I will goarantee that my Rheumatism Cure will relieve lum- bago, sciatica and all rheumatic pains in two or three hours, ami cure in a few 7% SUNYON. ‘At all druggists, 25e. a viel. Guide to Health and medi- cal advice free. 1506 Arch at.. Phila. aes J.J. JOHNSTON Real Estate Agent Real Estate boughtand sold on Commission, Estates Managed. Houses Rented. Rents Collected. Stamper Block Coarlottetown, P.E. I. PROPERTY FOR SALE FOR SALE—A house on Euston Street, in vicinity of (allows Hill. This hovse con- tains 8 rovme and kitchen, in goed order, and is heated with bot air. Good stable and large yard in connection, will be sold cheap. Apply to J J Johnston, Real Estate Agent FOR SALE.—On Upper Great George St near Tierney’s c ‘rner, house and lot 8) x40 ftt can be purchased for $W0.00, Apply to JJ Johnston, Real Estate Agent, Stamper Biock Sharlottetow a. FOR SALF,—Plot of land, 93x38 ft, on up- per Powna! treet. excellent location, price $140.00, JJ Johnston, Real Estate Agent, FOR SALI —Three acres of landin Char- lottetown, common, near residence of Arthur Peters, Fsq. will be sold cheap anion easy terms, JJ Johnston, Stamper Block. FOR SAL}—about four (4) acres of land in the City of C harlottetown, can be divided in- totwenty building lots, agenuine Bargain, J J Johnston, Stamper Biock. FOR SALS.—In the business centre of Charlottetown, a iarge three story house with lot 8x6? ft; also excellent outbuildings, © suitable place for » first class boarding house, Will be sold cheap. Apply to J J Johaston, Real Estate Agent, FOR SALE.—A house situated on the cor- ner of Pleasant Streetand St. Peters Road House contai as 10 rooms hes a good cellar and stable on pre:nises. The heuse ls built 8 years and is in excellent condition, Apply toJ J Jehnston Real Estate Agent. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE—A double tenement house on ‘‘hestnut Street, now in course of erection. Will be completed in one month. Wii! be sold cheapor exchanged for pooner n another part of the city. J Johnston, Real Estate Agent. FOR SALE-Hoeus* and lot on uvper Pow- _ nul Street, near Easton Street. Price $350.00 J J Johnston, Stamper Block. FOR EXCHANGE.—A three tenement house, situate on Euston Street, newly built, bripgvin a large rent, will be exchanged for a suitable plece in another vart ofthe city J J Johnston, Real Estate Agent. F OR SALE ~A two story double tenemen’ house on Bishop Street,each tenement con- tainsstx rooms and large yard. Apply tod J Johnston. Stamper Block, Houses To Let. TO LET—Dweiling housa and shop on lower Queen Street, house contains eight rooms. 1arge warehouse attached; everything in first class cop lition. Rent $:'70,0°, rent of house alone $'00.00, Avply toJ J Johnston, Heal Estate Agent, Ch’town, TO LET.-—-On the corner of Prince and Water Streets:. a house containing 13 rooms. This place is convenient to railway and boata, ltent moderats. Apply toJ J Johnston, Real huatate Agent, FOR SALE OR TO LET.~-That well known business hote!on Richmond “treet nearthe market. Thi« hotel contaios 20 good rooms snd shop, all in good re-~ulr, good stabling ,or 30 horses, with large yard in connection, will be sold at a bargain on easy terms, or ‘eased for a termof years. Apply to JJ Johnston, Reul Estate agent. Houses Wanted. WANTED TO PURCHASE,—A house in Charlottetown to cost about $6)0.% double tenement house prefered. Apply to J J John. som Real Estate Agent. WANTED 70 PURCHASE.—A house with vard and bain situated in a public part of the city, Will pay about $300.00 cash. JJ John- ston Stamper Block. WANTED 70 PURCHASE.—A house con- taining 7 or8 rooms sitnated in a respectable vart ofthe city or suburbs. House must be in good condition. Will pay a reasonable prices, Apply to J Ji Johnsion Real Estate Agent, I have several applications from parties for leuses to rent -roperty holders havinz vacant houses to let can have them reuted vy applying at ro 7 office, 5.3, JOHNSTON, Real Estate Agent, Stamper Block, Ch’town Beaver Line CHARLOTTETOWN and LIVERPOOL DIRECT SERVICE it is proposed to sail the Steamship “LAKE WINNIPEG”, 3500 tons From From Charlottetowa Liverpool Nov. 7 Nov. 27 Dec.10 The above steamer is fitted with cold ‘wwrage, wnod has modern improvements tut carrying live stock. Excellent accommodation for passengers For freighi, passage, statemoons, and other information apply at the office of N. RATTENBURY, 106 Asent | NOVEMBER MAGAZINES THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 31 1898 Lapiss Home Journal. The Thankegiving Ladies Home Jour» nal marks the fiftheeath anniversary of ‘that widely read magazine, which now sells 850,000 copies each month, and its editor reviews its past and the unique heading, “Fifteen Years of Mistakes, revealiog bis plans for its improvement apd for iis greater ueefulnese in the future. A page of illustrations admirably typ fies “Thanksgiving in the Country,” and another of photographs is filled with sug- gestions for decoratioas, etc. , for “ hankr- giving in the Cbhureb:” ‘*The Anecdotal Side of Mr Moody” reveals the chief char acteristics of the great Evangelist in @ suc* cession of interesting stories, and “My First Fight in the Juogle” is Henry M Stanley’s varrative cf the first of bis jour- pevys into Africa. “How Richard Wagner Wrote His Operas” gives the nearesi clea est and most interesting veiw of [the famous ccm poser that has yet been writen. In A Polish Fantasy” is told, in a tbeauti- ful and pathetic story,the early career of Paderewiski. The firet chapters of Mary E. Wilkins’ new serial are among the fiction features. Miss Wilkins reverres the novelisi’s usual oréer, and makes ludicrous the mistakes of city people in the country. Another that will be followed with keen interest is “The Girls of Camp Arcady,” also beginnivg in November issue. It is sparkling, vivacious narrative of four gir! breadwinners who livetogether in New York flat. “The Minister of Darthage” grows in interest, and “The Silk-Liaed Girl” ie a fascinating sbort piece of romvoce. There are invnu- merable, usetul, practical articles, Of epecial interest to women is ‘Prize Dollar Dinnere” tor four people. By The Curtis Publishing Company, Philadelphia. One dollar per year, ten cents per copy. LIPPINCOTT’S. The complete novel in the November iesue of Lippincott’*, “A Triple Entangle- ment,” by Mre Burton Harrieon, bas its scenes mainly in Spain and England. The hero is an American, whose course of true love does not by any means run smooth, but leads hin into safe harbor at last. The tale is one of this favorite author’s best, and perhaps the longest that bas ever appeared in Lippincott’s. “Mercer’s Best, Shot,” as described by Joseph A Altsheler was a very remarkable shot indeed, at an enemy whose shadow only could be seen. More vigor of couception and description has celdom been put into two pages. J. Armoy Knox, in “the Petrified Legs,” revives ard amplifies the Irish le- gendof Lough Neagh. “The destroyer’ 18 an allegory by Paul R Heyl. Jessie F O’Donnell gives an account of **The Horse in Folk-Lore.” Paul Ward Beck describes “A Ute Funeral.” “Fanciful Predictions of War’ and “Our Soldiers’ Songs” are the titles of two brief papers by William W..i Crave. Jane Ellis Joy has a littie es» «“*The.Craze for the Unconven- tio.a,’ and J K Wetherill asother on “the Goldea Gift,’ which is Imagination. ‘Oriental Stsge-Crafv” is con~:dered by L W. The familiar question $*Who is Your Author,” animadverted upon by Anuic Steger Winston. The poetry of the num- ber consists of quatrains by Julia Schaver and Mary E Stickney, and the cvuplets by Carrie Blake Morgan and Clarence Urmy. RESULTS OF UNBELIEF. Rev. Professor Burgess, M. A., of the Western University, London, Ontario, re - marking on the paralysing efiicts of national unbelief, spoke as follows regard- ing the Aoglo- French disturbance : “‘Deriding eternal truth, rejecting Divine autbority, France, under the sole guidance of national impulse and self-graufication, pursues her infatuated course, blind to the inevitable goal, unheeding the ominous writing on the wall. Maoy still remember how, some 30 year: ago, in passion and fury, she madly rushed upon her face, with every sign and circumstance pointing with unwavering floger co the awful dey of Sedan. Five years thereafter, by the gen- erous, the chivalrous intervention, of England, she was saved from virtual destruction at the hands of an implacable foe. What return bas she made, what gratitude has she shown, her benefector, her deliverer? Mischievous interference, persistent opposition, wanton provocation. reckless aggression! And now, torsoath. she would fain pluoge into war with th. power to whose disinterested friendship she is iodebted, itis hardly too muvh us say, for her very existence as a nation ! The internal condition of «his untappy country is known of al] men, and unlers eXperience is vanity, unlees the teaching of history is altogether delusive, her mia - guided people, in the bitterness of humili- ation, will, at no distant day, learn tu ap- preciate the admonition of the Psalmist, ‘Upon the ungodly He sball rain fire and brimetone, storm and tempest.’ Verily, there is a God that judgeth the earth.” —_— +> +e NEWS NOTES. By the proclamation of ihe United States officer in command at Saniiago it is* or- dained thatin that district the courts of justice shall be oper to all, that no private property shall be taken for pnblic ures without compensation, that no accused persou shall be compelled to give evidence against himself, aor, again on the same charge, and that no criminal uroceeding shall be begun without presumptian of guilt, and that habeas corpus shall not peedlessely be iaken away. People are iso given the right tosay and print what | they will, restrained only by their respon- sibility for damage they do. i —--——-_— 686 ——— | TO CURE TOOTHACHE IN A MINUTE Use NERVOL. One application cures; if not, your money back, ually good f. euralgia Headache. Ste, af a ieension” WONDERS OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE. The construction of the English lang- nage mustappear most formidable toa foreigner. One of them lookihg at a picture of a number of vessels said, ‘See what a flock of ships!’ He wae told that a flock of ship» were calleda fleet, and that a fleet of sheep was called a flock. And it was added for bis guidance in mastering the jutricacies of our language that‘a flock of girls ie called a bevy, that a bevy of wolves i+ called a pack, and a pack of thieves is culled a gacg, and a@ geng of angela is called a host, and a host of porpoises ie called a shoal, and a shoal of buffaloes i called a herd, and a herd of children ix called a troop, and a troop of vartridges ix called a covey, and a covey of b autiesis called a galaxy, aod a galaxy of roftians is called a horde, and a borde of rubbish 1 called abesap, anda heap of oxen is called adrove, anda drove of biackguards is called a mob, aod a mob of whales ie called a school, and a school of worshippers is called a congregation, and & congregation of engineers is called a corps, and a corps of robbers is called a band, aod a band of locusts is called a swarm, aod a swarm of people is called a crowd.’ GOOD MANNERS PRUCLAIM THE GENTLEMEN Good manners are a social obligation, aod @ youug mau should never make light of them por pass them over as unworthy of notice, The extreme manners of the fop are silly and uscecesjury, but the waya well. bred man deporis himaelf is always worth @ young man’s closest study Good meanders Mean Comiort for others and the recognition of little social rights, which to pass over is to degenerate. Etiquette books cannot instil’ good manners, Qune’s deportment comes from within. Few men are born without an intuitive knowledge of what is wrong or right in deporiment. It is simply experience that develops the qual- ity. To be good mannered generally means to bave consideration for women of every rank io life, and that is a quality which young men cannot pOssere too sirong ly.— November Ladies’ Home Journal, <> Boston Heraid: Perhaps the moat re- markable achievement of the late Harold Frederic’s career was bis triumph over difficulties ia his early boyhood. He was brought up in extreme poverty and had none of the educational advantages that are enjoyed by most American youth. The modest bome of the Frederica was mort- gaged to its full value, andthe widow undertook the task of supporting her little family and lirting the mortgage. She es- tablished a dairy indusiry, and it was on 4 served his first apprenticeship. He learved tne letters of the alphabet on a soap box in his mother’s kitchen, aod be did not attend school after he was fourteen years old. The education be acquired after that lime was trom observation and self application, avd the re-ulis be subseqnent- ly achieved furvish a fine example of what may be accomplished in any waik of life by a person who sets out with the firm purpose to succeed therein. ° e) | . e $ From $4 > e ° ®) {9 $10,000 @ @ an 62 ( = Every Hioiti : e GVEF iin), ° ®) We distribute 2424 prizes, ranging in value as above, at each of our ¢™ monthly drawings. If you wanté more definite information drop us eo * @ a post-card and we will send you e : our prospectus and plan of drawing. ©) e J e 3 Che Qanadian =} Royal Art Union, Limited, 2 > 238 and 240 St. James $t., 2 $ Montreal. . Tickets, 25¢, soc and $1. @ 11 one dollar tickets for $10. o) Next Drawing : moap! soap Use Kionpike Bar the great Laundry and scouring soap marvel of cheapness unsurpassed n excellence. Use Royat Oak in the Laundry. Happy homes, easy quick work, snow white clothes. Use Jupitez for the toilet and light Laundry. Makes child’s play of washday. J.D LAPTHORN & CO. Charlottetown Soap Works. Arithmstic. Common School Arithmetic, by Wm. T. Kennedy, Principal ot Halifax Academy, & Peter O’Hearn, Principal of St. Patrick’s High Scbovu!, Halifax, Part I 15c PartllI lde Part III léc All three parts bonnd in one vol 40c Academic Arithmetic, being Part Four of tue Progreesive Schoo! Senes of Arithmetics by W.T. Kennedy milk delivery wagon that young Frederic? and Peter O’Heara, 4% a YOU - SHOUL That we lead ‘he trade in ready to wear clothing for men and boys | You Should Know Our — you will be convinced that it will put money in your poc Price of O'coats, $10, 12, 15 and 18. $10, 12, 15 and 18, FALL UNDERCLOTHING No doubt about the quality of underclothing handled by us, we only handle the best that money can buy. We are selling agents for the now famous unshrinkable brand. Every garment warranted to out- wear any other garments in the market. Overcoats, - Suits It is not so much the price of a coat, as the quality—therefore it would be well tc buy your fall and winter clothing from us, as we positively show the best clothing made. THE BEST MAKERS OF CLOTHING IN CANADA Show their samples to us only—therefoie you cannot get the best in other stores. REEFERS $2.75 3.25 3.75 4,50 5.00 6.00 6.50 7,25 8 50 875 9 00 9.50 O°COATS $2 75 3 50 00 00 50 50 50 10 50 11 50 12 00 15 00 18 00 MIS Cte Cs The largest assortment of clothing every shown in the city. eefers - and' 1 OE ORS NO A Sh. ts AE EE TRS Alt i —_——— That our mantle room is second to none in the city, styles are all thefJvery latest, the qualities are as good as you can find, and our prices are the lowest. WE DO BNOW THAT Fit-Reform Clothing is the best reaay to wear Clothing and much better than ene halfof the custom made clothing, © and only costs about one half—see the styles and prices and — ket to trade with us—pricrs of suits: Price of pants, $3, 4 and 5. ea SUITS $3.75 5.00 5.50 6 00 6.59 7.00 ad OF, 8 00 LO00 12.00 15.00 18.00 ULSTERS $t 75 5 OU 50 00 50 OG 50 8 00 9 00 9 50 10 00 $12 00, 14 00 Phe best quality of clothing ever shown in this city. The lowest price on clothing ever asked in the city. AUWSE BROTHERS, THE WONDERFUL CHEAP WEl — — ae fa ey q . 4 f 4 ¥ let