ae a: Fas 4 - * ae o* ns. a a Eee apa a. or © ac ill ia Home Failures And Serious Tosses From Use of Common and Adulterated Dyes. DIAMOND DYES Are Used By All Wise and! Economical Woman. The only pure, harmless and successful package Dvesfor home dyting are the Diamond D»ea. The imitation package aves and the common soap grease mixtures are ©O large- lv adulterated with foreign subsiances that they are pos ively dangerous t> use and No lady who values her garments will care to risk the covoriog powers of thi se terated dyestuil 4, Sut fice itto say, the colors are dull, muddy aod lifeleas,s J cannot stand the most or- handle. and materia } a@au dioary wa-hi ig. Tae D am oud Dyes have a long record of triumphs sed well-done work that has rever been cq ualied in the history of bome dves. In evecy part of the world thev give de'igbt and satistaction, and are hailed as true money savers. vasy, pleasant and profitable home dye- n:-is only possible with the vested and pupular Diamond Dyes. As there are stil! storekeepers who-eell interior package and soap grease dyes for the sake of long profits, see to it that your dealer gives you the Diamon? Dves when you ask for them. Everr 2 nua ne package ha< the name “Drameond.’ Itis poor judgment to pay ten cents for adulterate 1 dyes when you can buy the yuaranteed Diamond Dyes forthe same price. Send to Wells & Richardson Co., of Montreal, for book of directions and sample card of 48 colors; free to any address. GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the _nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., Homa@opathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SU EPPS'S GO¢ PPER AA ores MII III ITs | Corset Flushing i No wonder corset steels slip out when “Flushing” is mere sham. Genuine flush- % ing 18 done by hand and the silk stitches show both out and inside. Examine any ordinary cokect actl yott find eilk “Hushiog” on the outs‘de acd coitoa +tit~ ches on the in- side. Of course, such work is only imitation of the real haad work that tells in the durability of a corset. Vbe celebrated French, tailor cut hand-sewed, light ¢pring steel boned coreet, the 3 : : TIVULS LIRIAS CLIT IIIT eT ZITIMITTIs P. D i e . "| ion hand-flashing” corset. It is Re Lue ligntest, strongest, most com- fortable, most fashionable and best vA ; Ba corset made. Inall sizea and tor + all figures. $1.00 to $30.00 per i i ath yA ¥ MM OTITITISS IIITIITIIT ss Teste ——— i pee aim Rees ©4@ 2S 2.4506 2003 AD VICEAECUT Spice. When Pe pper, Ginger, Allsp re, Cin rdering a package of namov or Cream of Tartar from vour grocer you.can ai- ways feel sure of securing the best quality by askirg fur::: ‘ 9 owee + a ' We. ey & ; ne " ; Sa = yy . > LJ faa BOAO OOS i 2B BOSS 6 6668 TF BSBSHSD® | : ¢ ! : | | | | Woon’s PHOSPHODINE i ; } THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 22 1898. PAY FEES OR SUFFER The feo system rs more rigidly en- | forced on a big passenger steamship than anywhere else. It is one of the places where servants demand their fees and tell you the amoant that they think you ought to give them. While the waiters at restaurants and hotels expect fees for their services and will hint and may perhaps make it embarrassing for you if they are not paid they have not gone so far as to tell yon that they want a fee and prescribe the amount. Even porters do not dothat. They come around, brush ycur coat and hat and run the whisk over your trousers, but it is seldom. that they ask you for any money, let alone a specified amount. On the passenger steamers the stew- ards regard their fees as a matter of right as much as the steamship com- pany regards your passage money. It is possible to avoid paying the fees, as they are not collectable by law, but the passenger who does not pay them will have trouble in getting his luggage off the steamer, and it would be well for him to keep off steamers afterward where any of the servants of that boat are employed. The stewards seem to have some sort of fee guidebook or black list of passen- gers who do not give fees, so that they can make them sufferyon future trips Certain fees are regularly fixed and ex- pected, irrespective of the cost of the stateroom or the style in which a man travelg while certain other fees depend on the style. Foran ordinary passenger there are fees to be given to the state- room steward, the saloon steward, the deck steward, the smoking room steward and the barber and bath man. The fee to the steward who looks after your stateroom is about 10 shil- lings. The steward who waits on you at the table should receive the same fee. The deck steward, for bringing you an occasional drink and looking after your steamer chair and rugs, expects 5 shil- lings, but he will take half a crown. The smoking room steward expects 5 shillings, and if yon are in the smoking room @ great part of the trip he feels that he is entitled to as much as the stateroom steward or your waiter. A bath every day on the passage can be had for a 5 shilling fee. These rates are fixed by long custom. | The stewards can tel) whether or nota man understands the rates and if he will pay at the end of thetrip. If they do not think that he will, they give him hints from time to time until they get sorne assurance on his part that he recognizes the obligation of the fee sys- tem. If they think he will not pay, he will have a hard time of it. He will find that his stateroom is not well made up: that he does not get care when he |} is seasick; that he is served last at the table and does not get the things that | he ordered; that the wrong drinks and | cigars come to him in the smoking room, and that his steamer chair is can- stantly lost. The servants are as effec- ! tive aS seasickyncSS im making a man’s trip miserable. s | Theve {eer ~~ not to be paid until the Last day of the trip. The servants Very speedily find out at which place a passenger isto get off. If making his first trip, they are pretty sure to know it. It is advisable for him in that case to tell his stateroom steward and his waiter that he will give them the regu- lar fee at the end of the trip if they serve him properly and that if they do not they will not get a penny. If he tells them thisin the proper way, he will get as good service as the mam who is weil known. The last mofhing of the trip the stafe- fdsim wteWard comes round for bis fee 3 if the passenger does not offer it, the | steward suggests that it is evetorary to give him a fee, and that the regular fee is half a sovereigh. If anything less is offered him and ho thinks he cin get a half sovereign by refusing to s#tlpt | less, he will at once hand the fiFoffered ; sum back and say in ap itisoleit way } that he hever takes lela than the rege | lar fee. With miany passengers, particularly women, this remark and the tone ex- tract the 10 shillings. The saloon stew- ard does the same thing. Ths stewards work in with each other, and if a man eacceeds in avoiding the stateroom stew- rd the saloon steward will ask him for both himself and the stateroom steward As a man cannot get off the ship until it stops, there is no way of escaping these demands, which will be repeated | during the last day of the trip until the passenger succumbs. —New York Home Journal. aw The Great English Remedy. Six Packages Guaraztced ta promptly and permanently Ctre cll forms of Nervous Weakness, Er:vissions, Sperts- | atorrhea, Inpotency aud aff of Abust’or Eaecescs, Menial Worry, extessive vse opt effects oI : 3 Ne of Tovacco, Opiuntor Stimu- ' Beforeand After. oe nea dhet hei he Bie | firmity, Insanity, Consumption «1 dan carly grave. Has been prescri} 35 rears in thousands of cases; is the only Teliab’e and Ilonest Medicine known. Ask druggist for Wood's Phocphodiae; if , ed over he offers some worthless mecicine in place of tks, | inclose price in Jetter. and we will send by return mail, Price, one package, £1; six, $5. One will please, siz wil cure. Pamph‘ets free to any 2idrass, | The Wood Ccempceny, VWindcr, Ont., Carada. ; Sold in Charlottetown by George E, Hughes, Druggist. ' ) I. &S Sanford, THE POWER OF SHADOWS As antique runners passed from hand to hand the sacred torch, so the genera tions transmit to the generations which succeed them all that they have of light and knowledge, leaving them as a herftage the care of continuing the di- vine work of enfranchisement and of helping to dissipate the shadows of ig- norance. Little by little thess clouds are van- quished and disappear, and the touch of intelligence flames the more radiantly in the midst of the travailing masses. But all of a sudden a veil covers the torch—something surges up which seems like the darkness of another age. One feels that in a corner of this civi- lization monstrous things have place. Here they burn a woman eccused af sorcery; there in Suabia a tribunal con- demns to four days of imprisonment a laborer who had disinterred the corpse of an infant. He wanted to make brace- lets of its finger nails, which, according to a belief held in that country, consti- tute a sovereign remedy against cclic. And all the stories of vampires, of elfs, return to the mind with all the victims they have made and are making still. ’ Jt seemsin reading such things that the ‘‘power of shadows’”’ is still impen- etrable to all that science has done and that, as I have said, the effortis vain.— Figaro. On the Eating of Loons. Man is acreature of prejacice. In Scotland he will not eat oels; in Con- necticut he will not eat sturgeon, te royal fish of England, where the first one taken in the ‘Thames goes to the queen’s table; in New York he will not eat Jampreys, miscalled *‘)amper eels,’’ which are delicacies in Conrecii- cat, and in England some old king—I never could keep a record of kings— died from a surfeit of lampreys. With these prejudices in mind, and | hate all prejudices except those which | enter- tain, I decided to eat the loon. There may be differences among loons, as there are between pigeons and squabs. I prefer an adult pigeon to a squab, there is better chewing on it, but if a man wants real hard chewing, with a flavor of raw fish, let him tackle ' an adult loon. That bird could not be picked. It was skinned, and in its stom- ach there was a catfish recently swal- lowed, one partly digested and the bones of another. The triggers of the pectoral fins cf the catfish were set, but the stomach of the loon did not seem to be troubled by that fact.—Fre’ Mather in Forest and Stream. If your children are well but not’ robust, they need Scott’s Emulsion of Cod- | liver Oil. We are constantly in re- ceipt of reports from par- ents who give their children the emulsion every fall for 2 month or two. It keeps them well and strong all w*r*s:. It prevents their taking cold. Your doctor will confirm this. The oil combined with \ the hypophosphites is a splen- did food teiic. gee, and $).00, all drugetste. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toroata, Chitown Engineering School. meee Young men wto wish arsiktarnce along, En- gineerivg .ines will bave an opportunity of cb- taining it dw ing the comiug winter months as the undersigred prepese <P ning a school fer t}e study of Mathematics, Surveying, Mech- apical and Marine Engineerioy, etc. This school will be of great advantage to those who sere cesitions «f itcreasing their knowledge in these subjects, but who are ua- able to take a college courre Special aurention wiil be given to mech- anices takieg mechanical crawing and to Marive Engineers voing up for examination. For further particalacs as to hours. terims ete, early erquirics--cither in person or by | letter, are solicited. Signet G.Y). MAcCKINNON, B.A Sc ‘’. A. MACLEAN Jr. B. a. SC Mechanical and Mining En;'iieers ana Sur- vey ors. P.O Address, Charlottetown, COMMISSION MERCHANT Strict attention to business and promryt re- ' Special attention given to the tuc-ns made. gsa'e of Pork, Poultry. Eggs, Hides, and Wool Skins. Market quo'ations given on application. address all consignments ,and oorrcspon- doxce to, I. 8S, SANFORD, 46 and ‘8 ‘rgyle St., 240 H’* LIFAX N. 8. } Chronie Eczema Cured A Baldheaded Reply. A naval officer, very well and favor- ably known in London, has for some unknown reason been advanced in his profession very slowly, though he has grown gray in the service and indeed lamentably bald. Recently one of his juniors was bold enough to question him as to his remarkable aleence of hair. **How comes it that you are so very bald?’’ The officer replied promptly and with much vindictiveness: ‘*You, man, you would be bald, I think, if you had had men stepping over your head for years in the way I have.’’ ALL HEADACHES fron whatever cause cured in half an hour by SOFFMANS HEADACHE POWDERS lu cents and 25 cents at a'* “~~ ~~tetg, Noching aves like jez ness. ~ Balwer. 5 ‘ . Minard’s Liniment Cures Ruras, etc. We are always complaining that our days are few and acting us though there would ba no end of them.—Seneca, Dr «hase Cures (atarrh after Gperations Fail. “Toonto, March 6th, '897 My boy, aged 14, has been « sufferer trom Cetairh, abd latesy we sucmitied him toan operation in the genera! nospital. Sines then we have resorted to Dr - haste’s Cuta ro Cure, #0d One box Gt Lhis my dicine has made a prompt and complete cure. H. G. Forr, Forem4n, Cowan Ave, Fire H Kirdzees is the go'ier cham by which seciety is bound together. BROKEN DOW MAN Sumach Rebellious: — Digestion Gone Wrorg— Nerves Shattered—Bat South American Nervine Made a New Man of « Bicken Down Que. When the + ystem is aj] run down nature needs belpt tring it beck to a good healthy normal coud tion, Whether in ‘rngtime, summert me, autumn or winter, Sou b American Nervive is a power in r = sioriig wasted nerve force: io toning up t.e digestive organ®; dispelling che impur ties from the bood which are accountable tor so much disease and suffering. HA. H. Darrock, of Mount Forest, Ont, says he was a!l run down, weak, languid, Lad ro appetite, perves shattered; he to k South Auerican Nervine, and to use bis own words: ‘IamO.K agaiv; my appetite is big acd bearty, IT thik it the bear medicine in the world to make a new men cut of a broken down one.” Sold by D. 8 W Doda and G:o E Hughes. When we wou'd, wih utmost detesta- ticn, single some monster from the traitor herd, “tie but to say ingratitu!e is his crime.— Froude. Minard’s Lipiment for sale everywhere A men of integrity will never listen io rv plea against .o science.—Home. 2D _ ome — One of the most chronic casesof Eczema ever cured is the case of Miss Gracie Altoa of Rariand, N. B, Unaswor s'aement Miss Alton says :—I bereby cert fy that my daugh- ter Gracie Ella was cured of Eczema of long sianding by using forr boxes uf Dr, Chase’s Qintments Wile m ‘Ibistie, druggist. of Hartwiand, alse certifies thyt hesold four boxes «f Dr Cbase’s Ointweat which cured Gracie Ella. ecicibinnliiitiitinaduinaiini Ue who commits ir jxtice is ever made m re wretched than he who suffers it — Piato, ———— ini: Minard’s Liniment Cures Dandruff. _--- —_— A man cannot leave a better legacy to the world than a we'l educated family.— Tnowmas Scott. —_— “FANE ee 0 et ae Te WORLD'S BEsr anwp MOST RELIABLY MEDICIN=. a CELERY. COMPOUND ST, Nee -~ ene tma 4 ti | ‘ | 4 j | | i 7 s/ ys Depa 4 o, 2g Os es 3 FS ee A LP ey ey (Ree f Vhs ; Xe a4 Was 2 Pen SX “ta a ae AN —— aT Me Ps *) . , oman ee AM ACTIVE AUTSSTiVE. pe ¢ Ghar HERVE TCE ; ( | d° irrcstoacs smencmy, Pe f] oma! RENEWS WiTAUTY, 1} fi HE” CURIFIES THE BLOOD. We PEGULATES Ti4= KIDWPYS a. \ tre 4 Parransn oY PEST sci tints! ' bl i ett ; HH pat Hil i , i LIVER AND BOWELS. a annie ! PROPRIETORS BURLINGTON. VT. sare ars he eee te We also have a splendid line of Me extra expense to our large and increasi On Underclothing, Shirts, Collars, Gloves, &e GIVE US A CALL AND Y GOKDON & Upper Queen St, DR GLP bury me hod or persistent self-heip in remov- ink causes trom the biood Continuovs, in- insures Mlnimum of suffering and Mazimum cf cure, possible in ¢ach case, Avoid Atiemp({s Unaided MITROSAOPICAL, FX AMINATION BLUOD, SPULA, URINE, &e. OF Teall who find themselves with_ bealth gradually slippivg away, Kidney aod Liver so disor: aniz dinat they «1+ inc+p e of keeping the svsiem (ree trom po sou us waste Matler- jal, Stomach Disoidered, Bowe 8 constipated, Fe d Aching, Back Paining, take Dr. ¢ hase e's K dney-tiver Pills, The quick way they help you bock to health wiil surprire you. a When u great man dies, for yeats the light be Jeaves bebind tim lies on the paths of men.—Longfellow. PLEASANT AS A CARAMEL—Dr Von Stan’s Pineapple Tabiets are nota nauseous compound—but pleasant pellets that dis-olve on the tongue Iike a Inmpcf suyar, just assimple, ju-t a+ harmlesr, but a potent arder to digestion and the pre vention of al! the ailusents in thestomach’s ca egory of troubles. Act directly on the digest veorgans. Relieve in oneday, 35 cenis. Sold ty Dr S W Dodd and Gio E Hughes. No abilities, however splendid, can com- mand success without intenee labor and per-evering application.—-A T Siewart, Minard’s Liniment relieves Neuralgia, eae An inquisitive msn is @ creatule patur- ally very vacant ot thought itself and therefore forced to apply to fereign assist~ ; ance.—Steele. PAINTING. Miss M. H. Chubolin bas recpcned ér studio in Morris Block and will ive jessons in Oil, Chira, Water ' olor, and ‘Tapestry painting from ' October Ist 1898 to June Ist 1899. 2662 d«w weeks | | i Graduate of New York University Andthe NEW YCRE HOSP!Tal, Twenty vests Feasere in N. ¥, Cite, Diploma reg- iste in U. 8., and Canada, Accommocations reserved fcr paticn's. References cn appliceticn: ——OFFICE In Charlottetown, P. E. I, on a 1 = | i A Marvellous Cure ¥ ae a i; Wi ‘ ij} Hh says ; 9%) rt he “i Wi i} |" captain? AREUAGLS LAXATIVE. Doll i Weil Veta’ «= AND DIUPRET! Sect | ait why re — j Wit HEN id) Ha il THT Pt ij Hl SFE OS OE oe nee Our Principal Business is ; Making high class clothing to order| We claim to give better value than any house in the trade. } treata CHRONIC DISEASES by the Salis- 1 telligent treatmen? in person or by lett r In Pictou at Royat Horst, ox Monpay axp Turspay, In New Glasgow at Wixpsor Horet, ox Turspay, Wepnespay AN® ‘ in Hamilton, Ont, | a 4 i 3 i} | ‘ When Life is in Danger and When Doctors Fail, PAINE’S CELERY COMPOUND Gives New Life, ee = apeeeenee eon —— | Miss Blake, writing from 303, . Hughson Street, Hamilton, Ont., ; I “For years I suffered greatly, and was under the care of doctors who final- ly told me I was going into consump- tion. I was becoming worse through the use of medicines, and I gave up my f doctors, While in a very critical con- jj; Gition, not able to sleep or rest, always faint and weak, appetite and digestion "bad, and my system rur down and little HW life left in me, I commenced to use Paine’s Celery Compound. After take ing one bottle I felt much relieved, [ have used in all seven or eight botties, and am now a new woman, can enj life, and am as well as I wish to ce Many thanks for your great medicine,” ; ' = ns Furnishings. Which dort add aly” ne Tailoring business. ¥3 * Ties, Braces, Handkerchiefs, Hos) ae OU WILL BE CONVINCED | McLELLAN ~~ Men’s Stylish Outfitte * ¢7 RUPTURE a ( UKED by the IMPROVED method Fndoe ed by the medical profession and by thousar whe por discarded their trusses and remaii cured, bh TBE IMPROVED RUPTURE CURE, painless, involving no inconvenience ane quires only 5 or6 visits, Examinations f and confidential, No Pay Until Cured THROW AWAY YOUR TRUSS | ; Correspondence solicited. A perfect cnt ean be guarranteed if you ovsey instruciions& i | DR. CLurIrr HOURS THORSDAY. Tuurspay, Fripay, Saturpay Ax~ SUNDAY. =< 3 an ‘2 " ¢ “2s We have «pened a fine ings, Uvercoating and Tro iser ‘nishings always cn band. John MoLeod & 0d, Sartorial Artists. HOT FauM . DE LU NEW SLOTH FOR FALL Au2 WINTER Call now and get first choicc—. full line of gents DON obby Clothe in sult line of ing. fut is :