CALENDAR FOR MARCH, 1894. ¢ after’: n : 6 2] ~s A 7.34 ' 8 28 TERMS Four Dollars a Year 5 46 9 22 ; ¥ 53 ' | » 27 4 Z »f) il ( | &| tis!) NEW SERIES a : wn =| The bow ot ~~ ri ae — —— seen vane 6? ll iZ L 45 : aft 18 He ia Hit Fae 0 53} | 1 3a] a AN ‘\} he > 29} ; , ats: a ote : 2 5 41 Ti DULY EXAMINER DAILY NEWSPAPER or P. I LSLAND red eve : } m the office of ' e EXaMINER PuaLisuine Company, in the | lon Hiouse B ! ( n Street i. Yu SUBSCRIPTION m A ANCE | $1.00 | Stx Mowres a | Terese Mowrnus 1. ONE Monta 0.% | Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the | Us Sta nwvprnr . TE ' ADVERTISING RATES ‘ nt Mi! rary uri! Ay iM t ar uivertisements which are ordered | | : | i beet r two weeks the charge is & | ' ne centa per r the first insertion, and 2 | nun i} i a for « stinuation. Rate cards are | iit furris fou ap ation at the office. Specia i nt t a reduced rate are quoted | wivertisements r inches in size or | ary ¥ hia! are ft run for three mouths or i No «1 al notices inserted unless paid for ents per line, and under no | es Vv such paid notices appear | | ui i - : scounts made on all advertise- : - “ ' Wy YE 4 Y/ ‘7 ‘ 7 “ y , merits cennected with Church Pairs, Bazaars, yf inserted with 10 cents per Picnics, et ‘Oo notices wili be ss »¢ regular rate of 1d Manufacturers to be the lead- Sti tonsowvm! Cut out Coupon on Page 1. ing nu spaper in P. EF. Island, and conse- yi ly the most valuable advertising medium . ares through which to mak eir announcements ” pub sabendantiy proved by the fact that rde a mmodate our advertisers we THE AMERICAN hav wen compelled to enlarge the paper to ite present size. T I ¥ EXAMINER sale by the fol S. Grey, cor. Water and Prince St. D. Chappell, Prine $100 instrument. lowir : ag aA ie. : nR.H as ason, Post O fee, Charlottetown J. Meintyre Mal peqt 1¢ Road, , : C. Panl, Lower Spring Park Road, a W. M. Cuifin, .-rafton Street, 7 a a It i is the first of Pazaar Store, Queen str 9 Geo. Carter & Co., Queen Sireet | This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and punc- on ine trains. ae a tuation marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just ‘like a Sb & s ; Waish, Eciectic OKstore, Sum- merside. i its kind ever oifered at a popular price for which the Harr srilane yu Tris, Hou. D. Gordon, eorget tow BR. 2 A. Bean. Mt Stewart. . M. Clarke, Alberton. \. J. MeNeil Stanley Bridge Easy to understand—learned in 5 | Weighs only four pounds—most portable. above claim can be truthfully made. [t is not a toy, but a typewriter built for and capable of REAL work. the large machines 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 aimost at a While not as rapid as: minutes. 85 05 ee x igs se aaa Blance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. The Weekly Examiner ss s issued every Friday morning from the V rites capitals, sma Hl letters, figures and publishers’ office. [t is made up of matter marks—71 in all. which has appeared in the Daily editions, and Vrites just like «2 $100 machi is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting rites 3a t like 4 3! ) machine. Compact, t takes up but little room. andetiin afin tid ade, No Shift Keys. No Ribbon. Prints from Built solid and simple; can’t get out of The subscription for Taz Werxiy Exam. the tv pe direct. order. INER, poet paid to any part of Canada or the - " > " i : Unite States, is one dollar per year. Prints on flat surface. Capital and lower case keyboard ailke- Advertising rates on the same seale as given | Writing always in sight. easily mastered. bove for T : Darty Ex rR. : S . - . . . 39 = eh eee — | Jorrections and insertions easily made. More “margin play” for the small letters Cakes any width of paper or envelope up which do mest of the work. $8.00, and are DOCTOR DORSEY to 84 inches. Takes good letter-press copies. j h wasereas ¢ S : i e ; Physician and Surgeon. Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, a ae mm | 2 registered letter, money order or certified check. We guarantee every machine raduate of the Medical Department of ‘ ‘ .2 ‘ : ye . ? *ilversty ofthe city of New York, lave | Zlad to answer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the >» Resident Staff of Belle- and the New York Member of th vine Flospital L¥ing-in Hospital, New York City. OFFICE North Side Queen Square D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlottetown. OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Revidence-—Near Corner of King and Queer wie ay IRA CORNWALL, General Agent forMaritime Provinces. dec20) Streeta. Charlottetown ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES. reet, Charlattetown FIRE INSURANCE. Your patronage by the following great Fire Companie s is respectfully solicited :-— The Royal Ins. Co. of Liverpoo!, The London & Lancashire Ins. Co. of Liveprool. The United Fire Ins. Co. of Manchester. The Phenix Ins. Co. of Brooklyn. These Companies command ENORMOUS MONETARY STRENGTH, and are noted for their prompt and liberal settlement of lossew. JOHN MACEACHERN, Queen St Robt. Balloch & Co., f rEA MERCHANTS, ; miNciNG LUANE-----------LONDON ANADA BY SENTED IN C3 J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX janl1 AGENT FOR P. E. ISDAND. Don't Talk! but call and inspect our New Parlor, Drawing | Room and Bedroom Suites, Chairs, Ta!ie Bedsteads, and odd pieces of Furniture. Don’t Listen ! but remember that we sell the Cheapest, and OR ne as . are determined to give the best bargains ¢ every time at JOHN NEWSON’S, the Cheapest | i Furniture Store on P. E. Island. Quality of goods guaranteed. No trouble to show goods JOHN NEWSON. Charlottetown, January 4, 1894. | Place a Cake of BABY’S OWN SOAP in your linen drawer, and it will impart to your clothes the delicate aroma of fine French Pot Pourri in a modified degree. The longer you keep the Soap before using it the better. Beware of imitations. | THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP C0., Montreal, 5 The Greatest | Rheumatic and Neuralgia Cure Z Of the Age j } ag yl MOUSEHOLO "PAIN GURE i ((3OTH INTERNAL AND EX ERNALD) ne K MANUFACTURED MELOY BY pe AA KER MEDICINE JOHN, N.B. ae jan6—ev sat tf SOLE MANUFACTURERS. ‘THE LOYAL CIRCLE Or KING’S DAUGHTERS INTEND GIVING A Musical & Literary Entertainment ST. PAUL'S SCHOOLROOM, ‘Thursday, Avril 5. | Remember the date. Particulars later 1 feb24—law ( Sat) Notice of Dissolution of ‘artnership. This is to certify that the partnership | heretofore existing between the undersigned carrying on busines ander the style “and firm of Matthew, McLean & Company, at | Souris East,in King’s Couaty,in Prince Ed- | ward Island,has on ‘this ninth day of March, | A. D. 1894, been dissolved by mutual con- sen . Dated this ninth day | 1894. URIAH MATTHEW. JOHN McLEAN. BENJ AMIN HEARTZ. Signed in the presence of } J. A. Macdonald. ‘ NOTICE. The above business will hereafter be ; carried on by the undersigned at the old stand, under the name and style of MAT- | THEW & McLEAN, who will be glad to ; meet all their old friends and as many new ones as will fayor them with their patronage. of March, A. D. URIAH MATTHEW, JOHN McLEAN. mehl2—dy lw wy 3i ‘Inland Steam Navigation Company. The Annual General poe of the Shareholders of the In!and Steam Naviga- tion Company will be held in the Room in Queen’s Building, King Street (now occu- pied. by the Harbor Light), on SATUR- DAY, the 17th inst., at 3 o’clock, p. m. L. C. OWEN, | Secretary. i Ch’town, March 1, 1894—eod tl dte r SATURDAY, KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to | tle needs of physical being, will attest } the value to nealth of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the | remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting | in the form most acceptab’s and pleas- | aut to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative: effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Sjrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- | gists in 75c. ‘bottles, but it is manu- factured by the California Fig Syrup Co, gly, w ose name is printed onevery | paskaye, also the name, Syrup of Figs, | and being well informed, you will not | weevt any substitute if offered, W. &. Watson, Druggist, Charlotteows PB Island. iymwtf Balike the Dutch Process — No Alkalies oer Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’S r BreakfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soluble. | Ithas morethan three times Ki wee? Sugar, and is far sore eco- Feds. delicious less than one cent @ cup. It icious, nourishing, an@ EASILY Sold by Grocers e everywhers. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass PERE FECT MANHOOD! How attained-—how ree stored—ho' Ordinary a. siology willnot tell the doctors can’t a ‘on’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, #.¥, 2 ‘ gHNSON ANoDYNE LINIMERT LIKE An ANY Y OTH Ep Peter t ata Im 1210 Originated by an Oid Family ja. Think Of It. pha A ay tion af G t — eal : ra after Generation have use and Every ae “utte have . —- tre Neuralgia, Eve ry Sufferer f°" Nervous Headache, Diphtherta, Coughs Bron. chitis, Asthma, Cholera-Morbua, D! Soreness in Bodyor Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, will find in this oid Anody me Cy = apeody cure have nson Every Mother Ansiyne Einiment inthe Sore Throat, Tonsillitis, Coys “Cuts, te oe and Pains liable to Occur — Se fami} without { notice. De/ays may Cost a life, Re: all er Coraplaints hike magi Pete Ss 35 ota. tles, 32. Exoresapadl. isd ado, Boston AFTER HAVING BEEN KEPT aa UP ALL NIGHT With that COUGH, if you do not want to repeat the experience, buy a bottle of the OLD STANDARD REMEDY Gray’s Syrup of Red Spruce Gum The best Cough Cure in the world. Sold everywhere 25 cts. a bottle. KERRY WATSON & CO. Paopnicrone MONTREAL. R DRUGCIST FOF VMI I NOR WE ws COD: Aa one cream. ofls snate in estes: In big bottles 5Q0c. and 81.00. / and good water. . THE DAILY EXAMINER. Single Copies Two Cents WHERE’S MOTHER? To ast. “Is mother here?” Then give an eager glance around ia 3 } Bright curly heads pop in all day | | And swiftly disappear. } She onght to wear a silver bell, W hose note, so sweet and clear, i Should tinkle out a cheery sound, Repeating, “Mother's near.” And then if any little one Had something giad to tell, Or seratches, bumps or tears or fears Or secret woes befell, No neeé to fly from room to room, But simply listen well, | And, like the happy little lambe, i Just follow **Mother’s bell." —St. Nicholas. ‘VANISHED. ~ -] was engaged to be married. My moth- er had died when | was aged 15, and since her death I bad been my father’s house keeper and companion. My brother, twc years my elder, was at the bar. We occupied a suburban villa residence —rather superior to a villa—it had a large garden in front, and a drive to the door, and a terrace on which the drawing room window opened. We liked to regard or | selves asa cut above suburban villa peo | ple. We kept a carriage and pair and had « butler and had a creataunt whc was an honorable, and sol believe we were ) what we believed ourselves to be. My father had been iu South Africa. | He bad made his fortune in the Kimber- | ley diamond mines and bad made it some- what rapidly, having had the good fortune | to find a number of stones of great size | One of the finest be had not disposed of. | He kept it as a specimen or as 8 Dest egg. It was rather a cause of anxiety to ua, as | he carried it 4.0ut with him in his purse, He would not trust itin the house. He thought it safer on his person, So it might have been had he not been wont to produce it after dinner, as well as at other times when servauts were present and show it and expatiate on its beauty and value. We had « butler whom we did not like. We called him the bandit, fram his wild ind savage appearance. His dress was ris wit enough, but he bad atforbidding face. lec ondneted himself harmlessly evough i} on One oceasion he got drunk at a din- ver party we gave. Theil my tather dis- missed him, and he took up his residence uot far from onr house, where there was a sort of slum inhabited by persons of no very fixed occupation. My father refused him a character, or rather be said that if he were called on for a character he would state the truth con- cerning the man and not give a false char- acter, as is so often done out of good na- ture in order to give a servaut another chance. It is singular that employers should be so considerate for the émployed end so little considerate for their brother employers as to let them engage servants whom they know to be unsatisfactory atcl likely to give troable. Tbe bandit of course knew that my fa- ther carried the diamond about with him. ft was odd that the bandit should have settled in the neighhorbood. These two thoughts did not strike me, or «trike me as connected, till later. My father wes, 1 daresay, somewhat trovbled at my engagement. He would tose me, asd was going to India with my tusband, and, as I have said, I was his companion and housekeeper after my moth- era death. But my father was not a map of demonstrativeness, and he made nec thow of greatly concerning himself at my loss. He took the prospect more coolly than I perhaps liked. My father belonged to a good family. The honorable greataunt was his aunt, rot my mother’s. He had been intended for the church and a family living, but had preferred going to South Africa, and eventually, through the death of an uncle, some money came to him, which in addi- tion to what he had made in the diamond fields enabled him to retire and live up to the hunorable sunt—I mean to keep a car- riage and pair and a butler and havea house # cut above a viila. In a couple of months I was to be mar ried. One evening I eat up late, thinking over the five. The season was October, the air was a little ehilly, but not cold, so a fire was de sirable, but. not necessary. The blinds and curtaina were not drawn, at my de sire, a8 the hunter's noon wasshining and was nearly full, and I am at all times fond of moonligbt. When one is in love and anticipating marriage, one simply adores it. So Ihad told the servant not to close the shutters and draw the blinds. The windows were such as are called French—that is to say, they opened to the ground and were windows and doors in one. They commanded the terrace. It was my father’s habit every evening before retiring to smoke a pipe on the ter race, and as I sat by the fire, with the lamp turned down #0 as to enjoy the moonlight, 1 could see him walking up and down the terrace. I could see him if I chose—-I actu- ally saw his shadow. The moonlight fell through the two long windows on the pol- ixbed onk floor and oriental rugs. As] sat I saw his shadow flung on the floor be fore window No. 1, then a couple of sec onds later on the floor before window No 2. Then ensued a minute, as he walked to the end of the terrace, then in reverse order came his shadow tn the light of No 2, und then, after a momentary interval, his shadow obseured the light from No. 1. How leng this went on 1 cannot tell. Presently it stopped. [did not particular ly notice when. I was thinking of my presents. Some time after the butler came in and asked if he should lock up the house and shut the shutters. I answered ‘‘Yes,’’ as uy father, I said, had done his pipe and come in. I concluded he had come in, be- cause I no longer saw his shadow, and I judged from his invariable habit of always coming indoors when he had done his pipe. Next morning I came down to breakfast as usual and waited for him. “Please, miss,’? said the housemaid, ‘*master left the lamp burning in thestudy all night.”’ “Did he?” said I. It was unusual. He was {s0 methodical in all he did. The tea wonld spoil unless he came quickly. I rang for the butler. ‘Will you call your master? He must have over- slept himself. Say there is grilled par tridge, and it: is getting cold, and the tea will taste bitter.”’ Presently the butler returned. *‘Please, miss, the master is not in his room. He has not been there all night. The bed is undisturbed. The hot water has not been taken in.” My father had disappeared. Not a trace of him could we find. Sud- denly, in the moonlight, he had vanished. The last I had seen of him was his shadow cast on the drawing room floor on the pre vions nigbt. As I considered, I could not The Modern Invalid. Has tastes medicinally, in keeping with other luxuries. A remedy must be plea- santly acceptable in form, purely whole some in composition, truely beneficial in effect and entirely free from every objec- tionable quality. If re _ ill he consults __Ph: ET tent ; if constipated uses the gentle laxative, Syrup of Figs sheen Now is the time to get your supply of crockery as we are selling off cheaper than ever to make reom for new goods to arrive @s s00n as navigation opens. The cheap crockery store.—W. P. Colwill. feb 6 dv&wky 3wke. | been tant I had seen flung on the drawing | room floor. } not noticed what he then wore. | ful—four days elapsed since the disappear- | find. | my-tather away from the terrace and down | be taken indefinitely without dangerous re re- VOL 33.—NO. 217 say in which direction I had seen his shad- ow pass for the last time. 1 could not tell within half an hour when I had last seen it. I could not indeed swear that the shadow I had seen was that of my father, as I had not looked st him through the window. All that I could say was that it was his custom about that time every night to walk the terrace, and that tierefore prob- ably he had walked it the night he disap- peared, od his shadow it probably had Days, weeks passed, and nota trace of my father was found. I had not the small- est doubt as to what had become of him, nor had my brother nor any of the neigh- borhood. The bandit had murdered him and made away with his body for the sake of the diamond. Of course we took action the moment we were sure he had absolutely vanished. The police watched the bandit, they searched his house, where they did find some arti- cles that had belonged to my father, but which the ex-butler protested he had pur- joined while in our service. There was a bandkerchief that had my father’s initials, a tie to which I could swear and a breast- pin, but I ceuld not be sure that he had worn these when he disappeared. My father did not dress for dinner when we were alone,so that he may have worn the tie and breastpin on the last occasion we dined together. I cannotsay. I had Nothing further tocompromise the man was discovered, but that was not wonder ance of my father before the police search- ed the bandit’s lodgings—time enough for him to make away with the diamond. What he had done with my father’s body, where he had secreted it, we could never We could not imagine how he had lured a back lane, where we conjectured the murder had been committed. Not that we found evidence there of a struggle, but that it was the only place in the immedi- ste neighborhood where a murder could have been committed. We had no moral doubt whatever that the bandit had murdered my father and had murdered him in the back lane I men- tion; that he had made him insensible by meens of chloroform before dispatching, and that my poor father’s body was secreted somewhere near our villa. Nevertheless it was not possible te bring the murder home to the man, and when he disappeared.shortly after we were all morally certain he had gone away to en- joy the profits of the sale of the diamond— cut maybe into two or three, so as to ren- der it incapable of identification. After avhile—eight months—I married and went to India. My brother let the house, as he was unmarried. Vive years later I returned from India with a couple of children, whom the cli- mate of India did not suit. As the house was then unlet, | took it off my brother, although associated with such painful rec- ollections. The honorable greataunt came to pay me a visit and make the acquaint- ance of her great-great-nephew and niece, the latter of whom was called after her. One moonlight evening after the chil- dren had been sent to bed we were sitting together in the drawing room, when we began to talk of my poor father. ‘It is rather odd when you come to think of it,’’ said the honorable greataunt,‘‘that Jack may be said to have disappeared be- fore.’’ ‘*How so, aunt?’’ ‘He was intended for the church, but didn’t fancy it. The living of Willowslop- cum-Studge was a family living and in- tended for him. We all wished it, but when sent to Oxford he did not read and was plowed at his examinations and then, ashamed to be seen, dashed away to South Africa, and there, as it happened, did weil.”’ As we talked ashadow passed before the window No. 1. A second, and it passed before the window No. 2. Then a minute, and in reversed order it passed No. 2, and in another moment No. 1. Our hearts stood still, Iwas nigh on fainting. A minute later, a step——my fa- ther’s step—in the hall. Another minute he—not his shadow, hein the flesh—was in the drawing room, and I in his arms. How came it all about? ‘*My dear Ethel,’’ said my father, ‘‘to tell you the truth. I had had enough of civilization. Before I got too old I thought I'd make another venture at free life in the wilds. I’ve been cattle ranching, I’ve been a cowboy—enjoyed myself famously. When Tom was getting on at*the bar, you about to be married and going to India, | did not see that I had any particular call to keep me in England. I had grown dead- ly tired of suburban villa life, of social conventionalities, sick to disgust of Eng- lish politics. I heard that a society paper was going to send an interviewer to draw me out as the wealthy diamond man, and so the fit came on me to hook it. “T hooked it once before and told no one. So I hooked it again and told noone. I] was ashamed to teil the truth—that I was dead sick of civilization; that I loathed it to the toes. But I was, so I bolted. “T sold my diamond in New York. By the way, I’ve not made money this time —I've lost it. By the way also, I’ve had a chap put over me in the ranch that was my butler here once. We called him the bandit. Hetold me he’d been accused of having murdered me, and the accusation had hung on him and forced him to leave old England. He is nota badchap. He advanced me the money to come home and sent his respects to you, Ethel, and asked me to tell you that he did not rob and murder me and conceal my corpse."’ “‘Oh, papa, are you now home for good?”’ “Yes, I think so—but can’tsay. I shall have to hook it again some day, but that will be into another world altogether.’’— 8. Baring Gould in Scotsman. Annie Laurie. A Pittsburg magazine, The Youth's Journal, has hunted up the history of An- nie Laurie. She was not a creature of im- agination, but an actual verity of whose ancestry honorable mention is made in Seotch history. Stephen Laurie was a flourishing merchant of Dumfries before James VI became king. Prior to 1611 he married Marion, daughter of Provost Co- ran, getting with her a handsome mar- riage portion. Being a man of mauy acres, he took the designation of Maxwelton, leaving at bis death his lands and titles to his eldest son, John. The next head of the house was Robert, a baronet. He was | twice married and had, by his second wife, three sons and four daughters. The birth of one of the latter is thus entered in the family register by the father, ‘‘At the pleasure of the almighty God, my daugh- ter, Annie Laurie, was born upon the 16th day of December, 1582, about 4 o’clock in the morning, and was baptized by Mr. George Hunter, the minister of Glencairn.’’ Tbe well known lyric was composed by Mr. Douglas Finland, an ardent admirer of ‘‘Bonnie Annie,’’ who did not, however, return his affections, but married his ri- val, Alexander Furguson. Puttner’s Emulsion contains neither Quinine, strychnine, nor other harmful drug. Its ingredients are wholesome ani- mal and vegetable substances, and it may sults, PECULIAR in combination, pro- portion and preparation of ingredi- ents, Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses great curative value. You should TRY IT. USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY the greaa Bleod and Nerve Remedy. Montreal, P. Q. A Marvelous Medicine Whenever Given a Fair Trial Hood’s Proves its Merit. The followiug letter is from Mr. J. Alcido Chaussé¢, architect and surveyor, No. 153 Shaw Street, Montreal, Canada: “CC, 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass “Gentlemen: —I have been taking Hood's Sarsaparilia for about six months and am glad to say thatit has done me a great Geal ef good. Last May my weight was 152 pounds, but since HOOD’S Sarsaparilla GURES ‘ I began to take Hood's Sarsaparita it has io- creased to 163. I think Hood's Sarsaparilia is a marvellous medicine and am very muc h pleased with it J, ALCIDR CHAUSSE. Hood's Pits cure liver ills, co sonstipation, bilicugness, jaundice, sick headache, indigestion. A TRIP ROUND THE WORLD STODDARD’S PICTURES. No more beautiful Photo Engravings are issued than Stoddard’s Portfolio of Views of Famous Places and Scenes. The pictures equa) the finest photographs in detail. Charmingly written explanations and descriptions accompany each photograph The pictures are 8x10 in size. Single photographs of the same subjects would cost $1.00 each. They are bound up in covers, and are exactly the same size as our famous World’s Fair Portfolios. Sample copy may be seen at this office. This series of pictures is issued in 16 parts. Each part will contain 16 photo- rraphs at the least. The price for each partis 10 cents, and an Examiner con- pons must be sent with the money. HOW TO GET THESE PICTURES. Stoddard’s Photographs Parts 1 2 & 8 Now Ready. Cut out this coupon, and send with 10 cents to THe EXAMINER OFFiIce, and the Part wanted will be delivered to you. Or- ders from the country filled by return mail. No charge for postage. The Examiner Pub. Co. March, 1894. THE MAGIC CITY. This series of World’s Fair Photographs will be published in 16 parts. Single parts cost 10 cents each. Coupons must also be sent for each part wanted. C CITY i ted of THE MAG Part wan 5 AND 6 READY. silver,and the F ao f47-Cut out this coupon and mail it, or bring it in person, to Tar Ex- COUPON FOR y The Magic City World's Fair Photographs PARTS Orders by mail will receive prompt attention, and no charge will be AMINER, with ten cents in will be delivered to you, The Examiner Publishing Comp y, ene Eee = — — pita rovysictans endorse 4 - tf them, 5 and me Dae ; 3 i. 4 Physicians ‘ ad make A ‘a them. x. la ommend seg Ass mak oda’s 5 Biscovery ain Skola's other remccies, as I know theta to be articles of true merit, and tae paurs.icians wv a componnd ther t) ve ine interrity and abil i Koda’s IDMseoy ery is uu like any propi-etary medicine- -if cures «is ease by removing the poieon, and the Suid iime SUPPLIES Giktip L Li 1) to wasted parts No other penne ly Las peoriormed 66 aay won- evf al cures or relieved so muck euf- ering. Skoda's Li (ulate Cane cousiinalien, Bich 1 paerted mi defame ’ Cts MEDICAL ADVICE FREEZES. GYOUA DISCOVERY C5., LTD., WOLFVILLE, x. 5. For sale by all druggists. Trade plied Y W. R. Watson; Charlottetows