rk, Genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. “Muet Bear Signature of fle Tlod See Fac-Simile Wrapper Below. Very smal) and as easy to take as sugar. CARTERS] ron ounces” e._ {FOR BILIOUSNESS. : VE FOR TORPID LIVER. PI FOR CONSTIPATION. * |FOR ALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION re ~s = lee weeaenne ae ee CURE SICK HEADACHE. ' ‘ DANGING ! Children’s Class and Private Lessons. | Mr. George Chilton will form a} children’s class, beginning next Saturday, Nov. 10, from 3 to 5 p.m. «Private lessons atany hour. All society dances taught. Skirt danc-| ing, the Highland Fling, Sailor’s Hornpipe, Spanish Dances, etc., etc., also tai ght. Arrangements for lessons may be made at any hour from 2 p. m. to 10 p.m., on application at the hall, Offer’s Building, Queen street. Any person wishing to form a private class may arrange their choice of evenings. GEO. CHILTON. ee ee ee “sie. DENTISTRY SIDE Office in New Prowse Block First door to the right up stairs. _ Telephone connec- DR. AYERS Real Estate Sale. To be sold by Public Auctiem en the premises on Wednesday, the 24th October nett, at the h.ur of 12 o'clock noon, that valuable arf desirable property situated on the southern side ef Richmond Street, between Zit Church and the bank of Nova Scotia, | known as the Young Men’s Christian Associa- tion-ilding and premises. The building is of'brick, well and substantially built, being in a central position. immediately opposite the | Law Courts; can be made suitable fer many | gy fhe, public or private. erms Cash on delivery ef the deed. For further particulars apply to J. D. SEAMAN, Prasident Y. M. C. A. | Sept, 25, tue and Fei. comasingiiponion This sale has been postponed til | Wednesday, November rath, at the) same place ard hour. | j OS TE RS, ; I tack of Royel Canediaps 4 5 _ Tbe Aud al Pearderberg 332 ent is a time when war pictures are in | grearer demand than ever. Theecrduct of the British soldiers on the batt efield | bas wom the plaudits of admiring nations. We have at great expense published fourlarge, beautiful pictures, size 2x24, on heavy, superfine, calen- dered paper. A picture that e ill con- mend itself and senda thrill to the heart. of every true Canadian 1s the one called Aitack of Reyal Cana- dians at Paardeberg,tiere are liter- ally burdreds of figures on this ie- ture the m untains or kopjes streteh- ing out into the distance are swarming with men while here and there a prose trace figure speaks only too well of the Beer riflemen It wes on this battle- field the gallant Major Arnold met death ante chingly. indeed itis only too true, that many of those gallant hearta that heat so high when the cheering thousands bade them God-speed as they sailed from Can- ada’s shores now He still forever in lenely graves on the Otner side of the world under African skies) To every Cauadian heart, to every Can- adian home, the deeds of their brave soldier boys speak with an irresist~ abla thrill of patriotism and pride. Gordon ighlanders at the Battle of Belmont, Charcing the Boer Guns at Elandslaagte, and the Cha of Gen. French’s Cavalry ou the Retreating Gen. Crenje’sArmy. These are all stirr- ing pictures and cannot fail to com-~ mend themselves to ary one who will examine them, They are RED HOT SELLERS ! Agentscoin money. Big profits. Enormous success. One agent sold 68in oneday, Sample and terms 25 cts. (Nene free); four $0 cts; $1.75 ej doz; 25 for $3.25; 50 for 6.00; 100 or 811.00. Writetodav for a dosen and make money. Home Nevelty . Mfis. Co.., Bos 518 (Dept 256 B) Chi cago, Til. Wed THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 12, 1900. BRITAIN’S M., P.’S. Proportion of Various sions and Occupations Re- presented. An analysis of the :ew parliament of Great Britain a aS] } yf » 669 » rs re ° . : etic hae _ fas ny ‘The middle of the largest room in | fortunately, of late years, fallen in- | liaamert, and that 14a ey the Camp 1s cleared, lwo men are} to some disuse in cur Sabbath! bers The following 1a analysis of | SCCUFELY blindtolded and, having Schools and families. th > Various profe ae ial | previously drawn lots for the first The Word of God stored i nitea and m ‘rceantile pos of the (69 | whack, they kneel = the hoor. In : and heart is like the sap in a tree. Our Tortoise Heaters have one®’ iec members at present e cted ee — pyar ee a | "i vitalizes. An insufficent supply | a Plece stO C¢ er 3 < ‘ Ss e < s- as . > > . rere } . Bankers andfinanci:...... 3 [other leather strap. of a ‘rope ts Snetiacciee tats ean et top. See that you get this top, and escape PATTISUCTS, I OF Ou prs € 116) held by the end, eitherclose to the|- : of a scat hee’ . oe Brewers, distillers a»:i wine mer- | aor or, in some camps, actually he | abundant <2 ap — a the danger and discomfort of gas in fyour Civil a i ‘at “e it. The latter strap, being kept taut | vel ily a living word, and the Christ- | house, Ota ee “a, Woetas + by the combatants, guarantees a lan who neglects it falls short of | Colliery proprietors At _| uniform distance between them.| his proper development | Di Snell ; and Govt. officials. . 17 Chey are quite near enough tohurt/} To have the memory well-stored | prOUsa See Se SOV: OnClas : . 2+) cach OCRCn wvele, See ai | when young is like the gathering of | Estate agents, archicects and accountants, Farmers and agriculturists...... 15 eae cael “i Ge ori and hes emia Pens er | enough to draw the first call shouts, | cont’nious outflow Little risk of | FE E re 7 « ( ers ye . . ° . } “ee which his) spirituz ‘ 235 where NN Li. & Ironmasters & metal merchants 18 opponent must immediately answer ere ee where, from | | Labor representatives.......... 13] ‘Here I be. Then eae: » | Such a reservoir, there is, day by | Manufacturers and spinners.... 5: Medical profession............ POPC fo os hikes 6 os boas ss Ministers and ex-ministers of Government. .......).79 Aw Newspaper proprietors and jour- Ip ec aes Peers’ sons and brothers........ 31 Printers and booksellers........ Railway contractors & engineers 6 Steamship and shipowners and builders ... Praca te Sees Solicitors, in or out of practice.. 2 Stock and share brokers........ 7 Shopkeepers and traders........ 13 University professors and school- RS oie ray k cn Oa e poe ae ) 4 606 ARMY AND NAVY LIST, Lieutenant-General!..:...... 1 Colomene se ere Cehss ee 3 Lieutenant-Colonels.......... 7 a? wep BETA ee re | CREME Stic. fas. see Lieutenants..... 2 NAVAL OFFICERS Content ose. oer. cok Lieutenants 63 — 660 RESOLUTION PASSED. The following resolution was pass- ed by the Grand Division at its ses- sion at Park Corner, Nov. 2nd: Whereas the Prohibition Act passed at the last session of the Local Legislature, whilst meeting to some extent the wishes of the tem- perance people still contains defects that will, if not amended, render it easy to evade its provisions and tend to lower all attempts at pro- hibition in the eyes of the public. Therefore Resolved: That this Grand Division would recommend amendments to said act in the fol- lowing, as well as in other particu- lars : | (1) There should be a clear state- | ment in it of what an intoxicating | beverage is by percentage of aico-| hol contained and would recommend | 2 per cent. as the per centage. | (2) Provisions should be inserted | that will effectually suppress the | sale of liquor in clubs. (3) The yendorship provisions | should be charged so as to remove | all temptation to the vendor to in- | crease sales. (4) The provision for fines should be first and second offences only, the first a money fine or term of im- prisonment, and all subsequent of- fences imprisonment with or without hard labor. | (5) More adequate provision for collecting fines and such other amendments, alterationsand addi- tions as are evidently necessary to make saidact more stringeent and effective. resolved. also, That this body use its iniluence in every way possible to secure the improvements to the said act as indicated in the foregoing resolu- tion to insure when the time comes to have it enforced it shall be thor- oughly effective to accomplish the end intended. ————_ Situation in Spain. —_—_——— MApDRID, Nov. 9.—At a cabinet council held to-day under the pres- idency of the queen regent, General Azcarraga, the premier, said there was now no Carlist under arms in Spain and that the rising had failed completely. In order, however, to destroy the entire Carlist organiza- tion in the country, he said, the suspension of the constitutional guarantees would be maintained. General Azcarraga also annonnced that a Spanish-American convention had been signed in Washington by which the Islands of Caygayen, and Cibutu, in the Phillippine archipel- ago, had been ceded for $100,000. ~~ oie The best place to buy your uncler- wear, gloves, caps or anything in Profes » | hove _ | frequently happens. g| ve’ and | **Here I be.”’ This +) take his turn at being struck. ,| Other has had enough or perhaps | | she commences with the real work | tine is mothers favorite remedy for croup, | A ROUGH GAME. URE. So full of peril is the lumberman’s | life than even his sports and games | must be spiced with danger or they} A more important resolution the | | will pall upon his taste. On the long |General Assembly could scarcely | winter nights a cruel game called) have passed than the resolution to | ‘Jack, where be ye?’’ is frequently | offer a diploma for the memorizing | played. of Scripture, which custom has un- | /MEMORIZING OF chee | | | | 1 the mountain springs intoa great | Now, the man who has been lucky) rese vir, from which there will be } ‘Jack where be ye? to the first man) day, and-hour by hour, the flowing | strikes at the place where he ima-/ forth of the living stream of truth | vines his adversary to be with the ‘into hear. and conscience and will | heavy leatherstrap. If he hits his) The diploma will be offered Seid | man, he is entitled to another blow— |mediately after the New Year to may call out again, ‘Jack, where be any scholar who will repeat to the the other must answer. | satisfaction of his minister or Sab- | ' us 18 continued til bath School superintendent the | the first man misses, when he must | prescribed passages of Scripture. | tak : | These will comprise about two aun- | The others form a ring around the | dred verses and the list will be ‘ | two combatants, bets are made, and | jssued on a neat card ata nominal ° H each faction encourages and ap- | price Be on the lookout for oF met it ard ware tor |plauds its chosen man. There are! Home Studv. y eC ;regular rounds, and the game is| : ‘usually kept up until one or the | BUILDERS’, FARM ERS’ MECHANICS’ Pscne .. HARDWARE.. |sport are numerous. At the begin- , Strathconas are funny reading. For — there is generally no malice. A| ne as one is now going the | p . t Ojl GI C , | hard blow isstruck —it is expected—| gounds: ‘‘A private in the first Cana- | }itis the game. But it occasionally | dian contingent iells how he over- arn s; S; ane arpenters Tools | happens that the game develops in-| heard a party of Boer prisoners | toa fierce duel.—Pearson’s. talking about the wonderful things | they have seen the Strathconas do — — |in the way of hitting coins and |bottles and lassoing horses and | HOW ZULU WOMEN SEW cattle. They were especially struck | |with the latter, and they described | The skill ef the Zulu of South Af- | S0me of the exhibitions they had | . . . . : T S i o oe 7 ~ | ‘rica in sewing fur is a household | S¢¢2. Why, said the Canadian, those | _ . , . £ a word in South Africa, and. some of | @T@ Mere trifles. Now, out in the A, B. NORTON & CC., Limited. the other tribes compete with them. , 4~rthwest, I saw one of — these | The needle employed is entirely) 5ttathconas do something |really | different from that used by the or-| wonderful. A hornet had lighted on | dinary needlewomen, In the first t#¢ neck of one of his comrades, and place it has no eye ; inthe second, | the latter was afraid to touch it for it is like a skewer, pointed at one! fear it would sting him. He told end and thick at the other. |his troubles to his friend, and tle The thread is not of cotton but is | friend made a lasso, threw it arou: d made of the sinews of various ani-, the hornet’s stinger and removed it mals, the best being made from the| Without pulling the hornet. off his sinews in the neck cfa giraffe. It Deck.’ The Boers were duly impre s- | : stuff, inelastic, with a great ten- ed. | dency to “‘kink’’ and tangle. itself| a. =. 1:.2 — | up with anything near it. Before Minard’s Liniment | being used it is steeped in hot} Gures Diptheria. | water until it is quite soft and is) mn —-- [ then beaten between two smooth! One bouquet tothe living is worth | stones, which causes it to separate | a dozen laurel wreaths on the coffin into filaments, which can thus be of the dead. obtained of any lengh and _thick-| ale ae ness, Thus the seamstress has a| Mother’s Favorite. considerable amount of labor before, Dr. Shase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpen- | CHANDLER —_ | HE WAS EXPERT. | till one is carried off the scene! / wounded. Hard heads can stand Some of the stories published in hard knocks, and voluntcers for the the English papers regarding the ALL CHEAP FOR GASH The Celebrated Norton Machine Oil. > in band. | bronchitis, asthma, coughs, colds and sore | Finally she squats on the ground | threat. It has by far the largest sale of any | (for no native stands te work or do’! remedy for coughs and colds It is pleasart einen . oe a , to the taste, prompt in action and is an abso- | anything else who can possibly help lute alent Sones consumption and pneu- | \t) and, taking her needle, bores two | monia. 25 sents a bottle. Family size 60 | holes in the edges of the rug or gar-| cents. ment On which she is working. The | ro thread is then pushed through with} Hit the middle classes, but hit | the butt of the needle, drawn tight, | thems through their favorite me-| and two more holes are made with) diums, papers they buy, not which | a like result, the skewer progressing | they receive without asking for. | very slowly, but fast enough for a/,., oe a ee country where time is of no value| Minard’s Liniment | whatever. « Di The skin upon which the seam- 01 Seren: Distemptt; stress is working is damped with Songs about the Klondike should water before she commences, and} be writter in a miner key. as the damp thread and hide dry > : out they bring the work very close-| ay qig Theory Exploded ly together. The old-fashioned theery of tearing down disease was entirely changed by the advent cf Dr. A, W. Chase s Nerve Food, which cures by creating mew rich blood and nerve tissue. Through the medium of the circulation and the nervous system they strengthen and iavig orate every organ in the human body. Sees aie & Mania for . i pan e 0 pe rat { 0 ni S | ascetin atemiicd Gain ia jot | wherehe can most conveniently put Among the Dootors. No Need of the his arm around it. Cure Piles. A‘Surer, Cheaper ,,.. a a ee Sree Dr. Chase's Ointment. Minard’s Linimeat Dread of the surgeou’s knife causes | CuresCar get in Cows. | multitudes of people to suffer on year ped sae sees after year with piles, when they could | You can generally count on the | be eured without risk, expense, or dan- women that dogs seldom growl at | ger of an operation by using Dr. | and children are not afraid to ‘‘go| Chase’s Ointment, the only preparation §+,?’’ watts : U N D E RW EAR T. J. HARRIS, London House. The Weather Bureau.... Is fuil of pent up colds, chills, shivers, shakes, cold winds and blustesy weather. You had better change your bleeding, or protruding piles. guaranteed to cure any oase of itching, | Rev. J. A. Baldwin, Baptist minister, Arkona, Ont., writes:—‘For over twenty years I wae a great sufferer from itching and protruding piles. I three very painful surgical operations, all without obtaining any permanent benefit. When about to give up ‘n de- gspair I was told to use Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment, and did so, finding relief at once I used three boxes, and am almost en- tirely cured. The itching is all gone. I have advised others to use it, believing it would cure them as it has me.” De. Chase's Ointment is the only positive and actval cure for every form of piles, 60 cents a box, at all dealers, or Kdmanson, Bates and Co., Toronte. mea’s furnishingsis at D. A. Bruce’s. used many remedies and underwent | To all who have felt the evil effects of de- | ranged kidneys, it is interesting to know that Dr. A. W, Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills are meeting with enormous sale and unparalleled success in this district. Backaches and ach- ing kidneys are fast becoming a thing of the past where Dr. A. W. Ch-se’s Kidney-Liver Pills are knewn. One cent a dose, 25 cents box a at all dealers. ——_ It is easier to earn money than to save it. wi tin _ Minard’s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. An Enormous Sale. | We have an extra quality fleece lined for 65c. Plenty ether kinds from 2 cents to $4.00, NEW FALL NECKWEAR Direct from the manufacturers; made from silks of our selectien. The styles are up-to-date and the prices within the reoch of all. There is no beuse im — furnishifigs where yeu can be better suitcd. We are determined to keep ®p a reputation for first-class furnishings. 135 MORRIS BLOCK D; A BRUCE CHARLOTTETOWN eee T