THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLC JWN, NOV The Day Bani The |'xaminer Publishing Company | i thirteen cents per dozen KATES OF ST BSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE) en veur 84.00 six the 7.00 | Therer VY onths 1.00 fae Viesth Ot | : ’ ‘ itea inttl WEEKLY EXAMINER sue ery Friday morning. It is made up mf roa ‘ whie nas appe red n he | aliy ' , t first ciusss me wspaper conta’ ning mitt ‘teal pews Suxcscription $1.00 a year TH DAILY EXAMINER NOVEMBER 26, [S897. THE MARKETS Cues The Montreal mar the | ; Ket continnes oO le et, es De ng.— Fi Untario Septem vers nodes sus oP 4 Fine Intario Octobers...... er ao Fine ownshipe...... ede eure to &} Fines' Quebec Uctobers.............74 to 7] A w Clement & Son, Manchester, und r iate of 1I3:h November, discuss the gitnat , as follows:—The season now drawity toaclose in Canada bas been a most remarkable one. The wake of cheese during May, Juse and July has been tiie largest on record, and yet during that period, and until the beginning of Sept: mber, prices kept steadily advancing. The make during August, September and Uctober bas not been so much above an averay “bile the quantity isthe finest we have -een for many years, and yet we have had a »teady decline in prices. At first sight the explanation would seem to be that tne trade was blocked’ with summ r goods. But that is not the cas, as the stock of this class of goods ia importers’ bands is lighter than we wave k.own it for many years. The con- samption has been very large, and will likely continue 80,as the trade is now pract'cally assured of a 6d retail cut right throug! ihe sesson, although 1 is just possible that the margin of profit, if apy, may be a very emal! one. In our opinion; Canaiian September made cheese at present prices are gocd value. and leave a fair working profit to the retailer, even at 6d per Ib. Butter —The butter market continues dull in Montrea) and ie confined to the jobbing trade. The weather in England has been soft and unfavorabie for eon- eumpt on, but tocounterbalance the ua- satisfactory condition, their seems a pros- pect «f settling the engineers’ dispute and averting the cotton strike, thus removing two great obstaclesto better markets in the United Kingdom. c. c. Finert creamery........00-.000..--18 18} I cstiicitnencccounvengeontoouh en to 174 Dibizy batler nccccccovccctcccesesesl6 to 64 Pork—Montreal advices repert a quiet and ¢angeless condition. Canadian pork i> guclitd at $16 16 $16 per po2Dd; hams llc to 13e, bacon, lic 12¢ per }b. ea ' Ta St. John, P. E. Island mess is quot- ed $13.59 per bbl., sod prime meas at $9.50 to $10.00. The Chicago provision market is report- ed weaker, and prices for pork deciined Tic to i24c, closing $7.20 November ; $7.20 December; $8.:74 January; $8.425 May. Mes-rs. Rattenbury are offering 44 cts. per ponnd for the best quality of live hogs, a great many of which have been deliver— ed, though t: eir factory is not yet quite ready for killing operations. Qe G Bo You Use It? ON NN et el It’s the best thing for the hair under all circumstances. Tust as no man by taking thouglt can add an inch tu uis stature, so no preparation ean make hair. The utmost that can be done is to pro- | mote conditions favorable to crowth. ‘This is done by Ayers Hair Vigor. It re- moves dardruff, cleanses the scalp, nourishes the soil in which the hair grows, and, just as a desert will blossom under rain, so bald heads grow hair, when the roots are nour- ished. Brt the roots must be there. If you wish your hair to retain its normal color, or if vou wish to restore the lost tint of gray or faded hair use Ayer’s Hair Vigor. rid to Any part of Canada or th i ' } vice, | Ceiient Sa i ’ ; } aeath rate a Oats,~ The price of oats in this city ranges from 27¢ to 28c per bushel, as to quality St [Ontario] ’ | “ona and 34e, quotations ear lots 3hc Potatoes.— The colder weather has stop- ped the movement of potatoes though better demand is reported in Neva Scouia, Eggs.— The price of eggs in this city is ied TD THE NEWS IN SHORT METRE, fiems of Interest Boiled Down Fur More Fasy KReading, Elaborate preparations are being made f.r Dr. Nansen’s next expedition in quest of the North Pi iO. Nearly al] the business portion of the village of ‘iverton, Ont., was destroyed by | fire a few days ago. The rew recitation hall which John D. Rockefeller has just built for Vasear Col- | ege at a cost of SI UU,U0U, was dedicated at | Poughkeepsie, N. Y., last week. St. Paul w« commemorate the 20th an- | | niversary of its reopening afier Sir Christo- pher Wren had rebuilt the ed'fice on De cember 2nd, with a great Masonic ser pgratu'ated on ite ex Since I8$1, ites from 43 to 25 per Montreal’s death (Jueebee is to be co itary condition. : : has fallen 7 1,000 of ite population. rate is 27 per 1,000, | Mrs. A. M. Dorn, a voung married | woman of Selma, Cal., met death in a | strange manner, She was laughing £0 | heartily that a paroxysm of coughing was caused, which ruptured a blood vessel and | caused instant death. | } The Director of the Christian Brothers in Montreal has given instructions that the members of the order are pot to teach night schools in Hull, as he considers they are already working enough in attending | to their day duties. 4 London water-color painter, who ordered soda water at a bar and was bit in the eye by the cork when the barmaid opened the bottle, has recovered $1,500 damages from tbe proprioter of the resiaur aat, though no structural injury was dope to the eye. The arrangement for the extension of the Intercolovial Railway into Montreal over the lines of the Drummond County rcad are now completed, and the service is expected to commence the first of De- cem ber. John Joverton, aged 100 years and 1 month, was married at St. Joseph, Mo., a few days ago to Mrs. Mary Henderson, who is 77 years old, This is believed to be the record breaker for marriages of old pers sons. Both bride and groom are in ex- cellent health. For an hour and a quarter a mine engio- eer near Rourne, Ore., was whirled around vith the flywheel into which he had fallen, but when he recovered consciousness, after the whee! was stepped, it was found that he was not seriously hurt. The wheel was a 20 foot one, and was making 125 revolu- tions a minnte. Oscar Gowing,& wealthy manufacturer of shirte, committed euicide in Boston last week by hanging himself to a bed post with a towel. Mr. Gowing wae about sixty~three years ofage. He left a letter in which he asked that his body be cremated and his ashes be distributed “to the winds and to The football players ought to be proud of the tribu'e which pug:list Corbett pays to their courage and endurance. Mr. Corbett says that he is notaf-aid to meet the best man that ever st-pped into e@ prize ring. But all the king’s horses and all the king’s men could not drive bim into # football team. “I bave too much regard for my limbs,” he esys. “I could not afford to take chances.” Sir William Harcourt in a recent speech described Mr. Chamberlain as a man “Jackivg in good breeding.” Mr. Chamber- lain in reply compares Sir William to the statesman of whom Mr. Leckey has written : “Lord Thurlow, though he hada strong natural bias towards harsh and despotic measures, seems to have taken his politics much as he took his brief, and he had that air of cynical, brutal, and { almost reckless candour which is some- times the best veilef a time-serving aud highly calculsting nature.” —--— ~<a — SOME ONE MIGHT HEAR. »,,! t I breathed my vows ore evening x | Unto my love so fair. a Her tresses brushed my forehead As I leaned above her chair. I saw her buruing bluskes As I whiapered in her ear, But, oh, she would not answeri Said she, “Some one might hear!** I grasped her hand and pressed it All fondly in mine own And told her that her image Was set on memory's throne, I vowed I loved her truly, That she te me was dear, But, oh, no answer got I Save she feared “some ene might hear!’’ I scouted at her caution. My breath did fan her cheek. I implored in fervent language That she to me would speak. . saw her with emotion Wipe from her eye a tear, Yet still she softly murmured, ‘‘Suppose some one skould hear! ty My hopes began to vanish. My tears commencedto flow, And to hide from her % werkness I turned away to go, When I heard a trembling whisper Fall softly on my ear, **Oh, yes, I fondly love you, And I care not who may hear!" Finley Jobnson in New York Ledger. Scared. ‘“‘Have you caught that murierer yet?”’ ‘*No,’’ replied the detective. ‘We haven't caught him, but we've get him so scared he doesn’t dare show him self when we're around. ’’-— Washington Star. ages, studying their causes and symp- toms ar d cataloguing the remedies which have been used by the most emi- nent physicians of all times he conc)lud- ed Wi ith a short chapter on prevention, His plan was to inure the back of the neck to drafts by having some one direct a current of air upon it from a bellows three times a Cay. The writer had the correct idea, al- | | though its practical application was | clumsy and he was a long time in reach- ing it. Lhe} l only way to escape colds is to meet the causes that produce them and not to run from them. Let the body be hardened by a cold sponge bath or even a cold plunge, fol- lowed by brisk rubbing with a nature,” , o I. HOW TO ESCAPE COLDS. Not by Coddling, but by Becoming Able to Endure Necessary Exposure. It is not always sufficient to point out a danger. It is often of even greater importance to show how the danger may be averted. Most people properly recognize a cold as avoidable and think they are greatly to be commended for the prudence they exercise in protecting themselves, but if they did but know it they are really doing all they can to make themselves susceptible to colds by weakening their resisting powers. professor wrote a lene treatise, with a learned title, on bow to avoid catching After trac ing the history cf colds from the earliest German once { old. ‘scratchy’? towel, every morning. Let the clothing be adapted to the season, though «lways as light as possible, but keep the neck tneovyered—no turned up com@ collar, no muffler, no boa. Never let the temperat in the house rise above 70 degrees in the winter. Air every room systematically every day, no matter what the outdoor temperature may be. Always have fresh air in the bedroom. There is nothing poisonous in ‘‘night air,’’ popular belief to the con- trary notwithstanding. In a word, don’t be always afraid of catching cold, don’t coddle, but meet cold and wet and changes of tempera- ture like a man, or rather like a horse, and you will them run a better chance of being as strong as a horse. Of course you must strengthen your armor where it is weak, but if you rec- ognize in yourself a weak place, a ‘‘cold spot,’’ don’t cover it up with more clothes, but toughen it and toughen your entire body until it is one homo- geneous resistant whole. —Youth’s Com- panion. The Cooking of Game Birds. Most game birds and animals, be- cause of a life of ceaseless activity, do not take on fat, and such should be larded or cocked with slices of bacon or salt pork placed on them. Do not serve birds with heads on and undrawn, as is quite generally practiced, the latter point being a relic of savagery, the for- mer an offense to sensitive nerves. It is pleasenter to enjoy’a bit of choice flesh withcut being so fercibly reminded that we are cating dead birds. This is not the only instance where realism is in- artistic. —Woman's Heme Companion. ure OO —~ SESS of the bowels, do not irri- ganism in perfect condition. Try them. 25 cents. tate or inflame, but leave Prepared only by C. L Heod & Co., Loweli, Mase. Restore full, regular action Pp s | 4 all the delicate digestive or- i Ss MESAGE TO MEN Proving that True Honesty and True Phil- antrophy still Exists If any man who is weak, nervous and debilittaed, or who is suffering from any of the various troubles resulting from youth- ful folly, excesses or overwork, will take heart and write to me, I will send him con- fidentially and tree of‘charge the plan pursued by which I was completely restor- ed to perfect health and manhood, after years of tuffering from Nervous Debility, loss of Vigor and Organic Weakness. I have nothing to eell, and therefore want no money, but as I know through my own experience bow to sympathize with such sufferers, [ am glad to beable to assist any fellow~beings to a cure. I aim well aware of the prevalence of quackery, for I mvself was deceived and imposed upon until I nearly lost faith in mankind but I rejoice to say that I am now pertectly weil and happy once more and am desirous therefore to make this certain means of cure known to all. If you will write to me you can rely upon being cured and the proud satisfaction of having been of great service to one in need will be sufficient re- ward for my trouble. Absolute secrecy assured. Send 5c silver to cover postage and address Mr. G. Strong, North Rock and, Mich 135 p&w. EPPS COGUA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR, SUPERIORITY in QUALITY, GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIESUNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only, Prepared by JAMES EPPS & COo., Ltd, Homeopathic Chemists . ‘London, oo NY -AS. SAN ULCEROUS SORES MEDIC David Sutherland, Clyde ADVICE: tiver, N. S., writes to a Wwe friend: ‘As you know J had suffered over forty years With & Sufterea fever sore on my leg, end though ninety years of age Forty Vears 2 REE|y Nvassan ‘Treatment cured wi me. This was two years azo [SEND and the cure remains per (POSTAL; fect, | CARO | FOR £ (BOOKLET, THE NYASSAN MEDICINE CO.,, TRURO N.S. Mention this paper when you write, Nov 22 24 26 &w ee0e nao es @&24 2D ie Souveni P E Island A copy of ‘ Prince Edward Island I]lus- trated,” is about the best thing for the purpose of giving strangers an idea of this beautiful Prevy- 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. They are for sale atall the bookstores in Char- lottetown, Sum 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. THE EXAMINER OFFICE, eooeee QUEEN STRE ET...... BDABVs*RASAAS*VGAVS — => @ @ @ @ @ @ ® @ ® @ @® ® + ee 2 @ es O22 4 28864806907 784 2] 437 OT OS 2>?e @ ® ® © @ 2. © @ © 8 628 6264624006358 0827406048 748 O88 8380060467075 7 6% 8 @ Ginna silieaeminiatatien innit Assginees Notice. Pursuant to the provisions of the deed of assignment from Messrs. Mc- Leod & Jardine, of Mount Stewart, Prince Edward Island, Merchants, to me, bearing date the third day of May, A.D. 1897, I hereby give notice, that a dividend, equal to ten per cent. of the respective amounts owing by said firm, to the unpreferred creditors thereof, is now payable at the office of Messrs. McLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, Solicitors, Charlottetown, to all such creditors as will, within one month after notice of such dividend, accept the same in full of their respective de- mands, pursuant to the provisions of such assignment. The dividend of any creditor refusing or neglecting to accept such dividend in full, within the time aforesaid, will be dictributed, pro rata, amongs* such creditors as will accept the terms of said assign- ment, Dated this sccond day of Novem- ber, A.D. 1897. JOHN J. McQUAID, Assignee, WANTED! 5,000 men, women and children te tocall and inspectmy New Goods. Compare prices with othor stores,ahd be convinced by buying from me your watches, cloaks, jewelry, silverware, spectacles, eye glasses, etc, you will save money, and the goods bought from me will be warranted to give satisfaction. Cc. C. JORY LIME ihe a Good Time to Buy Watches NOW. In spite of the advance in price at the Factory, I hayt been able to buy,and will sell a nice lot of naw Watcres, the old ra*e, the order having been yiven before the raise, Call and see them: also our new Rings. W. TAYLOR, — We Are Saving MoneyEverySeason —FOk— - “ Kad Moulding, Spouting, Flooring, Clapboards, Balusters, Raij Posts, &e., &c., we make a specialty of WOOD oMANLEKS and Newel Posts in Common and faney woods. If you are not yet our cusiomer, we would hke to haye you look through our Factory. Wecan soon show you wh we are able to give such value as we do—in fact, better thap ever before. Prices always right. Work never inferior, A. Duchemin & Co.. _ Charlottetown. P. &. Island. Ges ah ee Tah teeny Ta Ta ese ai aha Headquarters for Shoe Bargains Macdonald's Market Square. } $ Look for your.fall and winter Boors, from us, We are seiling at the lowest pmce yet. Womens strong leathr bocts for Je, children’s strong boots 5@¢, men’s strong boots $1.00. Other lines equally lov, You will be sorry if you buy without seeing ourprices. - ~~ ot J.B. Macdonald&Co FOR SHOE BARGAINS. A GLANCE AT OUR SHOES will convince all who want style, comfort and durability that our stock comprises the best that shoemaker’s art can produce. Women’s Felt Laced Boots: Women’s Buttoned Felt Boots. Women’s Elastic Side Felt Boots, from 85c and upwards, Felt Slippers. Cloth Slippers. W.H Stewart & Co PIANOS PIANOS PIANO Now Opening —Fall Stock rrr eee In new and elegant designs of cases, AJ! prices. C. P. FLETCHER, | Opera House*Buildits § T, C, P. YEO, Agent at Summerside Carpenters and Builders who trade wich us for Doors, Sash “hy. :® . > eae Aamee ote UF -—— 7 ww PSSAR ESS SHYT aA te Kee eeszawe