WRG LAE, ii i) aie ; a : ee ee anne ee a eee gp aa PRE a URE we can sell you Dodd's Kidney Pills at the followiag prices, viz.:—50c. per box »-rdozen, or three dozen at $3.75 per dozen. Sent by mail to any address po>*} prettiness. paid. ' The secretary of a large eastern insur- GEORGE BE. HUGHES, ance company decided a short time may 23 Charlottetown. since that it would be better for his office work to introduce half a dozen WALTER BAKER & C9. rhe Largest Manufacturers « PURE, HICH CRADE X COCOAS “AND CHOCOLATES On this C HIGHEST AWARDS from the great Industrial and Food + EXPOSITIONS \ In Europe and America. ke the I oceas Alka- ntinent, have received = peed any « Their delicions BREAK F AST pure aod sotuble, and costs leas than ¢ SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAXER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS. wee / c 7 6 KID T. Dzswsow, PM ger Standard Bank, Brad ford, Ont s, Chases K ey-Liver Pills are a gracd o cine for the } eys and Liver. WwW. #. Ca rm, 11s McCaul St, Toronto, re | presenting \ real Star. says. Chase’s Pills act like magic for the relief ot head-ache, bilious attack aad corsiivation. Sold everywhere, or by mail on receipt of price, to EDMANSON, BATES & CO. 45 LOMBARDO 8T. Terouta, ‘DOWT DESPAN era” > WILL GURE YOU We guarantee Dodd’s Xidney Pills to cure any case of Brizht’s D , Diat Lumb:go, Dropsy. K metism, Heart Disease, Female Troubles. Inypure Blood—or money r-tunded. Soid hy all ts in medicine, or oy mail on receipt of t c. per box, or Six boxes $2.50. D&. L. A. SMITH & CO., Toronto. r ix boxes for $2.50. To the trade—$4.00 & PILL AFTER EATING URE? GOOD CIGESTION. w ma S MED. CO. UD. 25 GTS THe OBIS MeO red TT ra wz Ma Ate A/4 A aA VEL, aad ae s and rapidly growing cl derive more b it from: £ Emulsion, than < test food they eat. Its nourishing powers are feit almost immedi ately. Babies and clitidren t! é on Scott’s Emulsion when n hoa rf See othe: f0Tia Ci i00d 15 assimilated Engtish Remedy. The Great ~ Siz Packages Guaranteed to promptly. and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Weakness, Emisstons,Sperm- atorrhea, Impotency and all effectsof Abuse or Excesses, e ; im Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opium or Stimu- Before and After. lants, which s00n lead to In frmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Honest Medicine known. Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if he cffers some worthless medicine in place of this, po Drice in letter, and we will send by return Piece, ar One backage, $1; six, $5. One will sie will cure. Pamphiets free to any address, The Wood Company, : Windsor, Ont., Canada, Seld in Charlottetown by Geo E Hughes ; much run it on the engine’s characteristics and SSN eS oc ede eee THE DAILY EXAMINER ENGINES AND DRIVERS. The Peculiorithes of Various Tocometives as Shewn in Their Runs It takes about an hour t steam n an ordinary iocomoti ele ; t it, from cold wat It is : t t! wat t! } ar 6 7 8 while the engine is stand- se by a pipe connect iler in the cellar underneath the engine starts its own fire is ~TANGUS i Locomotive engines that are ng regularly stand in the round hous in the intervals between runs | with their fires banked. The fir re kept cleaned, but they may not be haul- ed for weeks. The practice varies some this respect me roads . hauled s they Un st mee a week, on oth are kept up in engines f * weeks or more mtinu- locomotive engineer on one oO! York says that » that woul uld like to ride. ntly is felt by engine Calm- | noticea ble | n an engine he wt 1 appar gineer of a fast is one of the most wrries at all it is be- » he has got a hot box, or 1ing has happened so that he may not able to make the time, and not be- use he is going through the air at nty miles an hour. But od that none but is likely to reach a fast engine. is not a difference be- running at night and at day. Signal lights at night are plainer and ata much greater distance its ; and if he w some- sixty, seve uld be underst an of perfect nerve footboard of vast tw ' 1 be seen ca than day signals. The engineer must, r course, keep constantly in mind where he is, but he comes to know the count a pilot knows his land- marks in the dark, and he has this ad- i vantage of the pilot that he can't very | well get out of the channel. Most en- ers prefer day because it seems more natural to work in the day- e, and it is pleasanter. all locomotive engineers pre- |} fast run to a slow one. The fast trains are the blue ribbons of the road. Aside from the honor of running a fast ' ain, there is a very substantial =| r | | | | i 1 | ' | y just as nN runs, ost in the hours. If an engineer simply stepped into his cab in the sta- i ind stepped out again on his re- t almost any run might do well encugh, but he doesn’t do that ; he goes to*the round house before train time oks over the engine, and sees that it is in condition and properly supplied | for the run and in every way ready, and he runs the engine to the station. All this takes time. ‘uns the engine to the roundhouse; his takes time, too, though not so as the time spent before the run; but together these periods add materi- ally to the length of the engineer's | hours. Taking these duties into count, the great advantages of a fast run are manifest ; the shorter the time | spent on the road the shorter the total | ime There is a common impression that no two locomotive engines work just alike, even though made from the same patterns. A locomotive engineer of long experience says that the impres- sion is correct. He says by way of il- lustration, that two high-grade watches of the same pattern, and supposed to be just alike, may not work the same way. One may not vary half a minute in six months, and so be, practically, a perfect timekeeper, while the other may vary a minute in a month. It is So with engines ; they do not work just alike. One may steam and run better than the other. The slightest variation in finish o> adjustment might be suffi- cient to cause this. When the new engine has been run a year or so it goes to the shop to be overhauled. With it goes a report of the engineer who has ntage On his return he ac- ne performance. If the engine has de- veloped any defects they can usually be remedied at this overhauling, and it may be that the engine comes out on the road again as smart as any of them. —New York Sun. Pretty Girls Not Wanted. Hev-e is a little story which seems to indicate that the pretty girl's busi- ness prospects are hampered by her or more women as typewriters, oper- ators, and assistant bookkeepers. He had noted that of the feminine em- ployes in his office the pretty ones were the least effective and attracted the the most attention, to the detriment of the work of the other clerks. So he decided to engage only women who were of mature years and experienced in office work. First he advertised, stat- ing that applicants should give age and number of years’ experience. He did not succeed in getting a single satis- factory reply. Then he went to a well-known business college and told the manager that he did not suppose he would have any trouble in aiding him, as he did not want a young or at- tractive-looking woman. The manager listened to him while he explained his wants, and then, going to a desk, took out a file of leiters with a smile and laid them before his visitor. The e were upwards of Salf a hundred applications from banks and commer- cial institutions, and every one of them, without a single exception, asked for a woman of mature : The manager said that it was absolutely impossible to supply tl demand b for employces of iption that business men now dem 1, but he had rafts of pretty Girls at all times who were applicants. —Philadelphia Priss. Submarine Volcano The French Geographical Society has received from General Venukolf a com- munication describing a submarine vo}- ano, Which is under survey by the of- ficers of the Ruesian dispatch vessel The volcano declared itself immer, and, although un rca level in the Caspian. projected a large quantity of mud and debris ixto the air. As a result of the survev. the position of the volcano } 1 j mined as 58 degrees, 13 minutes. $0 sec. ond north latitude i des minutes east longitude from G: meridian, Lotaman last water ier anc e, 3 enwich and above 24 miles from st; | } er | or | VOICES. Forrest bass voice that had a deep med t mi mm the bottom of hi =¢ what w called a per i ever scolded in his | } remy I is always very mucn i i 1 showed the fact in h Lor ; a voice deseribed by hi ontemporaries as “ very t ly I VII. had a Vv so gruff that earned for him the sobriquet of “Bluff Ki Ijal Garrick had an exceedingly flexible vol nad wuld mimic anyone he ever T) Duke of Marlberough had a voice said, could be heard above a, roar of artillery Jonathan Edwards had sharp. st: t nes that grated unpleasantly on } ars of all who heard him. Old WKais Wilhelm had a soft voice d spoke in a soothing tone that gave easure to every hearer. Prigaolii was know as the “ silver- His tones, though not strons. exceedingly pure and sweet. hn Adams had a cool. deliberate Way of speaking, that carried convic- to the minds of his hearers. Wendell Phillips always spoke in an cinary tone, with very distinct artic- ut n and careful pronunciation. Cowper always spoke in a diffident, Si. ating way, as though afraid of the ct of his words on his auditors Prince Bismarck has a very loud harsh voice. and generally speaks in a matic, dictatcrial way that sdmits ! ontradiction C: leridge delivered his philosophic uit- te neces In an uninicresti monoton >. tt late in life becam in almost unin- I lerick Great had a sn ecable \ that corresponded \ th 5 utterances he was in ur habit ing Gold i 1 Singing voice of great i t was a troat to hear him rend an rish air, Which he did in inimitable style. AlecoLotivm in Prance. Among thinking people in France the evils of alcolclism are attracting a deal of attention, and only re utly the Academy Medicine, th Academy of Moral and Political Sci- ences and the Superior Council of th Public Assistance Which the whol held a meeting at subject was gs me ove: very carefully In the summing-up it Was found that absinthe is doing just about as much harm as are distillea liquors. Thus, one physician reported that in his practice he had found that. out of twenty patients. ten were suffer- ing from alcohol » and that wine und rdinary distilled liquors were responsi- ble fur five of these. while absinthe wa the cau ol the ther five. From 1885 bsinthe and sim i ks « under the observa tion « t} t i and other officers of Paris had more than doubled, and each year showed a g iter yearly increase In view of this state of things, the rs make the following recommen cations to the State :—First, to reduce the number of liquor shops. Second, to make as low as possible all taxes on beer and cider, while exercising a su perv'ision cver the quality of those drinks Third, to and to take meas ful adulteration tax wine moderately, res against its harm- i ourth. to increase the tax on spiriiuous liquors. and to allow in commercial pclicy only that which is hygenically pure iifth. to prohibit ab- Sinti.e and similar bitters in which the essential oils exercise a pernicious in- flUucnce on the hu:man or;anism. The facts mentioned constitute a sharp in- dictrent of the present condition of France. Certainly the French will not be equal to whipping the English and Germans. when the talked-of war comes, unless some reform on the drink qtestion takes place.—Luffalo Express. Mens Dress. The Londen Lancet finds the question rational dress for men one that jis almost as much Worth inquiring into as that of the same for women. “ Men.’ s2ys that journal, “ have for ages scoff- ed at women for the vagaries and fl ghts of faney displayed in their dress. but there is really little to choose tween the sexcs except in the great mat- ter of the pocket, for, except a profes- sional thief, no mortal being, even the owner, can get at @ woman's pocket.” of be- Some of the evils of men’s dress are then pointed out, notably the exposure of the lungs, the most susceptible to injury from ccld of any organ of the body. The animal creation is cited to show that nature left to herself takes care of this delicate organ. the polar bear having its thick coating o1 fur. the whale its blubber. and birds their ecating of feathers, with warm under- down-—only man showing a foolish dis- regard for the needs for protectton. The fas:.ionable waistcoat is by no means suitable wear. Lad as is man’s day dress, however, it is when he gets into his evening clothes that he betrays the greatest want of sense and forethought. “During the day, when he js going about. he wears thick woollen clothes, with stout boots and warm socks. At nigit he puts on very thin clothes, a waistcoat which is of no protective value whatever, very thin shoes, pos- sibly silk stockings, relinquishes his gaiters, and goes out in the open air thus insufiiciently protected on his way to theatre, dinner or ball, congratulat ing himself,’ says the Lancet. “ that he is not as those poor silly women. who go about with the upper part of their chests bare.”"—New York Times. An fateresiing Bandit Manuel Garcia was a curious chorac- ter,” said a Cuban gentleman in speak- ing of the reported death of that revo- lutionist. ‘He was more like a char- acter in a novel than a man living in the nineteenth century. His home was the 1.ountains, and he led a regular vandit’s life, every now and then holding up Spandiards on the road or carrying off one of them and holding him for ran- som. He would write to a Spanish planter, “Send me $5,000 or I shall burn your house,’ and if the money was not forthcoming he wauld carry iis threat into execution, He would even write to Government officials, signing himself = : ae vre. | ‘King of the Mountains,’ and demand- The diameter of its erat is less than } ing tribute. He never preyed on the 26 feet, and at 200 fathoms from its © native Cubans, only on the Spaniards, centre the depth of water is about e'sht and gave most of his money to the rev- fathoms, while at a distance of une Olutionary party to purchase arms.” mile the sea has its normal denth. ns = ane reer oe Suiaamnalieaaammiianliaeianalies ss cet - — —$15.00 and upwards. gant, strong and cheap. Just what everybody wants. smile. druggist. Orders by mail promply filled. ren Fer pepcne netecinmuee sue, Charlottetown, March 5, 1895—dy A So Furniture ! “Still achieving, still pursuing, Learn to labor and to wait.’—LonGrEeLLow. By labor, skill and patience we have produced elegant and at the same time cheap Furniture. See our elegant SIDEBOARDS. offered here—-$8.00 and upwards. Our CHAMBER SUITES. The best value yet New styles and low prices Our PARLOR and DRAWING ROOM SUITES, ele- The lowest prices on Rug and all kinds of Suites. Our prices will be so satisfactory they will make you JOHN NEWSON. Ponn’S EXTRACT ee THIS IS THE GENUINE. Our trade-mark on Buff Wrapper around every bottis, THE WONDER OF HEALING. FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, WOUNDS, SPRAINS, BRUISES, mim" PILES, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, Refuse Substitutes, INFLAMMATIONS, CATARRH, made cradeiy, 614 JE MORRHAGES, and ALL PAIN. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS Used Internally and Externally. Prices, 50c., Cheap, $1, Cheaper, $1.75, Cheapest. Genuine is strong and pure. Can be diluted wit? ater. Manufacturers POND’S EXTRACT CO.. 76 FIFTY .vE..” W YORK REPAIRING | We are prepared to fill all or- ders for Custom Work promptly. Stock, workmanship and_ prices right. Repairing of all kinds done neat and cheap. J. H. BELL, The Reliable Boot and Shoe Dealer. Es Behold the Perfect Injector, which we furnish with our Cheese and Butter Factory Boilers and Engines. The best in the market. Can be regulated to feed Boillers steadily without change. We ask the Dairy Companies of the Island to buy their Boilers and Engines from us, as they will get a better machine for the money than by importing them. By so doing you will save the profits of the midd!emen, and the money and machines will both remain among our own people. Jn any other case we have only the machines, and the money is gone from us forever. Estimates furnished and contracts entered into for Cheese or Butter Factories complete or any part thereof. Wi DEFY COMPETITION. Telephone connection. REPAIRS attended to promptly. Satisfaction guaran teed by McKINNON & McLEAN, urges aud Coatings We have been handling these famous Cloths for the past two years, and now have unlimited ccnfidence in re- commending them as the best wearing and best dyed Cloths on the market: SUITS IN WEAR for near two years are as bright and good colof as the day they were made. BELWARPS are the best. Have them. %== The Finest Line of Hats in the Citv. JOHN MACLEOD & CO., MERGHENT TAisLORS. Charlottetown, March 28, 1895—246 w Ch’town, April 19, 1895—dy a a = | 4 Wh This is the wheel that was illustrated in “ Bearing’s, the Cycling Authority on America,” January 25th, 1895, over the following title: “The Handsomest Model. Shown at the Recent National Cycle Exhibition.” It is the Waver.ey Scorcaer, and is the most admired and talked-of high-grade bicycle in the world to-day. Want a bicycle ? Illustrated catalogue free. Good az2nt wanted. INDIANA BICYCLE CO., mcbh18 Indianapolis, Ind., U. S. A. t talo @ > shew grep Sento any dddtesss Qoplicalian q Mall The First-class Steamship “SUNRISE,” 1169 Tons Gross, Class 100 A 1 at Lloyds, will sail from LIVER- POOL for CHARLOTTETOWN about 26th APRIL, carry- ing Freight at Through Rates to all Railway Points on this Island, also to Pictou and Shediac. Shippers would have time to cable any extra orders. Apply in London to John Pitcairn & Sons, 7 Union Court, Old Broad Street, E. C.; in Liverpool to Pitcairn Bros., 51 South John Street, or here to PEAKE BROS, & CO. Charlottetown, April 9, 1895—dy tf —— 20 Failures to Cure For 20 years I suffered the torments of the damned with blind and itching piles. Had I known of any cure I would not have hesitated to have given hundreds of dollars to obtain it. I followed the in- structions of an eminent physician in us ing syringe treatments. I used Fowler's Pile Cure and 20 others of different kinds. From some a little relief was gained, but nothing approached a cure. I was about resigned tothe fate of having to pass through an almost uninterrupted course of suffering so long as I lived, when Chase’s Ointment was brougut tomy not- ice. The statements in regard to it were so strong and bore with them a sense of conviction sufficient to overcome my skepticism in regard to its being no bet- ter than the rest. I used it, with the re- sult of receiving immediate relief and _per- manent cure. For weeks and weeks | was fearfully afraid of a return to misery, but it did not occur. I started using Chase’s Ointment, hoping for relief and realized a cure that is permanent. I[ do not believe there ever was a worse case of blind ond itching piles than mine, which leads me to think there is nota case to be recorded that Chase’s Ointment will not cure. Yours truly, Geo. W. Mor Brau Prop. The New. Morris Se . + He Gor Damaces.—J. T. Bulmer, a Halifax lawyer, has just recovercd damages againet eeven members of the police force of that city for forcibly ejecting him from the police court during the progress ofa trial. The affair took place in June last. Buliner and a witness were havinga heated argument causing considerable up- roar, when the police interfered and ejected him on the order of the presiding Magis- trate. Bulmer subsequently returned to the courtroom and was promptly ejected and placed ia the lockup, this time without the Magistrate’s order. It is for their con- duct the second time that damages given against the police, THE KENT CASE. Phsicians Universally Admit the Diagnosis to have been Correct. Orrawa, April 22—The diagnosis in the case of Mr.G. H. Kent, of this city, whose recovery from Bright’s disease by the use of Dodd’s Kidney Pills has been so extensively chronicled appears to have been a very correct one. The swelling of the body and extremities to an abnoral size the fearful convulsions and subsequent in- sensibility, the racking pains, the format- ion-of the hard ridges across the vit of the stomach and the great loss of albumen are all symptoms ofthis terrible disease, and it is, universally admitted by all who have been approached on the subject that the case was unmistakable in its character. It isalso universally admitted that he owes his restored health to the above men- tioned remedy. Prepicrep E1cut Deatus.— A strange story comes from Laure], Delaware. Chas. Fooke, son of Daniel Fooks, Laurel’s wealthiest citizen, died on Sunday last. Three months ago Edward Taylor, an aged citizen, was laughed at for telling a strange dream, foretelling of the death of eight well known citizens, and that the ensuing year would record the deaths of an unusually large number of them. A few doys later he said that he worried over the return of the dream, and that the four first that were to die would be the wealth- iest citizens of the county. They were Benjamin Fooks, Gov. Marvil, William Dashiell and Daniel Fooks. The three first named are dead. The eldest son of the last named and two others named in Taylor’s vision, are ill. Five Lines on K and L, I find the poopie avon t ere prefer Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver 1’uis to any other I have in stock. They are a wonderful pill. Send three dozen at once, I am nearly out. P. S.—Send by post, J. W. Ireland, Gour- ock. necesita After washing never wring dress goods, Shake them. Heart Disease Relieved in 30 Minutes. Dr. Agnew’s Cure for the Heart gives rfect relief in all cases of Organic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 30 minutes, and speedily effects a cure. It is a peerless eu for Palpitation, Shortness of Breath, Smothering Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces. Sold by S. W. Dodd. worsted If too rapid eating causes dyspepsia, and it in its turn produces nervous exhaustion, debility, weakness, anaemia, etc., the first step in effecting acure is to eat slowly. The second and most important is to take a course of Hawker’s nerve and stomach tonic, which aids the process of digestion, invigorates the stomach, renews the vital ity of the blood, relieves brain fatigue, and makes weak nerves strong. “Really, Mr. Stalate,” she persisted, “vou have given me four hours of your time this evening.” “Whv—er—upon my word! So I have. The hours pass like minutes when I am with you.” % he Caerpost is Poad’s Scicass, Because on “Small” bottle, 59 cents, has more beneficial] effect than one gailon of ether preparations sold as being the “same as” or “ecual to” Pond’s ixiract. For all pain and soreness.” best, The public are tvo intelligent to pur- chase a worthless article a second time. On thecontrary they want the best! Physicians are unanimous in saying Scott’s Ensulsion is the best form of Cod Liver Oil. Get the Reuier rx S:x Hours.—Distressing Kid ney and Bladder diseases relieved in six hours by the “Great South American Kid- ney Cure.” This new remedy is a great surprise and delight on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages in male or temale. It relieves retevtion of water and pain in passing it almost immediately. If you want quick relief and cure this is your re- medy. For Sale at Dodd’s Medical Hal’. “"f Youn Should Dle To-Nizs’ t”’ Well, it would be your own fault, if i wa3 consumption that tcok you off, and you refused to take Miller’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, which has been pronounc- ed by scientists to be a positive cure for that dread disease. If you have any lung trouble, if you aie threatened with con- sumption, lose not an hour in obtaining a supply of Miller’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. Itisthe great blood maker, and blood is what is needed by the con- sumptive. Miller’s Emulsion is the great nerve strengthener and blood maker, and cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Scrofula and all Lung affections. In Big Bottles 50c. and $1, at all Drug Stores. No 1, Portfolio, Wild Flowers of Canada, now in stock.—Haszard & Moore. ga SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 20 YEARS OF SUFFERING. were | BABY’S OWN Prize Competition —_—_—_—ooOo— remem oe eeeeneneenece i895. i fo A handsomely framed Olegraph, one which would be prized room (it has no advertising matter on it), will be given each week of Baby’s Own Soap to the boy or girl under sixteen years of ave SS ee r Bright Children, in any drawing by the proprietors who will have sent, during the current week, the best advertisement, illustrated or not, suitable for publi- cation in the newspaper for advertising Baby’s Own Soap. CONDITIONS. tis an Ist. That competitors be under sixteen years age 2od. That the wrapper of a cake of Baby’s Own Soap ement. accompany the adver- 3rd. That the age, name (in full) and address of the competitor be plainly written d attached to the submitted advertisement. REMEMBER ~ One prize is givén every 'ry again. N. B.—Two or more advertisements may competitor. Address E. D. acct, Albeit To let Soap Cx ap20—law (6) tf week, anlif not successful at first— be submittel at the same time by any »., McCord & William Streets, Montreal, 24408 02068 GO8GB 24O0F VOVASVVSSSESISSIS SOSSOCSIETESSEVUEE RIPAN ONE GIVES LELIEFP, SVVSSVSSSSSVSTTEVSSSSVSESVsEssosesse —_—— at ee ae ee Di See EERO es ie ee aes tet hg oe SS - -% ~ bag ae F a C.steria is Dr. Samuel Pitechcr’s prescription for Infants $¢ and Chiidrea. It contains ncit 3 pther Narcotic substance, for Paregoric, Drops, Soothin t is Pleasant. Tiillions of Mothers. Casteria preve Wind Casteria feverishness. cures Diarcrhoa tecthing t Castvrin and bowels, giving healthy and Phin Its guaranics ibles, cures constipation nilates tho food, regulates the stomach icr Opium, Morphine nor n harmless substitute yrups, aad Castor Oil. 3 thirty ycars’ use by aestroys Worms and allays ats vomiting Sour Curd, Colic, Castoria relieves and flatulency. 3 28 i and natural sleep. Case toria is the Children’s Panacea—tho Mother’s Friend, Castoria. “ Castoria is an excellent medicins for ch'l- @ron. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its good effect upon their children.” D2. G. C. Osecoon, Lowell, Mass. * Sastoria is the best remedy for children of stant when mothers willconsider the real w far di inter § destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, norphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful ag their throats. thereby sending tperm toe premature graves.” Da. J. F. Kiscuenoe, Conway, Ar agents down and 2 medical supplies what is known as regular The Contanur Company, 77 Merray Street, New Castoris. “ Castoria is So well adapted to children tha I recommend it as superior toany prescriptiog known to me.” Tl. A. Arcagr, K. D., 111 So. Orford St., Brooklyn, N. Y, “Our physicians in the children’s depart ich Lam acquainted. I hope the cay is not ment have spoken highly of thet experi- xcir outside practice with Castoria, hough we only hare among our im products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it.” Unirzp Dlesrrtat anp Disrersary, Acziex C, Surra, Pres., York City. ey eee ee SOIREE OEE bs a ite ca < te2 7 % sr Ss pe King of all Gey Absolute! nod ”s + . r > phe Bicycles. the Be i am ite) DOD rye se Lizht Weight and Sucerfor Meteriz (+ seniecieeiieitinasie ince cea te Rigidity. Every Ma- auc Scientific Works |i **| : be) chinefully warranted manship. . chi 5s 4 A 4 Pa es Pe rs Se Cee t 4 r bs 5 oty & res rs) ha Wnvidle te] ihe World i ee eee eS Send twascent stamp for eur 24-pece Cala re M snectes erin Canines is onarcii Vycic Con ipany, * . pte Retail Salesroom, 220 Wabash Ave. Lake cad Helsted Sis... CHICAGO. tLe. ? ; re - <n s mdi adbved mo ena S1oleus toe, nat BU, Boece 1G baa WS Se OS Ow eee ee. - ° —~ 130 PIS SERRA RRR OE As many good thing: to. the risk if you keep a bottle of Perry Davis’ at hand. antidote for pains of all sorts. Dosz.—Onae teaspoonful in a half glass of water or milk (warm if convenient.) 3 are likely sut you are safe in running PAIN KILLER It’s a never-failing Sold by all Druggists. INSIST Upon havin g Featherbone Corsets. Refuse all substitutes. they are stamped thus: PATENTED SEPT. 3rd, 1884. No. 20110. NONE ARE GENUINE UNLESS SO STAMPED. Spring. ELECTIO! It is not a certainty whether the Government issues writs for an Election this But Farmers, for al] that, must make a (S) Election of the SEED SOWER, PLOW, etc. best HARROW, HARROW.—We have the only Spring-tooth on the Island, with Steel Clip fasten- SEED SOWER.—Our Seed Sower has PLOWS.— One and fwo horse by the be common to the Island. ing tooth to Frame; also the Farmers’ Favorite, the Steel Dise Randall. all Steel Feed, which is not liable to breakage, and therefore insuring regular seeding. st makers; also repairs for all Plows FARM SEED.—We will have a full assortment of Wheat, Timothy, Clover Vetches, Corn, Peas, etc. D. W. FINLAYSON, Ch’town, March 16, 1894—246 w H. T. LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. ths & Ae tO ii dia is ean