ANOTHER VICTORY. Mr. R Morrow Oured of Lumbago Dodd's Ptlis 2 Toroyro, Nov 28.—Tuae east majority of Torontonians know and esteem Mr. R. Morrow, the able and popular agent for the Toronto Auer Light Co. For this reason the following statement made in writicg by Mr. Morrow, possesses unusual significance “Two years ago | was attacked by Lum- bago and (rinery troulle which caused me intense suff-ring,L tock several differ- ent remedies withont any benefli. Then I begaa using Dodd’s Kidoey Piils, and was completely cured by them.” Lum bago is unu-nallyv prevalent this fa'l, All eufferers should know that Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the onty known cure tor t. They never fa’. The city of Santiago, Cuba, is now ina fairly healthy state. The streets are no longer used as sew-re. The garbage of the city is burned every day. Keep Minard’s Liniment in the Hexse A varn comes from (be | slot machine bear: g the sonouncelcul “Put s quarur in ihesiotand get a sure prise.” Sometimes « tenderfoot who thinks he wants a surprise drops in @ quarcer. He gets the surprise ail right, tor the mecnaniem points & loaded revclver at bim and dieplays this notice: “Drop in all your money and vour watch,or I'll ex- plode in 30 secur eh WE « Urs Dr. Chase Cures Catarrh after Operations Fail. , 1)" LOL, lst is rer Loronto, arch My bey aged 1OU) .ceL, let Iycm Caiarih, ud vely wes BD Operauok at ihe Vel Laenh We OaVe resericd i Lure, 40a One 0OX vu ® PICDIpt and Ccunip) Deeh & sUile uDbmiltled him to rei 10s piias nce Ar. Lis nedicine Das Liade te cure, (face's VCalarra H. G, FORD, Foreman, Cowan Ave. Fire Hail. There are prospects of the erection pulp Dili of the biggest in the wWworid near Uttawa, Minard’s Linimen: is used by Physicians Prominent Ame possibility of iegai LOW Lha@litis a si the inhabitants be they have now tne give it the sanctic cans are discussing the zed polygamy im Utab se. Lhe majority of lieve 1b polygamy, and cousiitulional rigalio Of law alauytime, A CODStitallOnail ameudmenl, similiar to that dealing with slavery, will be necessary io avert ine legaliziny of that survival trom a barbarous pact. fo all who fine€ themselves with health gradually sipping away, Kidneys and Liver eO disorganized if at incapable ot keeping the system tree rum poisunous waste material, StLOMr aco Lisoraeread, bowels Con- stipated, Head A‘ ting, Back Paining, br. Chase’s Kian: y-Liver ri i he way they Leip y.u Lack to heallh Wii sur prise you, ihey aic ’ : LaaAcd QUulcK The Presbyteri u missionaries of We si Africa have discc vered SOme YEW Cuses OF horrible superstit: on amo: gy the natives. One of the brutal practices consists in te Sacrifice of @li tW:.o children, Minaré’s Linimeat Lumberman’s Friend | News has reaciie discoveries of gol fresh GISLTICL. i Vancouver of in the Atlin The disc ine ie ft i a oe ibe UleCOVerers WOO are itUula divulge the exact location. is, refuse to ] WAS Ul [ ik lmat ( t [ : : = ” e ' MINARD’S LINi(MENY. rialitax, ANDREW KING ING. | WAS CURED of ac Bronchitis | MINARD’S LIN MI Sussex, La.~C UREWE Reap. l was CURED of acute Rie umatiem by MINAKD’S LIN Marknam, Uni. C. 3. Bitire —_——— - li isnow con lently expected that the pew bridge acrors the Seine, the P” Alexander II], w |i the Opening of tb 1 30uU. Ask for Minard’ be compleied beivcre World’s Exposition in -_— — : and take no other e+er+e -— The Boston b« will stand seve: publicans, ird of aldermen for 1899 Democrats and five Re-~ + Chronic EKezema Cnred. One of the mes ever cured is th Aiton, of Hartiat ment Mr. Alton ; my daughter G Kezema ol long s of Dr. Chase’s ( druggist, of Har sold .our boxes of cured Gracie Ella, Eee chronic cases of Eczema case of Miss Gracie Kila i, N. B. Un asworn state- sys: 1 hereby certify that ucie Ella was cured of nument. William Thistle, land aisO certifies that he jr, Chase’s Vintment which SD Have Just Completed My New Oyster Place, Call and see the brilliant displ yo ome oysters on and off the shane . .vurVyster king is standing in the window, Bee him, and then > will eat , John P. Joy, VICTORIA CAFE \.:i George Street ; eeeere THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOT'TETOWN, DECEMBER 30, 1898 If you cannot get beef, mutton will answer. You may choose between milk, water, coffee or tea. But there is no second choice for Scott’s Emulsion. It is Scott’s Emulsion or nothing. When you need the best cod-liver oil, the best hypo- phosphites, and the best glycerine, all combined in the best possible manner, you have only one choice. It brings prompt results in all cases of wasting, or loss in weight. All druggists; goc. end $1.00, SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists, Toronto. _ Lae Age of an Oyster. It is just as easy to tell the age of an oyster by looking at its shel! as it is to ascertain the age of a horse by examin- | ing its teeth, or a tree by inspecting the circles revealed by the ax or saw when it islaid low. When the oyster is 6 months old, itis as big as a dime; when 1 year old, it will cover a silver half dollar, and when 2 years old, will be about the circumference of a silver dollar. The oyster, unlike the crab, is not obliged to seek new quarters or build a new house every time he Biably. | grows appre- , The extensions that he puts on | his house are clearly marked by a well | | consequence of this quiescence become | sluggish; hence its frequency after one defined ridge. Oysters are esteemed to be at their best when between 4 and 5 years of age, and the planters endeavor to protect the beds for that length of time. Conscien- tious oyster men—that is, men who are not inclined to kill the goose that lays the golden egg—always return to the drew Laug {i Longman’s Magazine. Neither Did the King. Tt ts told of King Frederick VI of Denmark that while traveling through Jutland one day he entered a village school and found the children lively and intelligent and quite ready to an- swer his questions. ‘Well, youngeters,’’ he said, ‘‘what are the names of the greatest kings cl Denmark?”’ With one accord they cried out, ‘‘Oa- nute the Great, Waldemar and Chris- tian V!"’ Just then a little girl, to whom the schoolmaster had whispered something, stood up and raised her hand. ‘(Do you know another?’’ asked tbe king. ** Yee—Frederick VI."’ ‘‘What great act did he perform?” The girl hung her head and stam- mered out, ‘‘I don't know.”’ ‘*Be comforted, my child,”’ said the king. ‘‘I don’t know either.” Hair Powder. The cause of the general disuse of hair powder was the high price of flour. It was thought little less than criminal that flour, which was almost beyond the reach of some of the very poor, should be used by the rich as a mere fashionable luxury of dress. Voluntary associations were formed, the mem bers whereof bound themselves not to use hair powder. In a similar way the abolitionists bound themselves not to use any sugar whose production involved the employment of negro slaves.— Notes and Quer‘és. Why Do We Yawn? There can be little doubt that one of the objects of yawning is the exercise of muscles which have been for a long time quiescent, and the acceleration of the blood and lymph flow which has in has remained for some time in the same | position—for example, when waking in bed oysters that are too young, but in | case a patriarch is brought up, over | whose shell the tides of from 8 to 12 | winters and summers have ebbed and flowed, he is sent to market, where he is put at the bottom of the heap and sold with his younger and more luscious companions.—Pearson’s Weekly. The Ethical Process. Mr. Huxley says ingenicusly (speak- ing of societies of animals) that the eth- ical process ‘‘is, strictly speaking, part of the cosmic process, Just as the ‘gov- | ernor’ in a steam engine is part of the mecharism of the engine.’’ know how the governor got into the engine; we don’t know how or why early men introduced the ethical proc- gut we | ‘ : E ' have in family four dairy cows, two ess. ‘‘It was their nature to,’’ and the | ignorant, superstitions blacks say that a god, Baiame, gave them this law. Yet in some ways morality does seem to. pay, practically, though not when | carried to an extreme. The universe, anding by using tour boxes ‘ like the traveling tutor, seems to wiis- per to its pupils: Practice, youths, a little virtue, Just as much as will not hurt you. This is ordinary morality. Go much further, and you area saint. The Isle of Saints has ever been the most dis- tressful country. Whither in the world are these reflections hurrying us? I have no idea beyond an ineradicab! conviction that the ethical process, plus some ‘‘governor’’ not yet invented, will win in the long run, and that we mu back it with our best exertions.—An- st the morning. Co-operating with this cause is sleepi- ness and the shallow breathing which it entails. This factor, as well as muscle quiescence, is apt to attend the sense of boredom which one experiences in listen- ing toa dull sermon; hence it is that the bored individual is aptto yawn. As in the case of sighing, the deep breath which accompanies the act of yawning compensates for the shallow breathing which is so apt to excite it.—New York Herald. Strangely Wordcu,. ‘‘Some of the applications for relief sent to the local committees by suffer- ers from bush fires are strangely word- ed,’’ says the Melbourne Argus. ‘* Here is an extract from one by a widow: ‘I pigs, a horse and three children, all these being by my first husband, and two goats in full milk and a baby by my second husband. All of the animals was lost in the fire.’ ”’ Our “Holy City.” One of the serious things told in Mark Twain’s ‘‘Along the Equator’’ is that formerly all that people in India knew United States was the of the e name of George Washington. Now they know also the name ‘‘Chicago, the holy city,’”’ where the congress of religions was held in 1893.- A Limit to Trust. ‘‘She said she would trust me forever witb her heart.’’ ‘‘Well, that wae satisfactory.” “Yes, Then we fell out abort who would carry the pocketbook.’’—Detroit | Free Press. ove Ue One dose re and specialists in of a cure, and strong, and says, “ Tell all cures piles in three to five nights, 35 cents, ” WO COOLS suffers violence. console the suffering one. The one great yearn of the heart-sickened patient is how to get relief and x cure, he spent a sma all ended fm disappointment, until a good friend, who had been ew’s Cure for the Heart. He tried it, and found it gave him relief and comfort almost immediately. He continued its use until afew bottles were taken, oul sufferers that I can “She Carries Her Heart on Her Sleeve” What a boon to many a man or woman ifthis were literally so—How many spirits are broken because this particular organ is shackled by disease—and yet how many times Agnew’s Cure for the Heart brushed against the grim reaper and robbed him of his victim. as Dr. of the heart are by far the’ most treacherous of ailments which afflict humanity—ruthless to old and young alike—not insidious but violent, for when the heart fails the whole system Discussing causes here will not Dr. Agnew’s Cure for the Heart stands pre- emiaently to-day as the star of hope to sufferers from heart trouble, and so far past the experimental period that thousands to-day proclaim,in no uncertain sound, the belief that were it not for this great remedy they world have long ago passed into the great beyond, Most eminent doctors, whom heart cases have baffled, have tested Dr. Agnew’s claims, and to-day they prescribe it in their practice as the quickest and safest heart remedy known to medical science. What are the symptoms? Palpitation, flut- tering, shortness of breath, weak and irregular pulse, swelling of feet and ankles, pain in the left side, chilly sensations, fainting spells, uneasiness in sleeping, dropsical tendency and as many more indications that the heart is deranged. Cure for the Heart is a heart specific; and no case too acute to find relief from it inside of thirty minutes—a powerful cure. Dr. Agnew’s Mrs. Jwo. Frrzpatrricx, of Gananoque, Ont., after having beeft treated by eminent physicians for heart disease of five years’ standing, was dis- arged from the hospital as a hopeless incurable, She suffered from acute pain and palpitation, her feet and ankles swollen, and there was every tendency tothe dropsical form of heart disease, but the lady pro cured Dr. Aeneas Cure for the Heart as she declared, as a last hope. ieved her of a very acute spasmin less than thirty minutes, and three bottles cured her—not a symptom of the trouble remaining Coxpuctor Wittuam G. Lucas, of the N. & W.R.R., and living at Hagarstown, Md., suffered for years with acute valvular form of heart disease—cost him many a“ lay off” from his daily duties on the road, fortune in remedies and treating with heart to-day he’s well and highly recommend this great remedy.” Sold by Dr, S. W. Dodd and Geo. E. Hughes Druggis. DR. AGNEW’S OINTMENT cures eczema, salt rheum, tetter, scald head and all itching skin diseases: DR. AGNEW’S CATARRHAL POWDER reli 1 utes—will @ure most stubborn and long standing cami ae roe a a. a LIVER PILLS cure constipation, biliousness, sick headache, torpid liver—clear the -3 spend, what you want, 125 11 700 Muffs Furs ! Wool Tremendous . 9 collars must be sold, “Dis punts. Save 20 to 50-o-Everthing Reduced | Bet kid XMAS WHEK BARGAINS GALORE Try us tor your Christmas Presents and save 20 to 50c on every Make your money go, Dry goods are the most acceptable Xmas Pairs Ladies’ Black and Colored undressed Kid Gloves regular price $1,10, Xmas sale price only Pairs Dressed Kid, black and colored, 4 pearl buttons, $1.10 regular Xmas sal price ONLY eo ccocccecceceeeepend eeonsoveereeisvenbetececdeecen c tii Pairs Perrin’s best buttoned and lacing black and t ‘eda regular $1.55, sale price.. .. Handsome Silk Handkerchiefs, nemstitched initial black. w and all colors, 20c to $1.00, Xmas sale price The 806i. ws i0 black fur, 90c for 68c, 8 better black, $1.60 tor $1.20. 1 $2.20 for $1.30—40 other muffs, all kinds, all all reduced—5 ruffs, all reduc 3 fi : : a 8, i ed, 8 fur capes, 3 coo Furs! jackets,S astrackan jackets, Now is your chance, ; pes, n ail to 340 all colors, Black, Pink, Sky Pink, Cardinal. «®? se 7 a. . e*eee e®-°@ee008 8 Seeseeeeseneenee080e08 eevee hee Lesa Ghe (he S'at Anl dollar you have present, We hav ; 4 pretty pearl buttons, 69¢ 69¢ « —~ an browns and fancy colors — 1.08 | — hite cream brocades =< ® black goats, Grealy Redu ipes, Fa be sold, big discounts Fn Prices all reduced. Muld ey, 7 ee Dn 2 OF , ‘ ™ Ra Shawls Regular 42c to $3.25, Xmas prices, 32 to $2.41 SOI n¢ ‘are 7 he ’ rs re y » ; 3 . ; > | (i; nts Gens Kid Glov s Neckties, Braces, Shirts. Collars and Cvffs, Undrloth- Get th Amas ing, Jerdigan Jackets; etc, ete. Bay your presen* here and make Xn Y gods cash go furtherest Gos : , xe us | fitz Berlin ols skein. doy lies Lamp Wicks Square, 4¢ PENS— Co’s easy writers. Sbetland and Andulasian 44c per udo Fancy working silks 33c per doz skeias 25 per cent discount cffall fancy SNAPS Small, 2c doz, medium, 3c, large, 4c doz. Envelopes—Oblong, 3c package of 25c. ‘ ne " aJ. Celebrated J pens at 5c doz, Week’s & } iineo q , ‘ . V1 a . . Left of Gents Bur x0 vs and Mitts in Coon, Astrachan, Bulli .c d Gieenland Seal, Grey Lamb, Persian, ete. grand Xmas box. SNAP SNAPS | 1000 doz buttone in all kinds, 3c a doz, | worth up to l5c dozen. 500 doz large coat and eacque all kinds, 10c doz worth up to 50c. TABLE OILCLOrHs— Vark colors l5dc yard, mar 7 veins L7c, , SNAPS 700 bundles off Park’s best quality blue warp 95c per bundle. 600 seamless flour bags each. 200 balle of Park’s knitting cotton in navy, black, grey scarlet and assorted colores. Half price, 3c ball, to clear lic Cl up business- -Big Bargains going—Everything must be sold. All reduced 25 p c—a 15 Pair Left ord = SNAPS : Ribbons ¢ | 540 yards of all colored ribbons See them at 2c yard. SNAPS Ink Ink? 2000 bottles tles for 5c. TOWELS— | Large huck towels 7c 9c and 13c pete pair. ; Large double skeins yarn 8c skein. > of best black ink, bot — A tor wma . a ees Se ee a TLN = ' t * | PLATES TS R% fn ~ —, , a ™ 2% EP | 3 we Eat | as ii JRRIS LL ‘ll ge haeh i? a | : 7 3 @ Bi Gy wPaede i U Charcoal and Coke. 490 do do do do do do do do do do do Opposite Post Office—~ey Early in January Kenevin Senator Loie Mirella Belmont Chig Bow Gerada Sapp Ho Saleta Paris Bow Nasen Before moving we will sell at low prices The Challenger Tie do do do do do cdo do do do do do 25 to 33 1-3 p. ¢, discount. D. A. BRUCE boxes landed ex 8.8. Lake | Winnipeg. For sale by HORACE HASZARD, 268 —eod HANEG SLs Certral : Restaurant. Nearest to market, Post Office, City Building, and Principal Stores. The right place for Oysters, Dinners, Lunches, ete, etc. New Rooms. New Appointments, every- | thing up-to-date. » Call and see us. ALFRED J. QUIRK, Uprzr Queen STREET 272—<dimi 22 A New Year’s Gift free ta every person buying fifty cents worth of goods. Last :: Week We sold hundreds ef Xmas Presents. Why ?—Because our prices were low and we had the new goods that suited the peo- ple. Young men boughc rings for their vest girls; old men bought Brooches Hed Ke KARE KOA HEE aes Clocks. Bracelets and Chinaware for ther ( partners in life, Young women boaght Watch Chains, uockets and Faney Goods for their beaus, mothers bought toy? 88 ¥ and dolls for the children, and mapy were i‘ made happy by visiting our stor. . This week we will give a New Year's Gift every person buying fifty cen’ worth 9 goods from us. JURY! CO, | s SUNNYSIDE. | Prowee’s New Stone Block on sanacsee, Opposiie PB.