sere Se ap ase pete’ - GxsEELO =. TESS TR ML sega me ah ET eg ca ae nas) a dane ANOTHER VICTORY. — ee Mr R. Morrow Cured of Lumbago by Dodd's Pills * Toronto, Nov 28.-—-Tae ast majority of Torovtonians know and esteem Mr. o Morrow, the able ¢ ad popular agent for the Toronto Auer Light Co. For ihis reason the following statement made in writicg by Mr. Morrow, possesses wousual significance. “Two years ago | was attacked by Lum- bago aud Urinery troutle which caused me intense Sulf-rit +, L took several differ- evt remedies withoot avy tenefit. Then I began using Dodd’. Kidney Pills, and was ‘ ”” completely cured by them Lumbago 1s uou-aally prevalent this fall. Ali eutferere should know that Dodd’s Kidney Pille are the only known cure for t. They never fa, Mre. Li la Johnstone, aged 60 years, has been indicted by th« grand jary at Perry, Old, charged with murdering two hus- nanda. Sve bas been & W idow seven times. The bodies of ber two la-t hustands,which nave been exhumec, were found to contain arsenic. Keep Minard’s Liniment 1m we House The Egyptian Government is about to send a circular to the Powers proposing that a term of the mixed tribunals, which anda op February lst, be prolonged for year. The mixed tribunals were instituted in L175, to deal wit , civil actions between persons of different nationalities, and with crimes committed | y foreigners, lll le I AA 1ave on hand a box Every household s)ouid the diversity of of Dr. Chase’s OU in! ment. uses to which it can be put and the many doctor’s bills it saves Warlant 15 im te king first place in the famuy modicine cl est. Alidealers sell and re commend i'. be made next session line of railway from to Edmonton. Application will for power to build ; Lake Wiuoipegos! catarrh and Hay Fever. itis the bug-bear of you the pleasure of freedom ed br. Chase’s Catarrh Ifits Hay Fever ti life you wont know from it tili you’ve U Cure. cmenmicsinsiciiiiah moeratic members of the United States Congress has been taken with the result that amajority of them favour the candidature of William J Bryan for the presidency. _——— A poll of the D —— Minard’s Liniment: is used by Physicians Four persone wi . kk lied in a fire a Brooklivr, on Sunday night last. Pain in the Back. Being troubled off and on with pains in my back. caused by constipation, | tried several gsinds of pills 1 hed scen advertised, and to put the truth in awutshell vr. 4 hase’s Kidney- Liver Pilla are the only pills that have proved effectual in my case. 1 cao hearuuly recom- wend them. sale on Jno. Devirn, Unionville, Ont —— The West Indies tish North American e«quadroo to be changed on account of ap outbreak of scarlatina. The departure from Ber- muda has been deferred from December 28th to Jasuary 25:b. rogramme of the Bri- has had Hivard’s Liniment Lumberman’s Friend | | —-—-—— — oe eee A mobof women in Grenada, Spain, considering thatthe discovery of America, was the principle cause of Spain’s mis- fortunes, stoned the statue of Columbus there, ee ee ' gout by [ was cuRED of Rheumatic MINARD’S LINIMENT. Halifax, Axprew KING. I WAS CURED of acute MINARD’S LINIMENT ~~ UPSCA. l 1 hee \ Bronchitis by ; REaD. | WAS cURED of acute MINARD’S LINE) “4 . . a Markham, Unt. C. 3. BILLING. MumMmatieMm by recked ausing the logs the number of British verseis w auripng November as 62, ¢ ‘ yes. Ack for Minard’s and take no other Hockey Tein ——— Men’s, Boys’ and $1.45, 1.75, 1.90, 2 25 A Few Prices ijn: Ladies’ Skating Boots Ladies’ Black Oi Pebble, flannel lined Ladies’ Tan Pebb e, fleece lined,... 81 S35 Ladies’ Black O11 Pebble Hockey Boots themccccedhie. titinteeh hs peosentl Sr 75 Black or Tan, a very 2dcetevcoscie pevoee $125 and $1.35 DW. H. STEWART & 09 Ladies Box Calf i fine boot......... ++. Lower grades at. i — Boots Our new Hockey Boots bave just arrived Youths sizes,— THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER 24, 1858 - - ~ Fat is absolutely neces- sary as an article of diet. If it is not of the right kind it may not be digested, Then the body will not get enough of it. In this event there is fat-starvation. Scott’s Emulsion supplies this needed fat, of the right kind, in the right quantity, and in the form already partly digested. As a result all the organs and tissues take on activity. soc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronte, THE SIEGE OF PARIS. —_—— HOW LONDON FIRST LEARNED THAT IT HAD ENDED. Story of the Reporter Who Got the “Scoop” and Who Then Induced Bismarck to Allow Him to Send Out the News Over His Private Wire. During the Franco-German war, from Oct. 18, 1870, to March 1, 1871, I was attached to the headquarters of the crown prince, who occupied an unas- suming little villa called les Ombragos, in an outskirt of Versailles, his august father residing throughout the invest- ment and siege of Parisin the prefecture of the whilom ‘‘royal burgh,’’ and cilors and secretaries, house of the Rue de Provence. ing or riding, during that long and bit- ter winter, but sedulously refrained aware spondent, who had everything to ask ed a statesman as Bismarck. this place, 1 had been made acquainted tion of Paris at an early hour of the morning after the conclusion of the armistice, and had, moreover, good rea- son to believe that the conditions of the surrender had not been communicated to any other correspondent of an Eng- lish or even a German newspaper at headquarters. Having obtained the su- premely important item of news, what was I to do with it? Unless it could be forthwith transmitted to The Daily Tel- egraph office by telegraph, my chances of forestalling my fellow correspondents would be aunihilated, and there was no wire at my disposal—-or, for that mat- ter, at that of any foreign journalist— within the vast radius of the lines of investment. The situation appeared an utterly hopeless one, until suddenly the hap- piest of ‘‘happy thoughts’’ flashed through my mind. Perhaps the all pow- erful chancellor, newly created a prince of the young German empire, would authorize the transmission to London wire, by means of which he was ‘‘en rapport’’ with every European capital except beleaguered Paris. There was no time to lose. Before 8 a. m. I had taken ey fail. poverished blood, catarrh of will completely digest the meat. Gb course rests, strengthens an By what means I need not explain in | Take two of Dr. Von Stan's Count Bismarck, with his staff of coun- | in a detached | I often | met the chancellor out of doors, walk- | from soliciting audiences, being well | that the visits of a war corre- | and nothing to tell, could not possibly | be welcome to so desperately overwork- | with the precise terms of the capitula- | “down the articied of oapitiiation iru the lips of my informant, within bait an hour I had copied them out, ‘‘large, bold and bhandsomo,’’ on two pages of foolscap and had made myself presenta- ble. At 9 o'clock I presented myself at the street door of the house in the Rue de Provence and sent up my card to Coun- cilor Lotbar Bacher, with a penciled request that he would allow me to speak to him in private. Almest immediately be came down to the waiting room on the ground floor, into which I had been shown, and asked me what he could de forme, ‘‘Can you procure me a five minutes’ audience of the prince?’’ I re- plied. ‘‘I don’t know,’’ was the rejvin- der, ‘‘but I'll try. The chancellor is ex- tremely busy, but perhaps he'll] see you if you can assure me that the matter is really urgent.’’ I declared that for me it could not possibly be more so, where- upon Bucher left me—I confess, in a fever of anxiety—and was absent for about a quarter of an hour, at the ex- piration of which he reappeared and beckoned to me to follow him up stairs. In an ex-boudoir on the first floor converted intoa sort of office I found the chancellor awaiting me. After the briefest of greetings he said, ‘‘ Pray, tell me what you want in the fewest possi- ble words, for I have not a moment to lose.'’ I produced my dispatch, handed it to him and asked him if it was sub- stantially correct. After looking through it he answered: ‘*Yes, itis. I don’t know how you got your information, and I don’t intend to ask, but these are the terms on which Paris surrenders. What then?’?’ When I besought his permission to forward the message over his wire, he laughed rather grimly, saying, ‘‘You must be mad to ask such a thing!’’ I urged upon him that the tension of public feeling in England witb respect to the fate of Paris was very painful— many people’s sympathy being tempo- rarily averted from Germany by harrow- ing accounts of the sufferings undergone by the population of the French capi- tal. ‘‘That tension would be considera- bly relieved, sir,’’ I replied, ‘‘by the knowledge that the siege of Paris is come to an end and that the victors have accorded merciful terms to the vanquished.’’ Prince Bismarck held out against my importunity for about a couple of minutes, but he yielded at last, only stipulating that I should efface my name at the end of the dis- patch. ‘‘On no account can I allow you to sign a message sent over my wire. If your people in London do not believe it to be authentic when it reaches them, that is their affair. But it must go un- elgned or not at all.’’ It did go unsign- ed; it was accepted as authentic, and its publication that very afternoon ina special edition of The Daily Telegraph proved to be one of the greatest journal- istic coups effected by any London | newspaper during the Franco-German of my dispatch over his own official | war.—London Telegraph. Bagpipe Music. A Glasgow paper thus analyzes the music of the bagpipe: ‘‘Big flies on window, 72 per cent; cats on midnight tiles, 1144 per cent; voices of infant puppies, 6 per cent; grunting hungry pigs in the morning, 54 per cent; steam whistles, 3 per cent; chant of cricket, 2 per cent.’’ In Japan avery useful accomplish- ment taught children is the use of both hands in writing and other work; hence there are no right or left handed peo- ple, as a rule, but both’ hands are used indiscriminatelv. Nature’s Own Dyspepsia Cure Nature’s remedies are not like man's—they never Of the many remedies intended to cure dyspepsia, sour stomach, distress after eating, weight in the stomach, wind on the stomach, loss of appetite, dizziness, nausea, 1m-~- the stomach, sick headache, and similar results of indigestion, only one is uniformly and unfail- ingly successful—that is nature's own remedy, found only in DR. VON STAN’S PINEAPPLE TABLETS. The pineapple contais a large amount of Vegetable Pepsin— nature's most potent aid in digesting food. Mix meat and pineapple and agitate the mixture at a temperature of 103°, and the pineapple Pineapple Tablets after your meals and they will digest your food without aid from the stomach. This d heals the stomach, The tablets will cure the most chronic case of dyspepsia. They give im- mediate relief. Take them for ashort time and your stomach will be as strong and hearty as that of a farmer's boy. They are as pleasant to the palate as candy. Atall druggists.—35c. a box—or direct from THE VON STAN MEDICINE CO., Toronto, Can., and Buffalo, N.Y. 1 Sold by Dr, S. W. Dodd and Geo. E. Hughes, Drugzgists., : Soap makes the little ones happy by keeping their tiny bodies in a healthy clean condition. ————— THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO. MONTREAL, MAKERG OF THE CELEBRATED ALBERT TOILET SOAPS. 66 SAA naan AR PU CELAEGSEAUERUAAEAEUEAESSEESESGUACEUEES GEL PREEUADEERAS EERAS OLEENAEDGGETGEYAEOAS EEA ESO ODES ULEAD OLDEN LEASE USO LAU AEDES U1 SUNUUUUSSUOONUES4EGGdUG00000088E000EOSU AEMADUGNEONUGGD CONES COOADEGEES HUNG AALDHNANUERAOOLASOOAONNY OUAEUARNALOGAULADEG2 LOUD ETOEU AONE ETE ES — _— —~ - PE. |. Railway. Christmas and Rew Year Holidays EXCURSION RETURN TICKETS For School and College Vacation From December 10th to 3ist, both ioclusive teachers and students presenting certificates signed by their Principal or Secretary of €chool Board will be ticket d between station on this Railway at first class single fare for the double journey. Tickets are not good for going journey after day ofissue, and will be good tor return up | to and including Januady : 1st, 1599 FOR THE PUBLIC Excursion Return Tickets wil) be issued from December 21st to Jantiaty 2nd, b> th in- clusive at first classsingle fare. Tickets are not good for going journey after date of issue, upd will be good for re- turn up to and includirg January 7th, 1899. Tickets are good only for continuous jouraey in either direction. D, FOTTINGER, G. A. SHARP, General Mansger Superiutendent hiailway Office, Ch”ewn, Dec 9, 1898—3i eox See S. F. TarBush’s Latest Novelty Your photograph copied on a batton fo 25°, or 3 for 50c. Large size Button 40c or 3 for 80c. A nice Brooch with your photo in it $1.00 A Gold Plated Locket with 2 photos in $1. 75. Call early and leave your order. S. F. TarBrss,]| High Grade Art Faror tcwr— 1&3 et Have Just Completed My New Oyster Place. Call and eve the brilliant display of | beautiful oysters on and off the ehell. Onr Oyster kivg is standing in_ the window. See him, and then you will eat rysters. John P. Joy, VICTORIA CAFE Great George Street...... Merry Xmas and Happy New Yearto all A few more days and Xmas is here to make many happy hearts and homes. But the purchasers will be still bappier i they buy their presents at the Modern Jewelry and Fancy Goods Store at Sunny- side. We have a large variety of goods to select from and we have no need to cut prices as theyare away down,as many of our customers can testify before purchae— ing. Visit our store and see what we have to select from. The Modern Jewelry and Fancy Goods Stere. JUREY & CO. Prowse’s New Stone Block Sunnyside, Opposite Post Office. Clocks,Watches and Jewelry promptly repaied. Gold, Crown and Bridge Work. (Teeth without Plates) Reliable work, Moderate Prices Dr. J. FP: Murray, UEEN SEREET ceesee 4 ; —p_— | Satisfaction or Your Money Back. } ee re In accordance with our advertise- ments to guarantee our wo to the fullest extent and in every particular, and as an evidence that the Guarantee Card, whic find in the pockets of Shorey’s gar- ments, means what it says, if you are Shorey’s Ready-to-Wear Clothing and do not find it perfectly satisfactory in every | rkmanship h you will © particular and will communicate your complaints } to us, we will see that you are satisfied or your money refunded. H. SHOREY & CO. Migey of ‘‘ Ready-to-Wear’’ Clothing. “ P - MONTREAL. | Jas. Paton & Co, Selling Agents for € ‘ PF town SAM SL NL se s SS NZ evs WAP AS AS AS OP UP TO AS simple seo what a be autiful $15.00 and $16 00. to show goods > > & D> SS DS BU SSS OH SBSSWS F VVBSBVSeVs Vetoes There is nothing she would appreciate more. But the $8.50 Rack ' money. Call in andflook around, — —— SRS SES SES ESSE SES ES S see Se ka —— Se gene - Gift Choosimeg Is Puzzling Sometime ste sresteate ste slate sleet Me Ve “ar It is made by choosing some useful article from our stock—A rattan or cobber seat Rocker—one of those pretty easy chairs in Mahogany finish frames—A bamboo easel—a fancy table in bamboo, oak or mahogney, or Walnut. your Hall Rack getting shabby. And Your Wife Wants a New One Or perhaps Come in and Hall Rack you can get for $8.50. If you want a better one we have them at $10.00, $12.00 is the best we have ever shown for We are always glad BWODPADOLOO ! ‘ 2 Se Nb MNS NE Me Me Nb ML ML 2 Me Me Me Me MMe MM SY SMM Se QE NG BV2 NAS GSES ES ESESENESS ars FSS USS ASUS US US AS AS AS OE OAS TE AP LP AS AES IS? EAS AE AE = = 7) yg ALL OTHER KINDS HEINTZMAN PIANO APPEARS., AY — ee —OF— . Musical — Tnstroments Take legs and run whereeve= Hactory established since 1850, and many of the first Pianos they made are ir use to ing proof that HEINTZMAN "KS WELL. day, which should be convine- & CO. PIANOS are made to AS SELL Consider this matter over carefullv before you purchase— It pays in the end to buy only the best. Call in and see them and we will be pleased to show you the difference between a Hentizman & Co Piano, and an ordinary Commer cial Piano made to sell only. MIL LER BROS. WK ettnt SA Gy 1 be b> be ,. te An Ae . —» Ate 1a or sa