F 4 ee: Gevereseoooos seeessesooes | ¢ $ ; $ | @ | > : 2 : $ $ 3 : © ¢ B o. 1 $ oJ : Dy : ‘ue ; ¢\S } . ¢ @ 3 IN TH 3 6 ® © : é@ | ; : ’sOwn:? | :Baby’sOwn: ¢ 2 | e | 2 . Som 4 ; | > | > ti | 3 } © t+ r v | = 8 4 Zt irit I é $ cate sl nd children. 3 ; ; 3 THe Atecrt T ey ‘ . MONTR ur roa MARER® AL FLEBRATED oS A 3 84 cy O9OO0S990096 OO 09099999008 We have a Beautiful ine of goods to show you this season in Diamond Rings Gipsey Rings Chain bracelets ornetie Chains Genis Chains Brooches el¢. ete. ete | We are giving special value in Watches avd Clocks until Xmas. It will give us pleasure to show them to you. W. N. TANTON Great George St. Evaporated peaches and spricote 4 Beer & Goff’s. Paton’s Annuai temnant Sale now on, — — —_——--—__—_— a $9.50 est Plate - ec mma a & ‘ Ve ~ simplest, Light Eastman’s Wo. 2 Eureka Jr. Camera An ryi< res W x 2 hes ! b lg : Je us o ir f. view ; ‘ ‘ . Adapt« > ~s Cc A ‘ e sal ! pod r with plate Ider - - . ° $2.50 arr olete developing as printing outfit 1.00 atelgue af Eurcha | ameras and Koda free at on by maki. 7 * cha ar war wr EASTMAN KODAK CO. ~ nahact - W Vv Charlottetown School of Music, KINDERGARTEN BUILDING. W. Harry Watts, Director Lessons given oo Pipe Organ. Fee (which includes use of organ for practice and blower) $15 per term of 20 lessons. Piano (one hour) $10 per term. hour Jeseons on Piano, Singing, Orchestral Toatruments, or Harmony, $5 per term. Papers will be ready by the Director every Saturday at 10.30. Pupils admitted free, but are to provide themeelves with com ‘bined note and exercise books. Hours : 9 ‘0,12, 2 to 5, T to9. 6—ta.thor, st —_— a. eA zim ony ouminteresting books “Inventors ” ona “How you are swindled.” We bave exter sive experience in the intricate patent jaws of 50 foreign model or for free New York Life Building, speak ay | of England, for Half countries. Send sketch, helen MARION & MARION Montreal, and THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JANUARY 31, 1899 AMERICAN HUMOR, An English Comedian Compares I¢ With the British Article. George Grossmith, comparing Ameri- | can bumor with English, says: ‘‘A | New York gentleman was once chaffing me about my pronunciation of certain words, and I was very much amused at it. So I said to him: ‘It’s our language, you know. We invented it beford you were discovered.’ He was a bit abashed | at first. Then hesaid: ‘That’sso. Well, I think it’s about time you learned te fe “It is very difficult to score off American, and you can’t play a prac- an | tical joke on one at all. I’ve often gone, when I’ve had a friend with me, |} into some old city bank, like the Bank | example—staid place, you know. We've marched up to | the counter, and I’ve said quite calmly to the old gentleman behind it, ‘Can’t | I have a brandy and soda and some | sandwiches?’ They've always been most polite and taken it seriously, saying, ‘We don’t keep brandy and soda and sandwiches here.’ ‘But you have them ordered in from outside.’ ‘Yes, but that of course is for ourselves,’ and so on, all quite gravely and without the suspicion of a smile or the slightest quiver of the muscles of the counte- nance to indicate a sense that a prac- tical joke was fooling around.’’ in America you would have | fared « rently?’’ ‘Rather [ went once to the state- | house in Hartford. There was a man atanding = at the entrance, aa official | with a ba around his hat, so I step- ped up to him and ezid, ‘Can yon tell el isconducted on the Eu- ropean plan?’ He simply looked at me, and calmly said, ‘Any more?’ Then there was a moment’s awkward pause, | and I had to walk out.’’ me if this hot Ss | | Is the baby too thin? | Does he increase too slow- | ly in weight? Are you in constant fear he will be ill? Then give him more flesh. Give him more power to resist disease. He certainly needs a fat-forming food. Scott’s Emulsion is just that food, It will make the baby plump; increase the weight; bring color to the | cheeks, and prosperity to the | whole body. Thin children | take to it as naturally as they | do to their milk. soc. and $1.00, all druggists, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto, B-NSNHONENENG Base Burners, Z | ' fact.’’ Heating Stoves at Greatly Reduced Prices Dodd & Rogers Wholesale & Retail emnen bis POG xsi NEW .. YEAR'S GIFTS G.H. TAYLORS old | Thanks to the wise and stringent shooting is allowed with | in its boundaries, ‘*The result,’’ says an English tour | ist, **is 3 scataireete charming. Hundred f little chipmunks, with their gaudy ( backs, scampered impudenely ator peered at the passing coach rom the roadside. The squirrel did not bolt for tae nearest tree, but nodded a welc All bird life treated us like wis Even the lordly eagie hovered near, and the wild turkey stalked un- ncernedly through the rank grass. We were fortunate enough to see a fine specimen of the wolf tribe. He stood, a beautiful creature, and watched us ort | of sight, showing only cnriosity, not and fawn grazing by the road. Not un til we were within a few feet did they seek the shelter of the woods, yet not | ta fly. They simply moved aside. Here at least mankind was regarded as 2 | friend—one who could be trusted. The , them feeding. i robes. | stretching out into the ocean of the in- | finite. | Shakespeare, | lington, | taire, Carlyle, Bonaparte, Remarkable Tameness of Animals In the Yellowstene Park. mm Vhe slaughter of birds has almost en tirely removed one of the delightful ac companpiments of life in the rura) east —the music of the feathered songsters Apropos of this, it may be said that one of the most pleasant features of the drive | ay ugh the Yellowstone National park the apparent intimacy betwee ‘animal and bird life NOT AFRAID OF MAN. at i ; n man In the pa k. fear. Another time were perceived a doe ; onl; animal who ran away was a brown He turned tail at the sig yet it was quite x for bears to approach close tels at evening to feed on the refuse thrown out. It was an after din- ner relaxation for the guests to watch They munched and dis- puted the choicest morsels, for the most part indifferent tothe company. Only when we became inquisitive and ap- proached too near did they retire, and these animals were perfectly free and unfettered in their movements. It may read jike a fairy tale, but it is solid ht of a COUAC! , NALLY, a com- ee MEN OF GENIUS, Nature Likes Then Net and Invarf- ably Crushes the Breed. Through aJl time men of genius have scoffed at and have ridiculed the at- tempts of purse provd old ‘‘richesse’’ to cicate sipericy orders of manhood. Nor is this a matter for wonder. They were and are ridiculous. Yet these at- tempts are repeated every hour. Con- sidering them ove would suppoce tbat wealth, titles, dignities, are talismans whick insure virtne and honor and per- sonal worth and beauty in those to whom they descend. Talismans are ridiculous, and so are titles. Nob iiity is of blood and not of gar- ters, royal sponsors and christening Pedigrees, portraits and family history when truthful tell usa great | deal about the nobility of arace. Titles, quarterings and patents are worthless, and the production of a great genius is yn general as bad a sign as the produe- ion cf a great profligate. Races that ce xduce geniuses should be avoided. The best is the second best—the normal. Genius, as some one (Victor Hngo, I think) has finely said, isa promontory descendants of Bacon, Macaulay, We!}- Gibbon, Swift, Vol- Goldsmith, Spencer, Milton, Cromwell, Disraeli— to take afew names at random—and you will find that they are not, for the genius is always a transgressor of the normal—a ‘‘sport.’’ He is never symmetrical. Such a one nature likes not, and she makes provision for the ex- tinction of his race. —Humanitarian. Look for the Nelson, TO CURE TOOTHACHE IN A MINUTE Use NERVOL. One application’ cures ;if not, your prones back. Equally good for Neuralgig and Headache, 250, at all Deuggists, ——~ —s a _ —$—$—— Tne CLOBE TORONTO, CANADA The Leading Newspaper of The Dominion. THE;DAILY.... —Has over 12,000 more regular cireul- —ation EVERY DAY than it hadin 1897, —and nearly 4,000 more than one year —-ago, If GROWS BECAUSE iT PLEASES IT HAS ALL THE NEWS EVERY Day. ___--— The Saturday Illustrated With ‘ts 24 or 48; ages everv Saturday, it’s iLustrated supplement, its many special fea~ tures--Short Stories and Sketchy Articles— besides having the cu-rent news of the day, has become a strong rivai to the best monthly magazines, : IT Ix CANADA 8 GREATEST NEWSPAPER, You can have THE GLOBE every day and he SATURDAY ILLUSTRAT? D tor about the ame priceax you have !0 puy for many of the smaller dailies, The WEEKLY GLOBE Se A SS SS ES ES SS TE [llaminnated © Another form of beacon for marinera of smaller dimensions, but hardly less j rti se is the illuminated buoy These floating lamp holders, placed in enaity where the available channel ten only # narrow one, bounded by mud or sand banks only a few feet below tue surface of the water, are invaluable | to shipping, Hitherto the illuminant chiefly employed has been compressed gas, necessitating a high pressure reser- voir and compressing machinery. Mr. Wigham, whose name has long been known in connection with light- house apparatus, has introduced a min- eral oil lamp which can be fitted to | any existing buoy and will br~n for a | long period at very small cost. The | maintenance of one form of lamp can be kept up at a cost of one penny for 2 hours, and as no compressing machinery is required this is the only expense plus the original cost of the lamp. The | approach to port—such as that of Liv- erpool, for instance, where a ship has to enter through a long avenue of buoys —could by this invention be almost ae well lighted as a city street.--OCham- bers’ Journal. uoyn. A Warm England. The extremes of outdoor temperature in England vary more than 123 degrees. The greatest heat probably on record was registered in the valley of the Medway on July 22, 1868, when the thermometer atel'onbridge stood in the shade at 1004 degrees F. Eleven years later, in December, 1879, 55 degrees of | frost were recorded at Blackadder, in | Berwickshire—i. e., 23 degrees below zero F. More remarkable, however, than the heat in summer were the hot winters of 1748 and 1857 and the warm Januarys of 1877, 1884 and 1898.— Notes and Queries. Important to Athletes. Mr. Mack White, the well-known trainer of the Toronto Lacrosse Club and Osgoode Hall Football Club, writes: I consider Griffiths’ Menthol Liniment unequalled for | athletes or those training. I have used it with the best success, and can heartily re. commend it for stiffness, soreness, sprains and all forms of swelling and inflamma- tion. All druggists, 25 cts. 22 Seld by Geo. E. |. Hughes hte RC et a a : HE ge A | 7 ‘| WARE the celebrated P.D. CORSETS To be bought from all leading dry goods stores, > PEeeEULAERIL IIE eTETeeT ITE EETL ITT “9S 6OBe wIHS VOSS OTSECO = CHHAP + Rubbers +s ands <s ()yerslioes Men’s Waterproof Overshoes 77 cents m Rubbers, Pisin, 32 cents Women’s 22 cents Boys’ . « 26 cents | These are the out put of a new factory, therefore we cannot recom- mend, as we don’t know their quality, but as the price is low you might give them a trial. Gott BROS Molasses and Sugar, Extra choice Porto Rico Molasses, Extra standard granulated Sugar yellow extra Has bad several new features added, has all the 1 ews of the week in concise form, and keeps its readers irclose touch with every partocthe world, and more especially our Owa coupiry. Subscription rates and full particulars can be had atthe office of this paper, any news- dealer or post master, or sena din ct to Bulig@ag Washington, D.C. | SUNNYSIDE — C Sugar, Demerara Crystals in bags. Selling at lowest prices. HORACE HASZARD Ch’town, Jan 5th 99 JHE GLUBE, TORONTO, Saarta | Jas. >» uotonenoeocedenseseeeters cos eit nnn Tra What is known and Sold as Ready-Made Clothing Is clothing cut out by machinery, put together by machinery, and with the aid of starving female labor. Such a garment stamps the wearer on sight as dressed in slops. He not only looks it but as a consequence feels it. Men are learning that they cannot afford to be ijl- dressed. .S/ops have had their day. Shorey’s Ready-to-Wear TWO KINDS Clothing **Ready Made” % and expresses exactly whai the ‘Ready-to-Wear.’ name would imply QUITE READY-TO-WEAR. Made by tailors, designed by an artist, sewn with the best linen and silk, cut to fit the form of man be he tall, short, stout, or thin. Any man tot a positive malformation can be fitted by Shorey’s Ready-to-wear Clothing. By fitted we mean dressed so that he looks a Gent leman, and possesses that feeling of comfort and air of ease that always marks the well dressed man, See that Shorey’s Guarantee Card is in the pocket of every garment. © a snscepeconnnosnoonpenseeeiennnsspeeelin Paton & Uo, Selling — for Ch’'towa A | t | =7 9O99SS 95999955999 S 09999654 09565905 69656000006099660000606668 4 2 wks eod _—— gj ——a— English & German Cutlery Pecket Knives, Table Knives, Razors, Scissors, Also; Club and Hockey Skates FENNEL & CHANDLER A PRESENT STOCK CANNOT PAUL TO PLEASE Like two friends, are the foot and shoe which meet in perfect harmony, Such meetings are common in our experience, Ladies’ and Gents’ Slippers ia all styles, Overgaiters aud legzins, Moccaseias Overshoes and Rubbers. A nice line of skating boots in all the latest styles and colors. It’s econowy to buy where high quality is cheapest. We've always lower prices and better qualty than you get elsewere. VWrveeks& VWrarres SUNNYSIDE...... Arh ae MME all | Many persons who are compelled to wear Artifical Teeth on Plates, Rubber or Vuleanite plate causes heating of the mouth, bad taste, shrinksge 0 ; etc, finally causing the plate to get loose. Sometimes sore lips, sore mom 6 i (hroate are caused directly from the wearing of @ rubber or Vulcanite plaie. is true that a majority of persons can wear rubber or vulcanite plates with sat yet it 1s a fact that to @ large percentage ihe same material is poisonous. We bave seen many cases where people who bad rubber or vuleanite were continually suffering trom the above causes, and came to us for, relief. of that kind we always 1ecommend a metal plate, either of Gold, Platinum, Aluminum Our reason for recommending a netal plate is that it is conductor @ a and cold, thereby keeping tho mouth coo!, and it is non irritating, and is thinoet wee and stronger than any other plate. It is cleaa in every particular. aod i6 ae the wearer, Yoncan have your impression taken and bave @ Gold, Pie i Aluminum plate made same day, fully guaranteed because we make ey P and know all about the material used. We alao make the fam us THUR noted for its thinness, coolness and durability. We would like you to call and see specimens of al! our different inert including our Continous Gum Plates—the very finest ; late work kno Science. Every piece of work done by us must give entire satisfaction 00 else we wil: not allow it to leave our offize. Examinations free. Berlix. Dental CHARLOTTETOWN,