aS THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 3, i ~ 1 LL EES CALENDAR, NOV. S97, BLOON’ [ANGI Parct ( Ist. 10h. 24.5 } MM . Hh. 37 “ Tas 7 v s.6m., a New \ 24 mh. 6.3 } 1UOh. 2 Dav of Week } San Sun | High } Rises ie | Water lL! Mo 647} 441 2 49 | 19 oY 3 ov tk OW 19 i AO 37 b 5 +! Thur \ 2 | 3b GS te BO i 45 y : S OV ; ; ‘) | 3 | ; ) 10 SY Q | ae It 2 10}. ) 2S 12 (9 sl ci. 27); 12S 2 31 %| 13 27 18 5 | 2A | ld s \ 7 2 | O Si 1S, os ai Ri 18 16 so 2 26 117 0 | Wi) 33! 18 12 | 19 | £ oS 19 an 8} 948 ») . i Of 17 j 6 5t eS aiekie wi wi 8 6 a | \ 17 5; Vile 23 | Tuesday ey 4 | 10m 24 | Wednesday 20 13 | Lt 30 25 | Thorsday 2] 31 12 Si 461 Friday © 23 12; 183 28 71 | Saturday 24] 11] Bic + 25 1} OSs # | Monday 28 | 1 30 j Tuesday 723] 4 7 2 40 P & Island Railway On and after MONDAY,4th Oct, 1897, the trains of this Railway will run daily, (Sun days excepted,) as under. ’ } : rains Out-| Trains In ’ ward. Read STATIONS. ward. Read down. up. Py M.A. Mel wu. A. M. 3 30) 6 15) - Charlottetown .... g 2 9 40 3 52) 6 29 .-Roya'ty Tunction.. g 14 9 19 4 42) 7 03 ..-North Wiltshire. | 5 49 § 30 4 58; 7 13... Hunter River... | 5 59) 8 15 & 34 7 7|..Bradalbane......' 5 93! 7 37 5 44] 7 49)..Emerald.. ..... 5 02' 7 28 5 50| 7 53 . . Freetown peceede 452714 6 >) ~ ot Kensington ( -> | 4 38) 6 St 6 55, 8 BOAT. org: 4 15|.6 20 1 40| 8 Sie} SSide | Lv.| 7 ogill 00 2 (2) & 50 ..Miscouche ......; 2 1210 37 2 59) 9 17\|..Weilington...... 8 29210 10 3 13] 9 45,.-Port Hill ....... 3 00, 9 21 * Be Os ieee cetheus | 9 11| 8 08 5 01)10 51\-- Bloomfield ...... 1 65 7 38 5 4911 15,-- Alberton dévcceds 1230 7 6 45111 55|--Tignish .... .... 12 50) 5 55 P. M.A. Mt. | _tp, M.JA. M. A. M.|P. M.| A. M.|P. M. 6 30, 8 10). .Charlottetown .../'9 10) 4 10 6 50) 3 24). . Royalty Junction! 8 591 3 50 7 al 3 47|.. Bedford ........ | § 32} 3.17 8 25] 4 15}...Mt Stewart...... «| § 101 2 45 BS OA GG)... Mosell wc cccs cee 17171 200 91 5 04). .St. Peters ...«+-| 7 15) 1 30 10 Ol, 5 38)..Bear River ......| 6 41/12 43 0 Gr © TE. . Betis ose 60054: 6 10/12 00 A. M.|P. M. A. M|P. M. A. M.|P. M. |A. M./P. M. 8 4 15|..Mt. Stewart ....; 8 05) 2 35 # 22) & 08)..Cardigan........ 717123 ® 45 5 20)..Georgetown ....| 6 55) 1 Oo As ot|P. M. A M.[P. Me P, M.| a i 5 SD) -Muperald =... | 7 20 6 rm ..Cape Traverse ..| 6 3) P. M. A. M. Tratnsare run by Eastern Standard ‘lime. G A SHARP, D.POTTINGER, su ntendent, Gen Ne Govt, R rlottetown, oncton, X's. 1897 Wants, Lost, Found &€ Rai way Office.Juae,, } | ' ~ | therefore |} cure known to all. MESAGS TO MEN Proving that Trae Honesty and Trae Phil- antrophy still Bxists Ifany man whois weak, nervous and debilittaed, or who is suffering from any of | the various troubles resulting from youth- folly, excesses or overwork, will take » me, I will send him con- ful heart and write t | tidentially and tree of charge the plan pursued by which I was completely restor- ed to perfect health and manbood, atter years of tuffering from Nervous Debility, loss of Vigor and Organic Weakness. Ihave nothing to sell, and therefore want no money, bat as I know through my own experience bow to sympathize with uti re, [ am glad to be able 1 assist any fellow—beings to a cure. I ain ve awat the prevaience Of quackers, for I mvsee!f was deceived and imposed ipon until | pearly lost faith in mankind but I rej o say that lam now pertect!y well and happy once more and am desirous certain means of If you will write to me you can rely upon being cured and the to make this | 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 1 sad, Mich 135 p&w. BSiI- monia C. P. Fletcher, Esq. Dear Sir,—I donot wish to return to Montreal without expressing my gratitude to you for the very excellent Bell Piano that you placed at D> “ KOC K ‘my dispogal for my recital, I have tried many Canadian Pianos of different manufac- turers,nd must say that, con- sidering the size of the instru- ment, J have never found one to equal it for depth and bril- liancy of tone, The action is quite as elastic and respons- ive as in American Upright Pianos of the highest grade. Again thanking you, very sincerely, I remain, Yours, Frep. E. Morris P. E. Island Agency, L. PH Opera House Building ~ ©. P. Yeo Agent at Summerside, LOST.—A few days ago, prehahiv on or near Queen Street, agold whi'te dotted ‘ead pencil, The finder will oblige by leaving it a* the Examiner Office. nev 2—3i pd WANTED. -—At once, a boy for restaurant Apply to A. N. Large. nov 1—tf WANTED—A cook; $7 toa comoetent per fon. References required. Appiv at this ceffice. novw3—tf LOST, -Asmeli sum of monev. The finder will be rewarded by leaving itat the Fxam- iner Office nov2 WANTED.—Two girls :or Dining Room, good address, mnst come well recommended, zood wages to the right person Apply at the Queen Hotel between the hours of ten and twelve o’clock a, m. oct 20 tf guar FOR SALE CHE \P.—4 Mason & Hamlin Organ, style C, has two sets of reeds, in good order. Apply at the Examiner Office et27—eod 2wks WANTED.—An experieneed woman ser- vant. Apply to Miss Morris, 233,W ater St. oct 29 WANTED.—Immediately, agood cook in a smali family. Apply to M, Examiner Office. oct 29 tf WANTEE AT ONCE.—A general servant. Apyly to Mrr. A A. McDonald. 252-~ WANTED.—A servant, must understand plaip cooking, bring reference. Mrs Edward Palmer, Queen Street. oct 11 eod AGENTS get fifty cents on each dollar; no are nooweaty- Write for agent’s outfit, Addrees The Catholic News, 5 Barclay St., New York. oct 23 41 FOR SALE.—Two double tenement houses in a good locality, Barns in connection with each, and alarge lot in rear. Terms reason- able. Address X Y Z Examinor Stee. oc Neuralgia In the head is aJmost invariably caused by abecessed teeth. *t sufler natdlcesly wi o ly when you can be releived in a few hour and cured In a few davs by the careful treatment we wiil give you, J H AYERS DENTIST. } : ‘plese extraction of teeth FOR SALE. RARE CHANCE The property occupied by J. J, Gay and son situate in the village of Pownal, 7 miles from ~harlottetown, is offered for sale. The pro- rietors have carried on a large market gar- én nursery, and seed business for thirty years, and the purchaser will no doubt retain a large share of the focaltrade. The prem- ises comprise a large dwelling house, s’‘ore, warehouse, barn, shed, orchard, and about 15 acres of the most ferti:e land on the Isiand This land hasbeen manured year after year, for so long that as an old man said the other day.; “It isall abed of manure and could be hauled for top-dressing.” This would be an Ideal spot for a country merch- ant, or it would be admirabie fora summer resort, The situation is one of the most beautiful on the Island. Good bathing, ne boating, shooting and within easy distance; churches, post office school telephone and shops all at the door. For terms and further particulars, apply to Von Clure Gay, J J 9a s son or to, JOHN T MELLISH Solicitor Charlottetown dé&w oct7 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, Goblets, Water Pitchers, Six Piece Sets in Colored and Plain Glass, Preserve Dishes, Bread plates, Celery Dishes,Butter Coolers, Cake Stands, and a lot of other articles too n»merons to mention. GIVE US A CALL, We are sure to suit you, both in price and quality. C, LEWIS, Grafton Street, exactly opposite North Side of Market House. —g 9 3idy wy EXCELSIOR, A Manufacture of Wood That Was Many Uses and Is Sold In Great Quantities. The material known as excelsior is not refuse, nor is it made of shavings; it is an article of regular manufacture. Ex- celsior is of American invention, and it was first made in this country 35 or 40 years ago. The present output amomnts to thousands of tons annually, and the use of it is Excelsior is made in many parts of the country, almost always in mills that are ‘easing all the time iz in close proximity to the forests from which the supplies of wood are taken. A considerable amount of excelsior is made in confunction with other manufactures; for example, it is not unusual to set up a few « I achines in a Inmber mill, but there is at least one concern in the United States that makes nothing but ex celsior and has at a number of different roints mills devoted solely to the produc- tion of these curling fibers of wood. Basswood and poplar are the woods used in the production. The logs are sawed into lengths of 18 inches, whichis the length of a fiber of excel These blocks are split into halves and the wood is prop- erly seasoned. sior. Exceisior is made of dif- ferent degrees of coarseness and fineness of fiber. In the manufacture a series of knife points run down the face of the block, cutting into the wood in parallel lines that are spaced according to the width of the fiber to be made. A following knife slices off the whole face of the bleck thus scored. The iibers curl and commingle as the knife sets them free. An excelsior machine makes 200 to 309 strokes a minute, every stroke cutting off a tier of fibers across the face of the block. The usual commercial package of excelsior is a bale weighing about 250 pounds. At wholesale excelsior sells at $16 to $40 a ton, Excelsior is‘exten purposes and in the manufacture of bed- ding and in various other upholstery uses. It is also largely used filtering pur- poses, and it has various other uses. Ex- celsior is now manufactured in Germany and France, where it is called wood wool. The wood used in the manufacture in those countries is brought from Norway and Sweden, and the maufactured product costs more there than it does here. American excelsior is exported to vari- ous foreign countries. The export demand has not been great, but it is now increas- ing.—New York Sun. LOT BOOKMAKER’S “RUNNER.” He Gets a Good Salary, but Earns Every Cent of It. Few men apparently earn their salarics easier and with more pleasure than the bookmaker’s runners, and in reality few men have to work harder and more consci- entiously for their daily bread than do these same runners. Unless you are fa- miliar with the methods of the runner you will not be able to distinguish him from any of the other frenzied, wild eyed men who people the betting ring of a metropol- itan race track on a race day. If you know him, however, you will see that he moves through the fighting mob that surges through the ring just before a big race with greater ease and far more speed than the other madmen do, and that when he ‘‘gets headed’’ for a book he manages to reach it before you have had time te call the man who stepped on your toe one of the bad names you have pre- pared. That is the runner’s business, to squirm and wriggle and twist his way through the crowd up to the man he believes is making a plunge on some horse. He finds out what horse the man is playing, what odds he is getting and just how ‘‘swell’’ a bet he ts making; then he wriggles and twists his way back to his employer, tells him just what he has learned and then starts out again. The bookmaker, in the meantime, if he thinks he is to get a play from the same man, drops his odds and waits for him. Before the betting on the race is half over the runner has visited all of the 40 or 50 stands and has returned to his employer with information concerning each horse, the extent to which it is being played, the change in the odds and the amount of money that is being sent in on the race, It requires a quick brain, a good eye and amazing ability to scramble through a crowd to perform this work in the brief time between the opening and the clos- ing betting, and the men who can do it succesfully easily earn the $10 a day that is paid to them. Persons who have mar- veled at the uniformity in the prices offered against a horse will cease to marvel after they have watched a bookmaker’s runner sguirm his way through the ring a couple of timnes.—New York Presa Oysters Oysters _ Oysters JOY! JOY! JOY! =r Victoria Cafe, Great George Street. Oysters served in every style; Lunches and dinners with despatch. | As usual, I am prepared to deliver Oysters in any quantity to customers to any part of tne city. Telephone Connection. JOHN P. JOY | Victor1a CAFE Gt George St..... e+ FOR SALE OR TO LET Milford Farm now in the occupation of the widow of the late George Thorne, situated on the North River Road, about a mile from the city, it eovers about 24 acres of land, fronting the North River,is ina high state of cultivation, with a comfortable Dwelling House, lots of barns and stable accomod- ation, possession can be given about the middie of November ifrequired, Apply to A. B.jWarburton Solicitor, City, or to owner DANIEL DAVizS Ch’town 2% Oct 1897 pat 5i—6i sively used for packing | | i -EPPS'S GOGOA SCHOOL aa ae SOOO 69650058 00E80058350866808 208599052390 | ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: { DELICACY OF FLAVOR. | SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. | | i NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homeopathic Chemists, London, England, PLLEGE D ra? & \ fea iF > . DP bs my Bd % BS UF GA Scribblers, Foolscap, Ink Pencils, Pens, Note Books etc., ets. Cheapest and Best at McMillan & Hornsby’s: QUEEN STREET NOTICE has just been received of a consider able advance in the prices of Waltham and Elgin watch movements. We have a large stock on hand bought be- fore the rise, which we will sell at old prices while they last. G. Hh. FAY LOR Jeweler and Optician, ‘orth Side Queen Square. PRINTING FOR EVERY DAY USE Requires to be done neatly, promptly and cheap, There is only one place in the city, where you can get the fullest satisfaction, that is at, JAS. D. TAYLGR, SOCSSSSSSECCIOOG*ASSESGEGSOES 76 S806 Piling and Piling all kinds of Lumber daily Everything new and good. Shingles in Cedar and Spruce—all classes; We V7ant ‘You to see us before you build or repair. New customers come again and bring others. It will mean mon ey in your pocket if you give us a oall. Lumber of all kinds in stock JAMES BARRETT, Connleys Wharf. a Evening - Classes PE. |. COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, COMMENCE ON Monday. 18th Oct.finst At-7.30. Open toall. TIadividual instrue tion in all commercial subjects. No WASTE OF TIMB HERE, Apply at once ‘o I. OXENHAM, Frineip oct @—t SS AND PINTED | a er bas, / ‘ nrine Tire ‘ ro : Extra bottie and springs. Wire rat traps, for another kind of bird, WLMON V7 CRABBE Walker's Corner iS7 STOVES & EARDWARE —— Remember The Place [0——esw dD SULE Your House, Furniture, Stock ship or Cargo, is with wr HORACE HASZARD > FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE AGENT- Office—Cameron Block TELEPGONE CONNECTION......c0.ccceseees oe ass — ————— = = — SO A a OUR BIG EXHIBIT... — OF NEW CLOTH We are opening our different lines for the new season, _ with much the same feeling of confidence which a fellow ex periences when he has a good thing. So many good grouped together that it is impossible to tell you all abou hem. Come and see the REAUTIFUL LINES OF OVERCOATINGS the finest ever brought to the city. And Trouserings, the finest you ever laid eyeson; and for Suits, they are beautifu, in the extreme. Those goods will be shown with much pleasure, and will be on exhibit this afternoon and to-morrow JOHN MACLEOD & 00} MERCHANT TAILORS. GLOVES---Macdonald’s for---GLOVES., WINTER CLOTHING We have a fine range of Men’s Warm Ulsters with Fibre Chamois lining—wind proof. You can make your selection of lines —33.95, $4.50, $5, and $6. Boys’ Ulsters, $2.50, $3 and 54. _ Bay? Overcoats, $2. Men’s Pants from 75:. ~ Men’s Odd Vests from 50¢ each. Our Men’s Underclothing is acknowledged to be the warmest and best value in the city—goin, fast. Buy now at J.B. MacdonaldaCe MARKET SQUARE. See our Waterproof Boots. Se ro oemetin 4 4 Herring, Herr! Large, fat Herring in half barrels, barrels and qualitY § barrels, from Sydney, Cow Bay, Madalene and Arichat. We will warrant every package we sell, or refund the mamey § For sale wholesale and retail by CRANT & CO., Queen Street, Charlottetown