Oysters t. ee THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, O TO3FR 15, 1897 Keep up hope. There are chousands of cases where re- covery from Consumption ’ > has been complete. Plenty of fresh air and a well-nour- ished body will check the ' ° T mrocress of the disease. Nu- > , ° 1 ° | serious foods are well in their ! ¢ ¢ } way, Out tne dest food of all 5 Cod-liver Oil, When partly d rested, as in Scott's | Emu! it does not dis~ | turb the stomach and thu! hy ‘eres the whole bene- | amounttaken. If | to read more about | st let us send you a book. } } SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville, Ont. ; ' ' The Leading 2 use AGams’ Tutti ' Frutti. Itallays : thirst and gives staying power. Some dealers to obtain a big profit try to palm olf imitations, See thatthe trade mark name Tutti Frutti is on each-ic. package. Save coupons inside afevrappers for latest‘Seoks and prixes, | | i retentin atin cccememnnss cet ne th. ltl tae Oysters Oysters. —_—-—- iY! JOY! JOY!" Victaria Cafe, Great George Street. Oysters served in every style; lamches and dinners with degpatch. As wsual, 1 am prepared to deliver Oysters in any quantity to customers to amy part of tne aty. Telephone Conneetion. JOHN P. JOY VicTORIA CarE Gt. George St..... Sritish £mericay, Dyeing Co. OF MONTREAL, Are the Geld Medalist Dyers and Cleanere of Canada, and are grepared to do the following work — Silk ¢: wool dresses, opera cloaks, silk velvets, plush or cloth, jackets, lined or trimmed with silk or fur beautifully clean ed. Gentlemen’s overcoats, drees suits, tweed suits, military or other uniforme, church vestments, altar clothe, stage and professional dresses Cleaned and color revived, Plush and fancy curtains, table covers, ernbroiderel ban ners, screena, enshions, ete. cleaned With marvellous results. Fur Coats, jackets, muffs, collarettes, etc., made like new. Feathers cleaned, dyal and curles. Goode done without removal of trimming. liniogs or orna- eate, without danger of shrir kage or ary to coloror tabric. Information *ith price Jist free on application to our agent for this province. G. E. Henderson. Express Agent, Ch’towan, * Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow’s Sooth- 8ept390— a MISS H. McDONALD PANCY DANCES, including Highland Fling, Flag Dance, Strathepey, Spanish ance, Sailors Hornpipe, May Pole and Viliagers Dance. Skirt Dance, Audalucia, te. Fer this seeson ouly these dances $5 ich, being one third of [price. Roome in Masonic Building. sent 30— DOUBLE - TENEMENT By Aucticn. To be sold by auction, on the prem- ses King Street East, on , Wednesday, tLe 13th day of Oct. inst; at 12’0’elock Loon, Double Tenement House and land 42x80, on north side King Street Kast, property of the late Wm. Ladner. Terms cach, | been superseded. to departing NOT THE WAY IT WAS, Shines Mad Not Changed st All Since He Was Young. Three young men were sitting to- gether in the rotunda of one of the big botels. They were discussing the prog- ress of invention. “It's strange,’’ said one, ‘‘how com- Pletely old ways of doing things have You may talk about tts being hard to introduce inventions, Sut if a scheme is any good it'll be uni- versally adopted nowadays in no time. Why, you'll find even middle aged men who remember when everything in use was different. There’s hardly a thing now that’s done the same way or by the appliances as it was when sane i they were young. Why, my uncle can ; remember the time when every kind of goods was made by hand, and he isn’t | very old either. It’s laughable to hear him tell how they used to get along. | | about | | Everything, it seems, was done | the slowest and hardest way on earth. People used to think that they were in the world te work, and it dikin’t make | much difference what they were at. I | tell you, boys, you don’t appreciate | what it is to live in these days.’’ At this juncture a men with entirely gray hair folded his paper preparatory and looked at tthe crowd . . | near him. One of them, observing him, Bicvelists ventured te ask what he thonght about | | it. “Pretty mearly right, I guess,” he | said. ““Now, £ suppose,’’ began another, **you can memember when the horse car was the onty known method of metro- politan comveyance, when bicycles were a thing tocome, when telephones were | an experiment, when they didn’t make | any ice in July, when most of the steel | in buildings was in the door locks, when newspapers printed two sheets and thought'them heavy, when fountain pens were an undisturbed dream, when aluminium was a theory and when harvesters were beginning to be talked about.’’ *‘No,”’ returned jhe person addressed. **I’d like te agree with you, but I can’t do it. The facts are otherwise. When I was & young man, business men used typewriters. A good many were think- ing about patting in a phonograph. People who didn’t own any bicycles or ifeel like paying for acab usmally tray- eled around town in a cable.or electric ear. Telephones cost 10 cents a try just as they do now, unless you kmew some- hody you could spevge on. Airships would go up:and come down pretty gauch as they cto now. The Sanday pa- pers were so full of ada thatit took till Monday to find anything to read. Smoke consumers were making Chicago @ beautiful plaes to live in.”’ The gathering was now looking in- credulous. Things seemed tomeed an explanation. Se he concluded: ‘‘You see, I got this gray hair trying to make a soda water manufactory pay im Kan- sas. Then a beard will add afew years I was 27 last March.’’—Chicago Times Herald. Ay OL_p AND Wett Tried Revwepy.— Mis. Wiaslow’s Soothing Syrup hae been used for over fifty years by muiiens of mothers for their children while ‘e2thing with perfect success. [t soothes the child softens the gums, allays all pain,cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea Is pleasant to the taste. “Sold bv druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. ing Syrup, aed take no other kind. DOBELL LINE. £.S. Polino is due here from Mont- real Wedoesday October 13th inst, and saile for S. John’s, and Harbor Grace, N fia. carrying live stock on deck and produce uoder deck at lowest rates. For further iuformation as to freight or passage apply to N. RATTENBORY. Agent* COLLE GE AND SCHOOL BOOKS Scribblers, Foolscap, Ink, Pencils, Pens, Note Books etc., ets. Cheapest and Best at R. BEARISTO, oct 12 Auctioneer. ‘McMillan & Hornsby's QUEEN STREET | trembling humility.) i is: ““Think of your ge; | you ask naively. 1 **Right. THE FUNNY ENGLISHMAN, | Some of the Pranks He Wiavs on His Tn- muspecting Victiois, To successfully annoy a policeman ts quite one of the little arts. ‘Try this: Go up to the Bobby and say, ‘‘ Please cun you direct me to such and such an address*’’ To which Bobby answers, ‘‘Go straight lown there, take the first turning to the right, the second to the left and the first ty the right again.’’ You are stupid. You io not comprehend, Bobby complies with your request to repeat it. ‘Th Chen, to staré with, I go straight in that direo- tion?’ (This with an air of respectful, ‘Yes, si ‘Then other direction. And here is a new way of aggravating mathematicians. Say te your victim: “Think of a number; double it; multiply inks. walk off bang in the It by 9; add 165; subtract 17: divide it by 22; add 865."’ and sa on until the man begins to get impatient. Then say to him, e ( Well, you have arrived at a certain re- sult?” ‘“Yes.’’ “Well, divide that figure by a similar figure and I think you will find the result is 1.” : Which reminds meof a simply horrid game for ladies once invented. Here it multiply it by 2, and then you get your real age.”’ And here is something for poor old cab- by: You hail him in Regent street und show him a piece of paper with “Charing Crass station’’ written on it. ‘‘Bleece gan ' you dake me to gat address, gabman?’”’ ; you say. **Right, sir,’’ Ar- be answers. | rived at Charing Cross station you «light. ‘‘How moch voz dat, bleece, gabmant’’ “Alf a sovereign, sir.’’ There’s a shilling for you, you lying old scoundrel!”’. But don’t do it to a@ very aged cabman. He may fall off his box. I will conclude with a piece of advice—a warning. Without doubt the person best adapted for the profession of a practical joker is achampion of the racing track. Tbe man who lacks that fleetness of foot, and yet wishes to practical joke, had bet- ter wear at least treble seated trousergy — lwndon Exchange. ——— ee To Write on Giass. ‘T} @ easiest way to write or paint on | glass is to take a solution of fish glue and distribute it with a soft brush over the surface of the glass. Of course the eolution must be curefully filtered, and when it is appiied to the glass pane the glass must be held over a stove or lamp in a slanting direction to allow the str- pins solution to flow off and to dry thor- oughly without streaking. When the pave has been prepared in this way, it is ready to write or paint upon. Even writing of microscopic minuteness can be applied to the prepared glass surface without the danger of the ink running. On this surface colors, india ink and any kind of pigment may be employed. —Crockery and Glass Journal. Balloon Aecidents, “<The cause of so many bailoon aoci- dente,”’ says Professor William Ken- dall, sm aeronaut of Philadelphia, ‘*}ies im the fact that the beginner does not realize what a delicate piece of meehanismn a balloon is, and, after hav- ing been employed about a balloon out- fit for ove season, imagines he knows it all. These people manage te get a bal- loon, usnally an old, weather beaten affair, and then secure an engagement at some amausement park. Statisticr show that mine out of every ten such aeronauts meet with accidents, and in nine cases out of ten it is all because they haven’t mastered the intricacies of their profession.’’ Wood's PIOCSPHODINE The Great English Remedy. Siz Packages Guaranteed to promptly and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotency and all effectsof Abuse or Excesses, & } \ m Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Optum or Stimu- Bef oreand Afte t. on which soon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only Eeliable and Honest Medicine known. Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, £1; six, $5, One will gicase, sia wili cure. Pamphlets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor. Ont., Canada, Sold in Charlottetown by Geo. E ughes Drugzgirt. Phys cal Culture & Dancing MISS H. MACDONALD Will re-open her Clasees on Thurecay October 7.h. Private leseons at avy hour. Adults at8 p.m. Juveniles at 4 p, m. Fancy Dancing a specia.ty. Full particulars on appiication at ber rooms in Masonic Building. or at the residence of John A. Macdonald, Esq. ownal St, oct 7— WANTED! 5,000 men, women and children te to call and inspect my New Goods. Compare prices with othor stores,ald be convinced by buying from me your watches, clocks, jewelry, silverware, spectacles, eye glasses, ete, you will save money, and the goods bought from me will be warranted to give satisfaction. Gc. G4. JOR th Sde Queen Squcre, * ‘ HLRO AND MAN, Storfes That Are Told of the Great Duke of Weliington, The worlds of reminiscence and history agree that there was something about the Duke of Wellingtcn which rendered empty pretense quite impossible in his company. He wus absolutely genuine, a man with- out vanity or desire of display. He was invariably courteous to women, but tliat did not prevent him from staving off such as were bores. One of them «ushingly asked bim to give her an account of the batsle of Waterloo. **Oh,’’ said ‘it’s very easily done! We pommeled them, they pommeled us, and I suppose we pommeled the hardest. So we gained the day.”’ Yet he was a great stickler for punctilio in what seemed to bim the proper places. When the regiment of his son, Lord Deuro, was quartered at Dover, the duke was staying at Walmer castle, and the officers rode over and left their cards as a matter of form. Soon after came an invitation from the Duke of Wellington inviting all the oflicers to dine, but ignoring his own When Lord Douro asked for an ex- planation, the duke gave it thus, with great good humor: ‘tT make no distinction in the service. Those gentlemen had paid me the com- pliment of a visit, and I invited them to dinner. You were not among them. So 1 omitted you in the invitation.”’ Thus he could always hold hisown with en imperturbability which might well have served him on the field of battle, but of all stories about him there is one which best proves his almost quixotic honesty. At one time he bought a farm lying near his estate, and therefore very valuable to him. When the purchase was concluded, his steward congratulated him on having got such a bargain, for, as he explained, tho owner was in difficulties and had been forced to part with the land. “What de you mean by a bargain?’ asked the duke. “It was valued at £1,100," said the steward, ‘‘and we gut it for £800.”’ “*In that case,’’ said the duke, ‘‘you will be kind enough to carry the extra £300 to the late owner dnd never to talk to me of cheap land again.’’-—-Youth’s Companion. he, SOD. ———= > 0 oe SmIN,O CrFERINGS. “oculisor Gifts With Which the Jans Deo. orate the Shrines of the Gods. The influences of the ninetewuth century have little affected the real spirit of Shin- to, if they can be said to have done so at all, in any partof Japan. The faith re- wmuins not less earnest, though its mani- festations often assume a character pecul-, iar tothe Meijiera ‘The offerings to the eods are as numerous as ever, but muny of them are strictly modern and some quite occidental. At the great shrine of Kompira, for example, you will find a curicusly snodern ex voto—a life preserver bearing in English letters the name of the ehip Tosa, to which it belonged, and you may notice there also among old fashioned ex voto pictures of junks saved from wreck by divine power new pictures of steamers end modern schooners similarly rescued by the god. At nearly all of the greater temples and at many of the smaller ones you can see spoils of the war with China. Among these are gatling and armstrong guna, canister shot and 82 centimeter shells, mannlicher rifles and martinis, oolt re- yolvers and winchester repeaters, not to speak of Chinese banners, uniforms and lances—a vast part of the captured arma- ment having been thus disposed of. The soldier of Meiji indeed salutes the gods as he saiutes hiscomman-iers, and the officer, unsheathing his sworJ, presents arms be- fore the Shinto shrine in western military fashion. But the re:erence expressed is the reverence unchanged of a thousand yoars ago. The festival for the military dead is eele- brated now with horse races and with modern gymnastic games. But the old belief in the real presence of hero souls makes the same appeal as in other days to the heart of camps. How little also the influenee of Buddhism has been weakened, even in the military word, may be divined trom the fact of the great festival held in 1896 on behalf of the spirits of the cavalry horses that perished in the war.—Lafcadio Hearn in Atlantic CHARLOTTETOWN inlA atin BOS Buy your tickets for Boston by the fast Steamer Halifax. W.W. CLARK, Ticket Agen Evening - Classes ———A? THE «= PE. | COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, COMMENCE ON Monday. 18th Oct. inst At 7.30. Open toall. Iodividual instrué tion in all commercial snbjects. No WASTE OF TIME HERE. Applv at once :o 1. OXENHAM, Friocipal oct 0—tf Weuralgie. In the head is almost invariably censed by decayed and abscessed teeth. n’t sufler D lessly when youcan be releived in a few hours and cured in a few dars by the careful treatment we will give you. J H. AYERS DENTIST. Painless extraction of teeths" | ~ - - z 1 rm — —" » ~ iin SO Mk, i EPS aS SoS * A te, Ti i ssncilnelsieilie Citing... cag inn naive hada LANCERS AON . HEAVY STEEL PLATE | SW VV SOO OOOH 90O4 08 ian re... SS PIPOSSCSS OV OOOS CO COD FOOTE >FOOCOOE COC OSE E FOP .c6 ame) Coal or Wood. pte o a ve ~ Made in various styles, from © & the ordinary family to the «¢ = > largest hotel size. . o o > Om ° > Are constructed in the most substan- > © tial manner and after the most @ © approved patterns. © & x © © ARE STRICTLYUPTODATEIN $% © EVERY PARTICULAR. e © © 75h ae ; > = oe It will pay you to investigate the @ o erties pare. \ good points of these ranges 5 g {ead before purchasing others. ° : LONDON, MONTREAL,... @ > The McCla Mfg Co TORONTO, WINNIPEG and @ © ° "S NAG iss sess e © —_—— —- © S If your local dealer cannot supply, write our nearest house, $ 6 OPSOOSSOOOS OOS YO OPO DODO POO OO OSE PODO DOOD OGIO OOOO OHO BIRD CAGES IN } 1 ASS AND PAINTED. Extra bottle and spriugs. Wire rat traps, for another kind of bird. SIMON VW CRABBE STOVES & EaARDWARE Walker's Corner i187 pe eeoaneeeee ———— NS eS BURG LARS | WANTED. To the Busglar who entered our office and broke the Handle of Safe we extend be invitation te call again, promising him a free entry into the safe, and thereby sav~ ing him the use of the Silleon wrench. We will oot insure his easy exit, but will be om, band with an ambulance and undertaker. ' At the same time we give the Dairymena guarantee for one year with our twely- @nog Cheese Presses, Nearly al .hat were imported aerein the past required to be. evpaired within @ year. Our improved Cheese Vat is the most popular in the market. Our Babcock Testers never break the bottles. The press hoops are right for eighty Ibs of curd. And best of ali the “ ALPHA de LAVAL SEPARATOR” is on f hime wayahead of ali others Write for pricee. Terms made to suit customers, Our Pamps are winaing,a vame for themselves at priges to beat any im T. A. MeLEAN es WHAT ISIT? Only a job lot of Boys Long Boots in sizes 1. 2.3. And price $1.75 now $1 39 to clear out. COFF BROS. NEXT TOA PRETTY GIRL i D 11,90 Rattan Rockers, and our pew Mirrors, 8.50 to 11,00, will enable you to make yourselves admirable to both sexes. ‘ é Our new window blinds 25 to 45 will beauti’y your home ail for a little money. We furnish homes. JOHN NEWSON. Newson Block, Victoria Row sn tl in aw cat eg te A ee INS eh le seem a MB Bos a ce, ise: i is LIE: Pci A te area NM Pri hee gu am we - cee terrae tia ag al - inaenpnctap tie: ata ample cing la sath wing + ee - et neers seen wi Pe a ey ln penal tt eo A i cn a ik mari, a ee eee eee Pr