he wants to get there, but also that he is driven from his own country by the shortsightedness of the people who keep its inns and look after its reads.—Mr. and Mrs. Pennell in Fortnightly Review. ANCIENT MEDICAL METHODS The Manner of Doctors’ Consultations En the Fourteenth Century. Coming to Mondeville’s exposition of the method of holding a discussion, we find his description almosta story of what might take place today. ‘‘First,’’ he says, “‘we should inquire into the nature of the disease, examining care- fully and feeling, because the diagnosis is made by touching with the hand and observing with the eye. All the consult- ants engage in turn in the examination. } Then, if the case demands it, they make a new examination all together, point- ing out to ore another the symptoms of disease and the special or remarkable features either in the patient or the dis- ease. Then one of them, the highest in rank, says to the patient, ‘Sir, we per- ceive very clearly what is the matter with you, and you ought to have full confidence in us and be glad that there | are so many of us here and such doctors— enough for a king—and to believe that | the youngest of us is competent to pre- scribe and carry on your trea‘ment and bring it fo a good result.’ Then he in- terrogates the patient about the circum- stances of his attack, ‘Sir, do not be displeased or take it ill, but when did your illness begin?’ following this with many other questions, the answers to / ’ andthe blood pure. which are recorded as indications fur- nished by the patient. ‘*When all the questions called for by the case have been asked, the con- sultants retire to another room, where they will be alone, for in all consulta- tions the masters dispute with one an- other in order the better to discuss the truth, and sometimes they come to a pass in the heat of discussion which | would cause strangers witnessing their proceeding to suppose there were discord and strife among them. This is some- times the case. ’’-—‘‘Fourteenth Century Doctors,’’ by M. E, Nicaise, in Populas Science Monthly. TT MRE - HOUSE TO LET PEAKE'S WHARF (WO 1) Wharfage storage and yard- age, at reasonable rates. Arthur @, Peake. Nov. 4 lialian Ware House Cor. Grafton and Gt. Geo. Sts. North side Queen Square — = CLUB SODA Received to-day; a shipment of Cantrells & Cochrane’s Dublin and Belfast Ginger Ale and Club Soda. JOY & DAVIES, Wholesale and Retail cena it tl CE Ce ane - . Ser , é “i wy be < Cee aes bag ra iy hy Fe ‘eg rn et : ie Pe! ei by | eae ais io 2 % 4 og A a oof eS at bie nail ae ot 4 a oo) Bs ie By ere: A Ocoee Fe Per; ee kr si f ‘ See ee Se es 7 Pi ee pees ad THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTT!I T WN, NOVEMBER 11, 1397 LOE : . ceteris iipradaactateentngstanhielng titel scinhapeaiipecenctncieaagpeyeglinenneneneaneipnennlap tne a Elastic Advertising Rates, When the advertising agent of one of the greatest shows on earth—for in the circus business ‘‘greatest’’ is not a super- iative term at all—yisited a small town in Yansas last summer, he called upon the editor of the local paper and inquired the cost of a double column display advertise- ment in the next two issues. ‘Two hundred and eighty doliars,’’ was the reply, without « second’s hesitation. ‘“Great Scott! Are you crazy?’’ cried the agent. ‘‘What would you charge us for a full page?’’ ‘Two hundred and eighty—just the 6ame,’’ “But how do you figure it?’’ expostu- lated the cireus man. ‘‘Haven’t you any sefitied rate for space advertising?’’ ‘‘See here, mister,’’ earnestly remarked the editor, ‘‘I don’t pay any attention to space in this deal, but I do know just whatan advertisement in this paper will cost you. You may havea ccluinn, or& page, cr the whole blamed paper, just as you like. There’s a mortgage for §.50 on this shop, and your circus bus got to help me Gut with it. If it doesn’t, I’:n a goner, that’s all. You may move right in hore audrun the whole shooting inatch fora couple of weeks to suit yourself, but we've | got to ante up $280 before next Saturday night. Now, then, are you a friendly In- dium or are you a hostile?”’ All the dates and extra posters used last seasen by that show throughout the west were printed in a little one horse newspa- per oifice in Kansas. The paper is still is- gucd regalarly, and its editor shows every evidence that he is at peace with all the world, and is prospering.—Chicago Times- Lierald. ii audi A Moral Courage Hero. Sirs. John Hays Hammond, in her ac- count of the Jameson raid, tells a good stcry of a ‘‘moral courage’’ hero, one of those who remained in Johannesburg, ‘“‘guarding the women and children,’’ in- stead of going out to meet Jameson. It seems this gentleman gravely said to her, “If there had been war, 1 wonder if I should have had the moral courage to keep out of the fight?’ ‘tI looked into his face,’’ said Mrs. Hammond, ‘‘and, seeing there his character, answered with dryness, ‘Qh, I suspect you would.’ ”’ le The stery is told of a young married wo- man, who asked another yowng married woman how she managed to get along so amicably with her husband. The answer “I feed the brute—his stomach with fi an@ his mind with flattery.’”’” Evena man will have to admit that this young wo- man hail solved about two-thirds of the art of aiming the aver man'thappy. The other third consists of keeping his body in such tendition that he will enjoy his food - and his mind in such condition that he will - tbe smsneptible to flattery. Itisn’t much use to pm tempting food before a man who hsasn*tmn appetite. It doesn't pay to lavish @miles on a‘man whose nerves are racked and overworked. Theaverage man pays very little attention te his health, and won’t take medicine of hhis‘own accord until he isflat on his back. A shrewd wife will keep am-eye on her hus- ’ band's welfare in this respect, and when she ‘sces that he is bilious-or suffering from indigestion, or is generallyout of sorts, will see that he resorts to that most wonderful of afl invigorators, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. Kt és the best of all appetite - sharpeners, blood- makers and fieshtbuilders. It corrects all disorders of the digestion and makes ‘the liver active Itttones the nerves amdvcures all cases of mervous exhaustion and prostration. It cures <8 per cent. of all caseswf consumption, brenchial, throat and kindred ailments. Medicine dealers sell it. Mre.SRebecca F. Gardner, of Grafton, York Co., Va., writes: ‘‘I was se sick with dyspepsia that I couldmot eat anythimg fer ower four months. I though’ I was going to die. I weighed only 8 s. I took two bottles ofithe ‘Golden Med- acal Diiecovery.’ I am now a: well as ever and weigh <25 pounds." Far constipation — Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. New Crockery Store All kinds of First-class <rockery, in- cluding Dioner Sets, Tea Sets, Chocolate Sets and Chamber Sets, Butter Coolers, Pitchers, Bowls, Pie Plates, Batter Crocks Cream Orocks, Cake Pots, Bean Pots, Teapots, Milk Pans, Churns, &c. Also, avery fine lot «f Glass, in Tumblers, Gobiets, Water Pitchers, Six Piece Sets in Colored and Plain Glass. Preserve Dishes, Bread 1-i'e-. ~!'«:y Dishes,Butter Coolers, Cake Stau}-,and « lot of other articles toc n»merons to “+ tion, GIVE US A CALL, We are sure to suit you, both in price and quality. C. LEWIS, Grafton Street, exactly cpposite North Side of Market House. —g 3 3idv wy A. A McLEAN, 0. ©. Barister, Etc., Brown’s Block Charlottetown Money to Loan. Printing in all its branches at the Exam- INER office, one,cf the bes« equip- ped Job Printing Establishments on P. E. Island. A SENTIMENTAL FOLLY Se eee st Rich men must burn TAILORISM fs their money somehow, and 2 ja are the natural prey of j ! high class tailors. / But,—men of moderate means, reflective minds, and business sense, should query why their hats and shoes are ready made before paying a custom tailor twice the price of “Fit-Reform” garments. As carefully made—as perfect fitting—as shape retaining. Brand and size and makers’ price in left breast pocket. ss St $10, $12, $15, $18, $20 per suit. st Catalogue from Fit-Reform Clothing Co., Montreal. ve te J pe eee Reasons Why The Ladies SHOULD HAVE THEIR | : JACKETS MADE TO CRDER AT D. A. BRUCE'S You can have any color or quality of cloth you want, You can have any style you fancy. Your Jacket will be made strong and well finished, such as a tailor only can make, You wiil have a first class fitting garment. Many of the most stylish jackets seen op our streets are made by us, at Lastly, one important consideration. You will not have to pay as high a price az for an imported garment of similar. quality, Give us a trial. ae Remember The Place T>—.e “Insure Your House, Furniture, Stoc.. ship or Cargo,is with —&— HORACE HASZARD > FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE AGENT- ce—Cameron Block TELEP AONE CONNECTION.,. .ccsecsecssves. e - Men's Wool | -Underclothi1 g Men's Cardigan Jackets. See our Stock, ; @20e<eeeee0se ‘ T J. HARRIS LONDON HOUSE )