er — ae The healthy man is sretty Sure to be a favorite with athe ladies. ponm't. Bie low, his is unpleas- int and he lis me ntally Vand physi. ie » cally slug- er gish i to disorders of iditw of the liver. - he blood, amd one cannot continually pump impure blood | to every organ of the body witheat mak. | ing those organs sick. Pump impure blood | the brain and th: soon a sick brain It wil how rm | izziness, drows- iness, dull ey: dreams and loss of sleep. Pump bad od inte the lungs end the result is consumption, bronchitis, | asthma, weak lungs, spitting ef blood or | throat or nasal troub Feed the nerves and brain cells upon the poisoas of an im- pure blood and the consequente is nervous exhaustion and 1 us prostration Dr Pierce’s Golden Me eases and cal Discove TY cures cures the cenditions that thee cause them. It restores the appetite, makes digestion and assimilation perfect, the liver tir the bloed pure and the nerves stea y It is th great blood-maker and f 1 1 it cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consumption. It is the best rem- edy for blood and skin diseases, Druggists | Seii it a Smothers. Esq., of Millston, Jackson Co.. y vrites I wish to say that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is the best medicine for the Grip that I have evertried. I was cured twice with it when I could got get any other reliet."’ ‘4A stitch in time saves nine.’’ Doctor Pierre’s Common Sense Medical Adviser telis the mother how to take one little home stitch that saves pine costly visits from the doctor. For a paper-covered copy semic 21 one cent starmps, to cover cost of } cust ind mailing onl. to the Wortd’s | Dispetisary Medical Asseciation, Buffalo, N y CVethe ger Fines ™«< ee ARAALAAF AK Men's Chains ols A man has opportunity of . showing only these arcicles of jewelry in his external dress. a A ring, studs or stick pin, and a ** watch chain. ‘Ihe chain the te conspicious item. [tis impor tant, therefore, that ite quality * should be as good as the man ‘* can afford, and its style be dis- tinguished for taste and cbar- a acter. ie] I have taken epecial pains in eelectiog a large stock of men’s Mo Chains, I am sure you will say i that the patterns are the most fie tastefulever shown in this city and the prices have eufficient * range to fit every pocket book. ee & W. W. WELUNER THE GREAT WATCH HOTSE RAAAAATAAAAAAAAAABSASSA Top Quality Bottom Prices There is no doubt about it when you buy KEROSENE CiL The best is always the cheapest WE SELL.. Pratts Astral and 4irclight Oil at very low prices. Lower prices for 4 gal. lots. Sanderson & Co. Just Received a nice assortment of 3LOUSE SETS the newest designs in sterling silver and_ rolled plate, and selling very low, os oD> W. N. TANTON Opposite Crabbe’s Hariware Store & complex. | $ »%1i0on is sal- | ' a= e eyes are dull, ee | constructed upon a mere analysis of its : \ skin is | 4\\ blotched , or pimply, | \his breath THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 18 1895 LL Sa ASR tn AB a — rr EATING IN GERMANY “Then you have examined the con- stitution of the German cnisine, you are tempted to grow loquacious. You are conscious of having discovered that the psychology of a nation cannot be made dishes. Your estimate of Brillat- Savarin sinks. He could not tell you what you are, even from all the menus of your lifetime. Freiligrath’s philo- sophic conclusion that ‘‘man is what true only when referring to cannibal- ism. And you will aver that only in the case of paleolithic man can you | _ construct a man from the crumbs that fall from his dinner table. And this you will want to prove, and conse- quently will grow talkative with pre- senting of much evidence. And yet, in your sane moments, you will have a sneaking affection for the statement that a German is a German because he eats what he eats. As a gen- eral rule he may be said to eat five , times a day. But his hunger is con- stantly being stilled. He starts early in the day with a cup of cafe au lait and a small buttered roll. This keeps him going till 11 o'clock, when he demolishes a slice of buttered rye bread spread with slices ; Of hard boiled egg, raw chopped beef or cheese. This he washes down with a glass of ale, thus stilling his inner man till dinner time. Dinner takes place to- ward ! o’elock and consists of soup (generally nourithing), a plate of meat, with potatoes and fruit (cranberries, prunes or apricots), occasionally cheese, seldom sweets, rarely a green vegetal..o. Three hours later coffee is taken, served with a piece of cake or thick bread and butter. This is the hour pre- cious to the gossip and the busybody, the time for spreading scandal. Toward 8 o’clock the appetite again asserts itself. The hour of the ubiquitous sau- sages has arrived. Their name is legion, and they share the honors with slices of ham, smoked gonse breast, pieces of raw pickled herring, and in summer hard boiled eggs and potato salad. Such is the German method of spread- ing the meals over the day. Of course there pe exceptions. Many families have twe ample meals a day, but the bulk of the population eats mostly but- tered bread and snacks. In justice to Germany one must say that the fare ip many a home will compare favorably with that of many an American family. In the German restaurant the cuisine is on the whole monotonous and the food singularly insipid. Ali ~cats seem to have the same flavor, all asec <erved with the same heavy, viscous saacxs, and invariably escorted with the same soaplike potatoes. Stodginess and heavi- ness are the great blots on the German fare. Theelement of variety, too, seems considered #uperfiuous, In the concrete the subject is almost too painful to face, the difficulty being t————_ - _ = —— —————— Mas an Interesting Chat About Dr. Chase's Ointment, HIS SUFFERING FROM ULCERATING PILES CURED. He says :—I was troubled with itch- ing piles for five years, and was badly ulcerated. They were very painfui, so much so that I could not sleep. I tried almost every remedy heard of, and was recommended to use Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment. I purchased a box, and from the first application got such relief that I was satisfied a cure would be made. I wsed in all two boxes, and am now completely cured. Every remedy given by Dr. Chase cost years of study and research, and with an eye single to its adaptation for the ailments for which it was intended. Dr. Chase detested cure-alls, and it has been proven ten thousand times that not one of his formulas leave a bad after-effect. Dr. Chase’s Ointment is based on lanoline, and the Yest phy- sicians prescribe It. Mr. MT. Wigle, of Kingsville, Essex Co- Cured of Itching Piles of 23 Years Standing, Physicians Fall to Make a Cure When Dr. Chase's Uintment Gave Immedl- ate Relief, M. T. Wigle, better known to every cne in the vicinity as ‘“‘ Uncle Mike,” was troubled for over 23 years with itching piles. At times he was so bad he would have to quit work. The irri- tation became so intense with constant rubbing that they became ulcerated and would bleed. He had been treated by many physicians, but found nothing that gave him relief. Reading in the paper the cvre of a friend who had suf- fered in a like manner, and being cured by Dr. Chase’s Ointment, he procured a box. After the third application he got such relief that he had the first comfortable nightgs sleep he enjoyel in years. The one made a complete cure, and he says he would not be with- out ft for $50 a box if it could not be re- placed. Mr. Wigle is a wealthy farmer, well known in tke community in which he resides. It is over two years since he was a'ilicted, and he has never beea troubled since. | Sprinkled over it, a garniture of gler- | kins is added, and the whole is eaten he eats’’ you straightway qualify as | vO steer CICAr OL CACiAMaATIONS Genowng positive offensiveness. Some of the kickshaws which figure regularly upon the German table are reputed to be most sustaining. They certainly are intense- ly and ostentatiously wonder inspiriny. One preparation is everywhere met with under the name (more or less pho- netically spelled) of beefsteak a la tar- tare. Its basis is raw chopped beef; this, spread ont into a pat of elliptical shape, is crowned with the raw yolk of an egg, raw finely chopped onion is with much gusto and no worse conse quences than a durable thirst. In many of the dishes you discovel all the humor, feeling and imag tion of a Waguerian composition. You ud the resolute desire to build up harmony upon discord. Of this nature may be considered the traditional menu of New Year’s eve, carp, pancake and punch. These three, brought into immediate juxtaposition and consumed in plethoric quantities, generally have the desired effect—that of inducing a hysterical good humor For stodginess nothing beats th vorite dish, panache. It consi of pickled pork, sour cabbage and a puree of split peas boiled down to the con- sistency of stiff dough. Experiments on this mass produce deplorable capers and cause one to grunt mournfully. A va- riety of this diet is found in Berlin. You substitute boiled balls of dough and indifferent prunes for the peas and eabbage, and you have the dish popu- larly termed ‘‘the Silesian kingdom of heaven.”” Cold eels, imbedded in a trauslucid, glutinous substance, figure in all workmen’s taverns, while roast goose is de riguecr for all solemnities. A dainty which we have recently met within Berlin recalled Darwin’s remark that ‘‘hardly any experiment is so absurd as not to be worth trying.”’ It consisted of finely powdered horse radish served up with frozen whipped cream. One may sum up one’s judgment by saying of German cooking what the art critic said of nature, ‘‘It has infinite potentialities.’’ Not the least of these is its ambition to discover victims that survive its charms only in the form that the walls of Jericho survived the trumpet blast of Joshua.—Lippincott’s Maguzine. £ a Protected Carrier Pigeons. Carrier pigeons in China are protect- ed from birds of prey by a little appa- ratus consisting of thin bamboo tubes fastened to the birds’ bodies with thread passed beneath the wings. As the pigeon flies along the action of the air through the tubes produces a shrill whistling sound, which keeps birds of prey ata respectful distance He Got His Leave. The Rev. Robert Nourse relates this story in The Congregationalist: On a certain Sunday morning the or- derly of the colonel of the Eighth Ohio presented himself before that officer. ‘Everything all right, colonel?’’ he asked. After looking around and find- ing that the tent had been put in order and his boots blacked he replied in the affirmative. ‘‘I have a favor to ask,” said the orderly. ‘‘State it,’’ said the colonel. ‘‘I beg that I may go off today, colonel, and go a little earlier and re- main a little later.’’ ‘‘For what rea- sons?’’ demanded the colonel. The or- derly produced a letter and said, ‘‘Sir, I have received this from the president, and he invites me to dine at the White House.”’ The president of the United States is in every way to be ranked among the great rulers of the world. But the gen- uine and unaffected democracy of the man who now holds that exalted office is shown in this incident, which could not be paralleled in any other country in the world. Santiago's Distinction. Santiago de Cuba has an ecclesias- tical distinction, and that is thatit is the oldest bishopric in the western world. When all Pennsylvania was a traceless waste, an archbishop ruled a see of no mean proportions from that city and under that title. From the city of Santiago also went out the two great missionaries to the Indians and fegroes, the first, Las Casas, who evangelized nearly all Central America, and the second, St. Peter Claver, who worked among the negroes of Brazil.-— Philadelphia Call. Millionaires’ Street. The latest census proves that in up- per Fifth avenue there is a stretch of houses a mile and a half long that con- tains dozens of millionaires. It is for its length the highest socially, the most architecturally handsome and by far the most wealthy street in the world.— New York Telegram. In Cochin-China when husband and wife find they can no longer agree they give a dinner, to which they invite their relations and the patriarch of the village. The latter during the meal takes the chopsticks of the pair and breaks them, and by his action they are legally divorced. Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets All druggists refuna ths money (fit fuilsto eure. 520. Eversthing ges, nothing reserved. Dis ounts 201050 per cent cff all our new tock.—W A Weks & ©». dy ! «k wv 3, Rubbers, rnh bers .all styler, #!) prices S]O0e644 OG Ot? 6G SS SEVVSUEQVSVEs at R K Jost’s, S:amper ’e Corner. McKays Just opened,---New Clothing, Hats and caps, ties and staple goods. Inspection invited, BARGAIN CORNER Trained Pigeons, Pigeons are carefully trained. The To k.eep Out the Cold. Changeable Weather young homer is taken half a mile the first day, a mile the second, two miles the third, and go on, doubling the dis- tance each time. It must be liberated each time only in the same direction as to its loft, for a bird can be trained along only one route at atime. When 40 miles have been reached, a week’s rest comes between. A hundred miles are enough for a young bird’s first year. So essential is the training that old birds are taken only two miles out for the first lesson of a season, though they may have flown their 250 miles the year preceding. The end of the next season, however, will, if the birds are willing and the trainer patient, be crowned by the accomplishment of a 400 mile flight. As you get higher in the scale of distance, longer and longer rests are needed. Male birds are generally used for long distances. Family matters are apt to engross the attention of the hen, though she is still capable of good work when she has a mind for it.—Good Words. THE ONLY HOPE! For Victims of Bright's Disease is Dodd's Kidney Pills. Not a day passes on which the newspapers do not record the death of ome or more persons from Bright’s Disease. Already its victims num- ber hundreds of thousands. Day by day the awful total grows larger. W. D. MCKAY ws ee ee, | 20 Farrivgdon St., and London, England, throws the human machinery out ot gear and renders it mor+ sisceptible to prevalent ailments. | After a “muggy” period the first cold day ‘strikes hom’ unless the system is well fortified by strengthening stimulit iag nourishment, of which the most perfect form ts BOV RIL. Return this advertisement to us with 2 cent stimp and we will send you Whonharts Great War Puzzle. We ae offering $100.00 for the solution af this puzzle. : BOV R L LIMITED 25 & 27 St. Peter St Montreal, Canada. No class is safe from this destroyer. War and intemperance, with all their miseries and fatalities, are not responsible for as many deaths as have been caused by Bright’s Dis- ease. Yet, there is a way of resisting it ; of drawing its poisoned fangs, and making it as harmless as a summer breeze. That great medicine, Dodd’s Kidney Pills, has cured thousands of the worst cases. It never fails to cure, hopeless as the case may seem. _ Would you safely shield your loved ofies from the fatal grip of this curse of mankind—-Bright’s Disease? Then use-“Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the only cure on earth for this disease. / ; : : ADVICE ABOUT ; | Spice. | When ordering a package of ! ’ Pepper, Ginger, Allspice, Cin namon or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al-~ ways feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for : : : ott’s TO LEP. —Thateomforteble brick dwelling house, situate on Water Street, now lo posses- sion of Mrs McDonald. Poss-ssiun given about 2)‘h seotem)er, Apoly to Peake Bros : 7 : Aa & Co, Aug. 2th, 186+, eo1 tf SAAARAAAAAAARASAAAASAA AAS SILVERWARE That Will Wear Right Tea Sets consisting of Tea Pot, Coffee Pot, Sugar, Cream and Spoon Trays, Yalad Bowls, Cake Baskets, Baking Butter and Pickle Dishes. ALSO IN SOLID SILVER, FINE GOODS 5 o’clock Spoons, ‘lea Spoons, Souvenir Spoons, Oyster ‘Forks | Cheese Scoops, Cold Meat Forks, Tea Bells, Thimbles, The cheapest ladies’ Watch that we think would be worth buying, $4.00, better ones $7.50 to $50.00, Watches for Boys, $2.75 to 10.00, Watches for men $5.00 to 100.00. Beautifal Rings Any Birthday Stone Ring made to Order Nearly every one knows we are the pioneers in the spectacle busines and in keep up to date in our stock of spectacles and eyeglasse and fitting. ee ' ee a ee A RS et nS sipetaiaet pnt cn nA sre i 7 | . ' ’ Ki. W. TAYLOR, Victoria Jewelry Store Nearly opposite Post Office Charlotietown, P. E. E. BE PEER EN EE EEE EEE EY i ‘ : P ee ee z Se ee ee 10 eg ae <coentnenns es Ae nasa e enone a oncaene Sis lt ee aNete aen mean see