) The man who lies assassin shudders at the thought of ; +t, na shit eTs ence a tremor rf ll t human beings at the mercy of an | i f that go down each year to premature graves, one-seventh 1 victi this relentless enem There isa prompt and pt ally unfail- in si le vithin the neat t I is Dr. Pierce’s | Ci NI very It cures 08 | per cent. of all umption. It| eut bronch iwitis, linge ing 1 l, weak lut | ' nd all diseases | irectiv on the } the air : l, allaying in- t ing up healthy tissues nd driving out all impurities and disease | f It whets the appetite, makes the } t and the liver active It ut od-maker and flesh-builder. | \ sufferer does not have to take these asser- | tions on trust. Thousands have testified to | under this marvelous med 1ope WwW gor Conies of | ttet with names and addresses, | ttt had by writing for them. Address Ww Dispensary Medical Association, B i Do not neglect constipation. Your gen- eral health is at stake Dr. Pierce's Pleas. nt P ts ctire constipation. They never They never ¢ripe One littl Pel Z e laxative and two a mild ~ as and etl ate and invigorate the stomach. liver and bowels All medicine dealers sell them n_d have no other pills that are ‘just aS ¢ OPERA HOUSE. CHARLOTTETOWN 3S Nights Only. Commencing TUZSDAY, OCT. 11, 12 and isth DIRECI FROM HALIFAX Amerieas Grandest Sp-ctnlar atttraction, CHAS. H. )ALE3 “Poreyer” Devils Auction Co. 50—PEOP |L.E—50 Car load of Special Scenery, BEAUTIFUL BALLETS. European and Americar Specialties Grand Transtornations--Fun- ny Trick Scenes SOUSA : THE : MAKCH : KINGS LATEST SUCCESS. “King Cotton’ “Hil Capitan” *“Ucchain the Dogs of War.” Columbia aod Britannia. Stars aod Stripes Forever. The biggest and best show that ever visited Charlottetown. Prices same as Halifax—25c, 35c, 50c, T5e and $1.00. An Evening With Robt. Burns «~BY- Miss Jean Howison of Perth, Scotland —IN THE— Opera Flouse aes Friday, October 14th AT 8OCLOCK. P.M ROBERT BURNS’ PROG:2AM ME. The Cotter’s Saturday nighi Tam O'Shanter. Man was wade to mourn. *“A Man’s a Man tor «’ That, To tke Unco Guid. Epistle to Davie. ssivice to Andrew. The Braw Wooer. Dunean Gray. To Mary in Heaven and Scott’s Gresting to Burne. An Allegory written on the statues of Scott, Burne and Shas espeare, in Central Park, New York. ’ Vinnicombe’s Orchest:a in attendance. Plan of the Ha!! will be on sale at the usual places on Friday moraiug. Single Office TO LET ee ein a In Cameron Block apply to HORACE HASZARD. ee Eeeakcenanieudieatdioal THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 13 1898 EYEGLASSES AND SPECTACLES “You eay you never wore spectacles?” said the near sighted man. ‘ Well, if you ever put ona pair you'll never wear anything else. I wore eyeglasses | for years. I thought they looked better on me, and then Limagined that they were more convenient; that I could take them off and put them on more readily and all that. But after wearing a pair of spectacles once for a few days —I had put them on, as I thought at first, temporarily—I discovered spectacles were the glasses for comfort. | timbers that | ‘*There are, to be sure, people who | do not wear glasses all the time, but only for réadin;z or writing, and so on, to whom eyeglasses may be more con- venient, and then I believe that eye- | glasses ure made nowadays that have more scientifically adjusted grips, and wil that sort of thing, but 1 tell you that the thing for real comfort is spec- | tacles.’’—New York Sun. A Very Sma!! Piece of It. She—Have you forgotten how you once said you would give the world for | mer He— What if I did? “Oh, nothing particularly, but it sees very s:range now that you won’t even sell that little old suburban lot so that I can have a new wheel !’’—In- ' dianapolis Journal. A Long Walk. The longest walk one could take in a straight line on solid land would be from the eastern side of the Red sea, not far from Mecca, tothe Bering strait, a promenade of about 6,600 miles. In the western hemisphere the walk would not exceed 4,500 miles, owing to the ir- regular shape of the American conti- nent. A Demand For a Waistcoat. At Strathfieldsaye there are (or were) llamas. A good story is told of the Duke of Wellington that years ago the first Jamas brought there were shorn and a wulstcoat made for the duke, but a late frost set in, und they bad to make flan- uel waistcoats for i+ llamas instead of their own wool Notes and Queries Dr. A. W. CHASE AT WORK IN His LABORATORY. THE GATARRH CLUTCH ! Chis Disgusting Malady is at the Throat ef Nine Hundred in Every thoasand of Our Country's Population, This is Not Hearsay, it is Borne Vut by Care- fully . ompiled statistics of Diseases Most Prevalent—Its Development is Watched Carefally, Because it’s .o Sure a Fore- runner of that Arch Moloch of Disease— Consumption—if Neglected, WILL I SUICIDE? While There’s Life and Dr. Chase's Catacrh Cure There’s Hope. I had suffered so many years from catarrh that I don’t know that I will ever get it out of my remembrance. One day, when I took one of the end- less prescriptions given me by the medicil man to a druggist, I asked him bluntly, “‘ Will this cure me, or will it not ? Or will it be like the rest ?” I was nearly desperate, I can tell you. The druggist said :—** No, nothing can cure catarrh. I have it myself until [{ often think-of suicide. I take °pium usualfy to sleep it off.” I took the prescription away unfilled and went home, thinking of what the drug- gist had said about suicide, and I was utterly disheartened. I have that pre- scription yet. One day my deliverance came. A lady told me she had suffered just as I had, and was nearly insane, and that a remedy known as Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure had actually cured her. I had read a bt about Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure, but I felt to- ward it as I did toward other medi- cines; had no faith. I tried it as a last resort. I used two boxes of Dr. Chase's Catarrh Cure, and found it a complete cure. MRS. M. V. ROSE, Holloway, Ont. Price 25 centa, blower included. HEALTH READERS =exew Elementary Text Books on Physiology and Hygiene with special yeference to the effects of Alcohol aad Tobacco upon the human system. Retail price Pt. 1 20 cents “ “ ~Pa 2. 30 cents For sale by all dealers in school supplies in the Mari- time Provinces. A HISTORIC WRECK “In the harbor of Santiago de Cuba, ” gays Maturin M. ballon in Due South, ‘‘a sunken wreck is pointed out, par- tially visible at low tide, not far from the shore. Only the ribs and stanchions are still held together by the stout keel and lower sheathing. This wreck has lain here unheeded for years, yet what a story these old timbers might tell had they only a tongue with which to give voice to their experience —literally the exporience of ages.”’ Reference is made to the remains of the old St. Paul, one of the ships of the great Spanish armada that Philip II sent to England in 1588, being one of the very few of that famous flotilla that escaped destruction at the time. What a historical memento is the old wreck! After a checkered career, in which this ancient craft had breasted the waves of innumerable seas and withstood the storms of nearly three centuries, she was burned to the wa- ter’s edge here in the harbor of Santi- ago afew years since and sunk, where her remains now lie, covered with slime the nation wkose flag she once proudly bore. —New York Tribune. The “Wicked” Lonsdale. At a meeting of the Poor Clergy Re- lief society in London a story was told of Bishop Waldegrave of Carlisle and ‘*wicked’’ Lord Lonsdala The bishop rode well, and on his going up to Low- ther castle Lord Lonsdale admired his horse and his management of it. The bishop pleaded the cauee of a clergyman passing rich on £40 a year, whose well educated wife took in tourists’ washing to add to their scunty income. Lord Lonsdale said: ‘‘Everybody looks on me as a very sinful man, be- yond all possible hope of salvation. You have spoken to me as a gentleman; you have spoken to me like a good servant of the great head of the church; you have spoken to me encouragingly about the salvation of even my poor soul; you have pleaded the cause very nobly for that young clergyman Here is my checkbook. Put down what you like, and I wili sign it.” The bishop said, ‘‘No; that is a mat- ter between God and you.” Lord Lonsdale gave the bishop a check for £10,000 and afterward two further checks for £20,000 for poor clergy of the diocese of Carlisle The Power of Modern Shelis, A 12 inch rifle is 38 feet long, with 4 feet external diameter at the breech, and weighs 48 tons. Its 850 pound shot, driver by a 430 pound charge of brown prisinatic powder, leaves the muzzle with a velocity exceeding 1,400 miles per hour and would reach a target at its effective range of 544 miles in 24 seo- onds, while it would take the report of its discharge 27 seconds to traverse the same distance. At a range of 144 miles this shot would perforate 19 inches of solid steel). The 250 pound projectile of the 8 inch rifle will penetrate a foot of armor at the range of a mile The six 4 inoh rapid fire guns within the superstructure each deliver eight 40 pound projectiles in a minute, while the twenty 6 pound- ers distributed over the vessel can be re- lied upon to clear an enemy’s decks or to disable torpedo boats by maintaining a terrific hail of explosive shell, capable of destroying any unarmored position. The final offensive resources of the cita- del are the four torpedo tubes, each pre- pared to launch automatic and dirigible destroyers containing 150 pounds of gun cotton. —Chautauquan. Not Infallible. Harriet Martineau, the English au- thor, wes shrewd and practical and had what men are pleased to call a ‘‘*mas- culine intellect.’" But she was not al- ways correct in her deductions, a fact illustrated by the following anecdote, told in her ‘‘Memoirs,’’ by Sir Charles Murray, who was then the English con- sul general in Egypt: One afternoon we met at the villa of my old friend, S. W. Larking, on the banks of the Mahamoudieh canal. In the course of our stroll through the gar- den we came toasmall gate, the pat- tern of which was new to Miss Mar- tineau, who was walking in front. She stopped, and looking at the gate in an attitude of intense admiration ex- claimed: ‘*How truly oriental! What wonder- ful taste these easterns have in design!’ She went on, and as Larking and I follewed through the gate he whisperes to me, ‘“‘I got it out iast week from Birmingbam.”’ Woond’s PHOSPHODINE. The Great English Remedy. Six Packages Guaranteed to promptly. and permanently eure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Envissions,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotency and all effectsof Abuse or Excessc:, SS = am» Mental Worry, excessive use ' of Tobacco, Opium or Stimu- Before and After. ma which soon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only Feliable and Honest Medicine known. Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, ¢1; six, $5, One will please, six will cure. Pamph:ets free to any address, The Wood Company, Winds>r, Ont., Canada. Soli mm Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggist. >| you your furnishings. and barnacles—a striking emblem of J ) ~~ CLOTHING. put azamnst anything made tor Any inan buying this class of they wea. tou long for us. Bu We are right in it—let Give us The Black Hole of Calcutta. A scientist, writing of the black hole of Calcutta and its atmosphere, says: “On the 20th of June, 1756, about 8 o’clock in the evening, 146 men were forced at the point of the bayonet into a dungeon {8 feet square. They had been but a few minutes confined in this infernal prison before every one fell into a perspiration so profuse that no idea can be formed of it. This brought respiration and an outrageous delirium. Such was the horror of their situation that every insult that could be devised against the guard without and all the opprobrious names the viceroy and his officers could be loaded with were re- peated to provoke the guard to fire upon them and terminate their sufferings. Before 11 o’clock the same evening one- third of the men were dead, and before 6 next morning only 23 came out alive, but most of them in a high putrid fe- ver. All these dreadful effects were oc- casioned by the want of atmospheric air and by their breathing a super- abundant quantity of nitrogen emitted from their lungs.”’ DYING BY INCHES! But Dodd's Kidney Pills will Yet Renew Life. Thousands of persons die in the prime of life because doctors think Bright’s Disease and Diabetes incura- ble. But Dodd’s Kidney Pills cure them both. They Aave cured thousands of cases, ¢ These diseases and other Kidney complaints are as common as ordinary colds, But people don’t realize that We have made up from ourown Cloth— Suits for men and boys. goods always comes back after another suit. Imported clothing we keep a good range, and our prices are right. Say, no better value is offered in this city, Hats and Caps on a raging thirst, the most difficult | These goods we wil Also pants, we can guarantee them every time. The on y tcult t as long as they give satisfaction we aint going to kick... hard wear. Wecan safel us fit you this fall. e, call at the In fact, we can andwe will giv: BARGAIN CORNER BARGAIN CORNER. eto GE Rr reer 550, Cn ee eae 1 The hest that Scotland Yields! jPattisons’ Whisky Rich, Mellow, Soft The King of Scotch Whiskies yr fale 1) Jtseiag Wine axd Syirit Dealers. 4 S, B, Townsenp & Co., MonrrEaL, SoLE AGENTS FOR fe CANADA. "T'YPHOID FEVER. : —THE POLICIES OF ME CCU/T, SCC TILT & CUPFFETEE CORPORATION Give weekly indemnity for—Typhoid, Scarlet and [yphus Fever, an Smallpox, and in additicn cover accidents of all kinds.. they are afflicted till the disease has | eaten deep into the system. Even then, Dodd’s Kidney Pills will posi- tively cure. Thousands of people are dying on their feet, but do not realize it. ey notice One or more of these symp- toms: shortness of breath, loss of memory, failing sight, ravenous appe- tite, pale or reddish urine, with brick- colored déposit, scalding when urina- ting, Constipation, nervousness, pains in the loins. Their only hone is Dodd's Kidney Pills. They won't fail. They never do. Just a nice assortment of BLOUSE SETS the newest designs in sterling silver and_ rolled plate, and selling very low, a nd W. N. TANTON Received Double liability in ase of accident on Public Conveyance, J. J, JOHNSTON, Barrister, ; . Stamper Block AGENT for Queen’s and Kings Counties 28-- 3aw Ask for it Take no Other Purnell’s Haglish PURE : MALT : VINECAR. No acids or chemicals use — SS Tr. B. CLIFT ST. JOHN’S, NEWFOUNDLAND, General Shipping and Commission Agent and: Auctioneer. —_ ——— —— DEALER IN ALL KINDS OF---~ Island and N. 8S. and American Produce: SPECIALTIES: attle, Horses, Hay, Oats, Vegetables, Fruit, Meats,. Poultry Butter, ete. Pp. E. —-—AGENT FOR THE-— “Stratton Little” Line of Sailing Vessels trom: Bester. & St, John’s. Opposite Crabbe’s Hardware Store anata trie nes aaeecaneiniaedaaaatae eattantiem inameaameeD ernnitaachetanacteiasnent ae a ns, rem ret ee