'yr T 1 l 3;46,jI_on don. Canada. 30' d rw 1' ~“'»"‘2 ."~»` " ‘ rv' 'is @~»¢g=‘.~r.=rf¥.n3s‘='=f»*r='e.»:<» ~ -- , , _ . _ ». - ,, .- _ ._ _ .. 1,.. ` ' i ‘Q "`-il ii '"5 5 ’l`;.`§l 1. *‘-_»\='_-`*’;`é§‘"`,`i~i<" - ...E '=~ =., - .-_»~'- _~ .~,,.. rs. .~.~;-, , ,_< f.__;'s.,;,.§. ,-_,»..-_; _,,;¢.»-,._~ -. _.-...W THF. ouanpngm cu var.o'i‘1*n'r0wx¢ PR lWf"l 8 ' "1 _ In Fall and Winter i Clothing _ h \\'e guarantee to pleart you. -\\'e are not in business for i`un,but to keep, and please our _ patrons. No clothing leaves _. cur premises unless it is en- tirely satisfactory to our , Customers. \Ve handle Shorey's Clothing I or for every-day wear. If you are not satisfied You can have your money back. _ A P. E. I_‘s Greatest Cloth- l S A ing House. Sole Agent ` e 0 9 for Ch’town. wllicll we claim is the best IIl2l11l1f°8CtUr€<1 in Canada, and will suit every man’S purse, wllethc,-r in -.v-wrl.-irg clothes. Sunday clothes. _ _ RUBBERS, " nnunmu Blend len Sales exceed that of em- G A I I E R S other in the Lower 1Pro- This year our Stock vmces Choices! growth of Indie. and Cevlon. _ King Quality QUAIIIIIAH WRITE _ ro L51' _ l`t)~l.ET-House on King Street, near Rail- way containing nine ropms in good order | .apply to Thee, lcqnald, Lower Queen Street. V 627dlf 1 ron sane __ FUR SALE-A irst class organ. It is a beauty I and can be bought very cheap, For particulars ` apply to Geo, Rackham, Corner Kent and #Prince Streets, 3 G IW Pd _ -1-081 _ 'LQST-On Tuesday 27th on North River 'Roadacart saddle mounted' with brass with four hearts “ breeching attached. Finder leave at L\rge‘s Livery and be rewarde.fd3 di wi pd _ r|e|.P waureo-Mu.-E E WANTED-Young man, with ambition, to manage ha agency in the principal cities of ¢anada_ Splendid Ichance for establishing Bsimselt' ina permanent, luer tive business of 1-his-own. Address Lee Electric Insole Co., Box WANTED-A reliable and capable man in constant touch with the trade, to represent a Montreal cigar factory on the Island. Apply at 0-ce‘o at C 0. Charlottetown Guardian. . ( 30 d rw HELP wanrso-FEMALE wax rgn-A good capable general servant for household duties. Apply to .\Irs. McDonald at Senator ¥cI)onald’s. bd 3i- MISCELLA N EOUS sWANTED-FAITHF UL PERSON TO CALL ON retail trade and agents for manufacturing -honse;local ter'ritory;straight salary $20 paid weekly and expense money advanced; prev. ions experience unnecessary; position perman- ent;business successful. Enclose self~address- ed envelope Superintendent Travellers, 62o lonon Bldg., Chicago. Oct 28 tl Nov 21 New Fall _ \ and Overcoatings The very latest goods just received at the _ American Clothing Store and will be made into suits and overcoats in _ the latest New York Styles,iit and workmanship guaranteed prices always the lowest- -l`l, L. Frank MacKenzie THE STYLISH TAILOR AND GENTS’ OUTFITTER Summerside. ` Queen Street, ` Opp. Prowse Bros. I ` ' _.»-\No- ~ I of rubbers include the celebrated AND I Granby Rubbers Packard’s Imperial 3 Gaiters and Leggings, ` all kinds, all prices. - MORRIS & SMITH, _ l- 1 l' __ l ni The Man Who Wants a 1 llllllllllllllll ll llllllll Or needs any repairingdone r should not forget that we ‘ have the facilities for turn- ing out work equal to any I in Canada. Let us give you l ; Founders, Engineers, X ' nd 'l k " Charlottetown, DR, TAYLOR’S an estimate, Rmcc»Stcwart & Co. Machinists a Box erma ers, Steam Navigation C0’s Wharf, P. E. Island, Phone 125. ' J Practice now limited to the _special- ties of diseases of the eye, nose and throat and surgical diseanes of women. 9 16 tu, fri, w 3m Suitings '~ -1 F l_ Nnw’s Your Time To ill up your coal bins. Coal is cheaper now than it will be,we are not as rushed with orders as we will be; and tyou’ll be on the safe side in any event. Remember the coal famine last winter and take our advice to buy now. 1 -_-1-_ii H ~ An artist who ire!" -'l"\'v.!h-:r u °‘ lil tht! Ilt‘lglll)0l‘l1mnl l|.‘\\l :\-\`iil‘il .\ll’S Lawton’s permission tn nmkc n sl:--tcli of thc little bridge lu l:~.~r ini-mloxvf The permission was civa-1|. und llobby had been spending L_. morning wlthi the artist. ' “I stood close to him ull the tlme.” I I watched him, and I talked to him I, good deal so he wouldn’t bc lonesome.” "‘l’m afraid perhaps you bothered hlm. dear." said Bobby’s dotlng moth- er. “Oh, uo, I didn't, mother,” said Unb- by. “He liked me. He said he.wa`s real interested in me. He kept looking at his watch so he could tell me when] 12 o’clock came, so I needn’t be late for dinner. He even made me show him what thick shoes I had on, for he said ‘ 'twas so damp he was moat afraid I might catch cold.” Cheeks and Drafts. A bank check is really a sight draft on the depositor’s bank. lt dlders from a draft in wording and is used in pay- ing a creditor, whereas a draft is com~ monly used as a means of collecting money from a debtor. The bank ls obliged to pay a check lf it has funds enough of the drawer to meet lt, but the person on whom a draft ls drawn may or may not honor it at pleasure. Another use to which merchants put drafts is in sending remittances from one part of the country to another, for as banks keep money on deposit lp all of the large commercial centers a ‘bank draft is simply the bank'a check draw- ing on its deposit with some other bank announced Bobby trinmphantly, “and 'Donald ,nm pgugpggn wgpg 0,” 1"( sell these drafts or “cashier checks" to customers. __.i.i--_-_.- Professional Jealousy. ‘ Brignoli, the famous singer, was ln- tensely jealous of all other tenors, nev- er admitting for an instant that any one of them could slug even passably well. When the handsome, talented Tom Karl burst upon the New York stage Brlgnoli tumed up his nose. “What do you think of Tom Karl?" Tagliapletra asked him one night. "Oh, he is a very nice little boy,” he L replied, with a shrug. “I like him very much, but he has missed his vocation. Ithinkhcwaaborntobeapolico- man." Karl was tall and of tins proportions and was singing at the time with Titiens In “La Favorlta." lo American Hoa-so Type. Notwithstanding the importance of horse breeding as an lndustry in this count1'y, there is at this time no dls- tlnctly American horse type. The :ae- Ing thoroughbred is English, the heavy draft horse ls~ French, the 'hackneyjs English, and the trotting horse, as bred at present for track and mad service, is not a type at all. An animal type cannot be said to be established until lt reproduces itself with reasonable cer- tainty.-John Gilmer peed ln Cen- tury. " Dangerous Examples. - Mrs. Long (who recommended a serv- ant)-Yes. she was an excellent girl in every way, except she would imitate me in dress and things like that. Miss Short-Ah, yes. I noticed sho began doing it when she came to me, but she-'s given it up now. Mrs. Long-I’m glad to hear lt. I ex- pect she saw she was making herself ridiculous. I _ His Idea Exactly. Uncle-How do you like your Sunday school teacher? Tommy-Oh, she’s got good sense. She’s smarter than mom is. Uncle-Indeed? So you believe ln her, eh? Tommy-Sure! Her an’ me thinks alike. She says Sunday school don’t do me no good. - Lucky Inspiration. Young Bride (looking over the new house)-Why. Herbert, do you call this little plgeonhole a shoe closet? i Young Husband-My love. that will hold a hundred pair of shoes of the size you wear. ' Young Bride-Well, perhaps you are right. It’s neat and cozy anyway. - __-__1___l_-1_- Refused. “Yes, he proposed to Mist Coke while “And what did she do?” “She threw him down.”--_Cleveland Plain Dealer. While we never trouble trouble till trouble troubles us, still we are not kept waiting long between times, are we?-Atlanta Journal. ' .____.?__ Freezing Cream. It is a mistake to throw away the salt and slush which remain in the freezer ,after the ice cream has been made. The salt will do .perfectly for the next freezing, and if some of it is still slushy and wet use it for the top layer the next time the freezer is filled. The freezing process will be greatly has- tened. ' , _ Siamese Delleaeles. among the articles of diet relished by r the natives of Siam are snails, croco- dile eggs, ants, silkworms and horse beef. _ l i A. Long Walk. _ 1 The longest walk on record is a llttlé l jaunt of 3,895 miles. The distance cov- ered was from San Francisco- to New Zoe Gayton. He left San Francisco A.P|c|__-..= »'=¢"`.“ ; ef; _. "‘ " ._ ~.. . ,..~ -wwe ~ _., 1 -v # it > }sta" s in elif 1 We do_~not care to spend _ ma prcturesfor the do justiceto our Fu from varlouu polntslnililsst 'fennessee re- i ' r.i.l_‘. ' 'Q I rs’ port that great forest Gres are raging at' ` » . yan take the 't1'°ub1¢ t0 theFur Room in our ' Store: you will be privileged tolook u SEVERAL |~|uNp|;£p PRE_TTIE»‘T FUR PICTURES in light; one TRAGKMEN STRIKE Pf9v1n¢fs, ,ana _ ' . Mananov Crrr, Pa., Nov. 2-Rather ; E E M U and a half cents an hour several hundred _ _V 3 A SCA L ` - . We lmkd v specialty of and keepin all s zes