TTL me, THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 13 (899, ’ Tortured by esi liching alroost driven Insane. instant Relief in Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointment One of the most distressing symptoms ima- gr t unbearable itching which 0 ; ent of Leucorrhea or whites, T},2 nerves are irritated by the poisonous dis- cb i the r t in itching which is env} e excruciating by rubbing or scr ; ; : vy at night, when the body is warm, the pat sf nted | vond the powers of bu nan endu e. Sleep or rest is out of the qu:stion Nervousness, irritability and des- : y are a natu result p ; ' ; are E » offices there are on the file thou- o i m grateful women who have ’ , intr whe 1 ] : f » | Racer ee Hert enagp t quick and ce cure for this itching to which women al . ng the expectant period many women ewer sit r agony from itching of the parts, or itching piles, which are absolutely cured by Dr. Ch s Ointment, he first application of this great discovery of Dr. A. W. Chase will afford prompt relief. At all lers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., LidulD Al (HE WONDER OF THE CENTURY COPPER has made fortunes tor thousands. LIQUID AIR 3 destined to revolutionize, efrigeration and power, A\DREW J, CHASE ‘he recognized and world renowr- ed authority on refrigeration and ventilation, is at the head of the Liculd Air Refrigeration and Power Co. ‘The first bloek of stock at $2.00 per sbare is over-subcribed, apd the sECOND RLOOK i: nov open for subscription for a short time OD y at 808 per share—Par Vaiue 81000 nopn-assessable ‘\ his isthe only andfJorlginal Liquid Air Co Call or Send for Particulars Make Cheeks or V oney Orders payable to ANDREW J. CHASE — Trustee. Room 301, Sudbury Bidg., Sudbury St BOSTON, MAS3 GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in }i-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Lid., Homeopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPSS 6 - $$ aa - ‘Baws, PLANT ay LINE am Lax STO 5 COA Commencing May 10th The Favorite “S, $. HALIFAX” will leave Charlottetown for BOSTON every Tuesday at noon (Standard Time) culiing at Hawkesbury and Halifax. Returning leave BOSTON every Satur- day at noon. Passengers leaving CHARLOTTE TOWN Wedoesday merning, via Pictou, can make close connection at Halifax with 5,8. “HALIFAX” sailing Wedaoes- dap evening at 1) p.m. ; Tickets foreale at statienson P. E. I Railway. For tickets, rates and ali in- formation apply to W.W. CLARKE, Agent, Char!otietow orto H. L. CHJIPMAN, Canadinn Agen‘, Halifax, N. S. ey J. O. SIMS 16 America Square, London, England CANNED GOODS AND PRODUCE BROKER. An extensive City and Shippin meé excélient facilities for handliag to best ad vantage your shipments of Lobssers, (Cheese Batte?, Bacon, Eggs und Poultry. Correspondence solicited. Trade gives | ; —ceateee } Top Market Prices and orompt Retarna Guar une. Mar, 2nd—3meod 8 RU OY We WH Hiss: It was not in the open fight We threw away the sword, But in the lonely watching In the darkness by the ford. The waters lapped, the night wind biew, Full armed the fear was born and grew And we were flying ere we knew From panic in the night. —Beoni Bar Some people hold that an English cavalry regiment cannot run. This isa mistake. I have seen 437 sabers flying over the face of the country in abject terror; have seen the best regiment that e wiped off the army list for the space of two hours If you re- at this tale tothe White hussars, they vill inall probability treat you severe- y. They are not proud of the incident You may know the White bussars by their ‘‘side,’’ which is greater than that f the cavelry regiments on the roster If this is not asufficiemtmark, you may know them by their old brandy. It has been 60 years in the mess and is worth going far to taste Ask for the **Mc- Gaire’’ old brandy and see that you getit. If the mess sergeant thinks that you are uneducated and that the gen- vine article will be lost on you, he will treat yon accordingly. He is a good man. But when you-are at mess you must never talk to your hosts about forced marches or,Jong distance rides. The mess are very sensitive and, if they think that you are laughing at them, will tell you so. As the White hussars say, it was all the colonel’s fault. He was a new man, and he onght never to have taken the command He said that the regiment was not smart enongh—this to the White hussars, who knew they could walk round any horse and through any guns and over any foot on the face of the earth! That imsult was the first cause of offense. Then the colonel:cast'the drum horse —the drum horse of the White hussars! Perhaps you do nat see what an un- ver drew bridle — « od speakable crime he had committed. I | will try to make it:clear. The, son] of the regiment lives im the drum horse who carries the silver kettledrums. He is nearly always a big piebald waler. That isa point of honor, and a regi- ment will spend anything you please on a piebald. Heis beyond the ordinary laws of casting. His-work is very light, and he only maneuvers at a foot pace. Wherefore so long as hecan step out and look handsome his well being is as- sured. He knows more about the regi- ment than the adjutant, and could not make a mistake if he «tried. The drum horse of ‘the White hussars wae only 1® years old and perfectly equal to his duties. He had at least six years more work in him and carried himself with all the pomp and dignity of adrum major of the guards. The regiment had paid 1,200 rupees for him. Bot the colonel said that he must go, and he was cast in due form and replaced by a washy bay beast as ugly as a mule, with a ewe neck, rat tail and cow hocks. The drurmmer detested that animal, and the best of the band horses put back their ears and showed the whites of their eyes at the very sight of him. They knew him for an upstart and no gentleman. I fancy that the colonel’s ideas of smartness extended to the band, and that he wanted to make it take part in the regular parade move- ments. A cavalry band is a sacred thing It only turns out fer ecmmand- ing officers’ parades, and the bandmas- ter is one degree more important than the colonel. He is high priest and the ne - ee ee te re es ne ce —-— When a man suf- fers from neglect- indigestion, iy constipation and torpidity of the ~>s liver, he soon fem | loses all enjoy- ment of his meals, hoe Se gor looks appetizing. He grumbles at itis i. ae ie cask. 4 the landlord, or the landlady, or the waiter, “f the ~~ may be. People say that he has ‘‘a finicky appetite " and let it go at that. | The fact is that-the man is in a precarious Con- dition and, if he continues to neglect his health, is a er “Ca = ae or ually terrible malady. : OTT a man doean’t wish to ‘‘dine with death for a waiter’’ he should take the right remedy for “ little ills’? as they arise, and thus ward off the “ big ones.” When a man’s appetite is “ finicky, when his liver is torpid, when he feels ‘“ headachey,”’ dull, listless and generally out of sorts, he should take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery.’ It makes the appetite keen, the liver active, the — pure, the brain clear and the whole y alert and energetic. If the bowen, Ore constipated Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets will cure that, The ‘Golden Medical Discovery ” cures 98 per cent. of all a of consumption, weak lungs, catarrhal, bronchial and throat troubles. “Twenty-five years ago eight different doctors told me that I would live but a short time—that I had consumption anc must die,” writes Geo, R. Coope, Esq., of Myers Valley, Pottawatomue Co., Kans. “I finally commenced taking Dr. Pierce's Iden Medical Discovery and am still in the ‘and and among the living. I have faith to be- Tleve that it has lengthened my life for the last twenty-five years, and I have so much faith: in all of Dr. Pierce’s medicines that I want his ‘Com- mon Sense Medical Adviser.’ "’ Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure con- stipation, One little “Pellet’’ is a dose. wet > taae Mewray ous. ‘keel Row’ is the cavalry trot, and the man who has never heard that tune rising, high and shrill, above the rattle of the regiment going past the salating base has something yet tohear and un- derstand When the colonel cast the drum horse of the White hussars, there was nearly a mutiny The officers were angry, the regiment was furious and the bandsmen swore —like troopers. The drum horse was going to be put up to auction—public auction—to be bought, perhaps, by a Parsee and put into a cart! It was worse than exposing the inner life of the regiment to the whole world or selling the mess plate toa Jew—a black Jew The colonel was a mean man anda bully He knew what the regiment thought about his ection, and. when the troopers offered to buy the drum horse, he said that their offer was mn tinous and forbidden by the regulaticnus But one of the subalterns—Hogan Yale. an Ilrishman—bought the drum horse for 160 rupees at the sale. and the colonel was wroth Yale professed re pentance—he was unnaturally submis sive—and said that, as he had only made the purchase to save the horse from possible ill treatment and starva tion. he would now shoot bim and end the business: This appeared to soothe the colonel, for he wanted the drum horse disposed of He feit that he had made a mistake, and could not of course acknowledgeit Meantime.the presence of the drum horse was an annoyance te bim. Yale took to himself a giass of the old prandy, three cheroots, and his friend. Martyn, and they all left the mess to gether Yale and Martyn conferred for two hours in Yale's quarters. but only the bull terrier who keeps watch over Yale's boot trees knows what they said A horse, hooded and sheeted to his ears left Yale's stable& and was taken, very unwillingly, into the civil lines) Yale's groom went with him Two men broke into the regimental theater and took several paint pots and soine large scen ery brushes Then night fell over the eantonments, and there was a noise as of a horse kicking his loose box to pieces in Yale's stables Yale had a big, c!d white waler trap horse The next day was a Thursday, and the men. hearing that Yale was going to shoot the drum borse in the eveuing Getermined to give the beast a regular rezimental funeral—-a finer one than they would have given the colone! had he died just then. They got a bullock cart and some sacking and ufounds anc mounds of roses. and the body. under sacking, was carried out to the place where the anthro x cuses were cremated Two-thirds of the regiment followed There was no band. but they all sang “The Place Where the Old Horse Died’ as something respectful and appropriate to the occasion When the corpse was dumped into the grave and the men be gan throwing down armfuls of roses to cover it. the farrier sergeant ripped ont an oath and said aloud. **Why, it ain't the drum horse any more than it’s me!" ‘The troop sergeant majors asked him whether he bad left bis bead in + the canteen ‘The ferrier sergeant that he knew the drum wellas be knew kis own, but silenced when he saw the umber burned in on the poor. stiff upturned neur fore Thus was the dram horse of the Vhite hussars buried—the farrier, ser geant grumbling The sacking that cov ered the ccrpse Was smevred in places with black paint. and the farrier ser geant drew attention to this fact But the troop sergeant major of E troop kicked him severely on the shin and told him that he was undoubtedly drunk. On the Monday following the burial) the colonel sought revenge on the White bussars. Unfortunately, being at that time temporarily in command of the station, he ordered a brigade field day He said that he wished to make the regiment ‘‘sweat for their damnec inso- lence,’’ and he carried out his notion thoroughly. That Monday was one of the hardest days in the memory of the White hussars. They were thrown against a skeleton enemy and pushed forward and withdrawn and dismount- ed and ‘‘scientifically handled”’ in ev- ery possible fashion over dusty country till they sweated profusely. Their only amusement came late in the day when they fell upon the battery of horse ar- tillery and chased it for two miles. This was a personal question, and most of the troopers had money on the event, the gunners saying openly that they had the legs of the White hussars. They were wrong. A march past concluded the campaign, and when the regiment got back to its lines the men were coated with dirt from spur to chin strap. The White hussars have one great and peculiar privilege. They won it at Fon- tenoy, [ think. Many regiments possess special rights, such as wearing collars with undress uniform, or a bow of ribbon between the shoulders, or red and white roses in their helmets on certain days of the year. Some rights are connected with regimental saints and some with regi- mental successes. All are valued highly, but none se highly as the right of the White hussars to have the band playing when their horses are being watered in the lines. Only one tune is played and that tune never varies I don’t know its real name, but the White hussars said horse s feet as he was regimental! 2hé caliit “Lake me ie ! 2 woudon Again. It sounds very pretty. The regiment would sooner be struck off the roster than forego its distinction. After the ‘‘dismiss’’ was sounded, the officers rode off home to prepare for stables, and the men filed into the lines, | riding easy—that is to say, they opened their tight buttons, shifted their hel- mets, and began to joke or to swear as the humor took them, the more careful slipping off and easing girths and curbs. A good trooper values his mount exact- ly as much as he values himself, and believes, or should believe, that the two together are irresistible where women or ren, girls or guns, are concerned. Tien the orderly officer gave the or- der ‘‘water horses,’’ and the regiment loafed off to the squadron troughs which were in rear of the stables and between these and the barracks. There were four huge troughs, one for each squadron, arranged en echelon, so that the whcle regiment could water in ten minutes if it liked. But it lingered for 17, asa rule, while the band played. The band struck up as the squadrons filed off the troughs, and the men stip- ped their feet out of the stirrups and chaffed each other. The sun was just setting in a big, hot bed of red cload, and the road to the civil lines seemed to run straight into the sun’s eye. There was a little dot on the road. It grew and grew till it showed as a horse, with a sort of gridiron thing on his back. The red cloud glared through the bars of the gridiron. Some of the troopers shaded their eyes with their hands and said, ‘‘What the mischief ’as that there ’orse got on ’im?”’ In another minzte they heard a neigh that every soul—horse and man—in the regiment knew, and saw, heading straight toward the band, the dead drum horse of the White hussars! On his withers banged and bumped the kettledrums draped in crape, and on his back, very stiff and soldierly, sat a bareheaded skeleton. (Te be Continned. ) ~ A VANCOUVER LADY | Cured of Asthma After Eight Years — of Almost Constant Suffering — She Says the Absolute Freedom rom the Disease Seems Like a Dream—Clarke’s Kola Compound | Cures, Mrs, J. Wise, Mt. Pleasant, Vanconver, B.U, writes: ""l mave been a great suilerer from bronchial asthma for the past eight you.r#, macy times having to sit up nearly vii igus. Through the adveee of a friend whe Lad been cured by Ciarke’s Kula Com. VU a FoeviVed ws a his. resorrc to Ury it, The tint bottle did not relieve me much. Luc before 1 had finished tae third bortle ‘ue wtiacks Ceased aliogether, and dung tue Pest six mouths of damp and cald weutuer Bave hot lad a singl: atuack. le Seeurs Soniething like a dream to be free trol this worst of all diseases after so wmany years of suffering. ] huve since my recovery recommended this remedy i» vthers suffering us 1 was, and know many ethers in this city whom it has cured. [ cousider Jt a marvelous remedy, and wouid rge any person suffering front this disease io try it.” Three bottles are guaranteed to cure. A | free sample bottle of Clarke’s Kola Com- | pound whl be semt to any person who has | wal GW isthina, mentioning this paper. Address he Griffiths & Macpherson Co., sole Cana. dian agents, 121 Onhurch-street, Toronto, Out, Ciarke’s Kola Compound should not be confounded with the other Kola prepara- tiors on the market, as this is altogether a werent preparation, designated especially for the cure of asthma. Ali druggisis, Price $. 0° per bottie. * Scld by Geo. E. Hughes AND? SEBS LSOSDSE GOOD q es bbiest styles | : ADVICE AECUT ; The latest and no y | 3 2 | | ‘Christies’ Londen %3 | ¢ LiSv.es acode 2 ‘ t ; Then ordermo a packer ge E ¥ ; ao r, Ginger, iiier. Cin ( J ust opened up at it , oamon or Cream of Tartar ¢ t from vour grocer you can al- - a ; comm {John MeLeed &Gos best quality by asking for: :: a 7 : 2 _ ; 9 Ber ec. ens ‘Mout s* Sunlight and Lif kuoy Soaps at 5 cents per twia var, is lixe bay- ing silk at the price of cotton. In Chabeery in The Rells Court DAVID P. IRVING & others, Complainant s and a . MARGAKELr IRVING & others, Defendants of an order Of this Honour?b! onan. on the 28th ver ot March, A D, 1899, notice is herety given that all per- sons having claims against the fsiare of George Irving, late of Onweil Cove, Lot or ‘township number 57, in Qneen’s County, deceased, intestate ae re- quired toceme in and prove the same before me at. the Prothonotary’s Office, in the Law Courts Building, in Chaiiettetown. on oF before Mon- day, the twenty-second dey of May next, A D, 1899, and all persons neglec'ing to come in and prove their eaid debts and vlsims by that time are to be exclud.d irom the benefit of i ; eeted tite 29th day of March, A D, 1899. * RD. J. A. LONGWORTH, re Se Nae aolicitors Master in Chancery 76—de& W td | } } ! ; ‘Ties that are Ties © a ym et RB OF me eh ee men OY en OE MN O4F A O98 I O06 RE A Clothing Talk. The weil dressed have a decid- ed advantage over the slovenly. 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