i, me [t is easier to turn a blood. hound from the scent than to shake off a disease which is fairly ,rooted in your constitution. No ‘ ubling and \ ( ive tl ne trail t off ind th isease pursues ju ssliy along the tra and debility ( ‘ < h ar | ve ' to sift out bil puri the stomach ; per work et ts no nourish filled up with tite a , and vital ener mies fail, and frequently the delicate lung es } . rT +4 YD > © tissues bex I but there is no ne in the wor! silly and thoroughly as Dr. Piet s Golden Medical Discovery td tly reanimates the liver and diges t ns and gives therm power to pro au hdant supply « pure, red, life- giv d which stops the wasting pro ce“s and creates fresh tissue, healthy flesh : I t strength 1 educated and ‘ physician. Dr. Pier I 1 f nearly thirty vears chief con « *-hysician of the Invalids’ Hotel and | Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N.Y. His rooo- | page tilustrated book, ‘‘The People’s Con mon Sense Medical Adviser,’’ will be sent fr for the st ef custonts and mailing o1 stamp loth-bound coveries of . ' lung and { ari sting d ¢ . wed beyond 1¢ reach of r >< re pa , 4 pa ba r4 be re ae r4 a ra ra ZIIIIIITIA Ts CORSET FIT Intimate avatomica! and the exercise of g) absolutely necessary i cutting but in the bo of corsets, if durability fort are to be attained. knowledge & “at skill are nt only in the ing of a pair fii and com- eoch -. D. has its hickness ant m according it is called Iu the celebrated F Corsets each bone or calculated width and each its correct positi to the special service upon to perform. Rigidity will be found where it is . fiexibiliay of greater or vided in ac- .ods of other g to supply eight a per- steel necessary, lesser degree, being pt cordance with the dem position-, the aim be with the minimam of ° feet fitting, thoroughly comfortable, ye. durable corset. Tre tailor-cut hand-sewed French Corset, the Peo. ive skill. It t comfort- and the best ® ie a marvel of construc is lightest, strongest, a able, most fashionable corset made. For sale throughout Canada. Ip all sizes and for figures $1.00 to $30.00 per parr. DITIITI ISIS SI EE Aaa AAS TIMI I IAA ISITI IIIT IIIA I TIO CrmnIrt TITISISITSSS PSST IIISII IIIS ITIL IRE IITIILIAL ITI : — crm = Tf a — aS —, Tf2 A man has opportunity of showing only these articles of jewelry in his external dress. A ring, studs or stick pin, and a watch chain. The chain the conspicious item. f[ im por tant, therefore, that its quality should be as good a* the mar can afford, and its stvle be dis- tinguished for taste and cbar- acter. [ have taken epecial pains in electing a large stock of men’s Chaios, I am sure you will say (hat the patterns are the most tastefulever shown in this city aod the prices have sufficient range to fit every pocket book. W. W. WELENER THE GREAT WATCH HOUSE Fee SESE TS OSS ane ee is AARAAATAAAAAAAASA AAR SA AP EAS Se FE EYES Ey YE yy Top Quality Bottom Prices Thereis no doubt abdout it when you buy KEROSENE OIL The best is always the cheapest WE SELL.... Pratts Astral aud dircolight Oil at very low prices. Lower prices tor 4 gal. lots, Sanderson & Co. ‘ THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 15 1898 The Astute Lion, One day a toothless lion, whose mus- cles were unstrung by age, lay in a shady place by the streamlet side. He set up a dismal groaning, which soon drew acrowd cf hyenas around him. ‘What is the matter?”’ they asked. He explained to them that the days of his kingship were over, and with tears pouring down his face protested that he was unable to defend himself againsteven the weakest of his enemies. On learning this the hypocritical sympathy before shown by the hyenas changed at once to open malice. They threw themselves upon the prostrate monarch and worried him with their teeth. Inside of five minutes they all lay rigid in death. **Golly,’’ chuckled the lion, ‘I’m glad I took the precaution to dust my hide with strychnine before I tested the kindness of these good friends. A fel- low learns something by having been in poli tics.”’ So saying he calmly went to sleep.— Criterion. His Worst Offense, When it was proposed to lessen the list of crimes punished by death, Lord Eldon objected to the noose being ban- ished in cases of petty shoplifting. ‘‘The small shopkeepers will be ruined by this exemption,’’ said the old Tory lord chancellor. Another Tory, a judge, so venerated the sovereign that he included in his re- gard any article *elonging to the king, no matter how far removed from actual] possession. A tailor had beea condemn- ed for the murder of a soldier, and the judge tacked on this addition to the sentence of death: **And not only did you murder him, but you did thrust or push or pierce or project or propel the lethal weapon through the belly band of his breeches, which were his majesty’s!’’ Past Salaries of Actors, A number of autograph letters of Ed- mund Kean supply some interesting in- formation about the salaries of actors early in the century. One relates to an offer by Mr. Ellison offering Kean £3 a week as acting manager of ‘‘the new theater in W#¥ch street.’’ Later this rose as high as £25 amonth. In 1826 Kean was offered $12,000 a year to go to America. In the prime of his popu- larity he received £200 for a week in Edinburgh, and apparently reached the highest point when Mr. Bunn wrote from the Theater Royal, Dublin, on Feb. 8, 1829, and offered him £50 a Bight to play in Dublinand Cork.— Liverpool Mercury. The Laplanders drink a great deal of smoked snow water, and one of the na- tional drinks of the Tonquinese is ar- tack flavored with chickens’ blood. The sacred crocodiles of Egypt were buried with her proudest kings. Dr. A. W. CHASE IN CONSULTATION. TEST THE KIDNEYS They Are the Great Feeders of Our Bodies—the Purity of the Blood is Dependent on Their Cleans- ing Powers. Dr Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills are the Only Combined Kidney and Liver Pill—What They Have Ac- complished is But a Guarantee of What They Will Do. There's a time to all, old and young, man or woman, when poor health brings trouble, anxiety, and burdens hard to stand up under, and one’s ef- forts to rid himself or herself seem cnly to be baffled at every turn, and we are prone to grow discouraged. That is not the time to give up— but the time for action, the time to seek out the seat of the trouble, and ect as your best judgment and the experience of others will help you, guarding against mistakes in the treat- ment adopted for your particular ail- ment, READ WHAT AMOS CARTER, MELBOURNE, ONT., SAYS: Spasms Lasted for Hours at a Time —Left Great Aching and Soreness— Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills Proved His Deliverer. I was for over six months troubled vith very sharp pains in the region ef my kidneys, the spasms lasted for half an hour at a time, and left me with great aching, soreness and pain. I tried many remedies, but they did me no good. I commenced taking Dr. Chase’s Kidney-liver Pills accord- ing to directions. I had not much faith that they would cure me, but noticed a change fer the better. It may seem | incredibls, but after taking the second box the pains all left me entirely, and I have not had them since.—Amo Carter, Melbourne. Price 25 cents per hox, all dealers. re The Rules of the House, *‘How can I learn the rules of the house?’’ asked a newly elected Irish member of the late Mr. Parnell. ‘By breaking them,’’ was the prompt reply of the Irish leader, who, as is well known, spoke from experience on the point. But few members would care to .dopt that heroic method of obtaining the desired knowledge, and their task in mastering the rules is rendered all he more difficult by the curious fact that many of these regulations are un- written. Some will be found in the standing orders, or permanent rules; but those that deal with etiquette and decorum ha not bee a Go iclally rt cords ad any- Where, save in a few quaint and obso- lete regulations to be found in the old issues of the journals of the house cr in the minutes of proceedings taken by the clerk and published daily during the Session. lor instance, a strange rule fer the guidance of the speaker is set down un- der the 15th of February, 1620, ‘‘The speaker not to move his hat until the third congee.’’ Propriety of carriage in leaving the chamber is thus reed, ‘Those who go out of the house ina confused manner before the spexler to forfeit 10 shillings.’’ Thisrule is dated the 12th of November, 1640. Again we find that on the 23d of March, 1693, it was ordered, ‘‘No member to take tobacco into the gallery or to the table ittees. ’’—Nineteenth sitting at comm (‘ey tory voutary. Useful Siwash Dogs. If you are going to prospectin Alaska and expect to travel much, a pair of good ‘‘Siwash”’ dogs are very essential -—2zlmost indispensable. These dogs greatly differ from our domesticated dogs, taking to the harness like a duck to water. They do not bark at stran- gers. They are kind and affectionate, showing the wolf in them only among their kind. It seems to be against their principles to get off the trail to let an- other team pass. This means a fight, an exciting epi- sode if the teams number five or six dogs each. In an instant the wildest confusion takes place. Dogs, harness and each driver witha club in his hand form one grand jumble from which or- der can only be restored by some of the dogs being knocked senseless. The dogs are trained to ‘‘gee’’ and ‘‘haw,’’ like an ox aud stop at the word ‘‘whoa!’’ ‘‘Mush’’ is the word used generally by the whites to indicate go ahead, a per- \version of the Indian word ‘‘husch.”’ The dogs prefer their master, but if lent for use they work as faithfully as for their master.—San Francisco Chron- icle. Damaging. A Chicago politician—a veteran in tho ranks—was recently accused by a former henchman of having offered him a bribe of $500 to do a job for him. The wily ‘‘second fiddle’ kept the $500 and afterward brought it in evidence against his former chief. While the scandal was being blown about town an acquaintance of the accused met him one day and slapping him good natured- ly on the back said chaffingly: ‘*Well, John, so yeu were going to drop $500 in Bill’s way, were you?’’ The politician colored, or, to speak ac- curately, his already florid complexion took on a purple tinge, as he said by ‘way of explaining his agitation (his : original language is revised): ‘‘Now, I don’t give a hang for the ‘talk about bribing him. That ain't | nothing. But it hurts my reputation to _have my friends think I was such 2 ‘clam as to give that heeler $500 when 'I could have bought him with a ham!’’ | ~New York Commercial Advertiser. | Forgot Something. Helen and her father and mother were dining in a hotel, and Helen, who was 6 years old, had never before dined { in a public place. The waiter was so attentiveand cour- \ teous that Helen’s mother said that he 'must be tipped at the end of the meal. ' The word tipped was one Helen had never heard used except in connection / wth a dump cart cz her father’s prem- ises. When they got up to leave the dining room, she said: ‘‘Oh, papa, papa! You forgot to dump the waiter!’’—Youth’s Compan- | ion. \ Both Satisfied. Hicks—W heeler and Brassey met for the first time yesterday, and they got ‘on together famously. They kept up their talk until late in the evening. ' Wicks—What were they talking ' about? Hicks—RBicycles and golf. ‘ Wicks—But Wheeler doesn’t knew ' the first thing about golf. | Hicks—Neither does Brassey know anything about bicycling. But that | makes no difference. Each kept it up _on his favorite topic without listening to the other.—Boston Transcript. | His Umbrella. |. The other evening a man was rush- | &g through the streets of London hur- | rying to an appointment wher a swell | passed in front of him who held his ‘umbrella at a dangerous angle. The ‘hasty pedestrian pulled the umbrella “away from the swell, and then, step- | ping around to him, said in suavest '! tome: *‘Oh, by the, way. here’s your um- ‘relia. Ifound it in my eye.”’—Pick } Me Ur. _—--—- Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Brome Quinine Vabiets | All druggists refuna the money ifii faile io . cure, 53e. | you your furnishings. - CLOTHING. — ee oe Sa ee et ee We have made up from ourown Cloth— Suits for men and boys put against anything made for hard wear. Any man buying this class of goods always comes back after another suit. But as long as they give satisfaction we aint going to kiel. they wea. too long for us. Imported clothing we keep a good range, and our prices are right, These goods we wil Also pants, we can guarantee them every tizre. The an!y tault We can. safe’ say, no better value is offered in this city, Hats and Caps We are right in it—'et Give us us fit you this fall. In fact, we can and we will give 2, call at the BARCAIN CORNER BARGAIN CORNER. ‘ Wealth on Its Travels. | Miss Ollabrod — There’s a clever ' sculptress down this way. You ought |} | to see what she can make out of butter. | | Miss Ritch!ey Greest—She’s a good | one if she can make as much out of it, as my pa makes out of oleomargarine. | | —Chicago Tribune. Good Impulses. | Aman should aliow none but good | | impulses to stir his heart, and he’ should keep it free from any evil that | ' may beast it down and harden it.—Rev. | _d. D. Hammond. 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. TWIN TORTURERS! Lumbago and Rheumatism made Harmless by Dodd's kidney Pills. Lumbago and Rheumatism cause endless pain and suffering. Every man and woman who runs chances ot getting wet, or catching cold, is iiable to suffer from one or both. Our 6S és NE OD Oe OBO 0°38 OS OOOH 90B OR O° £ 990203 OOO 7 Dg OD OD D9 £59 O96 OD 90S 0S 0G OD O°] 00303 0°30 3 © g 60 Kcr Sale by Leadixg Wine and Spirit Merchants ¢y S B. Townsenp’ & Co., Monrrear, Sore AGENTS FOR ry ¥ CANADA. . ee HPP OVOP LP IVD EDD F024 DODO eofe*e]F WD PDO ODOW FO E6OOO]OOO HOODOO 0ODODO]D3DOO-4G hospitals are full of sufferers from these diseases; mone are more pain- ful. Every nerve is on fire; every joint is a centre of agony ; every mus- cle an area of torture. To move hand or foot makes the victim shriek with agony. Rheumatism makes more cripples } than all the railroad accidents that ever happened. ‘Twisted, mis-shapen caricatures of humanity, who cannot walk without misery, are to be seen every day. The kidneys are to blame. If they are healthy you needn’t fear Rheumatism or Lumbago. Dodd's Kidney Pills keep the kidneys healthy and cure Rheumatism and Lumbago. Dodd’s Kidney Pills aLways curR The steadily increasing demand for.... Dr. HARVEY’S SOUTHERN RED PINE: shows that those who have been using it have told their friends how it gives Immediate Relief te the most Obstinate Coughs and does not derange the digestion. HARVEY MEDICINE CO. 424 Sr. Pau. STREET, MONTREAL. 13. Fe a semen pen ana W sNYTEv —Immediate:vy, cvergeuc re- presenta’ives 'o handle oar superior line of duplicator, neostyle and mimengrarh +up- plies also twnewriter sanptie. splerdid opportunity for stenotvrist with s me e»pital. References. «.€incot & Clement, Montreal. 233 Ging. | To Reep Out the Cold. Changeable Weather throws the human machinery out ot gear and renders it more susceptible to prevalent ailments, After a “muggy” period the first cold day ‘strik2s home’ unless the system is well fortificd by strengthening stimulat- irg nourishment, of which the most perfect form ts BOY RIL. Wae-Keturn this advertisement to us with 2 cent stamp and we will send you Whonharts Great War Puzzle. We are offering $100.00 for the solution af this puzzle. V. BOVR . LIMITED 20 Farringdon St., and 25&27 St. Peter St London, England, Montreal, Canada. The Mutual Life tnsurance €o., New York RICHARD A. McCURDY, PRESIDENT. (The World’s Gieatest Company). Total Assets, .8$253,786,4237.66 Annual Income, 54,162,608.22 Surplus, 35,508,184.59 Insurance in Force, '936,6234,496.62 All Canadian Policy Holders secured by funds deposited with” the Gee— ernment of Canada. Policies payable in gold. Most liberal policies issued to suit all corts and conditions of insurers. J. A. JOHANSON, General Agent, Halifax, S. 8. PETERSON, Sectiel Aueate E. A. ROBERTSON JOHN MacEACHERN.