FOR JANUARY, CALENDAR 1am » av, 10h 54.9 Pp. m. b ; yy, 64 56.7 m,p.m, 8 W \ } y, 10h 589 am. NE Ss tm pm, N W Week | °" Sun | High a “@t» water hs hm | after’n + 49;418 6 34 Ay 49} 19 7 36 Ay 49 | 0 8 28 ‘ . i mee 49 22 | 9 56 : ‘8 23] 10 36 45 | 25 | ll 13) is 26 | ll 48 is 23 mern ‘ 7 29 | 07 ct ae Oe 46 | 3] aa Ay 16) 33 2 5] 4] 2 ' ho | | 3 M4} 7 |. i} sy b : 4. 10 | x ; — : a: @s. 4 < +} 43; %& . 40 43 | 10 : Mi | 44) 113 3 | 45) aft ¥ ye} 47 | 0 ay | 4s i i AY ' ; 50 | 1 6 | | : ) . Ay ; 51 23 a : ae | 53 | 3 - . ' 54 e 3 7 } 4 57] 7 ssid ° ‘tr wr" it Va iI, 4 } ) | i i ut 4 4,Ri bs + ULY NewspiPer E. ISLAND, afternoon, fr x Pcetisnine Company, in the nd House Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. UN ADVANCE) mm the office of | One YEAR . Bite Six MonrTus 200 Taree Meanrus - LO | Une Monts 0.3 Sent pest paid to any part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES For smal! advertisements which are ordered | for only one or two weeks the charge is 50 | cents per inch for the first insertion, and 2? cents for each continuation. Rate cards are ‘nished on application at the office. Special tract prices at a reduced rate are quoted c advertisements four inches in size oF larger, which are to run for three months o: No sj | notlees inserted unless paid for ' ) jta per line, and under no | will such paid notices appar | cai Column liseounts made on all advertise- } i ments connected with Charch Fairs, Bazaars, Pienics, ete ‘Oo wotices will be inserted with the same unless the regular rate of lv centa per ine la paid. That Tue Examiner ta considered by ous Merchaats and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper io P. E. Isiand, and conse- quer the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements pubi'c, is abundantly proved by the fact thai | rder to accom nodate our advertisers we hav yeen compelled to enlarge the paper to | ite presse t size, i Tus Dv vy Examiner is for sale by the fol- “ azents Rh. H. Mason, Post O tce, Charlottetown J. Meintyre Maipeque Road, : ‘ wer Sp ing Park Road, o \¥ »fin, -rafton Street, - “ Water and Prince St. I ippell Prince Street, Ra Store, Queen street, s G ar & Co., Queen Street. S. Gray, News Siall, P. E. L. Railway; and On the trains M. & T. 4. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sam- me i harry MeFarlane, Sourts. Hon. D.. ordon, eorgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. @.M. Clarke, Alberton Chas. A. Gillis, Orweil Cove. REE ee . oe ° The Weekly Examiner Ia issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. [ft is made up of matter which bas appeared in the Daily editions, and is @tiret-class weekly newspaper—intereasting and full of the The subscription for Taz WEEKLY ExaM. INER, post paid to any part ofgCanada or the latest news. United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for Tae DaILy EXAMINER. Physician and ined G Medical Department of the sity ne City of New York, late 5 ber « e Resident Staff of Belle- Vig H mpit tal 7 the New York Lying-in He ospital, New York City. OFFICE North Side Queen Square OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Fesidence—Near Corner of King and Queen Streets, C hark ottetown. - ROBERT + BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOGD REFERENCES. alesroom: Queen Street, Chelttetow Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX BLE “—, R er PAIN ‘CURE »feore iw INTERNAL AND EXLER! ae We SO CENTS > ‘ANUFACTURED ONLY ay i \ HE HA WKER MEDICINE CY LD ies —e > oT JOHN, N. B. oath ne lls i i TERMS : Four Dollars a Year Or » SSE “ nee ee —— , CHARLOTTETOWN, P. ELIS RAIN and rtfolios of got su FLOOD the You have heard of the that is what happened with THE ther words, THE MAGIC Crry WE KNEW IT WOULD GO, | Grandest, the Most Beautiful, the Most “onderful of all! good man who prayed for EXAMINER’S P because it is the Best, the Largest, the Gr eatest, Containing over 300 Splen- LAND, V ! Wel World’s Fair, in the ‘did Photographic Views and Historical Descriptions of the World’s Fair and the Midway | Plaisance. «hey all want it and must have it. Nothing like it! Nothing equa Don't Fail to Get a Sample Number of “The Magic City. All who have seen it are astonished at its marvellous beauty. It and beyond everything else relating to the World’s Fair. IN NATURAL COLORS are a surprise to everybody. is away Its GRAND PHOTOGRAPHS Is it! above ONLY 0..E COUPON REQUIRED. “THE MAGIC CITY” will be published in sixteen consecutive weekly parts o1 numbers, each containing sixteen to twenty splendid Photographs of the World’s Fain and the Midway Plaisance, with accurate Historical Descriptions. The will constitute a large and beautiful oblong volume, 11x15 inches, OVER SOO CRAND YIEWSsS, -—— INCLUDING Creat Palutings, All the Principal Buildings, Celebrated statuary foreign and State Buildings, General Views, : (nterior Views, Architectural Details, And all the Grand and Wonderful Features of the Great Fair, taken the Splendor of the World’s Exposition by a Special Corps of Artists Curious Foreign Types, at the The consecutive weekly parts will be mailed to any address, or delivered to persons and ONE COUPON. 't ACH, hice calling at our office, at the uniforin price of TE* CENTS Don’t miss the greatest and best of all the World’s Fair Glimp es of the Art Gallery, Character Sketches in the Midway, $$ en eae —— THE AMERICAN $8.00 ‘T’ypeurriter. This is 2 well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, s:nall letters, figures, and yon ‘tuation marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just like a $100 instrument. It is the first « | 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 bailt for and capable of REAL work. While not che large machines sometimes become in expert hands, it is still at least as rapid a and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastered glance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. as t 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 sight. Corrections and insertions easily made. Takes any width of paper or envelope up to 8} inches. Compact, takes up but little room. Built solid and simple; can’t get order. Capital and lower case keyboard easily mastered. More “margin play” for which de mest of the work. Takes gvod letter-press copies. as rapid a he pen almost at a Easy to understand—learned in 5 minutes. Weighs only four pounds—most portable. out of ailke-- the small letters Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8. 00, in registered letter, money order or certified check. We guarantee every machine, glad to answer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the IRA CORNWALL, and are “ Yost.” General Agent for Maritime Provinces. D. B. STEWART, Agent, Chariot.ctowa. dec20 % “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise camer a neemertttnnpnaencnagnntndline | i } } | } complete series | illustrated with SDAY, TUES lo CoTrrocend ¢ COTTOLEN® G CoTrocnl Na] oO | |Corrotznm (Corrotang (CoTToOLEns}| OUT sr vie PRYING PAN Has come not a little knowledge as to cook- ery—what to do, as well as what wo/ to do. Thus we have learned to use GOTTOLENE, the most pure and per- fect and popular cook- jing naterial for all frying ‘and shortening purposes. _ PROGRESSIVE 5 COSHING 3 ' 2 | EE lis the natural outcome - i ound (a5 CorroLannc ,,| Cort CorvTotank NE a COTTOLEN! ‘OTTOLENE () Corte ° \Korror ENE iof the age, and it teaches \us of fo use lard, but rath- ler the new shortening, | COTTOLENE, which is far cleaner, aa more digestible than any lard can be. The success of Cotto- lene hascalled out worth- less imitations under similar names. Look out for these! Ask your Grocer for COTTOLENE, and besurethat you get it. Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., Wellington and Arn Sts., MORTREAL. | \COTTOLENS oO ‘Cor oe 50 Corre oLENS| oO > . s Corrorsr Corto oTTrorexg| J Store To Let. —_—— —_— 0 ) CoTTOLENSE J \LOTTOLENE| f LOTTOLES ® | Corroren® ¢- Corrotem LSOTTOLENE ¢ COTTOLENT SOTTOLEN Corro.en: ~o coveren.awel| o JCoTrocan® o Sees ema 0 CorTro.ana OK oe 9 (Corrounea |F Cor TOLEN a ¢ CoTTe_ens® CorroLen CorroLen “oO CoTTo.en | \CorroLens Carrot ENE Sic |COTTOLENE ¢ The small Store in the Cameron Block. next door to Messrs. Reddin Brothers. Apply to HORACE HASZARD janll 2w eod “You'll Feel Better ” Everybody —. after taking a few bottles of WiALTO PEPTONIZED 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 Recommended byPhysicians. SSSO8OTSOTTE Jalike the Dutch Process GR No Alkalies —OR— eS Other Chemicals i) cy are used in the bP preparation of ). BAKER & COS sreakfastCocoe which is absolutely ha] pure and soluble, oY) Ithas more than three times | the strength of Cocoa mixe t with Starch, Arrowroot uo: am Sugar, and is far nore eco- omical, costing less than one cent a cup it is delicious, nourishing, anQ EAsILx DIGESTED. napencnpieiatnainin Sold by Grocers everywhere. |W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass height of PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained-—how > ——— oe Ordinary works on mo siolcgy wi!! not tell your the doctors can’t or b—~ywon’t; but allthe 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 foe our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), ERIE WEDICAL ¢0., Buffalo, WY, DYEING COMPANY. Gold Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, MONT? EAL. WE ARE PREPARED TO DYE all ‘lass of goods and garments equal to any House in Eur ype. FRENCH CLEANING a specialty. All information regarding shades, prices, e c., furnished by CHAS. IVES MORRISON, Agent, Queen Street. Christy knives BREAD—CARVING—PARING, FOR SALE SALE BY JANUARY 23, 1894. THE OLD LOVE SONS . Piay it slowly, sing it lowly, | Oid, familiar tune! \ Once it ran in dance and dimple, | L. ke a brook in June. | Now it sobs along the measures j W th a sound of tears; | Dear old voices echo through ft, Vanished with the years. “- | Ripple, ripple goes the love song Tid in slowing time i Early sweetness grows completeness, i bP ieods its every rhyme. Who together learn the muste | Life and death unfold, Know that love is but beginning Until love is old, 1 Play it slowly, it is holy | As an evening hymn; } Morning gladness hushed to sadness | Fills it to the brim. | Memories home within the muste, } Stealing through the bars; Thoughts within its quiet spaces Rise and set like stars. —Cam pus. A Tour Through Japan. The ride from Atami to Kodzu, along a beavtitul coast, is a thing to be remem. bered. The coast is bold, the mountains extending tothesea. The road, which is the highway of a province, is from 8 to 10 icet wide. It is carved into the side of the nountains and winds in and out, follow 4 their contours, sometinres 500 feet wove the sea, then descending to pass ‘rough towns situated wherever a stream vomes in, making a delta of arable iand, which is cultivated in terraces as described t Atami, Oranges and lemons, figs and guavas, flourish on this sheltered shore, and tne ‘ultivation is as clean and minute as we uave seen anywhere. We meet many peo jle—men, women and childreu, farmers, peddlers and travelers. The jinrikixha is he only mode of conveyance beside walk ng. Many family parties are on the move | ihe sweet faced wife is in the first jinrik | isha, and the sober husband follows. Nei ther shows curiosity or self consciousness All along the coast fishing junks anc: sampans swarm, the fishermen seneralis naked except for a herrow breech clout the knees, and as they grew werm with their work they reduced their costumes to the extreme limit of the law. Your Jup } anese Coes not like clothing when et work | Goimg through villages we see mature mep dressed like the Apollo Belvidere and mat rons calmly making their toilets in the costume of Venus de Milo.—Boston Her ald, Maladies From Early Marriages. In a discussion before the London dio- ‘esan conference it was declared as the inanimous opinion of that body that the n extent as to render some reform in tue arriage laws urgently necessary, Sub equently, at the congress of hygiene, Dr .orosi of Ibuda-Pesth read «a paper ou The Influence of the Age of Parents ou ie Vitality of Their Children,’’ coutain “~ rem-rkable statements in line with he above declaration. He showed from t compxrison of several thousand cases hat the proportion of deaths among chil iren from weakly constitutions or mala ics traceable to the mother was twice as rze among the children of mothers un r20 as among the children of mothers ver BO. Investigation also showed that the healthiest offspring was born of mothers tween 20 and 50, united to husbands be ween #0 and 40; where either husband o1 wife was under 20, the offspring proveu senerally weakly, this being the case even in Hungary, where the girls become women at the ege of 13. In that country, too, 15 per cent of the n*nber of mar riages show the brides to be under 20 years of age, and in England 12 per cent, —New York Tribune. Acid Treated Bricks, One of the most effective methods for preventing white efflorescence on brick walis, when caused by lime, is that ot ipping the bricks before burning into .ilute acid. For this purpose the strength {the acid is to be determined by the amount of lime present in the clay, the creater the amount of clay the more dilute che acid. Thus for ordinary clay a solu tion composed of 40 quarts of water to om vf hydrochloric and is found special idapted for the purpose and is sufficient erdipping some 500 bricks, and then the olution is to be renewed. Having been thus dipped and thoroughly dried iti the sun, the bricks are to be dipped and dried again just before burning. Theadditicnal cost of this treatment is very slight.—- Thouindustrie Zeitung. Weather Proof Humbert. King Humbert of Italy is intensely foad of rain and bad weather. The more threat ‘ning the state of the atmosphere the nore eager be is for a ride. He delights n allowing the storm and rain to beat ypon him and thus putting his iron con stitution to the test in conflict with the ‘lements. He generally goes out hanting in the vicinity of Castle Porziano when he weather is at its worst, sod many an ‘yewitness has a lively recollection of the uauguration of Margherita bridge in tome, when the mayor delivered a speech while standing under an umbrella held uoft by a municipal guardsman, while he king steod complacently by in the iripping rain with his head uncovered.— Farfalla. Tight Collars. The influence of tight collars in imped- ing the circulation of blood to the head iy pressing on the juguler veins is well cnown to roops in India, but the bad effects of such sressure in cooler climates has been dem ustrated by the observations of Professé> orster of Breslau, who states that 300 ases have come under bis notice in which he eyesight has been affected by the dis urbance of the circulation caused by wear ing collars that were too small. A large number of these cases were probably sub- jects of myopia.—Times of India. Some modern vandals have succeeded in seriously damaging the famous sculp tured group by Carpeaux, representing La Dause, which ornaments the frontage of the Paris Opera. Many old and unique coins, that had for years been out of circulation, were bronght forth during the World's fair sea- aon, announces a Chicago paper, | The Parisians annually consume, per in- | habitant, 145 pounds of apples, 20 of cher ries, 120 of pears, 183 of plums, 3 of rasp- berries and 13 of strawberries, Australia is a country without orphans or an orphanage. Each waif is taken to re receiving house, where it is kept until a | country home is found fot it. Over in the Panhandle of Texas there is one pusture that covers 3,000,000 avves. (t is a wonderful tract for cattle pasturing. For Over Fifty Years. Aw Ovp Axpy Wet Triep Remepy.— Mrs. of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snecess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, | cures the colic, and is the best remedy for | Diarrhea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold E by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is | incaleulable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. | Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no R. B. Norton & Cos, | other kind—m. w. t. r. f. wkly—l y CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. ang 16. USE SKODA’S : DISCOVERY, the great | blood and Nerve Remedy. : ~ cr ak Our coolies started with bare legs nbove | vil of early marriages has grown to such | military surgeons with the } ' Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has | beed used for over fifty years by millions | THE ORGAN GRINDER? THE BUSINESS IS NOT WHAT IT USED TO BE AND iS OVERDONE. The Financial Resulte of # Hard Day's Work by a New York Italian—A Reporter | Relates His Experience on Street Corners Passing the Hat For Penoles. | The hand organ business is not what it | | used to be- say 15 years ago. There have | ; been cycles in the ealling, so to speak. | There was the time, for illustration, when the “old soldier” played the street music just after the war, He was a pitiful spec- tacle, was the grim, war scarred veteran, and in those merry and ancient days it was no uncommon feat for him to make $16 or $20 a day. * Here is a dollar for the old soldier!’ the good citizen would exclaim as he passed the bill into the one legged man’s hand. But that was long ago, and, alas! the drawing powers of the veteran who wore the blue have long since given way before the upward and onward march of civilization. gan grinder. Who does not recall the days wien Unser haan that patient drudge, treena at his cide ar ly tapping on the tambourine? He made the thin Z pny, too, and many a prominent citizen in German affairs today, many a successful grocer, owes his start in life tothe dimes and quarters he collected while plodding the etreets playing “Oh, Kaiser, Don’s You Vant to Buy a Tog?” Rocco, the Italian, faces life under dif- erent circumstances. The organ business, he tells me sadly as I drop into his mis- erable rooms in Elizabeth street, is not bat it used to be in the old soldier days, | forexample. ‘‘I was out all day yester- | day,’ he says in his broken fashion, ‘‘and | cil [ made was—how much, do you | toink?’’ “A dollar!” “No; 75 cents,’ $150 he would, paid for his piano organ. He | he says, goin the fruit business | —and get rich after a long time. Rocco plays long and industriously for ; 12 hours a day. He was over on Sixth { avenue this morning. By invitation } | joined him. He was playing in front of : | lager beer saloon. The people paid not the slightest attention. It was 9 o’clock, and the women who were early out shop- ping eyed him with indifference. The tanes followed rapidly one after another. There would be a jolly one, then a sad one, Aft er playing a very, very sad tune, along came an elderly gentlemay, who, fam- bling in his pocket, handed outacent. 1 went out and got it in my hat, Recco ' bowed and smiled till his brown skin fair | ly cracked. Well, that is a good begin- ning. We were just starting in ona third tune when the saloon keeper's boy came ont and said: ‘‘See ’ere, dago, git out of this.’’ | Rocco stopped playing, and seizing the ‘ heavy strap on the apring truck motioned to me te grasp one of the handles, and to- yather we pulled the jumbering instru inent up toward Eighteenth street. Her Roceo played a merry air. A couple o; men having their boots blacked in street cheirs leoked up from their morning pa vers with some little interest. I went up and passed the hat. One man vave a cent; the next, with a grim show of being humorous, pulled a beer check out of his pocket and said: ‘Here; this ix for your nibs; go after a ball’? At this the gentlemen in boot stands all laughed, I bowed, handed the coins over to Roeco, who smiled, as usual, and pre- pared to trudge further along, when up came the policeman on the beat, who came down to where we were standing and said in a very snappish fashion: ‘Dago, don’t you think you had better move on? None of those organ grinders will stay in one place on my beat 15 min- utes if I can help it!’’ “I go! I go!’’ said the frightened Rocco. “There, don’t givé me any of your lip! And, by the way, where is your license, en?”’ Roceo produced his card. It certified that he had paid @1 into the public treas- ury, and that, in return, he was to be al- lowed to play in the streets of New York from 9 o'clock in the morning until 9 e’clock inthe evening, daily, except Sun- days, for one year from date. ‘The officer scowled furiously, erunted softly to himself and permitted us to move on. We haunted the shopping district for the next hour and won for Rocco just 7 cents! An hour later we were playing under a window on West Nineteenth street. A woman ia a third story flat wrapped a nickel in a piece of paper and threw it ou the ringing pavement. Thus eucouraged, Rocco played on and on. Suddenly an angry face appeared at the same window anda voice exclaimed, ‘Get out of this, you blackguerd, or I'll have you run in!” The man threw «lump of coal atus! | readily concluded that he was some night worker who had heen disturbed by our music. So we went over in another street. It now began to rain, but for the hand organ man and myself there was no haven | of refuge. The cold, drizzling downfall | struck through eur thin clothing, until 1, at least, shivered and shook! Still, that music must be continued! I had beard ‘‘After the Ball’’ until I was fairly mad: | “Bow-wow,” ‘*Ta-ra-ra”’ and all the rest made me stark crazy; yet Roceo was | not in the least disturbed. Indeed I doubt very much if he heard the music at all. His eyes were directed all that day toward } the upper story windows of the tall flat- | houses, looking for some one who might | throw down acent. If he did not havea | erick in his neck, it was teeause his neck | was past all possibilities o' the crick. At noon we chanced to be on @ quiet street, and near a livery stable, we saw a number of uiused trucks drawn up at the curb. Rocco wheeled his organ near by, and crawling under one of the wagons sat down on a stone toeat. He had a tin dinner pail fastened to the instrument, which, being opened, was found to contain some Italian sticks of bread, a piece of meat and aslice of cheese. This frugal mea! the patient organ grinder offered to | divide with me. After he had disposed of | the food he counted over his money and | found that he had that morning taken in | 83 cents. He now brought forth a tin tube | in diameter about the size of half a dol | Jar, in length equal to an ordinary pen- | bolder, Into this the Italian rattled his | money, pat on the lid, and, satisfied, stow- | ed the treasure away in his ample sbirt tront.—New York Herald. i An Ancient Custom. “Why do so many mothers with their daughters frequent leading watering places?’ | “A very ancient custom; dates back from | the time cof Abrabam, when Rebecca met her future husband st the well.’’—Kx- change 3 REAL ME MERIT is the character- ! cures even after other preparations fall. Get Hood’s and ONLY HOOD’S. Nursing Mothers and delicate children should make free use of Puttner’s Emul- sion, the best Jung healer, strengthner, and flesh productor. Ciergyman, students and overtaxed busi- | ness men will find a wonderful recuper- ative agent in Puttoers Emulsion, which | contains Phosphorous (brain food) in the | most assimilable form. eeeere Then came the period of the German cr- | »wheeled his, ied and had Ka In short, Rocco cami he tad back the istic of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It | | | | | | ; | E | Mr. David M. piedinn of Edmeston, N. Y | Colorless, Emaciated, Helpless A Complete Cure by HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. This is from Mr. D M. Jordan, a re- tired farmer, and one of the most re- spected citizens of Otsego Co., N. Y. “Pourteen years ago I had an attack of the gravel, and have since been troubled with my Liver and Kidneys gradually growing worse. Three years ago I ' got down so low that £ could scarcely waik. I looked more like a corpse than a living being I had no appetite and for five weeks I ate t gruel. I was badly emaciated = had no more color than # ma statue. Na was recommended and | thought 1 would try it. Before Lhad finished the first bottle I noticed that I felt. better, suf- cred less, tue in@ewmatien ef the bla © had subsided, the color began to return to "ny face, and I began to feelhungry. After ker three bottles eould @¢at anything oat hurting me. 1 got so hungry to cat & times a day. I have now fully recovered, thanks to Hood’s Sarsaparilla I feel well and am well. A)l who know me marvel to see me so well.” b. M. JORDAN. Hooo's PILLS are the best afte ndlnner Pills, assist digestion, cure headache and biliousnes Analyticut Chemist, 238 Boylston St., Boston, Mass., says: J. ¥. W Holborn St, After a careful examination of Skoda’s German Soap, find it composed of ingredients of a chem- fal or land healing nature. It cannot boon highly recommended, both for Peedicinal and tolict use. fad Skoda’s German Ointment rfectly pure and porenemng hich medicin- al qualities. It can be wu with cfect safety on the most delicate ekin, and is an — ent ointment for general every-day a Raymore, whose picture appears above, and who for many years, was engaged in the manufacture of toilet soap, —— under date of Feb. 4,93: “I am eurpri at its soft and Rod, wo fee trom It is pure, unadulterated, an ee from alkali, which most soaps contain.” Miss Alice L. Welton, & luate of the Victoria General Boon rainiag “feaiy for Nurses, Halifax, N. says: “ Trut Skoda’s Soap is soft as valves and one it makes the skin soft, white nas utiful.” SKODA CISCOVERY CO., LTD., WOLFVILLE, W, S. For sale by all druggist-. Trade aup pried Sy W. R. Watson; Char!ottetcwn P. E. Wiss 8 ARY peu i i, STU SIO, STAWPER BLOCK. Instructions given in the varions branch es of Drawing and Painting. nov29—2in eod JOHNSON - 4Nopysxeé LINIMENT ALIKE an ANY ‘OTH Ep ars, and still hs used and in Ever Sufferor has se Nearaita Every Sufeer eras will find in tale cht Anedona oe and oes ¥ 7 Should have Every Mother anotyne tinioentin the sor Puseh certs ome Oae ee Saas so ow may cost aiite, elhowes Lxpreespald L.& Sonnaon & Gon betas Were, | Baby Wants It. i 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 ali Druggists and Gro- cers and Wholesale by KERRY WATSON & CO. Propnicrons MONTREAL. (OUR DRUCCIST FOF VRS RT NORWEGIAN ‘EOD, mai: OIL am bdo oa. 7 q ana a palatable as cream. 3 taste .ike others. In big bottles 50c. and $1.00 Kidney Pills Site Back Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of ail who have used them. TH «¢ CURE TO STAY CURED, Bya ists or mail on receipt of price, go cents . L. A. Smith & Co., Toreata, coo a eee ee ee oe Gentes cm ee il: ek RMN eR ae ane emae inh ear ee in fe Eg sme ee re a et rd