CALENDAR FOR JANVARY, 1904, ur : : } New Moon, 6th d ay, 10h 54.9m., p. m. b ~ or 14th day, 3h 56.7 m,p.m, 8 W] eee CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E.ISLAND, TUE ——— = —_ — _ . anne — "tm Camm’ somali pa | — core Ber iene roe meer aw | a, | Ch = ch — ene \ 58.9 am. N F ww Week -u s big ris =« water | | ; ihm i after’y o i v 40 418 6 34) — ay $9 i9i 3% i : say 9} 20 4 28 | TERMS : Four Dollars a Year ‘ aday 499} 21) 9 13] ; ay 99) 221 9 56] wi . ' 43 | 23 | lv 95 eT — — s : Si i hi 13} v . |Minay | ts] 38 | 1-81 NEW SERIES i 45 | 29 Meth Sa ia 7} 29) 0 23 | i’ ORE, \ { 0) 054 si — : | ‘ l | i 3) ~ ‘ 4 } 43 2 = + to 4] 2 50 5 >| ' 43} : t oi \ { a 6 lt i ‘ i a9 t 4. i + 84 20} Sa Ay i! $2] 9 45) é “ lav i 40 43 10 50 22 | Mouday | 391 447 Lb 33 ees Tuesday ' 38 S| aft 4] 24.) Wedne«day | 37 | 47 | © 42) Si 1 sday i a6 | 48 | 19 > a ae 2 Frid uv 35 | 50 | Ss 27 | Saturday } 33) Sip 3 33) 23 | Sunday 33 531 3 29) 29| M V 33 | 4 4 39 6 | Tuesday 33) 861 & 40 | 1; W aday 7 30 457] 7 8 | nine | HUE DAILY EXAMIN Tus Leaprne DatLty Newsrarer or P. E. Istanp, ’ i awe [Is laeved eve ry afternoon, from the office of | | Tre Exaxiner Pceumnine Company, In the | London House Buliding, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADVANCE) Oxe Year +++ G4.00 Six M wrne . 200 Turks Motus - 0d Ons Mowtes .» ©0@ Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United Starzs ADVERTISING RATES For «mali adver.isements whieh are ordered for only one or two weeks the charge is & cents per 'meh for the first insertion, and 2 eents for each continuation. Rate cards are urnished on application at the office. Special atract prices at a reduced rate are quoted for advertisement« four toches in sive OF to run for three months or notices inserted * ste of 1) cents per line, and uader nro | such paid notices appear ants made on all advertise- sted with Chureh Fairs, Bazaars, \o notices will be inserted with unless paid for | We take pleasure in | publishers of announcing thi A Grand Treat for Subscribers to The Examiner. (x) THE GREATEST WORLD'S FAIR BOOK IS READY 1: it we have made arrangements with the The Magic City jof TEN CENTS per namber. leach containing sixteen Author, MR. J. W. to the public. BUEL. the same unless the regular rate of 10 cents per | ' Th THs = sMINER is considered by our and curious races of people. Merchants and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspeper in P. E. Island, and conse- | quently the most valuable advertising medium | through which to make their announcements | public, is abundantiy proved by the fact that | in order te accommodate our advertisers we | have been compe''led ¢ its present size. Tee Dat ¥ ExamtNer is for sale by the fol- lowing nts R.H Mi asOn Post O*ce, 2 Mel: re Malpeque Road, Paul L »wer Spring Park Road, “ W M. Cuifin, -rafton Stree “ S. Grey, cor. Wate wand Pre » St. D>. Chappell. Prince Street, Pacaar Store, Queen street, Cea. ( arter & Co., Queen Street. S Gray, News Stali, P. E. 1. Railways] aud on the trains M. & T. |. Walsh, Eclectic Charlottetown rr Bookstore, Sum- ersice Harry MeFarlane, Souris. Hon. DD). ..ordon, ‘-eorgetown. Db. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. «. M. Clarke, Alberton hos. A. Gillis, Orwell Cove ee HES ES Se The Weekly Examiner Is issued every Friday morning from the ponlishers’ office. It is made up of matier whieh has appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and full of the latest news. The subseription for Taz Weexry Exam. t%ER, poet paid to any part offCanada or the U nited States, is one dollar per year Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for Tue DatLy EXAMINER. ‘DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Gruduate of the Medical Department of the | U niversity the City of New York, late — iy ré ot the Resident Staff of Belle- * Hospital and the New York Lyiag-in How pital, New York City. OFFICE. North Side OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Restdence—Near Corner of King and Queen Strmeta, Charlottetown. ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES. Cherlattetown alesroom: Queen Sireet, TEA MERCHANTS, WINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY Rheumatic and Neuralgia Curt on ge Robt. Balloch & Co., J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX | & enlarge the paper to (Tt History of to supply this celebrated work in W Weekly It will be tions of the 7 a D’s FAIR and the MIDWAY PL AISAN CE, by The Photogray They constitute a splendid OYER S0O YIEWS in NATURAL PHOTOGR‘\PH COLORS, embracing all World’s Fair and its surroundings, and curious and interesting character issued in sixteen to twenty magnificent Photogr: ialic Views and Historical Descrip- | Parts to our ——— at the very low price consecutive ‘Weekly Parts, NCE the famous American vhs are the finest that have ever been offered series of the wonderfal features of the | the famous MIDWAY PLAISANCE, with its sketches of life in foreign countries and among wild) | The Greatest, iS | The Grandest, | The Most Beautiful, The Only Complete The Photographs, in natural colors, are the Fair that has been published. Beautiful as a Dream, finest in existence. tion, especially for THE MAGIC Series. ‘being done by these inferior World’s Queen Square | The Examiner Always Gets the Best Watch Our Advertising Columa. for Portfolio of “ THE WAGIC CITY.” while the historical descriptions give the author spent nearly the whole summer at ing the work of the corps of write employed in taking views. trained ar i-ts of who knew how to secure a best resulis and the Their beauty and splendor will be a surprise to our readers. has ever been seen in pictorial representations; and the fact and will not be made common by promiscuous publi- | They wer taken by CITY, cation in other works, adds a hundredfold to their There are other World’s Fair Series being issued, ngs | but the price charzed for them is no lower than for the m: agnificent “ WHITE CITY You only need to compare the specimen of “ MAGI: | to show you that the “MAGIC CITY” will sweep the field and over-run the businéss ' | Fair work a value beyond all computation. The the Fair, preparii ng his notes and superintend-| These pictures are the more than national reputa- | most favorable points of view Nothing equal to them that they were obtained | value. cheap, unreliable, garbled affairs, | CL!Y ” with other books Series in the field now. the Announcement of the First Grane. THE AMERICAN | $8.00 Typewriter. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and punc | tuation marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just like a $100 instrument. its kind ever offered at a popular price for which the above claim can be truthfully made It is not a toy, but a typewriter built for and capable of REAL work. | the large m: achines sometimes become in expert hands, it is still at least as rapid as the pen, and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastered almost at a_ It is the first ot | While not as rapid as glance. We cordially commendjit to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. Writes capitals, small marks—71 in all. No Shift Keys. the type direct. Prints on flat surface. | Writing always in sight. letters, figures and Writes just like a $100 machine. No Ribbon. Prints from Corrections and insertions easily made. /Takes any width of paper or envelope up to 8} inches. D B. STEWART, Agent, Charlot:etown. Easy to understand—learned in 5 minut Weighs only four pounds—-inost portable. Compact, takes up but little room. Built solid and simple; can’t get out of order. Capital and lower case easily mastered. More “ margin play” for the small letters which do mest of the work. Takes good letter-press copies. keyboard ailke-- Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.00, in registered letter, money order or certified check. e || glad to answer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the “ Yost. We guarantee every machine, and are IRA CORNWALL, General Agent for Maritime Provinces. dec20 es | LATISVILLE, EY SAY, Onye ENS ovs | Both the method and results when ntly yet promptly on the Kidneys, tem eff fectually, dispels colds, head- aches =. feyers and cures ha -bitual Syrup of Figs is the Ri r kind ever pro only rem edy of its kind ex pro- aced Ph leasing to the taste anc ace pta the stomach, > rom} apy vin wractien: aad truly ben eficial in its | th flects, prepared only from the most ealthy und agreeable substances, its aanve *xcellent qualitis scommendit » all and have made it the most puwur remedy known. Sy sap of Figs is for sale tf .es by al leading drv Axy reliable ruggist who may not in Te 1ecists, or ave it on sand will procure it | who wishes | numptly for any one .o try it. Manufactured only by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. REW YORE, N. ¥ W. R. Watson, Drugzist, P.E Island. Charlotteown jymwtf “You'll Feel Better ” body does, after taking a tties of PORTER. It builds upthe run-down sys- tem,—is strengthening and appe- tizing. Itis readily borne by weak stomachs, regulates the bowels, and is invaluable to those afflicted with Indigestion and Flatulency. THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LTD. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA, Highly tecommended by Physicians. Jnlike the Dutch Process Gi A No Alkalies —OoR— ee Other Chemicals ge ¢ eS ? Ay are used in the ‘= preparation of “W. BAKER & C08 + Bratfastce which is absolutely pure and soluble, \Ithasmorethan three times the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroct o¢ Sugar, and is far more eco- nomical, eosttng less than one cent a cup It is delicious, nourishing, anc EASILY DIGESTED. ES Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained—how re- stored—how eee, Ordinary works on Phy- sioicgy will not tell yous the doctors can’t or E=ywon’t; but all the same you wish to know. Your SEXUAL POWERS are the Key to Life and its reproduction, Our book lays bare the truth. Every man who would regain sexual vi ‘ gor lost through folly, or develop members weak by nature or wasted by disease, should write for our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. i of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. SAPIT L STOCK, - - $109,000. A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arte, to encourage and help artists. Incorporated by Letters Patent of the {rovernment of Canada, the 27th February, 1~93 GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Noe. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame &t., Montreal. EXHIBITION AND SALE ee oo from 10 o'clock, a m., to 4 p. The only chance in this country to pur chase works of masters. All the Paintings are originals, mostly from the French School, the leading modern school. Eminent Artists, such as Rochegrosse, Aublet, Barau, Pesant, Petit ean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a many others, are members of this | iety. Ask for our Catalogues and Circulars H. A. A. BRAULT, oct26 Director. JANIARY Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant | and refreshing to the taste, and acts | Live: avd Boweis, cleanses the sys- | « Francais ; 15, 18)4. ‘ THE CHEROKEE STRIP. The government wil 1 fix no date for the rand rush to get out of the Cherokee strip —Detroit Tribune, The man who goes down to the strip to li victuals instead of to raise thern will ake the most money.—Topeka Journal. All this to gain possession of land for h ich the settlers must pay from $2 to & c acre, and ou which they must reside for » years before obtaining a title. —Chicago ‘ie spateh, It was not because the government was a erer, but because a great many edge’ were feols, that the Cherokee open ug turned out to be a big bunko game.— La uis Post- Dis patch. intnko A contest between dollars would be just as inoral as the wild and brutal physical cramble lately witnessed. If the govern- nt has any more laud to throw open, let t sian soid.-- Philadel phia Inquirer. res alone could think ‘that there was wetter way of allotting someting ~ rized tien appointing a day on which everybody leniving if wasto be allowed to make & crand rush for it.—Rochester Union. ok Ic is clear from the conditions attending e first rnove mole toward the settlement f the * ‘berokee strip that many of tbe | boomers will be werse off iu a short time nn they are now.—Baltimore American. This is the way modern history is mak- in itself on this continent, and as vne ' ginnees back into the oid order of evolution | in the growth of commonwealins the past ems strangely inanimate.— Boston Globe. The ecramble e.cross the frontier—‘“‘every man fer himself, and the devil take the hindmost’—was barbarous, usps typical of methods largely character- istic of this rushing century of ours.—Bos- von Herald. THE WEDDING DAY. Secret marriages are in every country in FEnrope considered illegal. The Greek church employs two rings in | the marriage ceremony—one of gold, the other of silver. A hundred years ago, when the bride had 4 fortune, the newspapers stated that fact ind gave al-o the amount. In Samoa the bride wears a wreath of lowers, a dress of cocoa matting, and has | ver face colored with turmeric. Wedding rings engraved with the device f a heart and two clasped hands have been ound in Egyptian tombs dating B. C, 2000, In most churches of England a ring is ept se that embarrassment may be spared | 1 case of forgetfulness of the parties con- erned, | The bride’s veil is a relic of the “care loth,"’ a canopy held over the virgin bride »y our Saxon forefathers to conceal her em- iarreassment. { The white ribbons and favors used at | veddings” todsy areemblematic of the time | vhen the bride’s garters were cut up into its and distributed among the young men sud women present for good luck. In one country district of Germany ‘‘pay veddingss”’ were in vogue as late as the pres- nt century, each guest paying for his en- ; | crtainment as much as he would at an | an, the receipts going to set up the bappy | sair in their new home, At the wedding of George III a stout, :oble duchess, whose name is not given, ad the dreadful misfortune to sneeze dur- | -¢ the ceremony and thereby burst her stays. jhe was taken to the vestry for repairs.— san Francisco Examiner. CROWN ANO | SCEPTER. The caliph of Khartoom has 700 watches, | ind not one of them goes. When Princess Anne, afterward queen of ngland, was married, she wore a head- | ress 2 yards high and 8 yards in circum- erence, The Princess of Wales appears at the ypera dressed in black, veiled with jet and wibroidered chiffon. .ies wear either black or white. The queen of Holland celebrated her four- centh birthday recently, and by her spe- ial request the festivities ran largely to chool treats, in which she took an active uterest. Queen Victoria has grown so lame that he bas given up her habitof always stand- ug aiter dinner in the gallery at Wiudsor -nd sits in au armchair. Those who are xear her or may be speaking w her sit down aleo. The latest report about the German em- peror is to the effect that ie proposes to be rowned in Berlin next year. In that event sere will be a splendid ceremony, at which all the crowned beads of the father- .and and other royalties will be present. strongest man of his time. He wasa man of great stature, and the power of his arm was such that he thought nothing of cut- | vlow of bis sword. } ——. NATURAL PHENOMENA, Ctah is a mound covered with giant erys- tals, Perfect prisms of selenite 5 teet long ire found there. Mount Kinseo, which rises precipitously | wholly composed of hornstone and is the iargest mass of that mineral in the known + world. One of the most singular products of | Hawaii is a vitreous lava known as *Pele’s | uair.”” It is a silky, filamentous substance, | olive green, soft, but very britle. It is pro- | duced by the wind catching the flery spray __— | ‘hrown up from the great crater of Kilauea. ‘THE SOCIETY OF ARTS The name of Gay head, applied to a fam- ous promontory of the Massachusetts coast, | means exactly what it seems te mean and | is peculiarly appropriate. The headiand, | as seen from the sea, is gay with many colors running in strata, the result of | chemical qualities in the earth of the cliff. | ' | —_—————$—— ELECTRIC SPARKS. A gentleman speaking through the tele | phone during a recent thunderstorm in London was flung violently across the room. Tesla, the electrician, thinks he has evolved the problem of transmitting elec- tricity to a distance with little loss of power. An automatic electric music leaf turner is about to be put upon the market. It can be easily attached to any piano music rack and is operated by touching a button with the foot. | A German scholar, Professor Brann, | has discovered that if aspiral of wire be | elongated mechanically a current will be | produced in it. The creation of the current is not due to magnetic or thermoelectric ef- fects, but is based upon the fact that the bending of a wire generates a current in it. For Over Fifty Years. As Orn Axo Wert Triep Remepy.— Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Svrup has | beed used for over fifty years by millions , of mothers for their childen while téeth- | nig, with perfect snecess, It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colie, and is the best remedy for a sae by Druggi-ta in every part of the world. incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. | Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no ‘ other kind.—m. w. f. wkly—l y though per | A shaw! was thrown over her, and The other royal la- | Scanderberg, king of Albania, who lived | in the fifteenth century, was reputed the Ling two men in halves with one single | | In the Henry mountains in southern | 700 feet out of Moosehead lake, Maine, is | Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold | | Twenty- five cents a bottle. Its value is} ee pees aieenions _ - THE DAILY EXAMINER. Single Copies Two Cents VOL 33.-NO. 165 VASSALS OF VENUS. Silas C. Herring, the safe man, began cerking in Albany at 17 ina homespun eait. Oscar Wilde is reported to have grown very big sud fatand untidy as to appear- ance, William B. Horn)lower ing advantage of every opportunity that otlered, Sueci, the faster, is insane and is now in an asylum near Paris. His delusion has taken the form of a belief that he is Cassar ané Napo leon in one, Josep Pulitzer has purchased the Cun- ninghem estate on Bay Shore harbor, Mount Deserr, containing seven acres, and will build a handsome cottage on it. Mr. Eugene Higgins is the richest bach- elor in New York. Heis said to be worth | $20,000,000, and Ward McAllister says he is | | probably the most Juxurious unmarried map iv America. Alvinza Haywood, the retired San Fran- cisco milliousire, was in youth a farmer's “bound boy” in northern New York and received, et 21, $100 and a ‘freedom suit” us his start in life, The scle survivor of General Fremont’s | famous exploring battalion is General W. | F. Swasey, who was a boy clerk at Sutter’s Fort in 1845, and was the youngest officer on Gencral Fremont’s staff. M. Vuillod, the “cannon man,” who eatching cannon balis as they were dis- charged at him from a large gun, is one of the deputies elected to the new cham ber. | Daniel de Poe's great-greet-crandson has | been discovered on the roll of the Chelms | ford nnicn in Essex as an outdoor pauper | He is 79 yecrs old, has fits, is partly para | lyzed and has an income of 76 cents weekly. Ex-Comptroller A. Barton Hepburn, one of the abiest financiers of the country, was a barefooted country boy in the Adiron- dacks, who gained a little education by privation and hardship, and bean life asa leacher, Captain Francis Martin of Detroit is the oldest commissionel officer in the United States revenue marine service, He is ia his ninety-fourth year, and as there is no | retired list in the service is still on the ac- tive list. the Mississippi river to the Pacific and north of the Missouri river. Judge Robert S. Hefflin of Alabama, who | served in the Forty-fourth at.d Forty-fifth over $4 a month, and that he returned to his home with $¥,600 ont of his two years’ salary. The richest man in the island of St. Christopher is Joaquin Farara, who went | Now le is 5i years old and owns $1,000,000 worth of real estate on theis!and. Itissaid thet he can neither read nor write, He most frequently travels to tuwn by the ; : : Tet - ; | traiu, leaving Tring at &:48 in the morniny, isat Euston at 9:35 and thus reache« his | Ile is therefore | breakfasting quite as early as the majority | ’ desk comfortably by 10, of his clerks. PULPIT AND PEW. Church oastorates are still sold to the | highest bidders in some parts of England. The Rev. Dr. John R. Paxton of New | York, whose bealth has been critically im- ' paired the last few months, has returned to | his pulpit. ; Chaplain Milburn speaks slowly in mel- | low and resonant tones, and his diction is | eloquent. Though the sightless preacher is 70 years old, be isan active, self reliant man. Dr. Lyman Abbott has issued a new hymnubook, upon which he has been at work for three years. The work contains | (10 hymus and will be used by Plymouth church, The religious census of Australia, just {| completed, shows 1,485,066 mx ue) 5 of the Church of England, 84,118 CatLol es, 493,- 369 Presbyterians and 204.544 Methodists. Chese are the four most numerous denom- inations. HOUSEHOLD HINTS, When corks are too largeto go intoa bottle, throw them into hot watera few minutes, and they will soften. Never scrub oilcloth, but wash it with a soft rag. Use neither hot nor very cold, | but lukewarm water, and no soap. stains. | too dry, let the kernels stand in milk and | water over night. They will then be as | fresh as when new. Insects may be destroyed with hot alum. Put in hot water and let it boil until the | alum is dissolved. Apply hot with a brush, aud all creeping things are instantly de stroyed without danger to human life or | FLOWER AND TREE, Experiments have shown that the com- mon sunflower exhales 12 ounces of water in 24 hours. It takes a leaf just three weeks to unfold itself from the time it first appears in the ieaf bud. Manie leaves are more rapid than others and are perfect in two weeks. The Mexican primrose is a continuous bloomer, It should be included in every collection of winter blooming plants and is equally desirable for the lawn or flower garden during the summer. The “devil’s plant,” which clings close to the earth and bears beautiful red blos- soms, is so poisoncas that bees, tasting of a liquid drop always found in the calyx of the flower, drop dead almost instantly. injury to property. | } ' | SIMPLE SALVE. Butter is an excellent thing for a bruise on a child’s face if the skin is not broken. Hemorrhages of the lungs or stomach are promptly checked by small doses of salt. A salve made by melting beeswax in sweet oil is good for sore lips, Apply it often. If the foot is bruised, take off the shoe ind stocking and immerse it in hot water rom 15 to 30 minutes, adding hot water tten. Scara may be removed or made leas con- spicnoe: by a daily application of hot olive vil, ri onnge Une oil inte the skin with the tips of the fingers. Pond’s Extract, Used alike by the medical profession und the people, by no other medicine inthis country, or, perhapg, the world. er should make free use of Puttner’s Emul- | sion, the best lung healer, etrengthner, and flesh product: rr. Clergyman, students and overtaxed busi- ; ness men will finda wonderful recuper- ' | ative agent in Puttsers Emulsion, which | | contains Phosphorous (brain food) in the | most assimilable form says that he owes bis success in life to his habit of tak. | gained celebrity in Paris and eleewhere by | Dr. Frederick Andros of Mitchell, 8. D., | claims to be the first authorized practi- | tioner of medicine not only in Dubuque, | la., but also in the immense reion west of | congresses, boasts that his expenses during | the 14 months of his two terina were not ' there a barc.ooted Portuguese boy of 16 | and began working for a shilling a day. | Lord Rothschild sets an example to less | fortunate financiers in business regularitr, | — le Oyster juice is said to be as great a clari- | fler of skins and remover of f-eckles as it | isa cleanser of linen from fruit and wine When the meat of walnuts has become | | | 600. it holds a position held } Nursing Mothers and delicate chikirea | Mr. Harvey Heed Laceyville, 0. Catarrh, Heart Failure, Pa- ralysis of f the Throat “I Thank God oua Hood's Sarsa- parila for Perfect Heaith.”’ “Gentlemen: For the benefit of suffering hu- manity I wish to state afew facts: For severat | years I have suffered from catarrh and hart allure, geting so bad 1 could pot work and Could Scarcely Walk I had a very bax as spell of paralysis of the throat some ti Jy throat seemed closed and t could res owallow. The doctors said it | Was cate by heart tailare, and gave medicine | Shick f trok acoording to dinpetioes, bas teatd | not seem to ‘< » me any good. My wife ur = ; metotry parilla, telling me of Josepa { th, who Ie d beea at Ceath’s Cocr but was entirely cured by Hood's Sarsapariila. | After talking with Mr. Smith, E concluded t& | try Hood's sarsaparilia. Whon I had telter two hottics b felt very much better. 1 hive continued takingit, andam now feeling cxcel- ; lent. LIthank God, and 9 2 Hood’s Sarsaparilla | ond my wife for my restoration to peytecs heal th.>? Hanvey hi Hiren, Lacey vii 2. < HOGD'S i” ion # s Co wor pari @, pala of golpe, | bat act prompt. see Se Cec opeeetepenlighen eee Rev. F. J. H. Axford, Rector St. Jown’s EPIscoPaL Crvuren, Conwallis,N.S.says Mr. Borden is a neighbor of mince: and I know that his statement is true Rheumatism & Paralysis CAN BE CURED. Mr. Beréen — Have had Rhen- matism for 15 ye In the antuinn of i890 Th na anenaail attack. Icovk not sk "ep, 7 y feet and legs swel led and life was almost unbearable. Phy ci , patent medicines and electric batieries gave me no relief, Skoda’s Cures. I was treated four months in the Nospitel, but after being at home one week was as bad as ever. ITIlave tak- en 6 bx ottle 8 of Skoda’s Discovery and feel like a new man. Skoda’s Litthe Tablets cure constipatior, fick hoadache and dyspepsia. 35 cts. MEDICAL ADVICE FREE. SKODA CISCOVERY CO, LTO., WOLFVILLE, #. § For sale Ly all druggista. pried by a. a Watson; | P. E. I. WESS WAGY DOUL a STAWPER BLOCK. Trade sup Charlottetown STU sie, 2 given inthe various branch Instructions ¢ | es of Drawing and Painting. nov29—2m eod gHNSONS ANODYNE LINIMENT ALE aH OTHE As much Por INTEMNAL as EXTELNAL ome im 1s10 Originated ty an Cid Family Paysician. in use for more th n | Think Of It. Years, pA still etn a ~ 4 ration alter Genrration have used and ble hg it. Every Travel s should have @ bottle in his satchel, Every Sufferer tintica ieunten’ Nervous H-adache, Diphtheria, Coughs,Catarrh, i, enitis, Asthma, Cholera-Morbus, Diarrhoea, Law Soreness in Bodyor Limbs, SUf Joints or Strain: | will Gud in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure Should have Johnson'’» Eve ry Mother paste Liniment in the Bore Threat, Tornilitia, cone ‘Cuts, "Bruises, Cramp and Puins Nabie to occur | ~ A. without n tice, Delays may qua ole. Peres oh G@easeeer St) plaints like magic. Price, 35 s 6 bot. on ta hxvvesspall-L& Sondeam & Gos ieeten Make | } j } } i i Baby Wants It. Martin’ ‘Cardinal Food FOR INFANTS AND INVALIDS. The most palatable food prepare d, and is unequalled by any other preparation of its kind. The best food and the best value, put up in one pound Tins, pri 25 cts. per Tin, So'd Retail by all Druggist cers and Wholesale t KERRY WATSON & CO. Prornittons MONTREAL. and Gio- JR DRUCCIST FOR aS TT NORWEGIAN ‘EO D-. mas, oll has ‘aaltioe ‘ai ia ble as cream. 5 canta. vile others. In big bottles and $1.00. When we assert that ‘ Dodd’s aww Cee Kidney Pills wee Cure Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bri; ght’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troutkes, we are backed by the testimony of ail who have used them. TH <«/ CURE TO STAY CURED. By a. iruggiste or mail on receipt of price, gecentm Dr, L. A. Smith & Co., Toronta ya oe cmcegs