CANADIAN PAGIFIG RAILWAY. TOURIST SLEEPERS MONTREAL TO PACIFIG COAST Every Thursday NURSING MOTHERS want Scott’s emulsion of cod- liver oil, almost without ex- ception. So before they get to be mother’, eating for two months. The emulsion not only 1s food itself; it gives strength for digesting usual food. If the milk is scanty or poor, v ua For full particulars as to passage | rates and train service to Canadian Northwest, British Columbia, Washington, Oregon ad CALIFORNIA and enriches quality. we We'll send you a little to try if you like. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronta TIME TABLES. rIME) Also for maps and pamphlets de- ecriptive of journey, etc., write to A. J. HEATH, Pe. A. © P. w.. St. John, N.B , b } (LOCAI } >». | =~ Arrival and Departure of Trains — TRAINDS. 00 DS } Express leaves for the west....+... 7 35am | Express arrives from the west.... 9 20pm ' Accommodation leaves for the FOR.... WO nc ct¥ccuc ceasenee. chee 867 } Accommodation leave¢ for Cape XMAS | When debat question, *‘W) this season, 01 cloth, hair an PR ESENTS TeRVeSER ice on vague acess cacet 6 00 pm , Accommodation arrives from the bs WO ive cecsanees . ceesectG QAM ng the ever present! Accommodation arrives from the at shall I wive, = 20] Web. cocec.ccciccscvsessccccte I 50 pm r line of EBON Y—| Express leaves for the east........8 00a m hat brushes. mir-| press arrives from the east.....-10 00am seeee ° ACCO atl leaves fc th rors, etc., will appeal to your good a Con. ¥ ae co p m taste and appreciation ol the Accommodation arrives from the useful. S, QMBceee'svctsecenntes sesnieses§ DOOR Your inspection is respectfully | er ene asked. STEAMERS. | G. F. HUTCHESON, THE HILLSBC ROUGH : ” : 7 Leaves Prince Street ferry whart for South Jeweler and Optician. port every half hour. Sunnyside. - PICTURESQUE ia aw A 4 Weeks A Prince Edward Island THEN CHRISTMAS _—— 25c at all We're about ready for the AN - NUAL RUSH. The big shop is| Bookstores fast filling up ‘ ‘ith An ilfustrated bceok on P. E. Isl- HOLIDAY PRESENTS ind. An interesting souvenir for ‘ourists. Raphael Tuc Son & Co's Xina z see er @alendars, Cards and Books ar here now in great profusion. > oa ' ' Boys and Girls’ Own Annnal:', 2b : and thousands of other good bo Most Reliable And Fancy Goods galore; the kind vu. DON'T see in any dry good ss . B - ¢ ¢ ' Pi i your repair work done store. Come aud see. \? is the place that nihien tiek dhieek tp ~ oa |* terestin your neels. We strive to " zccommadate all] who leave any work Haszard & Moore } ies ir pce Sexton { qul spatcn of same, We have e | the reputation of being **O. K.” on Sun nyside. repair work. Give us a.rial and ; be convinced that what we say is true, I ¢ BRUCE STEWART APPLES | & CO., Cpr Founders, Engineers, Machinists and Roiler Makers. Steain Naviga- 173 bbls of first-class Northern | tion Co’s wharf, Charlotte- } Spies and Baldivins just received in} town, P. E.I. Tele steak. If vou wanta barrel of nice phone 125, i) ples for house use or for retailing ‘| cali and see our stock. ea ar MOTIGE! rm a4 iy MINC Cur stock of MEAT mince meat has just | In the matter of Thomas J. Morris, | i putup by a a i , oJ a arrived. Itis putupinoneandtwo| of Charlottetown, in Queens) . } a % ~ e | pound tins and also in ten pound County, merchant. ed } t is very nic c stock and 1S } Notice is hereby given that Thomas ad reliable firm. IGS:: a Morris, of Charlottetown, in neen’s County, in Prince Edwpard | jfland, merchant, has by an assign- ' ment bearing date the 27th day of | . i a | Our Layer F os are verv fine stock ; November, A. D. 1900, assigned all | this ar. bei 1 larve and very} his estate to me, the undersigned, | i Au The cooking figs are also| George E. Auld, of Charlottetown, very good and cheap. | merchant, for the general benefit | | ef his creditors. | Dated this 28th day of Nevember, | A. D. 1900. tt. ci aA vy B & GOFF, Grocers GEO WE ARE E. AULD. Dentistry... BY SPECIALISTS | To refund the money when REMICK’S ECZEMA CURE Fails te cure any case of Eczema ir piles, no matter of hom long ‘standing. For sale only at WAGDONALD’S DRUGST@RE. Pa‘nLess Den ristRY by use of e ectricity er by th Berlin \!ethod. “ODERN DEN istRY, crown and bridge week. (Hoth without pain.) AKIIFICIAL ThetTH.—We make all kinds. Teeth extracted wahout pain. BERLIN BENTAL PARLORS | ‘is no small tax, continued for | the emulsion Increases supply | ‘after breakfast. | Trembling, frightened, she knows not | early days when + tiaternity | furnished by Dr. § AUTHORIZED THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECRMBER HOW TO CET MOST OUT OF THE COW. (Continued from page 3.) Imer. And the milking should be done by men; the stable and ‘yard are no places tor women—save | when they are looking after chick lens. THE PLACE FOR THE DOG, \ ‘Should a dairyman keep a dog ? Yes, if the dog knows his business. | His business is, however, to crawl |under the barn and stay there when the cows are about. When he wants ‘exercise he can get out on the ver andah and bark at the neighbors. The less dog the more milk. nothing, and neglect nothing, that will make the cow uneasy. Unless the animals are fed when ithev expect to be fed, and milked |when they expect to be milked,they ‘will be uneasy. To avoid the un. easiness not only feed and milk at regular hours, but in regular rota- tion. If you begin feeding with No. ‘Sone day, begin with No. 8 each {susceeding day and go down the | line in regular order every day. If | you do this each cow will soon learn ‘when her turn comes and she will not be uneasy, while waiting. If you jump from No.8 to No. 4 and back again to No. 1, there wiil be rest- } | | ‘lessness. The same holds good in ‘milking. If you go regularly down | ithe line, each cow will be lready to give down i her turn comes. | order, from No. 6 to No. 3, for in- \stance, the cow will not be ready 'and there will be loss of milk and 'time. Another thing, milk quickly. Once you start keep the work hump- | jing until you get through. And| milk dry. If you do not the cow will | fall off in spite of you. No amount! of feed will keep a cow up to her ) Work that is not milked dry every } i time. SAME COW, SAME MILKMAN. ‘Should not the same party milk | asked J. | 1 | the same cow every day ?”’ |'C. Sproule. ' ‘That is important, too,”’ answer- | ed Mr. Gould. ‘Il have just return- | }ed froma two week’s hunting trip | |in Muskoka and I find by reference | ito the milk sheets of the cowsI had_| | been in the habit of milking before tyoing that the trip cost me more, than the sum spent on aimmunition | (and travelling expenses. { ily bedded, and that they are kept ,clean,’’ the speaker went on. 2 | | have been in some dairy stables up (in Western Ontario and I really ‘wonder how makers manage | t> make butter at al jiren milk that comes from those stables. I was at one place up at Bruce County where the own er was the director of a creamery I noticed that he was not anxioui for me to visit his stables befor« breakfast, and I did not go unt! From the appea™ | ance of the stables then I wondere*} wae. TEARFUL, why. Between her sobs she tells her husband of her misery. It is not enough for the husband to comfort the wife in this con- dition, she needs help. In those the shadow of first begins to fall upon the woman she is often nerv- ous, sleepless, without appetite, f= and full of vague B fears, be. The help need- & ed by women atf this crisis is fully ¥ esunemmnaneguenaniciiennaes Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It nourishes the§ nerves and sof§ quiets them, It restores the appe- tite and induces refreshing sleep. It gives physical | strength and mental buoyancy to meet | | DETS. the trial of motherhood, and makes the baby’s advent practically painless. to Say a few words for “I will be very glad RY , -rescription,” writes Mrs. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pt | P.S Dongilas, of Mansonville, Brome Co., Oue. &During the first four months when I looked | to becoming a mother I suffered very much from nausea and vomiting, and I felt so terribly sick IE could scarcely eat ‘or drink anything. I hated all kinds of focd. At this time I wrote to Dr. Pierce and he teid me to get his ‘Favorite Prescription’ and a ‘Bottle of *Golden Medical Discovery.’ had taken them a few days I felt much better, and when I had taken hardly three parts of | each bottle I felt well and could eat as well as | any one, and could do my yerk without any | trouble (I could not do anything before). I feel very thankful to Dr. Pierce for his medicine, and I tell all who tell me they are sick to get these medicines or write to Dr. Pierce.” Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate the bowels. TO LET. That centrally situated one tenement house ;on Prince St., rext to the late Thos. Alley’s. | containing eight lirge rooms, with stable aad ;coach house, at present occupied by Rev. HH. | B, Morris, whe is removing from the Is!and. | Possession givem the 23rd inst. Apply io TH@MAS McOU a4 ye ! { Lewer ©ueen »iree | i | | | j i di tf barn | Do | when | mer food besides silage ?’’ askefl an- lf you break the| Other. | } ‘See thatthe stallsare sufficient | ¢ a | vas the reply, ‘‘where neo other | General Agent, Commission |roughage is used, I will give D0 | Merchant and Auctioneer. | ounds per day in two feeds. 1 do) OFFICE AND WAREROOMS | t believe in stuffing all day long,’’ | en. ee em iot believe in stuffing 7 iy long 73 GREAT GEO. ST. | continued Mr. Gould. | This year | purpose following a some | what different course. 'acres in sugar beets | given me 1,400 bushels. I intend re- the first year I toek hold of it, eight | | years ago (there area little less| ‘than 100 acres on the farm), | cculd | itorty now. | has increased just in proportion aS} dealer in all kinds of produce, my large and | vour cows in the field | answer. ‘that comes to the food will take a ‘bite in one place and run all over | ‘the lot before she is satisfied which | I got a bottle of each and when I | . lis 'the waste which occurs wnen feed- | ‘ing in the field and cattle are al-| 7 a 3, 1908 | what it must have been before the | morning cleaning was done. Be careful of the Man--he must be clean, prompt and gentle. FEED ALL ‘Never Quit Certainty for Hope.’ There are many things of which we may be absolutely ¢certain. For instance, we know that fire con- sumes combustible materials ‘and that water quenches fire. But how do we know these things? First, from the nature of the elements, fire and water, and, second, from Observation and experience. An intelligent person puts oil into a lamp, feeling absolutely certain it THE YEAR ROUND. ‘Feeding. It is not sufficient to feed in winter. Feed all the year round, winter and summer. Failure 'to provide for stall feeding between | \July amd September has wrecked. 'more dairy factories than any other | cause. People keep their cows on| pasture, and pasture alone, when| j there is not a green thing to be will burn and give light. He knows seen. And then they expect to get| this is the nature of the oil and this ‘milk! Keep the cow always in a/i# what it has done in all previous nice, thrifty condition, not fat and ‘not poor. If the animal is poor in- | crease the feed; if tending towards | fat reduce it. Everybody prepares | experiences. But supposing he} poured into the lampsome other | fiuid, resembling oil in appearance, | but of the nature of which he had ‘to feed in winter, few prepare to| 2 knowledge. There would be no feed when dry weather begins in | certainty about the results and they might be disastrous and even fatal The argument is precisely the same in regard to medicines. Every July. And yet the one is as neces- sary asthe other. Give your cow bran even in the full flush of June}! ; grass, and for every dollar you feed intelligent reader knows that Hood's in bran you will get two dollars back | Sarsaparilla cures rheumatism or through the milk pail. My cattle) dyspepsia, scrofula or catarrh. How never come to the barn without|does he know this? Exactly the gowns both ~—— and ae and aes - in ioe ee, He they come to the barn the year| knows the natureo e medicine— round. . | its ingredients and their qualities ‘‘Do you feed dry bran?’’ asked| have been described and explained an auditor. in print over and over again. Then ‘‘As well dry as not,’’ answered he knows in actual experience that | | | } | i { ; Mr. Gould. ‘‘The cows will get | Hood’s Sarsaparilla does cure these | plenty of moisture from the grass or | diseases. He therefore takes this silage.” medicine with perfect confidence “What else will make a good sum-| and derives from it the benefit he desired and expected. | But suppose the druggist offers to “Peas and oats, cut green,’’ was| give you instead of Hood’s Sarsapa- the reply. ‘‘Sow half an acre of| rilla a bottle of his own prepara- peasand oats as early as possible| tion. You have never heard of it and another half ten days later.| before. You know nothing of its Half an acre will keep ten cows for| nature or effects. True, it may be 21 days and two plots willkeep you| cheaper, as water is cheaper than in feed until the green corn comes. | Oil, but what you want, if you have) _scrofula, catarrh, rheumatism, dys-| | pepsia, is a medicine that is certain “oy | to cure. | This is perfectly sound and fair | reasoning,and we think it should be CHEAPEST FODDER. ‘But,’ the speaker continued, consider silage better than green corn. You get grain as well as|_. Ree -|given honest and _ conscientious stalk in emsilage, andif the corn is| 8 ~ consideration. The proprietors of Hood’s Sarsaparilla have a medi- cine which is unequalled in its record of cures and inits intrinsic power to cure. The testimonials of thuse who have taken it must conviuce you of this; now try it for yourself. For the sake of justice, and for your} own good, see that you get just; that you called fo. Don,t take any} well eared 25 per cent. will go to- wards making milk. But unite in| this thing,’’ continued Mr. Gould| earnestly. ‘“‘All work together. If} only a fewof the men on a milk! route feed in summer, they will get | mk but their neighbors will not | and it willl not pay to send out wag-! ons for the muk of the tew good | oatrons. Thus poor dairy farmers,! —.) 4: Wah Bieta iain ala a sis ae La ame ceanidiels | substitute for Hodd’s Sarsa parilla a ae ae 7 | ‘Never quit certainty for hope, for summer feeding, injure not | : nly themselves but their neigh- | GEO CARRUTHERS orsas well. We can now | ‘ ee omt on a season of drouth} ' ada wD. ie Oe airaost every summer and we mus " prepare for it. I prepare for it by | London, Eng. outting up an abundance of silage., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEOR That is the cheapest feed I can grow. i put’ 225 tons lust season and, after! illowing for everything entering in- | t of production, save interest | and or rent of land, that silage Office and residence— Kent Street, opposite Mark Wright's factory. Office hours—8 to 10 a. m., 12 to2/| »> COS . 4 j - , ist cost me $1.03 per ton. Where|P: ™:> ' to Sp. m. ad | vy ll you vet anything as cheap ? Telephone communication. | “What quantity of silage co vou | gut atime ”” asked one of those} | vesent. ‘EWEN MACDOUGALL “Witha thousand pound cow,” “T have been | a the habit of giving two feeds per| lay, night and morning, with about | ‘our pounds of clover for dinner. | Charlottetown, P. E. IL. Pa Box 3353. * Reference, Bank of Nova Scotia. ‘a MUSIC oa Herbert A. Tanton (Late of New York.) —TEACHER OF— PIANO, ORGAN and VOICE CULTURE. Voice culturea specialty. j t Thad three | which have} ‘ucing the silage by 10 Ibs and feed- ing 4 Ibs beets, fj SPOCK MAKES RICH LAND. ‘“You must have rich land to produce such a crop,”’ interjectee | one of the factory patrons. ‘ My land is all rich,’ replied Mr. | Gould, “andany other lad will be) rich on which dairying i> properly Studio - Tanton’s New 2 idirg, Creat carriedon. My land was not always} 2Tg¢ 5 treet, € karlottetown, P. E. I. fice hcur:—142 to 15 to 6, n’- JOHN iP. BRENNAN ~~ Ship Broker, Commission Merchant and ric h. It wasin rent for 17 years and | npg aaa not keep six cows as well as [ san} The fertilityof the land | the cattle have increased in num- | commod’ons premises on Ccemmerciai Street | being particularly adapted for handting o! feed to| Prince Edwaed !sland products. Consigumeats solicited. Prompt returns. JOHN P. BRENNAN, North Sydney, Sept. 25, dy 135 wy. W. 0. ROSS,5.A. JPNLY AT , the best morsel. By half an| ATTORNEY AT LAW hovr’s work you cancut and haul; At theoffice of A. A. McLean, Q to the barn enough grain for 24) C., Brown’s Block, Ch’town cattle, and by doing this you save or ~» ? ‘Do you throw green * asked one. ‘No, Ido not,’ was the prompt | “There isa great deal of | waste inthat way. The first cow | | j | lowed to tramp the stuff into the SUNNY- ground. SIDE DENTITSRY | Office in New Prowse Block First door to the right up stairs. Telephone connec- DR. AYERS (To be continued. ) H.L. Dickey, M.D. (Late of London Hospital.) Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. if 118 —9. 30 to I; 2 104. E ves tested and fitted with glrsses. WANTED.—Lady canvassers to solicit | orde*s for Corsets (to order), Filty per cent. | | commission, for the wel] known Caniff Cc rset 4 Ce., 105 Bleury Sireet, Montreal. nie We are Agents for the GENUINE Tortoise Heaters WITH TWO PIECE TOP : We warrant every one, Call and let us show you one. We are almost giving away Enamelled Ware DODD & ROGERS 135w 20 PER CENT DICCOUNT on LADIES’ SLIPPERS. See our window. Fine slippers, all sizes, all to be cleared out at 20 per cent discount. R. K. JOST, Stamper’s Corner. SAVE MONEY ON YOUR SHOE BILLS. By buying your Boots and Shoes at the big Sale.. BARGAINS IN ALL LINES All Some lines Half Price. goods must be sold. STORE NEXT TO RISCOLL & HORNSBY’S QUEEN STREET Prowse Bros Opp. The One Who Cooks way and knows there isone sure to reach a man’s heart, that is by always having nicely spread table. To | this vou mvst have choice groceries, canned goods and provisions. ao We Can Help You There We have the best of every- thing in that line. What we want is your trade. Can we have it. JOHN McKENNA QUEEN STREET.