SHOE BILLS. By buying your Boots and Shoes at the big Sale. BARGAINS IN ALL LINES Some lines Half Price. All goods must be sold, STORE NEAT TC DRISCOLL & HORNSBY’S QUEEN STREET Opp. Prowse Bros —_— Dentistry... BY SPECIALISTS PaInLess DENTISTRY by use of electricity or by the Berlin Method. MopERN DENTISTRY, crown and bridge work. (Both without pain.) AgTIFICIAL TRETH.— We make all kinds. Teeth extracted without pain. BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS Silver Spring Brewery, SHERBROOKE, P. Q. S. C. NUTTER, Propr. Ale and P above brewe ly superior t rter of the y are vast- the gsocd: produced bv any other bre very in the Domin ion, and in order to give chance to ve beg to quote the folowing low prices for cash : everyone a sample then ¢ Per hhd........- $16.50 Vechalfdo...... 8.20 Per quarter do.. 4.20 Per dozen quarts. 1.50 Per dozen pints.. St) Delivered of the city, trains. A. fFARGDOVALE Sole agent for P. E. HIT’S OUT island THE { Magazine A particularly number. Some exceptionaily int resting ar ticles, and the cover picture, ‘‘A P. EH. Island Road,’ and ‘he frontis- | piece, “’Marchbank’s Mills.’’ are both very pretty views. These are the contents. Near Marchbink’s Mills, Hampton, P.E.I. ~Fromtispiece, ; The Marys: qu Rev. J. M. With Wolves ; fence WW. \ ‘ Our Educational System Charlottetown Fifiv V. ne Aa #spen Poplars —!. > A Jeurney from Port Lalcie to Trois | a a : «cA i as Va ' Wieres—fohn ( }. ' The Ambitious 4 ATrue Fish Stor: Two Dreams Book Notes, For Sale N€wWs sande : uae +] ~ -EIDTION one yea ny nths 5c. “THE P, £, I. et eteteeeetneseneecsemamees oe Agents Wi: bw nany part teamers or T4 Trarry TT) NOVEMBIIR FOO me, (illus.) oes hing (illus.)\—Law MAG semana Go at i ; my Nova Q ca Oo seu ine Zers : S - ertiil- | IV TO T a} aa wad he WeyVa OCOIa j el ilizer Co., ‘Stuart's Tablets because | right along until one day | | Prairie, Wis., ' i i | vote for Pineau. It | | tones THE THE ARMY OF HEALTH. The Army in the Philippines In- significant Compared With This One, lf all the people in the United States, Canada and Great Britain who make daily otuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets could be assem- bled together it would make an army that would outnumber our army of one hundred thousand by at least five to one. Men and women who are broken dewn in health, are only a part of the thousands who use this popular preparation, the greater number are people who are in fair health but who know that the way to keep well is to keep the digestion perfect and use Stuart's Tablets as regular- meal time comes to insure good digestion and proper assimi- lation ot food. Prevention is always better than cure and disease can find no foot- hoid if the digestion is kept in good working order by the the daily use of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablecs. Mr. Thomas Seale, Mayfield. Cal., says: ‘“‘Have used and recommended there is nothing like them to keep the stom- use ofl } * iy as iach right.”’ Miss Lelia Dively, 4627 Plummer St., Pittsburg, Pr., writes : “‘I wish everyone to know how grateful I am for Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. I suffered tor a long time and did not know whatailed me. I! Jost flesh noticed an advertisement of these tablets and immediately bought a 50 cent box at the drug store. I am only /on the second box and am gaining in flesh and coler I have at last found something that has reached my ail- ment. From Mrs. Del. Eldred, Sun ‘‘T was taken dizzy very suddenly during the hot wea- | ther of the past summer. After ten days of constant dizziness | went to our local physician, who said my liver was’ torpid and I:had ever- for two weeks without much im- provement; I finally thought of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets (which I had used long before for various bad feelings) and the first three tablets helped me. They are easily the best all-round family medicine I ever used.”’ The army of people who take Stuart’s Tablets are mostly people in fairly good heaith, and who keep well by taking them regularly after meals. They contain no opiates, cocaine or any cathartic or injuri- ous drugs, simply the natural pep- and digestives which every weak stomach lacks. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets are sold by druggists everywhere in the United States, Canada and Great Britain. “IN THE NAME OF PURITY.” Str,—A vote far the Farquharson vovernment and its candidates is a remained tor | the men in power to sully the fair i - i name oft i. i; rAome | LO! Prince Edward island, at and abroad, by the most con- Liv | temptible tactics known to poiltical | renresentative. ife. They purchased the people Poor Pineau is now wt in the cold—lugged off the plat form by his former constituents |and it remains for thedecent voteis {of the Province to put Farquharsen /out inthe cold—to hiss him out o! our public life, which he has debzs and degraded. The purchaser worse than the purchased. PuRTi £292. Be Ae Pets cn ee PY mare =“ wb ebGad EG Bat es ‘o io Gough The cough that hurts, the cough that ets tight in the chest is daily getting deever and ceeper into the bronchi} tubes and is making directly for the lungs, to Recome pneumonia, inflamma- tion of the Jungs or consumption. Such coughs are sometimes referred to as “ veyard coughs,” because they isuaily bring their victim to that last resting piace, Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine has long been known 28s mother’s favorite remedy for croun, bronchitis, coughs and colds. It gains in popularity every day and now has by far the largest sale of any similar preparation. | Tt loosens the tightness in t'g2 chest, i} allays the inflammation, cures the cold and prevents pneumonia, consumption and other !ung troubles. 25 cents, all dealers’, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., To- ronto 3 ' Dr. Chase's Syru Jia Qf: wu J # J inean i ft 2 & os & t | C7 LreeSeae a x ER EEE | 4 GERSRA SRE I ECR AS Gis Beas po WEE SELL Ge ee ae (Late of London Hospital.) = s Eye, Ear, Nose and-Throat. on ITeurs—9. 30 to 1; 2 to4. Eyes tested and fitted with glasses. | } i ene eR } heated my blood ; he doctored me 4 | | | devoted affection, has learned a secre! Jof horse training better than any from the dog with his generous, warm | HLL. Dickey, M.D. | DAILY EXAMINER, EDUCATIONAL COLUMN. Edited by Inspector M Cormac. NUGGETS, _ 1. Never siep «ver one duty to per form an othe. Take them as. they come. 2. Every young man must either go up stream or drift down. 3. Whoever goes wrong himselt leads an army astray. 4. How many people punish their children with a sounding whack across | the side ot the head? It is a truitf1! | source of deafness, that me:hod of! pun shment is, and semi-barbarous | Such treatment has been known to| make idiots of tormerly bright children | Teachers are known to have punished | children in this way. | 5. One of the grectest incentives to | the editorof the t-ducational Column | to continue the publication of educa-| ional items is found in the many en | couraging letters received by him from | month to month from teachers, pupils | and others in different sections of the province who have gained information by the persual of his articles on edu-| cational topics. The editor is always pleased to receive suggestions as to) how to make this Coluwin more bene- | ficial to the cause of educat on in our) fair province. 6. Don’t wait for great opportuni- | lies. Along, continuous watk will! get you over more ground than a| short run. 7. Now i§ the proper time to reorgan | ize the Local Institutes of Teachers. Many profitable meetings can be held | during the winter months. | 8 Endeavor to make your school- | house comfortable for the winte | months. | | | FARM LIFE AND THE YOUNG. possible, be separated from that of rudgery. To work is a pleasure. ‘To! drudge is ahardship. The difference | lies in the seeing ornot seeing, and | the desiring or not desiring the object | of our toil. The boy who “helps his | father” to pay fo: the farm, to buid a' new barn, (0 pay tor his own tuition, | or for a servant for his mother, or lessons for his sisters, has before him an object which he can appreciate, and his work is pleasing because its aim is elevated. {he one who 1s com- pelled to work without seeing that any immediate good is to be the result, who looks upon his father as a task- master whom he is obliged to serve fora certain number cf years, but from whom he means to escape as soon as he can, isa Grudge. His work is a hardship. To attach the young to farm life there is roone thing so powerful as the cultivation of human sentiments between the lower animal and man! To recognize that the love exhibired | by the cowto her calf is but a less complex form ofthe love of a woman for her baby, is to give to the cow and the calf a human interest. The boy who has recognized this can never be other than gentle and considerate in his treatment of animals, and one who has inteligenty and sympathetically observed the working ct materna! i.ve in animals will always show a ji:len appreciation of the tenderness | and self-sacrifice of the human nic ther. | The bey who has cultivated the friend- | sip of bis horse till he has sounded he deptrs of his animal’s power of The idea of work should, as far as } taught by Rarey or his successors There is no form of animated life. heart, io the beetle or butterfly, that is not worthy of closest study. To this study children are naturally incline« and, if it be intelligently followed, the active young wind will soon becom: too busy to care for lounging arounc the village store or grogshop, for reac ing ta’es cf crime, or for forming pr jects for any future which is to tak: him away from the dumb companio: ship which opens before him an ever- CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 28, / world seems t. widening vista of knowledge. The affection for animals does nv! hinder the making them _ useful. Rather has it the cpposite effect ; »: learn to regard them as fellow worker: wh se duty t ‘sto makea proper rcturs | tor the cate bestowed upon them, tc) earn their own living, as it is our duty | to eatn our own. The most pro ductive flocks and herds are those which are the best loved anc | tnded. Both animals and humap | ; aiWay: beings thrive best im the warm b timuiating love at atnosphere of expectation, nerving to exertion an | rewarding for it | ch is ever the moral atmosphere e farm of which we have spoken. | We find it as weli on the coldest, grey est day of December as onthe warm) lune rroini’ g when we first looked | upon it, When snow-paths have to) be dug to barn and fold that animals | may be seen, fed, cleansed, talked to) Su r th os 1900. and symparhized with for the know and feel the glow of human sym pathy when it comes to them in kis ly voice and caress, and a °: it ot Suga , Oran apple for the colt, or a nubbin « | corn for the cow, or a handful of va: for the sheep~—then, when all the co. bave frozer to its heart, we f.el the deligh:ful thrill « | Unose who fight for others, and figh to wir, These dependent creatur + are ours to serve and save. We hav. an object in our lives. Of all me: none may live so near to nature as the farmer, if he so wills it,. in a cen partonship the freest, the most inti mate and the most progressive. JOKOSERIO, After a girl has taken as many as six lessons on the piano she begins t pronounce Beethoven and Wagner in a wayto jar her elders. —Atchiscn Giobe. You may find the fount of knowledge, Yet not know how to drink, You may drive your son to college, [hough you cannot make him think. “What is a synonym?” asked a teacher. “Please, sir,” saida lad, ‘it’s a word you can use in place of an- other if you don’t know how to spel the other one. Uncle Bob—Well, Johnny, are you _at the head of your class? Johnny—No, but I can lick the fellow that is!}—Hartford Courant. “Ts that cement any good?” asked a prospective purchaser of a peddler. “Any good?” was the reply. “Why, you could mend the break of day with that cement!”--Weekly Telegrapa. “Why, my child,” exclaimed the mother goat, “you’ve got the jaundice, You ate that yellow journal, didn’t you?” “On'y a weenty, the kid confessed. “That was too much. Here, take a few mouthfuls of this sarsaparilla.’ —- Philadelphia Press. A bashful lover wished to make a proposal of marriage, but his courage failed him, and he induced his sister 'o become an intermediary, he remain- ing outside tae half-clesed door, hid den, but within earshot, to learn the teenty bit, ma,” | result. It was not favorable. The fair saucily tossed her plied: “Indeed, now, if I’m good enough to be married, I’m good enough to be axed!” Hearing this, the anxious swain thrust his head inside the door and said, bezeechingly. “Norah, darlin’, will ye do what Maggie axed ye?” one head and re- Some preachers have odd ideas ot humor, and often the grace of the garb is not enough to soften the un- pleasantness of the witticisms. There is a story told of one good clergyman who asked: “How many of you have read the Bible?” Fifty hands went up. ‘'Good?’ said the preacher. ‘Now, how many of you have read the chapter of Jude?” Twenty five hands were raised. A wan smile overspread the minister’s face. ‘That’s good; but when you go home 're:d that chapter again, and you will doubtless learn something to your interest.” Of course, they found that there is nosecond chapter of Jude, and, of course, no matter how they made attempts to ‘auzh! it off, th: victims of the clerical pleasantry are not likely to love their pastor any the more because of his little joke. It makes one cringe to think, what a mean man he might have been if he hadn't been a clergyman. Singing like sixty —A muscal epiaph from the Graxary Burying Ground, Boston, reacs: Don’t Negiect a Simple Cold in the Head. JAPANESE CATARRH CURE SUPE COLD ih THE HEAD iA SINGLE NIGHT. It is pleasant and harmless to use and cloars 1e head almost instantly. You can use it on 1.e smallest infant with Perfect Satety Catarrh of the head-usualiy starts with a Id in the head, and if left unchecked in this limate rarely gets well i seit. Anotl er cold ; usually added and before it gets well inc pl ent catarrh scts in, and as eacn frten co acted thedisease gradually } sw il hearing, sense of tasle anc i finally incurable jung troub If vou have a cold in the head cent negi Catarrh Cure reiiev cold in Japanese ’ . cor beod ina few minutes and will cure in @ sit night. t te Mr. Alex. McRae, the well-kn w Westminster, B.C., writt $s iw as for e weeks suffering from @ coid In the hens hich was anparentiy developing into catarrn. i ? r: nase a of Jap : % : C i less than two days the : : entire! di noared.. Lean iighly recomimucud it; ths Arst application relieved. Sold by all druggists. Pric eo, conta ; o mailed. Address The Griffiths & Macpherson ('g.. Limited. Toronto, Can. | At MUNYON’S GUARANTEE, Strong Ascertions as to Just Whal the Remedies Will Do. Munyon guarantees that his Rheumatism Tre will cure nearly sil cases of rheuma- tiem ‘n a few hours: that his Dyspepsiq Cure will cure indigestion and ell. stomach troubles; that his Kidney Cure will cure 90 per cent, of «!l cases of kidney trouble; that hig Ca- tarrb Cure will cure eatarrh no matter how Jong standing; that bis Headache Cure will cure any kind of headache t» a few minutes; ths: ate vd ee wil quickly rea u e eola and se on through the entire = Pj es. At all druggists, 25 cents a vial. medical advice write Prof. }'cayan 1505 Areb st., Phila, It is abscluicly tres. Here lies interred Priscilla Bird, { {Who sang on earth till sixty-two, Now on high, above the sky, No doubt she sings like six’y--too. REVERSIBLE SENTENCES. The puzzle editer of London Truth offered a prize for sentences making sense whether read forward or back- ward, and here are some results: Scandalous soc ety and life makes gessips frantic. ais reads backward: Frantic gossips make society scandalous. Apply the same rule to the given be'ow; Dies slowly fading day; winds mourn- ful sigh; Bright stars are waking; Fites owlet, hooting, holding rev el high, Night silence helding. Solomon had vast treasures—silver and gold things precicus. Happy and wise and rich was he. Fauhfully served he God. Carefully boiled eggsare good and palatable. life and other Dear Harry: Devot:dly yours, re- main I. Have you forgotten $20 cteck? Reply -immediately, please, and hand to yours-— Grace Darling. Mar is noble and generous o'ten, but sometimes vain and cowardly. Love is heaven and heaven is love, youth says. All bew:re! says Trying is poverty and fleeting is love. Exercise take, excess beware; Rise early and breathe free air, Eat s'owly, trouble drive away; Feet warmish keep;blend work with play. Adieu, darling! Time flies fast; sails are set, boats are ready. Farewell!! Matter and mind are’ mysteries; never mind. What is matter? Matter is—never mind. What is mind? Mind is never matter. MILITARY AND CLERICAL TITLES. (From the Harvard Graduates’ Maga- zine) “No form of distinction can be de vised which won’t presently be counter- feited. The titles of General, Colonel and Major, earned inthe field, are as- suredly very honorable: but these very titles are given by the hundred to car- pet knights who never saw a battle. In like manner the distinctive appella- tions of Jearning have been vulgarized. When you are introduced to Dr, Jones, you dont know whether to con- sult him about your soul, or your rheumatism, Or your h.rse, or your toothache, or your libel suit, or the religion of the Ethiopians, or the mal- leability of aluminium.” “If he is a minister,’ said the ii- repressible Y, ‘the chances are that he is at least deubly a ‘dector’ ” “Clerical fondness for titles seem to have come in along with the fashion for surplices,” remarked Q. “No parson orer thirty, and within a day’s journey | of acollese, lacks a D. D. Sometimes L wonder whether chapel services cor ducted by the Right Kev, John D»o-, Le. DO. DDG TAK, Ba odily my son as much as those conducted by the Very Venerable Richard Roe, | S, FT. D,: lL... D., 31.2) 1 shoald suppose the col:ege bil! fur printing all these prefixes and appendages of vanity would be so large that the Ger- | man P. T. would have to be substitu- ted for them.” Fali Time Table, Rocky | Point Ferry, 1900. Commencing Monday, October Ist the steamcr Eifin will run I lows for the balance of the season. Will leave Frince Street Will leave Rocky as LOl- Wharf Point | At 7.002. ™, At 8.00 a. m. . At 8.30 a. Mm At 9.00 a. Mm. | At 9.30'a.m. At 10.00 a. m | At 18:00 a.1r. At 13.30 2. | At r.co p. ™ At 1.30 p. m | At 2,.00p. nm. At 3.00 p m 4.00 p.m, At 4-30 p. m. SUNDAYS. At 9.00a.m, At 10,00 p. m. At 12.45p.m. A 1I5 p.m At 2.00 p.m, At 3-00 p. At 4.00 p.m. At 4.30 7. JAMES J. WISNER, Manager. Ch’iown, Sept, 2, 1900. age. | PRESENTATION AND ADDRESS. To Mr. Harry Winchester in Appreciation of His Services. The following isa copy of an ad- dress which was presented to Mr, Harry Winchester by the Sunday School on Sunday afternoen. He was also presented witha teacher's Bible and a gold watch. The ad- dress was read by the rector and the presentation was made by Mr. Cundall. The address was illumi- nated ;-- To Harry Winchester, Sec’y.-Trea- surer and Librarian, St. Paul’s sunday School, Charlottetown, | P. E. Island. DEAR. FRiEND AND £FELLOW Worker.—Itis with feelings of deep 'regret that we anticipate your ap- proaching departure. As Secretary- Treasurer and Libarian of our Sun- day School you have been so closely identified with our work that the wrench caused by your withdrawal, will be felt by every teacher and scholar. | Doubtless, whereever your lot be 'cast you will find opportunity to work in God's service, and conse- quently your transfer to another field of labor will involve no loss to the church at large. Yet we feel none the less keenly the rupture of the ties which have so long bound us together and which have been so ; pleasurable. You bear with you our best wishes, and we will follow with in- terest your future career, confident that the cheerful readiness and un- failing punctuality characterized your conduct here carry with them an assurance of future success. Commending you to the lovin care of our Lord and Master, an begging your acceptance of the accompanying small token of our Jegard. We wish youan affection- ate farewell. On behaif of the sehool, Leo Wittiams, Rector, H. J. Cunpauu, Supt- Ch ‘town, Nov. 25th, 1900. nett ili TAKE CARE OF THE TEETH Most people have a general idea that itis wise to take care of the teeth, and accordingly do so, as they suppose. They rub a_ brush hurriedly two or three times over the front of the teeth before going to bed cr on getting up in the morning, and think they have cleaned their teeth. The impertance of sound and serviceable teeth as an aid to health cannot be overestimated, for upon their good condition depends the thorough mastication of the food which is the first, and not the last, requisite of good digestion, Many a person doses himself with all sorts or remedies to aid digestion, when the real cause ef his Gyspepsia may be found in the pour state of his teeth. The proper t'me to brush the teeth is after each meal and at bedtime, Be~ fore this is done all particles cf food should be removed from between the teeth by means of a toothpick, or, bet- ter, dental floss, then ihey should.he brushed thoroughly with a brush of medium stiffness, dipped in tepid: water. Veryhotaal very cold water are equally harmful The brush should be used wiih an up and dowu msvement, and not sd e ways only, and tae backs of the teeth should be brushed even mor? careful- ly than the fronts, for it is to ere that jtartar tends to accumulate. Many ithink that tartar is harmless, but this \is an erroneous belief; its accumulation lis one ofthe principal causes o the | loosening of the teeth, and i's | re <1 e¢ |exposes one constantly to the recar irence of gum boils. | The use of some gocd den'‘ifrice | once a day,or two or. three times @ | week, keeps the teeth whicer and bet- 'ter-looking. but it is not absolutely |n-cessary » hen the tooth brush is used lregularly after each meal. ‘Rinsing ‘the mouth after each brushing with isome pleasantly-flavored antiseptic ‘solution helps to avert decay of the 'teeth. | Finally, net the least point in the care of teeth, isa regular ‘semi-annual visitto the dentist, that ‘he may examine the teeth and fill at ‘once any beginning cavity. In_ this way the teeth may be preserved, acci- dents excepted, for a long life-time, and the natural teeth; even when fil- led and repaired, are many times bet- ter from every point of view than any artificial ones. ——— JOHN (P. BRENNAN Ship Broker, Commission Merchant and dealer in all kinds of p:oduce, my large and impertant commod ous premises on Commercial Street being particularly adapted for handting of Princ: E-lwa‘d 'sland preducts. Co isignments solicit Prompt returns. JOBN P. BRENNAN, | Worth Sydney, Sept. 25, dy 135 wy- which have st 4 chee rey ie ee a7 arn i a a]