; several rcoms need new VVal I 8 ._ .. ,~.-_-¢.tf~.>¢~esv>¢l*>Qf¢r»i1rvasvs;er»»¢_ze'~,-arf: THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN MARCH 27, 1899 i I .i _‘__ , _ - - __ . i i Yes, ask your wife about it. See if she doesn’t tell you tha r_of_“P Paper. Yes, and you know she’s ofte told you it was hard to ge pretty papers piiced -low. 'I`hat’s where ASI( °“""i° comes in. c+’»I3 lllllllll lllilitlillillilillllilllillllllillllllllllliiilllill Think of it choosing from Y0 u r the full line of one of Cauada’s . f § best wall paper houses, Nearly a thousand different patterns. Prices iron lc per roll up. \ That’s what I offer and I , pay the freight. ' “You leave your order I do the rest.” ` lllltill 15 ‘ F' .; . F4 - Summerside DJK. CURRI Currie’s Bookstore, #MM ~itf~'»i 1~ »' it MlWWM 'I lil § %#=#dt#Ht¥###%####iti%##it%th### -~ Q. rio- Q '-1 ft ch Q. ll it in one setting. f reat and fill in one setting. again. ` _ ay asimpression is taken. or -comfort of our patients. We can take the worst case of abcessed or ulcerated tooth an _ We can take any number of such teeth and make them ight in one sitting, and fully guarantee them not to ache or abces `We have everything required and up to-date for best work an We make metal Plates oi' Vulcanite plates and put them i '\ ,Wil .l Nlilw ' ,'i 'l»‘ ill ,lv vi, il, , mm ` ¥¥##¥S## ## TEETH Are you thinking of coming to town to have some dental wor one Z Is your time limited Z Let us tell you what we can do. We can take the worst case of an aching tooth and treat an WE SAVE TEETH. Dt)N’T HAVE A TOOTH EX- _ACTED because you are told that it cannot be filled. We ave the experience and methods for saving teeth. We do PAIN- ESS DENTISTRY by use of the famous erlin Method and by Electricit We make Crown and Bridge Work and put it in places am , lace same day as impression is taken. hahahaha# Persons from out of town will see the great advantage of com- ing to see us, as they can have their Dental Work done withou loss of time, and fully guaranteed in every respect. Cnr prices are lo v, and each branch in charge of a. specialist. gxaminations and advice free. Call and see specimans of Teeth without plales, dr BERLIN DENTAL PARLOHS CHARLGTETOWN. easeaaaaasaaaaaeeaaaasaana Dr. Chasels Preparations Have Merit. ` QLDEST AQT1VE JQURNALI For Piles. Eczema, Salt Rheum, Pin \Vorms and all skin diseases Dr. Chase`s is a positive cure. It is recommen 'ed by Dr. C. M. Harlan, of the American Journal of Health. ‘ Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure with blower included will cure insipient Catarrh in a few hours; Chronic Catarrh in one mon- th`s treatment. Dr. Chase’s Kidnev-Liver Pills are the only combined Kidney-Liver Pill made ano will positively cure all Kidney- Liver troubles. I RAPIDLY MOVING STARS. Some of the stars move with a velo city of fifty miles a second. Z~li¢ Those Tired Kidneys. Dr. Chase’s Kidney Liver Pills help tirde kidneys to do what they must do _ if you are to be a healthy msn or woman. 4 ' _ . , I ,.,-». . ._ , _.-.lim -»g ,gi -F.. a ,_ .,419 ~,~.e¢.,_.m.».x . , . _ , . , . JA g. . _ . _ ,. . .. . \ _ ev-f' '- ..- r ,z-’.= 7 J 1 1 “ i A titlllll EU llllilllii aaaaraaauauaaaasaeaaasaaaaaaaaaaaaa PT Q-» D-i i F-* ._ ‘< I3 FP 9 i l. Ritter Leopold von Blumencrnn, editor rfthe Vienna Eremdeu who has just completed his nine t year, is probably the oldest active paper man in the world. lie is at work in his office every day, re less of the weather. He was for yin the diplomatic servise, but has on the staff of the Fremdeu Blatt fo , years. t Montague, of Dunnville,Cured of rand Itching Piles Mr. Robert Montague, of Dunn Ont : writes.--"Was troubleb with ing Piles for five years and was so ulcerated, they ,were very painf much so. that I _could not sl tride almost every medicine when I was recommended to u Chase’s Ointment. I purchased a and from the first application got Have used two boxes and am now pletely cured.” -l_@?...__._ 88 k snuuiuiuiutanuitnitiiuuwiitinuiuuuiuuiusi ls'sm= Anglais-ef ee. Riccnran monthly business meeting of the Y. M. C. A. .to-night at 8 o‘clock. Mn. W. P. Rochas. ieturnedhomo ` on Saturday evening from a trip through the eastern part. of the Island. Mn. and Mics. E. S. McPHAi1. of Crapaud spent Saturday and Sunday in towu.the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Mc-7 Phail. Tni-: county court was in session here Friday and Saturday. The docket was a large one, but a number of cases were settled out of court. - V MR. McCni-zsnr, editor of the Guan- DIAN, ou D`Arcy McGee, in Market _- Hall on Tuesday, Apiil the 4th. al 8 o’clock. Proceeds in aid of the public library fund. - THE Charlotttetown Engineers will give'their military entériainment in Ma1lretHall here on Easter Monday evening. April 3rd. Their two appear- ances before Charlottetown audiences a short time ago were received with much pleasure and satisfaction. Their appearance here should draw I. full house as, it desires. The programme will appear in these columns tomorrow. Watch for it. - THE annual meeting of the patrons of the Central Creamery was held Sat- urday afternoon. Mr. R.;McPhee.Cape Travoise, presided. Mr. John Camp- bell, Secretary, read the annual report ‘which was unamiously adopted asf a satisfactory showingfor the year’s work. The following board of directors was appointed for the ensuing year: R. Mc- Phee,T1'averse ;Wm Hacker, Wm. G. Taylor, J. VV. Clark, Hugh McNeil. Wm. Lefurgey, S. R. Sillikor, Hubert McDonald, Clement Perry. f Msssns McGoccaiv & Wnienr have completed the attractions io their store and are now fully equipped in all- their departments. A new grocery depart- ,meut has been opened up, a new milli- nery room finished and thoroughly furnished. a new gents furnishing _ de- partment completed, and a new oiiice occupying one side of the rear of the store. fini.-hed. These alterations and additions add very much to the comfort and convenience of the store and will give them greater facilities than ever for attending to the wants of their customers. Mr. Geo. li. Baker had charge ofthe work. THE suggestion of thc editor of the Pioneer, that the contemplated amend- ments to the by-laws of this town should include the substitution of ithe term “Mayor” for “Chairman of the Town Council” is a grand one and it is hoped that those Councillors, who are now making history for themselves, and the town will act upon it when opportu nity offers. The esteemed editor’s` rea- sons for the change, namely: that under present conditions the im- pressien may get abroad that Summer- ‘side is a one horse town, may,however, be subject to the retort that that 'con- tition might be as desirable as a. one Mayor town. But by all means let as have a Mayor, and by the way, while providing for the Mayor, would it be within the bounds of wise legislation to provide for a horse or two te be kept somewhere in the vicinity of the mar- kat house so that their services would be available in case of fire P This would frequently obviate the necessity, as at present, of stopping mud-digging Oper. _ ations on the Bedeque mussel -beds when the fire engine horses are called to duty by a fire alarm. p 3 A PLEASANT and profitable hour was enjoyed at the quarters. of The Boys’ 9 Brigade last Friday evening. Rev.W. L H .Smith,who was present by invitation, l gave the Boys a ten minutes address. T He congratulated them on their fiuo ap- i pearance and the privilege of being 1 members of so excellent an organiza- i tion. He had for some years watched 7 -and studied the Brigade, and had come 4 tc the conclusion that it was a very ex- Ai cellent means of spreading the influence , of the Kingdom of _God among our i future men. He then stated his suoject j “Purity” He introduced his address ' by a capital illustration: Take a glass Chief-of water and look through it._ You may settle in your mind in this way whether it be fit for use or not. If it is not, it is because ‘of particles of dirt detected in it. This foreign element rendered it impure. We . The Great Fire at the Windsor N. Y. Was an awful calamity, but cannot be remedied. Now, Catarrhozoue eau U1¢q.,-`, ,remedy and is a positive cure for catarrh and kindred dreaded diseases. This statement is backed up by bushels of testimonials, which we have and' can produce. Snuifs, ointmeuts, washes,&c; have been proved useless in giving relief or curing catarrh, bronchitis, irritable thrbat, rasal and ear passages, but tfalarrhozone, the ozouated air cure, does not only give immediate relief, buteffects a pernaineut cure. Why delay all know the difference between the .the butt of a cigar, and removed it sud- Send at once for sample bottle '-audi pure air without, and the impure air we take into our lungs when we go in- to a stuffy, ill-ventilated room. All boys are noi pure. When they sro not, it is because of some elements of filth which viiiate his nature. One of these is impurity of thought. N o boy should , harbor any thought which he would be ashamed to tell his mother or his ot- tioers, or his best friends. Evil thoughts are like the minute worms which may in time undermine the strongest struc- ture. Keep your thoughte pure. Second- ly, all boys are not pure in their words. He illustrated this by observations of his own on the streets, and showed that impurity of word undermined a boy’s dr a man’s self respect. The evil is intensified bv the fact that the impu- rity of one boys speech' invariably cou- taminates another. We can all look back to the one who taught us our first lessor in vices wretched-thing io be remembered for. Boys of the Brigade must guard this self 'respect and this goodiuilneuce and so _must keep their words pure. Lastly, hovs must be pure in their acts. To be pure in out- ward act, is to be atrue man, one that is not ashamed if anything he does, not ` like the little boy whom he had mei a few days ago on Water St., smoking denly on his approach and dodged. The Reverend gentleman a of his wonderful cure of Scrofula by the public some fifteen years ago,,the case was so remarkable, as it had defied the skill of leading hysicians and surgeons in Canada, t at many were inclined to believe that the disease would surely come back on him again. ' To this day, though, the reverend gentleman, who is now stationed at Kirkton, Ont., has never had a sign or symptom of this terrible aliliction returning, which is another strong and convincing proof, added to the long stay cured. The following is the statement Rev. Wm. Stout made of his case in 1883. ln the autumn of the year 1859 an indolent, painless swelling was observ- ed~by my friends to be rapidly grow- ing on the left side of my_ neck. Iodine was freely applied during the followingwiiiter, but swellingcontinued to enlarge, until it reached the size of a large apple. i - _ In the spring of 1861 I apphed to Dr. Symmes, of Mea.fordl(now dead), who blistered it and punctured it but pronounced it devoid of pus ; but upon a. deep incision being made over half a pint: of genuine pus was discharged. Immediately it ealed, _and began slowly to grow again; and in the spring of 186 I had ii; operated on by Dr. Chas. Bamhardt, of Owen Sound, after which a terrible inflammation having set in, I went to the hospital at Toronto, and was about a month under the care of that erninentsurgeon, Dr. Aikens. He treated the swelling by free incisions, and by setons which were continued for six months with no real benefit. In December of that year I was again under the care of Drs. Barnhardt and Allen Cameron for three months. It continued empty- ing and iilling until March of 1864, when, it beingpclosed over, I attended ' the Grammar School at Kincardine, . but in ]uue had it operated on by Drs. Moore and l\'Iartin, then practising in that town. I had it opened that fall several times, and had it filled with the tincture of iodine for the purpose of destroying the sac. I began teaching in school section No. 1, Kincardine, in Feb., 1865. In about three weeks it violently attacked me again, and I was advised to go to Dr. P. R. Shover, of Stratford who, with Dr. Hyde, opened the abscess and applied iodine freely into the inner walls`of the cavity, which destroyed the rotundity of the sac, but produced no other benefit. In june, 1867, it inflamed again most violently, and I was pnder _the care of Dr. S. Secord, of Kincar- dine, for six months. -, From that time until 1873 it was an open unsightly sore. I removed to Virgil,-township of Niagara, and taught during 1872, trying to labor, though under intense suffering. At Niagara I was so com-. pgetelyrworn down that I consulted r. ilsou, who said he could only . ' prescribes. nourishing and stimulating a - i" '.;"~_¢`1;'f"e'.‘.-,_,;"f=.w - 'j ,- . `;_;,»§.f‘,-2,1 1 ff » Y’ if ., ' ‘ - f :'. f' "' - . W -;» _~v :,. f _ A _;,~_,~;.-,_ ..,.»,-.,; _'_ _.-...__ _ " _~,' _V e -_ _ - =, _ ‘ 1 - . . .»,, »~-,-;- -5-. ..».. 1 < » fs -. »i~'.- ,.,».l‘~.s-<1. 3 iuii»1sr,,ioeems. cami, sion. 7 j / l tN.c.;1jei,gf_>aa cm Kiaga»n,_oaa , » ?i0 - » -s __¢ ‘few remarks. While listening to the ,,ad~'1ress, he saw-not their faces, but ,and he saw, as they could not now, I the most skilled pliysici ° ° I , do him good-B.B.B._ cured him 17 years ago; and to _ this day there has been no sign of the disease returning. i I . , Burdock Blood Bitters was given to list we have already published, that when B.B.B. cures you you’re cured to_ .sysem en in , dictindtdertomeet thedminon would itnot, round a coiner. The season ofthe boy’s act was- the consciousness that ho » manly. , It is unmanlyffor ii boy to ill use a dog or any other dumb animal. lt is ,yuniuanly for o big boy io beat or illuse a small-I, er. If so inclined let him always choose I one bigger than himself. He made a' strong appeal to the boys to de- velope ihe spirit of comradship, in helping each ` other upward. in lifting a fallen com'-"f‘»°. find. helpiug’a weak one to be manly after the manner of the Boys’ Brigade ideal.~ Rev.J.M.Withycombe followed with a those of the companions of his youth, these principles worked out. It was not the boy who swore or bullied or spoketilthely who made a success of life. He remembered many who lacked moral fibre as illustrated by Mr. Smith, and who madosad ,shipwreck of their life. He was struck by the frequent phrase “You members o the Boys’ Brigade.” It brought to his mind the fact that all through the 'great British Empire. the best boys to be fbund were in'the Boys’ Brigade. Think what it means to be among the future history makers of the great people who shall in future as now dominate the world. was doing something shameful.-un-if _ _ _-_`».» Ansghahoun-as-ll-Iwo-nhnlhil 4 lllEV. KST() S_T’St sufferer for 23 years-tried ans .in Ontario, who failed to 18 3 I moved to Port Credit Public Sc 1 but after eighteen months resigned my charge, afterwards assum ing charge of Glen Williams School, County Halton In May, 1874, suffer in gterribly, I again went to Toronto to the same Dr Aikens that had treated me in the General Hospital in 1863 That summer and fall I was greatly afflicted, and suffered fearfully during the winter of 1874 5 The next summer I went to Dr Mullin, of Brampton, under great suffering. He treated me very skillfully and kindly, advisin me precisely as did Dr Wilson, of iagara jauuary, of 1876, I became head master of Bath School. During a nine months’ sta at Wark- worth, Dr. McRae and Dr. goldsmith, of that village, both operated on me, as also did Dr. Mitchell, while I was attending college at London. After my ordination on the 18th of ]une, 1878, I volunteered to take the Bisliop’s poorest mission, and through painful trial labored on, under the providence of God. I now have three fairly good churches. Starting from nothing, -I have made for myself a pleasant and desirable home. When came 'to Wiartpn in july, 1878, I was again violent y attacked and con- fined to bed for over two weeks under ,the care of Dr. Wigle, who incised the abscess, and by care I did my w_ork until the following spring, when his services were again necessary, and again in December, 1879, I went to London and consulted Dr. More- -house, and afterwards Dr. Woodruff. ` Although I had to work very hard that winter, I was under constant suffering. The abscess assumed a cancerous appearance. I assisted the Bishop in March of 18- ' 79 at St. james’ Church, Westminster, ; at which time my neck was com lete I covered with a white cloth. lpam ‘rejoiced to say that I rio longer need to cover my neck to hide my affliction, and fear no recurrence of the same.' Dr. Wigle, of Wiarton, operated on me in May, 1880, and again in I December of that year. I thenwent to London, and on my retum I was again attacked more violently than ever. _ I was almost on the verge of despair, having been treated by the best uieilacal skill the country contain- ed, as the many eminent names pre- , viously mentioned will show, When ' I had exhausted thc skillful resources of the regular profession, I then resorted to nearly all the patent medicines' that promised to cure sc_rofulous and blood diseases, but 7 without any benefit whatever. When in an almost helpless condition, I tried Burdock Blood Bitters. I took it for about four months, and in that length of time used several bottles internally, and having faith in its common-sense like rational promises, and believing that if it was a. good .alterative blood-purifyingqymedicine that would act uWn uw t wh taken , why, I 1 b e powé' ,of absorption, excite . duh: 7 When Rev. Wm. Stout’s statement offered no permanent' benefit. I_n is 'Em 4--______ ~¢n_¢».A4_.¢»i-_ ._. I\\n-auinnnn-n__m-ni KPFli§\§F?'B¥'¢l_|G\ Fl l'*U‘L_i\_|rf v =o"'.:r'l\>airt>fi-4 r-mms: RUEED 92.!! CTG- Ma iizg.-F3,