CALENDAR FOR FEBRUARY, 1894. hor ) Las « f iUh Sy m.SE ai water ; 46/539] 443 Tl, DNILY EXWMDER DalL¥Y NEWSPAPER ce Leaptne I or P. E. Istanp, I« led ev y afternoon, from the office of iINER Pvuatisuine Company, in the House Building, Queen Street RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE) YRA : $1.00 ~ MonTHS 2.00 THrer Mentits 1.00 One MonTu O35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES | advertisements which are ordered for only one or two weeks the charge is *h for the first insertion, and 20 ents fo ach continuation. Rate cards are | farnished on application at the office. Special } contract prices at @ reduced rate are quoted for isements four inches in size or lars Ww h are to run for three months or long No special notices inserted unless paid for atthe rate of 19 cents per line, and under no cireumstances will such paid notices appear in the local column. Special discounts made on all advertise- ments connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Picnics, ete. NO notices will be inserted with the sam ibne is paid unless the regular rate of 10 cents per | That Tux Examiner is considered by our | Merchants and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, is abundantly proved by the fact that in order to accommodate our advertisers we have been compelled to enlarge the paper to its presen? size. TERMS : Four Dollars al. : Veag “itle “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak .free.”—Buripides. Single Copies Two Cents eT, ite “t) NEW SERIES aseaeaalied bene - — ee __ s ‘fe : oe > Ser AN, Fr ake » o,— CET Ir NOW! a eumragyoen You have heard of the good man who prayed for RAIN and Portfolios or the pra that is what happened with “THE EXAMINER'S ‘other words, THE MAGIC CITY ! Tre Datiy Examiner is for sale by the fol- Owing agents RK. H. Mason, Post O'fce, Charlottetown J. Meintyre Malpeque Road, : ©. Paal, Lower Spring Park Road, W. M. Corin, srafton Street, S. Grey, cor. Water and Prince St. D. Chappell, Prince Street, Pazaar Store, (queen street, treo. Carter & Co., Queen Street & Gray, News Stall, P. E. 1. Railway} and on the trains M. ®& T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- mersid-s. Harry McFarlane, Souris. Hon. D. Gordon, '-eorgetown. D. A. kgan, Mt. Stewart. 4. M. Clarke, Alberton Chas. A. Gillis, Orwell Cove. ee a he The Weekly Examiner | Is issued every Friday morning from the | , , , os |and beyond everything else relating to the Wold’s Fair. publishers’ office. [t is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and ja a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and full of the latest news. The subscription for Tae WreKkty Exam. INER, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. bove for Tas DatLy EXAMINER. DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Graduate of the University of the City of New York, late Member of the Resident Staff of Belle- vue Hospital and the New York Lying-in Hospital, New York City. OFFICE. Nerth OPPOSITE POST OFFICE esidence—Near Corner of King anc Queen Streets, Charlottetown. ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES. Queen Street, Cherlttetown Salesroom : |Grandest, the Most Beautiful, the Most Wonderful of all ! got a FLOOD! Well World’s Fair, in WE KNEW IT WOULD GO, because it is the Best, the Largest, the Greatest, the Containing over 500 Splen- }did Photographie Views and Historical Descriptions of the World’s Fair-and the Midway | Plaisance. Don't Fail to Get a Sample Number of “The Magic City,” | } i ‘they all want it and must have it. All who have seen it are astonished at its marvellous beauty. It is Its GRAND PHOTOGRAPHS | IN NATURAL COLORS are a surprise to everybody. ‘ } | | | num , ‘and the Midway Plaisance, with accurate Historical Descriptions. Surgeon. | will constitute a large and beautiful oblong volume, 11x13 inches, illustrated with Medical Department of the | ——- INCLUDING ——— Side Queen Square All the Principal Buildings, | foreign and State Buildings, Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX Rheumatic and Newalgis Cure Of the Age HOUSEHOLD PAIN CURE AND EOE £ MANUFACTURED ONLY BY é ONLY ONE COUPON Advertising rates on the same scale as given | Nothing like it! Nothing equals it! above away REQUIRED. “THE MAGIC CITY” will be published in sixteen consecutive weekly parts or bers, each containing sixteen to twenty splendid Photographs of the World’s Fair The complete series OYER S00 CRAND YIEWS, ‘General Views, Interior Views, Architectural Details, ‘The consecutive weekly parts will be ; —————— ae And all the Grand and Wonderful Features of the Great Fair, tal the Splendor of the World’s Exposition by a Special Corps of Artists. mailed to any address, or delivered to persons calling at our office, at the uniform price of TE CENTS KACH, Don’t miss the greatest and best of all the World’s Fair histories. Great Paintings, Celebrated Statuary, Glimpses of the Art Gallery, Character Sketches in the Midway, Curious Foreign Types, = at the taken height o ONE COUPON. and | THE AMERICAN j } Writes capitals, small letters, figures and marks—71 in all. Writes just like a $100 machine. No Shift Keys. No Ribbon. Prints from the type direct. Prints on flat surface. Writing always in sizht. Corrections and insertions easily made. Takes any width of paper or envelope up to 8$ inches. order. in registered letter, money order or certified check. D. B.LSTEWART, Agent, Charlottetowa. $8.00 Typewriter. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and pune- tuation marks (71 in al!) on fail 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 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 almost at a) Gold Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, Zlance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. It is the first of While not as rapid as Easy to understand—learned in 6 minutes. | Weighs only four pounds—most portable. Compact, takes up but little room. Built solid and simple; can't get out of Capital and lower case keyboard ailke- easily mastered. More “margin play” for the small letters which do mest of the work, Takes good letter-press copies. Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on rece ipt of price, $8.00, We guarantee every machine, and are glad to answer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the “ Yost.” IRA CORNWALL, General Agent forMaritime Provinces, dec20 ‘: heif 9 4/, KNOWLEDGE Bri«gs co:nfort and improvement and tend to personal enjoyment when | rightly used, The many, who live bet~- | ter than others and enjoy life more, with leas expenditure, by mors promptly | adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest | the value to nealth of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. {ts excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptub’s and pleas- ant to tlie taste, the refreshing and truly | beneficial properties of a perfect lex. ative ; effectually cleansing the system, | dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanentiy curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and } mot with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels withont weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable aubstance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- gists in 75c. bottles, but it is manu tactured by the California Fig Syrur Co, only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs. and being well informed, you will no | ‘ccept #ny substitute if offered. W. R. Watson, Druggist, P.E Island. ~ Ontike the Dutch Process No Alkalies —O8R— Other Chemicals -- are used in the dy preparation of W. BAKER & COS reakfasiCocoe which is absolutely pure and soluble, '| Ithasmorethan threetime ) the strenyth of Cocoa mixe with Starch, Arrowroot ¢ ae Sugar, and is far more eco nomical, casting less than one cent a cup It is delicious, nourishing, an@ EAsILi DIGESTED, Charlotteown iymwtf Seld by Grocers everywhers. W. BAKER &CO., Dorchester, Macy ~~ ee PPV w VOwwseyR es , a $ @ 6 e e é ¢ é @ e ee mm , @ é 4 “Vou’ll Feel Better” $ ,Uverybody does, after taking ag ‘ .2w bottles of é ee ee ee PORTER. = § » It builds upthe run-down sys-¢ ° em.—is strengthening and appe- ¢ izing. Itis readily borne by weak , ttormachs, regulates the bowels, > cd is invaluable to those afflicted § * with Indigestion and Fiatulency. @ “HE NiL10 PEPTONIZED PORTER C0. LID. § 5 TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. “ Wighiy Recommended by Physicians. ¢ KAS SOD Information Wanted of the relatives of JAMES WALLACE, a carpenter and seaman, who came to Bos ton about 20 years ago. Address GEO. WALLACE, South Abington Station, Mass. jan29—dy & wy PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained—how ree stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- siolc gy willnot tell yous the doctors can’t or <=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 =| yor lost through folly, casa 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., Duffalo, N.Y. DYEING COMPANY. 7 PEPTONIZED: A>, eee } } } MONTREAL. WE’ ARE PREPARED TO DYE al! class of goods and garments equal to any House in Europe. FRENCH CLEANING a specialty. All information regarding shades, prices, etc., furnished by CHAS. IVES MORRISON, Agent, Queen Street. Rept25—eod Christy nives BREAD— CARVING—PARING. FOR SALE BY R. B. Norton & Co., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. sag 16, hie le ne ES aaa CHARLOTTE’ ‘OWN, P. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1894. HIS OPINION ON MONEY. $HOMAS A. EDISON, THE GREAT IN- | VENTOR, SPEAKS. He Thinks the Hankering After Gold aod Silver Largely Due to Tradition and Custom—The Best Dollar Could Be Made of Compressed Wheat, Thomas A. Edison, the great inven tor, has apparently turned a odes of | his attention to the financial problem in a recent interview he sa‘d: The hankering after gold and _ silver ia largely traditional. People allow themselves to be governed by the old ideas on the subject of coinage formn- lated ata time wher national credits did not exist and currency would only be taken at an intrinsic value. What we need ts a new standard of valne. I think that the best dollar could be made out of compressed wheat. You take a bushel of wheat and squeeze the water out of it and then compress it intoahard cake the size of a silver dollar and stamp the government mark upon it. That would represent actual value and labor performed and then you could eat your dollar, for when you wanted to use the wheat all that would be nécessary would be to put your money to soak. We should then have the bushel of wheat as a permanent unit of value which all farmers would appreciate, and the currency of the country would represent actual worth and labor performed. Both gold and silver could then be dispensed with rs ~ present bimetallic problem solved.” Aluminium. Aluminium is silvery white, two and a half times heavier than water, and only one third as heavy as steel. It does not tarnish like silver when exposed to the air, and although it is not so hard as iron some of its alloys with copper and other metals are intensely hard and strong. It can be spun around wire s0 fine that weavers turn it into cloth, and it can be hammere-1 so thin that afbreath will blow it away. It is already being used for kitchen pots and pans, because it is so light and strong, and in Germany it is made into equipments for soldiers for the same reason. It is expected some day to replace iron wares for carrying electric currents, since it is much lighter than iron and will not rust. Boats are being made of it. though aait water corrodes it, and the first prac- tical flying-machine is likely to be built in large part of aluminium. 3y the aid of electricity it is now pos- sible to extract aluminium from clay cheaply, and the uses of the metal are being increased every year. Up to the present there has been ons strong draw back to its use. Mechanics have been nnable to make a solder that would unite two pieces of it firmly. Ifsuch a solder has been invented, as claimed, then the uses of this most abundant metal have been increased a hundred fold.—Harper's Young People. Some Definitions. Cuff was once a mitten or glove. Coupon—something to cut off—was de- vised. by Thomas Cook, author of Cook's tours, in 1864, but it is not among his testaments that it shall be called ‘‘kew- pon.” Culturist ,is Americanese, from cultivator of fish or other natural pro- ducts to a cultivator of culture. Chi- nook ‘‘cultus” means of little worth. There is a cultus cod which will prob ably give us @ significant term in due time. There was an honest simplicity in the elder meaning of custard. It was egg pie. Among the fanciful moderni zations stands pre-eminent cynosure— literally the dog’s tail—which. by the way, Prof. Moultoe ought to pronounce “sinesure” to be consistent with “inythe,” and which, from its original meaning of the pole star, the train of Ursa Major, and spelt ‘‘cinosura.” was carried by Benjamin Disraeli to its full present sense, a centre of attraction or interest. Laugi. There ia absolutely nothing that will! help you bear the ills of life so well asa good laugh. Laugh allyou can. If the clothes-line breaks, if the cat tips over the milk and the dog elopes with the roast, if the children fall into the mud simultaneously with the advent of clean aprons, if the new girl quits iu the mid dle of housecleaning, and though you search the earth with candles you find none other to take her place: if the neighbor in whom you have trusted goes back on you and keeps chickens, if the chariot wheels of the uninvited guest draw near when youare out of provender and the gaping of an empty purse is like the unfilled mouth of a young robin, take courage if you have enongh sun shine in your heart to keep a laugh on your lips. Europe Slowly Growing Colder. That the continent of Europe is pas. sing through a cold periéd has been inted out by M. Flammarion, the rench astronomer. During the past six years the mean temperature of Paris has been about two degrees below the normal, and Great Britain, Belgium, =. Italy, -,ustria and Germany have also been growing cold. The change seéms to have been in progress in France for a long time, the growth of the vine having been forced far southward since the thirteenth century; and a similar cooling has been observed as far away as Rio de Janeiro, where the annual temperature has going down for some years past.——Scientific American. When Children Grow. The British Medical Monthly offers some interesting statements, which our readers may test for themselves if they will, as to the times of growth of the human body. The year of greatest growth in the boys is the seventeenth; in girls the fourteenth. While girls reach ful! height in their fifteenth year, they ac- quire full weight at the age of twenty Boys are stronger than girls from birth to the eleventh year; then girls become physically superior until the seventeenth year, when the tables are turned, and remain so. From November to*April children w very little and gain no weight: ame April to July they gain in height, but losein weight, and from July ta November they increass greatly in weight, but not in height. A Husband's Rebuke, “How do I look?” said Dr. Kallowmell to his young wife as he exhibited his new suit. “Dressed to kill!" she exclaimed en- ery dear,” replied ber h “My . usband ty. “you shouldn's talk shop,”—-duhes” The Modern Invalid, Has tastes medicinally, in keeping with other luxuries, A remedy must be plea- santly acceptable in form, purely wholef some in composition, truely beneficial in effect and entirely free from every objec- tionable quality. If really ill he consults physician; it constipated uses the gentle amily laxative, Syrup cf Figs Seah For Sudden Colds, take Hawker’s Toly and Wild Cherry Calsam. It cures ...... USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY the great | Blood and Nerve Remedy. DAINTIES FOR JOHN CHINAMAN. 4h Sin Revels in Dishes Which Look Curious to Occidental Eyes. Every day in New York you can see a score cf pigtailed gentlemen in the neighborhood of Mott street each carry inga huge brown bag. If you could open these mysterious packages you would find desiccated shrimps and [coe picked Amoy cabbage, delicate ittle tubers known as ‘‘ma-tai” bitter eucambers, dried devil fish, Awabi clams from Japan, smoked oysters, pre- served sharks’ fins, pots of sweetmeats funny looking sausages and lots of dain | ties for which there is no name in English, A poor laundryman wi!l spend a quarter or a third of bis income upon these luxuries, and will devote a half day of his precious tim to cooking them in approved Mongolian style. The table is a queer work of art The china and porcelain are superb, so | beaatiful that in this land of collectors | they would be placed in cabinets. There are no knives and forks. The Celestial wind regards cutting and carving a labor unworthy ofa guest, and rele gates it toacook. In lieu of forks are chopsticks—iong, slender bars of ivory tipped with silver or gold. The spoons are films of porcelain; the white glass @s, cups like those in children’s 4do!! honses, Your plate is a saucer and vour napkin a silk towel held by a servant. The table is handsome nevertheless. It is nearly covered with dainty plates containing hors d'ceuvres piled up in slender pyramids. One pile consists of peeled bananas, cut into little drums; another of pineapple, carved into tiny bars, like miniatures of laundry soap; & third of crystallized dwarf oranges, moistened in honey: a fourth of fine onion sprouts and a fifth preserv- ed eggs, dark green and suggesting cu cumbers. Other plates contain sliced sausage, pickled cocks’ combs, hard boiled pigeons’ eggs, sweet pickled intial ginger, sliced water chest- nuts, dried fish segments, desiccated prawns, smoked fish roe, and a score of other and equally incongruous dainties. Yon help yourself to any of these both before and during the banquet. In the meantime the waiter or the “‘sing song girl” has filled your teacup with fragrant Oolong ani your winecup with boiling wine. From this point neither cup is permitted to remain empty nor grow old. If it stands longer than the time allotted by Mongo lien etiquette it is removed and replaced by a hot one. After a jew minutes of nibbling and sipping the courses begin to arrive and continue to arrive as long as there is a soul at the board. Soups and stews, omelettes and entrees, roasts and boiled. raygouts and fricassees, croquettes and vol au vents, sweet dishes and sour follow one another without apparent rhyme or reason. At the end of every half hour you take a recess of from five to fifteen minntes Everybody lights a cigarette or puffs a water pipe. A few retire to one of the bunks and smoke a pipe of opinm. The ‘sing song” girls perform a brief concert, vocal and instrumental, and again the meal proceeds. It is a poor din ner that has less than twenty courses, Some have forty and fifty, and a few pass the hundred mark You eat what you please and as much as you please. Scarcely any dish is simple ; some contain twenty ingredients. ‘The average banquet uses pork, fresh, salt .and smoked; pigs’ brain, liver and kid ney, chicken, duck, pigeon, quail and goose; fish, fresh, driei, salt and smoked ; eggs of at least four kinds, rice, pastry, beans, peas, cabbage, millet. lentils, onions, garlic, leek, cucumber, squash, melon, gourd, potatoes, white and — yam, ma-tai, bean, sprouts, Spinach, turnip, parsnip, carrot, devil fish, dragoon fish, fish roe, clams, oysters, crabs, sea weed, mushroom and tres mushrooms, bird's nests. shark's fins, chilliss, orange peel, ginger, cocoanut, macaroni, and heaven knows what not. Interesting Experiments. The Armstrong Gun Company has shown some very interesting experi ments with the latest ordnance. A 6 inch gun was fired four times in twenty seconds, an 8-inch gun three times in thirty seconds. A torpedo was driven satisfactorily with cordite as powder There was a search light which would keep its beam upon an object no matter how violently the vessel rolled. A 1( inch thirty-ton gun, when it was fired. opened the bresch screw by the recoil and wound up a spring, which, when released, would close the breach again A 47-10 field howitzer anchored itself after the first discharge by driving a spade-shaped plate into the ground, after which its recoil was met by a jacket which surrounds it. A 6-inch gun, with light portable disappearing mountings, for @ siege train, could be taken apart so that no portion weighed more than three tons, ten hours being required to mountit. A 6-inch naval gun fired five rounds in sixty-nine sec. onde, each time at a different range and target. A — of special steel designe.) for a shield received rifle and Gatling gun fire at 100 yards range without a single penetration, while the plate hitherto used was penetrated at every shot, the Gatling gan almost cutting it in two. . Freeing a Well of Foul Air. ‘I saw,” says 8 writer in a Western paper, “a curious method used, the other day, in Illinois to take the foul air out of a well. Te well was to bo cleaned, but the man that took the job was afraid to go down until he had ascertained the quality of the air at the bottom. He let down 6 lighted candle, and when it had decended to about six feet of the bottom it went out as sudden ly as though —ae by a whiff of air. That was all he wanted to know. He wasthen sure that the well had poisonous gas in it, and took a small umbrella, tied a string to the handle and lowered it open into the well. Having let it go nearly to the bottom, he drew it up, carried it a few feet from the well and upset it. He repeated this operation twenty or thirty times, with all the by stande-s laughing at him; then again lowered the light, which burned clear sud brighteven atthe bottom. He then condescended to explain that the gas in the well was carbonic acid gas, which is heavier than the air, and therefore could be carried in an umbrella just as thongh it were so much water. It was & simple trick, yet perfectly effective,” Sara's Opinion. ~ Madame Bernhardt has expressed her = regarding several of her fellow y ers. Mary Anderson she considers very ee and graceful, and a—a actress, but notgreat. Mrs. = beautiful, beautiful! “But me, Terry is the artist I love. Oh, she is « great, & grand artist—so graceful, so be witching; and Mr. Irving is an artist. }o—more artist, however, than actor ” SaaS Puttner’s Emulsion contains neither Quinine, strychnine, nor other harmful drug. Its ingredients are wholesome ani- mal and vegetable substances, and it may ao can indefinitely without dangerons re- sults. THE STRONC POINT about the cures by Hood's Sarsaparilla is that they are permanent. They start from the solid foundation —Pure Blood. Toothache, Faceache, Inflamed and Bore Eyes are certainly cured by Pond’s Extract: sold in our bottles ouly, —@.- VOL 33.—NO. 202 | Montreal, P. Q. A Marvelous Medicine |Whenever Given a Fair Trial Hood’s Proves Its Merit. The following letter is from Mr. J. Alcide Chaussé, architect and surveyor, No. 153 Shaw Street, Montreal, Canada: “C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. : “Gentlemen:—-I have been taking Hood's Sarsaparilla for about six months and am gla to say that ithas done mea great deal ef good Last May my weight was 152 pounds, but since HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES I began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla it hes i- creased to 163. I think Hood's Sarsaparilla isa murvelious medicine and am very much please ! with it.” J. ALCIDE CHAUSSR. Hood's Pills cure liver ills, constipatior, bi'iousness, jaundice, sick headache, incigestion. Phy sicians Exporse Uae. (or mor refunded.) Mrs. Eimer E. Miliett, ?. O. Box 511, Livermore Falls, Maine. SALT RHEUM and all disease, of the BLoop & Srry. Skoda’s Discovery, Skoda’s German Ointment and Skoda’s German Soar, are specially adapted to cure inher!’ ed and chronic diseases. Mrs. Mitl writes: ‘I have had Salt Rhenui ev. since I could remember; tried mov, remedies, but received no benett un. | I took Skoda’s Discovery. Skoda’s Curec. My husband says it wil! cost too roel to board me if I take any more of Siko da’s Discovery. Skoda’s Little Tablets cure sick headwete. constipation and dyspepein. &) ina bud, «< MEDICAL ADVICE FRER. SKODA DISCOVERY C2, LTD., WOLFVILLE, NB DHNSON'S 4NopyNe LINIMER ynErke Bar Tay Ep INTERNAL as EITELNAL cee Im 1810 Originated by an Cid Family : In use for more Think Of It. f.2re formar, than Eignte ration after Generation have used and bicesed tt, Every Traveler should have @ bottle in his From Rheumatiam, Every Sufferer & a, ome Ree 5 eadache, a, Coug chitia, Asthma, Cholera-Morbu Diet 4 J ‘a, Soreness in Body or Lim Su Straipa wiii find in this old oat relied aut cede cure Every Mother swoiyneiniovuttn the Sore Th me Tonsilitia, aut Pains lable to cour, in sny family without ys “ke as eh = " paid; Gite s. °. Express pal ' { | | | } ' ’ ’ Baby Wants It. Martin’s Cardinal Food FOR INFANTS AND INVALIDS. The most palatable food prepared, and is unequalled by any other preparation ofits kind. The best food and the best value, put up in one pound Tins, price 25 cts. per Tin. Sold Retail by all Druggists and Gre cers and Wholesale i) KERRY WATSON & CO. Propritrone MONTREAL. Yaa NORWEGIAN pe 10) Ds LIVER. OIL WiT H_HYPOPHC ms hie ery; taste flee other Es bir bathe aste .ike others. In b 1 50c. and 81.00. oo “oe When we assert that Dodd’s RI ALLAANS Kidney Pills wnwnn’ PLAPLAIINAN Cure Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of a1 who have used “em. TH <¢ OUP” ro sray oureD. brs: ; eta ner Racers § | Maneeeneeeeeees For ra'e }wall druggists. Trade sup pried hy W. R. Watson; Charlottetown P. E.I 7? ae ge ee hee ee spaces wimeccemanaocanty + = dames Gigs es p sf ‘t oe eatin mses Amrunciors seteeeaat> tm somite inguiganesin sadam amon b