a4 THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 29 1898 KO eee s ALLE ! SALE! SALE! CLOSING UP BUSINESS ~ALE EVERY DAY W. A. WEEKS & CO. om Smee te EXAMINER CALENDAR Asthma Gasps MS ye The ore — strangling of those who once . ame are Victims o sthma are vromptly relieved MOON'S CHANGES by a few doses of Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed 6th day, Last Quarter. and Turpentine. 13th day, New Moon. , ee on Bn tei Yes, she exclaimed, I don’t believe any ath an aa lady could listen to him for five minutes - y . —. | without being fascinated, : What a simpleton the fellow must be, he a ig : Sy i ‘ ° 7 ’ 1 | Day of We’k High Water _-s ___ | growled—Chicago News. 3 7 Mor Aft Rises,| Sets. musth Seeing S — — | Piles Cured without the Knife 9 9 . 1 Tuesday 0 04 '13 35 16 28 «4 29 by Dr. A. W. Chases’s 2Wednesiay; 0 29 (1417 | 29 25 Ointment, $Thursday | 0 59/1500) 31 26 4 Friday 1 34/15 46 32 25 _Mr Geo Browne, painter, of Woodville, Ont., + latera. 2 19 116 36 34 24 Victoria Co., says :—"‘For thirteen years I was 5 Saturday ci > 4 a sufferer from bleeding piles and the intense 6 Sunday 3 23 |li 34 35 23 agony which I passed through during thos» : Monday , 4 40 118 29 37 21 years and reat obtained bs De Chase’s Oiut- an ; 5 , Ineut prompts meto give this testimonial. 8 Tue sday } 9 03 » 18 38 20 My physician wished me to have an operation, 9 Wednesday 7 20 '20 03 40 18 but I felt I could be cured without the knife ) Thursda 8 26 20 44 42 17 Vhree boxes of Dr. Chase's Ointment stopped ‘ Prideo '9 20 21 22 43 15 the bleeding and effected a permanent cure.’ 12 Saturday 2157 | 44 14 5 a anes NO aadas 10 11 22 25 | 4 13 Wayworn Watson—I wonder if that oid | Masdew 11 00 (22 54! 47 12 guy was right that said genius was nothin 1" Tuesday 1l 47 '23 26 48 ll but a gift for hard work? 'y Wednesday 12 33 13 20! 50 10 Perry Patettic—I allow he was. All 16 Thursda 14 10 52 9 them geniuses is more or less nutty.- - 7 Friday 0 07 15 G3 54 8 Cincinnati Enq sirer. 8 Saturda 0 56 15 58 55 7 a oe 19 Sunday 1 54 16 55 56 6 ‘ ’ cual : OMondey (306 1758 57 § | Minard’s Liniment the best Hair Restorer *l Tuesday 431 18 54 58 4 » et a 2 Wednesiay | 6 02 19 48 70 3 Mrs Watts—At least you will have to 3, Thursday 7 20 20 38 i 2 edmit that the lecture had the merit of t, Friday 8 32 2123) 2 1 } brevity. 6 Saturda 9 34 22 02 4 1 Watts—Yes, but it was sbort at the 5 Sunday 10 32 22 30 5 0 wrong end. Why didn’t he begin an hour "7 Monday 11 18 22 58 7 0 eooner ? ~Indianapolis Journal. »§ Tuesday 1 58 (23 26 sus ; : °9 Wednesday 12 37 13 19 9 59 _&lobe Loan & Savings Co .. cor 30 Wants , Lost, Found, & 6, ruff on Ri ak LOST.—<« 1 Friday morning a mink neck hmond Street between Powna) residence of Sir Louis Davies. | be paid at this office. i7 45 treet an< eward wi arge cost” ook a pair Londen Hy have boots ire. legrity, to Permaner J H ‘ ppl to} FOR S4 im pe 0. B E.—A very valuable lot of very ted engravings at less than half office 276 Sins pd. 1K THE ROOTS.—The man who ! af Rebber Boots from the window | we on Queen Street. Monday. Nov »%ok them into a place round the | ise Corner wasseen. Weask to | returned at once ard save exp9s- } 176 D.—A weil educated woman of in- nvyest in an estab'ished business, ! position to energet’c worker. ood talker. Correspondc« nee in- iy Manager. 975 \LE.—Steinway Piano, cost $700 | red at New York. Specially select- essional expert at manufactury ttone. Price $1.50 D, B. Office, aid. "MENT WANTED.—By a man— book keeper, useful in shipping inany other capacityina busi- shment. Apply at this office. 225 tf ~—Three story Dwelling House.con ht large rooms, on Prince Street given on Oct 13th W. W. Wellner, WHO T¢ fa boot st fh, and W ANTI ist bea ted, Ar 27 FOR 8 nufact | by a p agni fice 74 3ins “MPLO upeten hess o 38 estab TO LET aining ek ossession ol" whi ene ro LET s the “Ok to.» .OE6 3 ~The house and premises known London House,’ situateon water » Government Warehouse No } sake Bros & Co. jan28—-tf () LET..-Halfof three story dwelling house on the corner of Queen and Fitzroy Sts p- 1v to Wm Henderson, Fitzroy St. 245 ti : ; Pr ; ~- a rd train yuwWeen ¢ ry honse, sitt 4 ahbout Qi wae, Al le 4 a Tt, . JO8T.- io Euston Street, between Queen d Brighton Road, a gold cuffbuttop, Fin- er please leave at this office, 269 nr a — ee gee VANTI D.—4 bright intelligent lady, ace b ‘ut thir'v. with some capital,to travel, hire agents. References. Permarent ‘right psrson. Investigation in- Diy Manager. tition fe qd. A ILOUSE TO LET--Opn Dorchester Street. 1cen and Pownal Streets, contain- ooms besides good kitchen Session about Ist Nov. rant. or son. oz eight wtrs. F V illiaxa ¢ TO LET /pply to at ~l hat comfortable brick dwelling iteon Water Street, now n posses- rs McDonald. Possession given September, Apply to Peake Bros % 2th, 1863, eod tf. of } ion "O LET mn King § Tier of ip ~~ ~Half of a double tenement house reet. Apply to Mrs, Catherine May ‘““nce and King St. “ps BOYS WANTED.—Wanted by the o° dd, twosmart young men who un- id he feeding and care of stock and to ie to mi <ers, no others need apply, good ‘san permanent employment will be *n, Apply at once Edward Kelly. Sout) ort, Lo: 48. ‘ 974 : - Have dust Completed My few Oyster Place, Call cod eee the brilliant Cisplay of vautifu’ oysters on and off the ebell. Jar Oyster king is standing in the wiedow. See him, and then you will eat John P, Joy, VICTORIA CAFE > eat | reorge Street eeeeres and | iv geveral farming, will have to be | l of Victoria and Lombard Sts. Toronto E. W. Day. Manager Globe Loan & : Savings Co, Says: ‘I « onsider Dr Chase’s Ointment in- valuable.” We have thousands of testimonials from prominent business men all over the Do- minion. teen “Now,” asked the iaterviewer, ‘what led you to come out of Santiago harbor ?’ “We were drawn out,” said the Span- ll of roast beef on the Brooklya.”—Philadelphia North Ameri- can, Minard’s Liniment Cures ‘LaGrippe “T trusted you with my heart,” said ahe with bitter sobs, ‘and what have you done with it ?’ His laugh for barshness could given @ crosscut saw the dockhead. “Elave you looked in the top drawer of the tureau ?” he asked.—Cincinnati Eo- lard, “‘by the sme have | quirer. I was curep of painful ARD’S LINIMENT., Chatam Ont. Goitre by MIN. Byarp McMuvtuty I was curep of Inflammation by MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT. Walsh, Ont, Mrs W. W. Jounson I was corep of Facial MINARD’'S LINIMEN C. Parkdale, Ont. Neuralgia by J... Baitey ————_-__emenemen, . eee Watts—I don’t believe yOu ever miss an amateur performance, Potts—Of course I don’t. through amateur perfomances makes me evjoy professional work so much more.— Indianapolis Journal. Minard’s Liniman ta ts { is tha bast notes this morning that ti ed— read that in one of your vill You ought limit,— age papers. Chicago Newa, Minard’s Liniment for Rheumatism Ask For ‘Mclean Stamps Issued by the People’s Say ings Co, Office, Reverr Horer Kent €rreet. Every merch- ant whose name is in our Blank Stamp Book keeps them and will be only too pleased to give them and get your cash trade, You can get your goods as cheap and as good from them as any one else Try them and SEE, | All | | Sitting ! Chicago Citizen—Say, you must have to know that Chicago has no St Louis Citizen—I read in the railway e Caicago limit- | | | | j ANOTHER VICTORY. ee Mr R,. Morrow Cured of Lumbago by Dodd’s Kidney Fills. Toronto, Nov 28.—Tbe vast majority of Torontonians know and esteem Mr. R Morrow, the alle and popular agent for the Torento Aner Light Co. For this reason the following statement made in writi: g by Mr. Morrow, possesses unusual signiiicance. “Two years ago | was attacked by Lum-~ bago aud Urinary troulle which caused me intense suffering,! took several d ffer- ent remedies without avy benefl’. Then I began using Dodd’s Kidney Pills, and was completely cured by them.” Lem bago is unusually prevelent this fa | cufferers should kvow that Dodd’s K:dney Pills are the only known cure tor it. They never fal. —_ Dangers of Pony Express Riding. In The Century there is an article on ‘*The Pony Express,’’ between St. Jo- seph, Mo., and San Francisco, written by W. F. Bailey. The author says: Considering tbe danger encountered, the percentage of fatalities was extraor- dinarily small. Far more station em- ployees than riders were killed by the Indians, and even of the latter more were killed off duty than on. This can be explained by the fact that the horses turnished the riders, selected as they were for speed and endurance, were far superior to the mountswf the Indians. There is only one case on record where a rider was caught, and that was pwing to his having been surrounded. This occurred in Nebraska, along the Platte river. He was shot, and several days later his body was found, His pony, still bridled and saddled, was also found with the mail intact. It was transferred to another horse and soon forwarded to its destination. In laying out the route through the Indian coun- try pains were taken to avoid anything that would afford cover for an ambusb- ed foe. One of the greatest dangers encoun- tered by the pony express riders was from immigrants and others who mis- took them for Indians. In those days it was shoot first and investigate ward, provided the shooter survived to make an investigation. A pumber of the riders met their death in this way, be- ing mistalzen for Indians, horse thieves or road agents. It is a strange but nota- ble fact that the Indians often stood and saw the daring riders fly past without offering to molest them. There wasa mystery about it that made it ‘‘bad medicine’’ to interfere with them. Su- perstitious as they were, they scldom bothered with anything that they could not understand. - Ff aiter- of hope. No matter how called remedies he may have tried, mented upon him in vain, no matt ever ridding himself of his disey Hundreds uj} cured by This wonderful other necessarily fatal diseases. and geta bottle. It will relieve , to full recovery immediately, ] asthma, hay fever, loss of smell] 20n hundreds of cases as | TT, (eet i anna See SALE EVERYTHING MUST GO BIG DISCOUNTS OFF EVERYTHING——TWENTY TO FIETY PER CENT—Tunis immense sale is being patronized by thousands. Tremendous bargains are going SALE EVERY DAY ocnabaameineteea A Similar Case, The Indian may be unsophisticated by the side of the white man, but Bishop Whipple, writing in The Temple Maga- tine, shows that he has a dry sense of bumor. His Indian flock was visited by a speculative Yaukee who hungered after their good lands and tried to persuade them to exchange their reservation fora worthless tract of country elsewhere. A council of the tribe was called togeth- er, and the Yankee addressed the assem- bly. My friends, I have lived 55 years rn this world,’’ he said, ‘‘and the winds of 55 winters have blown over my head and silvered it over with gray. Asa true man I advise you to accept this new treaty at once.’’ He sat down, and at the same mo- ment an old chief sprang to his feet. ‘*Look at me!’’ he said. ‘‘The winde of 55 winters have blown over my head and silvered it gray, but they have not blown away my brains.”’ ‘‘That conference was ended,’’ the bishop laconically. said Weeds as Food. What is even regarded as a vile weed Can, with a little stretch of imagina- tion, be turned into an ornamental plant or delicious vegetable. This is especial- ly the case with the commé@n burdock, Lappa major. Schoolboys all know it from gathering the burs and compress- ing them together by the curved points of the floral involucre. This is all they | know about it. It is ditlicult to see any- | thing more to be despised in the bur- | is in universal use. dock leaf than in the leaf of the rhu- barb. It appears that it is largely used in China for food, but it is stated that if the stalks be cut down before the flowers expand and then be boiled the taste isrelished equally with asparagus. The leaves when young are boiled and etaten as we eat spinach. In Japan it Thousands of acres are devoted to its culture, but in this case the root is the object. It requires deep soil to get the roots to the best ad- vantage.—Meehan’s Monthly. A Swelled Head, A typical English woman, when some | One spoke tho other day of a certain | cried the English woman. a RELIEF IN 10 MIN Every sufferef from catarrh who reads these lines w severely he may be afflicted, no matter how many -r how completely he may } isting ‘anc Don't put it off--go at once ou in 10 minutes--it will place y It cures cold in the head, sore throat, tonsilitis, and deafness. the Rev. James Murdock, of Harrisburg, Pa. : man having a ‘‘swelled head,’’ looked dazed. ‘‘Really! You don’t mean it!’’ ‘*i’m very sorry.’’ A day or so later the English woman, happéuing to-meet the wife of the Manin question, observed that she was so sorry to near. that Mr. Blank was ill. ‘**But ho isn’t!’’ cried the wife. ‘*He Was never better in his life.’’ **Is that so?’’ said the English woman. ‘‘Why, what could Mrs. Dash have meant the other day when she said he was suffering from a swelled head?’’ ill find in them a message ‘r how many so- physicians have experi- lave despaired of 1 distressing malady—be can be cured } no matt vad as his have been fully and permarent! “Bae DR. AGNEW’S CATARRHAL POWDER. |)” remedy never fails if taken before catarrh has developed into to your druggist yu on the road Here is an interesting letter from ‘When I know anything is worthy of recommendation, I consider it my duty to let my friendsknowit. I in its effect. The first application benefited me within five minutes, ave used Dr, Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder for the last two months and am now completely cured of catarrh of five years standing. It is certainly magical I would not be without it in the house if it cost $5 a bottle, as it will cure any slight cold I may have, almost instantly.” At all druggists. Dr. Agnew’s Cure for the Heart relieves heart d Liver Pills—zoc. for 40 doses—are the best. zenm, tetter and all skin diseases, Cures piles in 2 to 5 nights, isease in 30 minutes. Dr. Agnew's Dr. Agnew’s Ointment relieves in a day ec- 35¢. 10 eres 5 - - < a tied ts ead ] Seeereseooosesooooerooes PYANO EXPERIENCE, SALE! SALE! oe »-A. WEEKS & What is known and Sold as Ready-Made Clothing t out by machinery, put together by Is clothing cu y mechinery, and with the aid of starving female labor, Such a garment stamps the 3% wearer on sight as dressed § in slops. He not only looks. it but as a consequence feels $= it. Men are learning that $e they cannot afford to be ill. § dressed. S/ops have had@ their day. : Shorey’s | ' Ready-to-Wear TWO KINDS Clothing = aa expresses exactly what the ‘Reedy-to-Wear,’ name would imply READY-TO-WEAR. Made by tailors, designed by an artist, sewn with the best linen and silk, cut to fit the form of man be he tall, short, stout, or thin. Any man not a positive malformation can be fitted by Shorey’s Ready-to-wear Clothing. By fitted we mean dressed so that he looks a Gent- leman, and possesses that feeling of comfort and air of ease that always marks the well dressed man. € See that Shorey’s Guarantee Card is in the pocket of every garment. ; 3 ; FOESOSES HS SOSSESCSOOOSO SSS S EOSHSOOOOOSOHOSEOOOESD de | Jas. Paton & Co, Selling Agents for Ch’te te SE eee s> QUITE g a 2 eS ee ee oe me 2) ” MMe NE NE Ne MS TT ET a Brighton Brewery having undergone extensive alterations we can guarantee ! to supply our customers with this.cld reliable beverage brewed from the fiz Malt and Hops only. ects TSO innentie Always on hand a full stock of India Pale X X and X X X Ales and Bs Stout in wood or bottles. All siz: packages to suit the trade. Fresh grains at Brighton Brewery every Tuesday and Friday 25 cts per bit Q Halifax Breweries Lid? A. S. HEWITT, Agent. 79 Queen St Chtown™ a et ; That goon Taxes, Tennyson’s “Brook”, anirapairs 102229 DD But the BELL Piano eliminates the latte Nothing but the very best material enters into the construction, Master hands alone mo that material, and ripe captains the whole process of buildit The result is easily seen in the great dura bility of the BELL PIAN@ and its power t retain the original sweetness of tone: : For sale at FPLETCH HRS} Piano Warerooms, Opera House Building T. C, P. YEO, Agent at Summerside,