. . a = SALLIE! BIG DISCOUNTS OFF EVERYTHING EXAMINER CALENDAR MOOX'’S CHANGES 6th day, Last (Juarter. 13th day, New Moon. 20th day, First Quarter. 28th day, Full Moon. ~~ a ~~ — ——_—— , = | High Water. Sun + Day ofWe'k’ . ; forn.| Aft. | Rises. Sets 1 Tuesday ) 04 (13 35 16 28 ~=14 29 ? Wednesday; 0 29 |1417| 29 28 Thursday | 0591500) 3 2 t Friday 34 |15 46 32 25 5 Saturday > 19 116 36 34 | 24 6 Sunday 23 17 34 35 23 i Monday + 40 118 29 | 37 21 STuesday | 6 03 19 18 38 | 2 9 Wednesday 7 20 2003) 40 18 10 Thursday 3 26 20 44 2 17 11 Friday > 20 21 22 43 15 12 Saturday 21 57 + 14 13 Sunday 711 22 25 46 ] 1; Monday 100 2254] 47 2 > .. Tuesday 1 47 ‘23 20 | 48 lL ‘” Wednesday |12 33 13 20! 50 10 16 Thursday 1410! 52 9 L? Friday 007 1503| 54 8 18 Saturday 0 56 15 58 55 7 ’ Sunday 1 54 16 55 56 6 Monday | 306/17 55| 57 5 21Tuesday | 431 18 54 58 4 22 Wednesday | 6 02 19 48 | 70 3 23 Thursday | 720 2038; 1 y 24 Friday | 8 32 121 23 2 l 25 Saturday 9 37 22 02 + l 26 Sunday 0 32 (22 3 5 0 27, Monday 1 18 22 58 7 0 28 Tuesday 1 58 23 26 8 j|3 59 29 Wednesday 12 37 13 19 9 59 af FEST ESTE PHYS PFPPVHFF OPHPSPHEP PVP PPPS Lasts lo: ng—lathers freely—a pure hard scap-—low in price, highest in quality. Read the Directions on the wrapper to learn how to obtain the best results in washing clothes, A quick casy way. SURPRISE SOAP is the name, YP FEF EPRI PEF PF PPS STEP TPP PK Wants, Lost Found, ae 4 FOR SALE.~-A very valuable lot of very Jarve imported engravings at less than half O. B. office 276 3ins pd. VHO TOOK THE BOOTS.—The man who took a pair of |inbber Boots from the window of « boot store on Queen Street. Monday, Nov it h,.and took them into a place round the 1, nden House Corner wasseen. Weask to eve boots returned at once ard save exp%s- ure. 176 +, «! a > > Oa Je sbec ! i | i ao 0 om = COs" WANTED.-A well educated woman of in- tegrity, toinvest in an established business b Victoria Co., says Permanent position to energetic worker. Viust be a goo! talker. Correspondence in- | vitcd. Apply manager. 275 OR SAI —Steinway Piare, cost $700 facture at New York. Specially select- a professional expert at manufactory nificent tone, Price $1.50 D, B. Office, i Jins pals. INT WANTED.—By a man— jk keeper, useful in shipving any other capacity ina busi- nent. Apply at this office. 225 tf MPLOY i mpetent be ness or ir 1eS8S establial rO LET.— taining eight! Possession g hree story Dwelling House con large “ooms, on Prince Street ven on Oct 13th W. W. Wellner, 7 } LET.— he house and premises known as the “Old London House,’ situateon wWater St., uaextte Government Warebouse No 1 ply to Penke pros & Co. jan23—tf OLET alfof three story dwelling house 1e corner of Queen and Fitzroy Sts \p- ply to Wm llenderson, Fitzroy St. 245 tt ST.—On Euston Street, }etween Queen Brighton Road, a gold cuffbutton, Fin- please ive at this office, oD \NTE..'.—A bright intelligert ladv, age ab -at thirty. with some capital,to travel, hire and train agents. References. Per mar ent » ition for right person. vited. Apply Manager. -_ Investigation in- OUSE YO LET—On Dorchester Street, ween Qpeen and Pownal Streets, contain- elght rooms besides good kitchen and pntry. Possession about Ist Nov. Apply to V:iliem Grant. or son. 250 GRAIN Ismagzs APE sizes now in stock. }TORACE HASZARD. THB DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 28, 1898 SALE! CLOSING UP BUSINESS SALE ! SALE EVERY DAY W. A. WEEKS & CO. A LESSSON FOR WOMEN. Mrs. Dowson of Toronto Cured of | Female Weakness by Dodd's Kidney Pills. } | Toronto, Nov 21.—The case of Mrs. Ellen Daweon, of 640 Gerrard St, east, who bas been restored to vigorous health, by Dodd’s Kidney Pille, sfter six years of agony from Female Weakness, and Palri- tation of the heart, is causing widespread interest in the east end. Mrs. Dawson writes that she used three so-called kidney cures and was treated by one ofToronto’s most prominent physiciars without deriving the least benefit. The first box of Dodd’s Kidney Pills gave her pronounced relief; eight boxes cured her thoroughly. Mrs. Dawson’s case furnishes a lesson every woman should learn. Dodd’s Kidney Pils are women’s best friend. What a precocious child that boy of ! exclaimed thecross grained [rivvins’ is! sitizen. Why, it sits for hours without saying a word. | know it. That’s more than ‘ts: father can do.— Washington Star. Asthma Gasps The wheezing and strangling of thore who are victims of Asthma are vromptly relieved hy # few doses of Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine. ‘*How that Loy of mine has improved in bis penmanship !” exclaimed Mr Billus with fatherly pride, glancing over a letter he had just received from his eldest son, away from home on Lis first visit. Then Mr Billus began to read it, and he understood. It began, ‘‘Dearest Lucy.” No, it wasn’t the letter the bey had meant to send his father.—Chicago Tri- bune. Piles Cured without the Knife. by Dr. A. W. Chases’s Ointment. Mr Geo Browne, painter, of Woodville, Ont., :—"For thirteen years I was a sufferer from bleeding piles and the inreuse agony which I passed through during those y rs and relief I obtained by Dr Chase’s Oiut- ent prompts meto give this testimonial. “iy physician wi-hed me to have an operation, but I felt I could be cured without the knife Three boxes of Dr. Chase’s Ointment stopped the bleeding and effected a permanent cure.’ Sir John Fowjer, who was engineer-in chief ofthe Forth bridge,for which <er- vices he was created a baronet io 1890, is He dead, was boro in ISI7. Globe Loan & Savings Co., cor of Victoria and Lombard Sts . Toronto E. W. Day. Manager Globe Loan & Savings Co. says} “I consider Dr Chace’s O'ntment in- valuable.” Wehave thousands of testimonia!s froni prominent business men_a}] over the Do- minion. ee GD SHIP NEWS. Port of Summerside. ENTERED, Nov 25-—-lda M, Mallett, Pictou, coal; Samuel Drake, Olsen, do, do; Jessie New-~ el], Bernard, New Glasgow, coal; Ste Aune, Potvin, Sydney, coal. CLEARED. Nov 26 —Edna, Donovan, Demerara: ae se ee re $3500 779 bris } 63 jerates > potatoes ...... sontvepenees SOO 50 baga gg RS eer ee 200 Py OA Ce ss 5 Veen 80 12 boxes cheese.......... ) 5 cases lobsters.............. 50 Oe DONENE, | .. . cocudadeteosses . 2100 FE ORAL IE i cisnne dceesess s sbilinateian 155 | Se icawinchk dp ceeses tener: ae 2B Pigs.-csssseeseerssscereeseeseesse ess 90 250 turkeys......++ 158 DEO WOOO vo ccreccse . 50s ccosepecscesoces . LOG NOI oa csctew. 6a 6% able eeoehs 100 | I i is ie hin gy 39 $8015 Shippers, A C Rogers & Co. Samuel Drake, Oken, Pictou, bal. Se A RR ES from whatever cause cured in half an hour by HOFFMAN’S HBADACHE POWDERS, ro cents and 25¢ at al] druggists. ~~ aT > Boston wa‘erproof dressing at R K Jost’s) Stamper’s Corner. SHARP KNIVES anG Scissors are exsured , by buying those beaning the registered mark of WALTER’S Celebrated TRUE BRAND () CUTLERY. treading dealers sell them. | FLL HEADACHES ! A Brazilian Indian Story. Here is a Brazilian Indian story, says the New York Times. The jaguar and the monkey met. The jaguar had a lus- cious bunch of plantains which the monkey craved. ‘‘I will gladly give you the plantains, ’ said the jaguar, ‘‘pro- viding you catch a fawn for me.’’ ‘‘Agreed,’’ cried the monkey. ‘‘But,’’ added the jaguar, ‘‘if you don’t get the fawn you must promise to let me bitw a mouthful out of you.’’ ‘‘ Agreed,’’ once more cried the gleeful monkey. The monkey ate the plantains, and the little matter about the fawn quite slipped his memory. Then one day the jaguar met the monkey and insisted on taking his pay out of the monkey’s hide. The busine:s, becoming serious, was left to the pec- cari to decide. ‘‘It seems ail right enough,’’ said tle peccari, ‘‘only this: How am I to determine what is the ex- act size of a jaguar s mouthful and aso where is he to bite? He had better rejer the matter to the big snake.’’ The big enake took the subject under considera- tion. His judgment was that he would have to swallow the jaguar, the monkey and the peccari. The jaguar and peccari he did at once assimilate, but the mon- key, being nimble, escaped. A Burglar’s Mistake. ‘*When I looked into the dining room of a house that I was in one night,”’ said the retired burglar, ‘‘I saw a man sitting in a chair perched upon the din- ing room table. That seemed a singular place for a man to get to eit, drunk or a per him a chance to get tired of sitting | there and go to bed before I began, for if I didn’t he might wake up any min- ute and interrupt things. SoItooka seat in a big leather chair in the library, next room, and waited for him to wak> up. When I'd waited what I thought was a reasonable time without hearing from him, I looked in again, and there he was, still sitting there, just the same. ‘‘But this time, even in that light, there was something peculiar about him, and I ventured to turn my own light on him now, and then I saw that it wasn’t aman at all, but a suit of clothes, with a hat on top, set up there to dry after being wet in the rain. The man tkat had worn them kad been abed and asleep for hours, but his c.othes had served for a scarecrow mighty well, for I’d sat there waiting for them togo to bed s0 long that if was now too late for busi- ness.’’—New York Sun. Clothespins. Clothespins are an American com- modity. Some clothespins are made in Sweden and in ‘Scotland, bus they are big und clumsy, twice tbe size of the American pins and whittled out by hand. Clothespins are made chiefly of beech and of maple, but some are made OP? taemala wenond vw ore made entirely — SALE! SALE! SALE! | EVERYTHING MUST GO TWENTY TO FIFTY PER CENT—This immense sale is being patronized by thousands. Tremendous bargains are going” TH EVERY DAY W. A. WEEKS & CO. rene by machinery, counted into Doxes con- taining 720 each by machinery, and the boxes are nailed up by machinery. It might almost be said that blocks of wood fed to machines at one end come out boxed clothespins at the other, They are made and sold wonderfully cheap. There are two grades of clothespins, firsts and seconds. First grade pins can be bought for 35 cents a box. The pro- duction of clothespins is enormous, mil- lions of boxes annually. The coneump- tion in this country keeps pace with the growth of the population, and great numbers are exported. Even people in the trade wonder what becomes of all the clothespins. ’ What Bothered Him. ‘‘When I was a young man,’’ says a well known civil engineer, ‘‘I was sur- veying the route of a proposed railway. An old farmer with whom I stopped for a time admitted one day, when he saw me figuring in the field, that mathemat- ics always seemed a wonderful thing to him. Being young and enthusiastic, I began to enlarge its wonders, telling him how we could measure the dis- tances to different planets, and even weigh them; how we could ascertain the height of mountains without scaling them and many other things which I meant should astonish him. ‘*You can imagine how he set me back when he replied to this brilliant array of facts by saying: ‘Yes, yes, them things does seem kinder cur’us, but what allus bothered me was to ander- stand why yon have to carry one fur sober, but I thought I’d have to give | ev’ry ten, but if you don’t the durned thing won’t come out right.’ ’’—New York Tribune. “Rillington’s Sea.” There is tangible evidence that the pious passengers of the Mayflower were not entirely without a sense of humor. Back of Plymouth over the hill upon which they planted their cannon isa large fresh water pond, perhaps a mile in diameter, which, it appears from the records, was discovered by John Bil- lington while he was prowling around one night, probably on a scouting expe- dition Jooking for Indians. In the morn- ing he reported that he had found the sea in that direction and there was a lively dispute between him and the oth- er pilgrims as to the accuracy of his in- formation. He stuck to his theory with the same tenacity that he adhered to his religion, and to this day that pond fs called ‘‘Billington’s sea.’’ — Chicago Record. -~_E— et Ce a — SEE aoe THAT THE i\FAC-SIMILE MEL Peet GTEE HH} Pht i = ANVegetable Preparation for As- similating the Food and Reg ula - ting the Stomachs and Bowels of SNS eT ye Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. OT NARCOTIC. SIGNATURE — IS ON THE Pianphin Seed - Alx.Sinna ¢ et Fiochelle Salts ~ Anise Seod > 5S ° et, Se Beene af Olid Dir SAMULLPITCEERR Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Worms Convulsions, Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. MUR Rees oo te ge eed Cen Dams nS hae WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTLE OF CASTORIA Castoria is put up in one-size bottles onty. Tt fis not sold in bulk, Don’t allow anyone to geil a you anything else on the plea or promise thatit = 7 is “just as good” and “will answer every pure EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. j pose,’ 4a” Sco that you get C-A-S-T-O-R-T.4, y The fac- simile is on signatcro every of . Wrapper. Minard’s Liniment the best Hair Restorer | eters The Dominion Coal Company, which mines more thau half the co.] raised in Nova Scotia, has given notice of twenty per cent, reduction in the rate for coal cut- ting. CUR URE. No matter what your experi- ence has beer with so-called catarrh ‘‘ remedies,” your ulti- mate, complete recovery can surely and positively be effected. Don't suffer any longer. Don't trifle with a distressing and dan- gerous disease when a Sure cure is Within your grasp. Thousands of sufferers whose condition was worse than yours have been cured and are now in perfect health. Their enthusiastic and unsolicited testimonies show beyond the shadow of a doubt that Dr. Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder § isthe most wonderfully effective remedy ever compougded, It re- lieves the most severe case in from f 10 to 60 minutes ; it effects a full curein a short time. The most mm emment nose and throat special- § istsin the world have given it their unqualified endorsement. In al eases of catarrh, colds, sore throat, asthma, hay fever and influenza it acts like magic. It is easy and pleasant to use. gives testimony : It never fails to do precisely what is claimed for it. In less than an hour it will prove its worth if you will but give it a chance, A prominent evangelist Rev, Warren Bentley, writes :—‘‘ While in Newark, N. J., conducting religious ser- vices, I was troubled with great relief and I have recommended it to many among whom I have labored.” catarrh and used Dr. Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder. It gave me Hon, David Mills, Minister of Justice of Canada, has used this remedy and highly recom- mends it over his own signature, At all druggists. Dr. Agnew’s Cure for the Heart cures all cases of organic and sympathetic disease of the heart. Relieves in 30 minutes. Dr. Agnew’s Liver Pills are at once a mild cathartic and an invigorator, system renovator and blood maker and purifier. 20c. for 40 doses. Dr. Agnew’s Ointment relieves in a day and cures eczema, tetter aad all skin diseases. Cures pilesin2tos5nights. 35c. 7 aE ee ee eee ee Sold by Dr, S$. W, Doddfand Geo. E. Hughes, Drug gists, Malt and Hops only. —$—$—<$<—<—<—$—$—$—_———— OT TT BRIGHTON B Brighton Brewery having undergone extensive alterations we tosupply our customers with this.old reliab’e beverage brewed Always on hand a full stock of India Pale X X and X X X Stout in wood or bottles. Fresh grains at Brighton Brewery every Tuesday and Friday 25 cts per bbl A. S. HEWITT, Agent: a rn pe genta ——— a ie EER) can guaranted © from the finest] ——_—ALSO--——_— Ales and Extra All size packages to suit the trade. Halifax Breweries Ltd } 79 Queen St Chtown | ——— wench soins THREE That go on Forever Taxes, Tennyson's “Brook”, andrepairs on cheap Piawy But the BELL Piano eliminates the latter. ¥ Nothing but the very best material enters into the construction, that material, and ripe PIANO EXPERIENCE} captains the whole process of building. The result is easily seen in the great dura bility of the BELL PIANO and its power W retain the original sweetness of tone. For sale at FPLATCH HRS | Piano Warerooms, Opera House Building T. ©. P. YEO, Agent at Summerside. | oo Master hands alone mould ee eS