ee ee — ey siting aaa, sn trea eaaagesipn sili aii OE ——— a maga ee ao i A A RL \ CHILD'S AGONY. Ribs Broken From the Spine— Diabetes Developed. Noctors Gave Her up—Hospital Sur. ms said the -Yet Dodd's Kidney Pills Cure d Thoroughly Case was Hopeless i Her Quickly and HampsteaD, N. 3., Dic 23.—Noth- mg wriogs the heact with such unat- syerable, awful agony us to be cempelled » witness the sufferings of a li‘tle »bild, and at the seme time te be abso- solutely helpless to relieve its pain. Terribie, indeed, must have been the beartache cf Mrs. (:eorge E. Rathburn, vt this place, when she was obliged to watch by the bedsiie ofber little two- year-old daughter. and to realize that surthly power was unable to relieve the y yild’s sufferings in the least degree. Che child, Edna, had two ribs torn trem the spine, in an accident. The re- «1t was terrible. The broken bones re- iused to join; the sufferer was bent touble, and could move only with the reatest difficulty. Diabetes, of a most severe and o!s'‘i- mate type, setin. Toe child's sufferings grew to be simply terrible. Day and night her little body was racked with burning pain. The doctors gave her up. They cou.d d» nothing for her, they said. Then she was taken tothe hospital at St. Jehn. Tne surgeons told her parents to take r home and cire tenderly forber for me could not live. me night Mrs. Rathburn Podd’s Kidney Pilis.She resolved to try teu in Edna’s case. She did trythem AiMo St immediately their good effect was apparent. Day by day she improved wotil perfect heaithand strength re- twened . Now there is no more robust, stardy child in New Brunswick. Phis case proves that Diabetes cannot e cured except by means of Dodd's Kidney Pills, and also that Dodd's Kid- sey Pills never fai! to cure it. Dodd's Kidney Pills are sold by all druggists at fifty cents a box or six soxes for $2.50, or sent, on receipt of price, by the Doda’s Medicine Co., Limi- ud, Toronto, Ont ronsetiainiaialal. atin Whilethe United States cruiser Cincin- satti was leaving Santiago de Cuba on Ssturday evening she ran fuil speed upon a rock clearly defoed in the charts, but aot buoyed. She is probably not seriously lamaged. a HUMAN SACRIFICES On the Altar of Diabetes, manei by Dodd's Kidney Pills, Only. ¥ onal rmiard rdly a family in the country is from Diabetes. Great thirst, ng sight, numbness in the thighs, wollen ankles, ema nervousness, pale or turbid inine, loss of sexual power, decaying ‘seth, pains in the loins or small o’ : Back, are all positive signs that iMabetes.is in the system. _ Do yousknow how it ends? Ix RATH. A’ premature, horrible, agon wed, pitifub death. The victim has nc wace, no ease Im.life. His days an ed with tortures. His nights are sing dreams of agony, He long: o die, yet fears the terrors of his end ‘te dies, a bloated, fetid, repulsive mass of corruption. ‘That is the only end of un hecke j Diabetes. Dodd's \idney Pills will cure it. They drive 4 out of the system thoroughly, create w, clean blood, rebuild the diseased cidneys, and restore rahnst health TIN PLATES —_ — nd Coke. ex S. 8S. ‘or sale by HORACE HASZARD, 268 —eod ‘ARM TO LET AT ROYALTY, To let “Milford Farm” on the North er Road, about a mile from ihe city, ® present in the occupation of the Widow » the lateGeorge Thorne. It comprises abut 29 acres of land in a high state of n tivation, fronis on the North River Shore. There ie a good one anda half “o’y farm house with outbuildings aad » \srge stable and barn, and a tool house on the premises. Possession given, if re- parved latter em! of November. These premises are wel! adapted for a butcher on | pasture farm. Rent $200.00 a year. Yo: further pagticularsapplyto. DANIEL DAVIES, 154 Dundas Hsplanade c\? sy cr? : 7. Ing Sums, LION, 400 Lake Charcoal roxes landed ¥ innipeg. ~ - read of | THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOT''ETOWN, DECEMB SR 24, 1898 THE DAILY EXAMINER DECEMBER 24, 1898. ——aa Sweee ae “LOVE.” S EEieinanenenmael Hon. J. W. Longley, Attorney-General of Nova Scotia,bas written a book with the title of ‘‘Love.” The Copp, Clark Com- pany, Limited, of Toronto, publish it. Seemingly ibe book in advance of its ap- pearance on the general market bas fallen into the hands of one of those irritating peragraphists who,without ability to grasp the scope ofa book, employs himself in reviewing its typographical errors. In the case of this. book theonly eftect has been to increase the sales. Contrary to what migbthave been ex- pected frono the attractive title, it is not a tale of true Jove as told by the poets aad romancers, buta prote essay in fourteen short sermons in which the various phases of the master passion are presented philosophicaily as they might be by a special pleader before a jury on areopagus hill. As love has been known and exploit- ed ever since the creation of the wold it ie not to be thonghtthat it would remaiu for a dignitary of a colonial bar to say any- thiog new on the topic. Coasequently these sermone inculcate nothing that was not known to everybody, but the know- ledge is stricken home. ‘The ecope of the work is set forth in the introductory chapt er. It is that the essence of love is eimply a recognition of the tremendous principle that love pervadesall relations with our fellow creatures as well as ours with the deity, and, of iteelf,proves immortvlity. The ultimate destiny of the race is to be wrought out by love, by the process of slow evolution, and our relations to our fellow-men, by self-abne gation, self-effacement and, in short, by altruism. The word “altruism” is not English but was foisted into the language by Compte, the French communist, and Herb:rt Spencer. The term +elf-a-bnega- tion, or self-effacement,as Mr Longley is fond of calling it,would express the author’s meaning equally wellor better. Then be proceeds with his diequisition in a manner thai excites interest, and possible comment. A book that excites no com- ment is not worth reading. The writer proceeds to treatof the manifestations of love between the sexes, with an accuracy that shows he has been } an observer of the process called “spoon- ing” at some fashionable resort, although we doubt be bas understated the in- fluence of the summer girl. Propinquity he regards as wholly the caute of earthly lovee, proving toa demonetration that two persons in adjacent parishes who- lave ucver seen or heard of each other do not fall in love, but then, with an under- lying touch ofcyn‘cism, adds that if one enamoured persons removes to a distance of @ hundred miles love fades and die: ont, leaving the field open to another. This altogether, in a legical! sep2e, knocks on the head the fond creed of enamourcd young ladies and geutlemen that they were “made for each other.” ur preacher then touches on matrimonial differences, re- specting which we cap, as given in the vulgar tongue, only advise to kiss and be friends. Caprices, and matrimonis! wis- takes of selection are also attended to. The sixth chapter—*“what love is lawful,” is probably the one that a paragraph in the Progress, of St John, N B, says a charming Halifax widow and a Dalhousie professor object to so much that the lady wishes the book put on the Expurgated Index. The trouble seems to arise from a fine piece of casuistry in answering the question: Is lawful an exict synonym for jawful? “The law of nature is the law of God,” is enuociated in the beginning of the chapter, and in the end—“love h-llows everything it touches; unhallowed love is a thing inconceivable,” etc. This, as it reads, ie dangerous doctrine or might be distorted to such. There be those whose minds have not acumen enough to draw a line among these psycbic mysteries, Hence mieunderstanding, and hence, too, the charming widow and the professor of The Progress, Une would think that a preacher of love would be on his own grouod in applying the doctrine of love to the Christian reli- gion which is founded on love and of which the Deity is inculcated as alrogetber love. What, on the contrary, do we see? A cyclopedia of jealousies. This is seea, in very sadness, by those who are mosi observant of the churches. Unfortunate- ly, this frightful anemaly has existed since ever church history has been, and the indications do not yet show that it is less so than in older times. We do not seem to be yet approachirg the beatitudes. From the multiplicity ot sects arise ar- rogance, uncharitableness, intolerance and spiritual tyranny. This is very sad but clear-sighted eyes cannot be closed to it. The chapter in which the author ad- vances the grand principle of love in poli- tics, is the least practical in the book. Utopian! wholly utopian! the mind of man cannot conceive Sir Charles Tupper and Sir Wilfred Laurier kissing on both. cheeks and rushing into each other’s arms The capitol would quake to ite base at such @ weird pbenomenon, and party voters would not know whether they stood on their heada ortheir heels. Yet all this is looked for to be brought about py slow evolution ! The pace of the tortoise is proverbially slow, notwithstanding that some optimists givethe animal the credit of getting there all the same; but he seldom gets there on time,and never until “time !’, is called, and time is longer. A. D. 1900 is the commencement of a new ers;. but from the brief space that evolution has to werk in betweeo now and then, it is not likely we shall see the reign of love even- tuate in our day. Such books as this, though littie practi- cal, have a mission for good in provoking thought. Truisims escape the memo: y and we are all the better of being reminded how they may be best applied. The i anon — . oe book ends with a postscript, appropriately entitled “the crucible of love,” in which the author feelingly relaies the affliction that befell him in the death of a loved daughter at the interesting age of fourteen, and, with eome eloquence, toucheson the epasme of der pairand coubt that paseed over hig soul until be reached the happy conviction Of an ultimate re-union with the lost. Thecarpivgcriticism to which the book was subjected in a Ha i’ax paper does not e¢em to have burt its popularity, for it is understood the author is bringing outa cheaper edition. TT KITCHENER'’S SCHOOL. [Being atransiation ofthe song that was made by a Mohammedan schoo|master of tbhe— Bengal Iutantry (some time on serviee at Suakiu) when be heard that the Sirdar was taking money from the En- glish to bui'd a Madrissa for Hubshees— a college for the Soudanese. } Oh Hubsbee, carry vour shoes in your hani and bow your head on your breast ! This ig the message of Kitchener who did not break you in jest. [t waa permitted to him to fulfill the long appointed years, Reaching the end ordained of old over your dead Emirs, He stamped only before your walls, and the Tomb ye knew was dust: He gathered up under his armpits all the swords of your trust; He set a guard on vour granaries, secur- ing the weak from the strong: He said :—“Go work the waterwheels that were abolished so long.” He said :—“Go eafely, being abased, I have accom pliehed ny vow.” That wasthe mercy of Kitchener. Cometh hie madness now ! He does not desire as ye desire, nor devises ae ye devise : He is preparing a second host— an army to make you wise. Not at the mouth of hie clean-lipped guns shall ye learn his name again, But letter by letter, and many letters, at the mouth of hia chosen men. He has gone back to his own city, not seeking presents or bribes, Bat openly asking the Erglish for money to buy vou Hakims a: d scribes, Knowing that ye are forfeit by battle and have no right to live, He begs for money to bring you learniag— and a)l the English give. It is their trea ure—it is their pleasure—" thus are their hearts inclined. For Allab created the English mai—tbe maddest of ail mankind ! They do not consider the meaning of Thinge; tLey consult not creed or clan. Bebold they clap the tlave on the back and bebold he becometh a: an! They tenibly carpe: the earth with dead, and before their cannon cocl, They wslk unarmed by twos and threes to Cali iue living to school. How is this reasou (why is their reason) to judge a scholar’s worth By casting a bal! atthree straight sticks an‘ 4-fending the same with a fovrth ? But this iney do (whch is doubtless a epell) and otber matters more strange, Until, by the operation of years, the bearts tbeir sch \lare change; Till these make come and go great boats or engines upon the rail; (But alweys the English watch near by to prop them when they fail) Till there make liws of their own choice and Judges. f their own blood; And all the mad English ovey the Judges and say that tbe law is good. Certainly they were mad from of old: but I think one new thing the mag'c whereby they work their n agic—wherefrom their fortunes 8} ring— May be tua ibey show ell p ople their magic and ask no price in return. W berefore, since ye are bund to that mag- ic, O Hubsbee mceke baste and learn! That Certainly also ix Kitchener mad. But one sure thing I know— {f he who broke you be minded and teach you, to his Madrisrsa go ! Go, aud carry your shoes in your hand and bow your head on your breast, For he who did pot slay you in sport he will not teach you in jest. Rupyarp Kipuine. VerviveWvedededWe dN veWedeuvevedredddy % = We Want The Address % OF EVERY SUFFERER from heart weakness or disease—or from any disease caused by or comp icated with imper« fect circulation, imflammation or swelling, of which the symptoms may be dizziness, pal- pitation, inflammation in brain, stomach, liver, kidneys, feet or other parts where biood ac. cumulates in sluggish veins. Send address and stamp and receive litera- ture explaining the modern remedy which is for the first time offered tothe yublic outside of the great hospitals. Howard’s Heart Relief always relieves. & & May be had at drug stores or by mail at 5oc. per box, 5 boxes for $2. S$. W. HOWARD, 71 Victoria St., Torouto, Ont single Office TO LET In Cameron Block apply to HORACE HASZARD| Saveda Life. ee Rrysipelas and Imupre Blood Were Doing Their. Deadly Work. Paine’s Celery Compound Gives Mrs. Gallagher a New Lease of Life. Exposure to cold, indigestion and dys- dyspepsia, debility, impure blood, run- down system, living iv badly ventilate! rooms and poor surrounding hygienic conditions, are ail causes of erySipelas. It will afford comfort to thousands to know that. with ordinary care and the use of Paine’s Celery Compound, the many dangers of erysipelas can be en- tirely avoided. When any of the sym- ptoms above are noted, promtuess in the use of Pai.e’s Celery Compound will quickly banish ail dangers. If, unfortunately, you are subject to the d'seuse and haye not u 6! Dr,! he'ps’ great presc’iption, we say, with a de- sire for your welfare, give Paine’s Celery Compound an instant trial, so that you may be abl: to fully judge of of its worth. Mr. John Gillagher, Mzerbdieton, P. C., one of the many saved fiom death by Paine’s Celery Compound, writes as follows: In the winter of 1897 I had a severe attack of erysipelas. At the same time my blood was out of order, | was com. pletely rundown and so Weak that 1 oou'd not stond alone. I commenced at once to use your Paine’s Celery Conipound, and = after taking fieu bottles J was greatly bencfited, and seemed to take a new lease of life. [know from experience that Paine’s Celery Compound is pos- sessed of all the merits claimed for it, and I will recommend it to a!] suffering from erysipelas, headache or stomach troubles. I also consider Paine’s Celery Compound the greatest of all blood purifiers. I keep some of the Compound at all times in my house, and use it aS a family medicine.” —$—$—$ $$$ —_— a SPECI CHRISTMAS SLE Our store is now in fn]l bloom with ‘very necessity for the holidays. This is the place to get up-to-date goods. Dinner sets, Tea sets, Water sets, Berry sets, Toilet sets. Beautiful lampsall styles very cheap. All kinds of new Fancy China and Glass, eT ---- 4L50.... A splendid lot of Fancy Goods in Albums, Dressing Cases, Manicures, Neck- tie boxes, Photo frames &c. &c. All kinds of Dolls, Toys and Games very cheap. ... FHOTOS.... Don’t forget we are making Cabinet Photos eitber on flat or gloesy paper for 3 00 per doz. Cc. LEWIS ‘yunvyside. Jorth Side Market House. Look Here forChristmas LIFE SIZE PORTRAIT OFFER S.F. TarBush for The High Grade Art Co’y, who is well known tor the High- est Grade work on the island, to com- pete with the cheaper grade of work which is going around, will give a 16x20 water color pictures from tintypes, Cabis nets or frem group pictures for $4.50 and give free with each order a Regent Camera with fu!! instructions how to use it. Any boy or girl can readily learn to photograph. We wil! give a16x2U sepia for $4.00, a camera also with it, a 16x20 Crayon with frame and camera, only $5.09, a Tinted Crayon with frame and camera Only $5.50; also some nice Easels for premiums.. Beware of others who it is sail use this Company’s name, bold your order for or write to 8, F. Tarsuss Ch’town. their onlv representive on the Island. — t4d—ddewit EE ny - o. 3 $e EE TC eee, PPSGRG +18 COOD BUYERS Will be quick to see the supesior make of our Ready-to Wear Clothing....+.- Fit-Reform is the best in fit, quality, and workmanship and th? prices are only aslale over half what it cost to get the same goods made to crder. A 1 sizes in stock, We can fit the tall man, the short man, the thin mun, the st\u! man, the tall man, the poor man, the rich man, the big haarte] man,the msan man, in fact the man we cannot suit with FIT-REFORM is no man at all. Don’t waste your time ard squande: jour money looking over Shoddy Cloching, when you can bry the best that is made right in here from the WONDERFUL CHEAP MEN We don’t a-k yoa to buy o.r goods unless we can demonstrate x . - i : to you beyond a shadow of adoubt that ours 1s the best aud that ours is the cheapesi. Hivery garment guaranteed, your money back if it goes wrong. If you don’t like to take our word come in and see and then if you cannot see the superior make ot our goody over those sold by others then we can only come to one conclusion and that is that you don’t know anything about clothing. In that case it would be advisable to place yourself in our’ hands as we have areputation at stake that we would not care to sacrifice for the few paltry cents that we make ona SPECIAL Ge Hundred Raetry Mate Sut Made by the Tryon Woolen Mulls double or singl breasted for $8, 9 10. Fit-Reform suits $10, 12, 15, and 18, Fit-Reform overcoats $12, 15, 18, and 20. Remember we are sole agents for Messrs Johnston’s ready to wear clothing and those two firms are the best makers +f high class clothing in Canada. SITIES SS ~»e & e @ = 7 PROWSE BROS The Wonderful Cheap Men gp te ee a ey DESIRAELE -- PRESENTS GENTS CHILDREN 8 LADIES Snow Moccasins Moccassins Moccasins Patent Shoes $1.65 Patent Slippers 92c Box calf skatingBoot $2.10 Hockey Boot $2.10 Skating boots 78¢ Ru bber Boots To-ddlers Boots Peb do $1.48 (hand bottomed) Felt Boots Feit Slippers Ice Creepers Slippers Kid and Velvet Leather Leggings Gaiters Kid Slippers Trunks Chock Slippers Cloth Gaiters Overshoes Overshoes Valises A job lot of lcdies expensive slip} ers sold at a bargain toclear out. Come and see, GORE - BROS.