— an CALENDAR FOR MARCH, 1804, N ‘ Bes m.nodnh fF ‘ ® ™m,} m, s kK F 7 am.NW b 1 ] ‘ y ’ ~ ~ ~ Hiv s = wate af i 7 34 ~“ Pu Lis ) 22 5 af } 53 ¢ 10 iv 2; ry ‘ ll ¢ +} ’ n ~ ‘ 0 b 0 37 7 1 16 ’ , » @ 419 : { 7 2 ' ty ; 7 } é ~ 0 » 2 ‘ - ie 22 I ll il 2 ! 2 ll 45 ~ ’ “a ls < 7 0 ; - > 90 : * 5 i 2 t 22 21 +! ' 6 22 51 & Leaping DatLy NEWSPAPER OF r FE. ISLAND, Iv issued every afternoon, from the office of \MINER PuBLisnHINe CoMPANY, in the ling, Queen Street TES OF SUBSCRIPTION N ADVANCE) we Vea 31.0 Six MonTus 2.00 | Tourer M H 1.00 One MonTH 0.35 Se st pald to any part of Canada or the Uns i States ADVERTISING RATES For smal! advertisements which are ordered fore ; two weeks the charge is 30 cents per inch for the first insertion, and 20 ents r each continuation. Rate cards are furnished on application at the office, Special eontra I « at a reduced rate are quoted for & rtisements four inches in size or large h are to run for three mouths or lo: Ne special notices inserted unless paid for atthe rate of 10 cents per line, and under no eireumstances will such paid notices appear jn the local column. Special discounts made on all advertise- ments connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, | Picnics, ¢ No notices will be inserted with the same unless the regular rate of 10 cents per 3 paid That THe Examtver is considered by no Merchants and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing wspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quent e most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, is abundantly proved by the fact that sno to accommodate our advertisers we hay compelled to enlarge the paper to ita present size. Tr iy Examen is for sale by the fol- lowir agenia KR. H. Mason, Post O'Fee, Charlottetown J. Meintyre Ma!lpeque Road, : C. Paal, Lower Spring Park Road, W. M. Colfin, jrafton Street, AG cor. Water and Prince St. Ll). Chappell, Prince Street, Pazaar Store, Queen Street, ine Carter & Co., Queen Stree sy #® Gray, News Stall, P. E. L. Ratlw ay? and on the trains M. & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- merside. Harry McFarlane, Souris. Hon. PD. Gordon, (-eorgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart + M. Clarke, Alberton Chas. A. Gillis, Orwell Cove. a8 te The W eekly Examiner | and beyond everything else relating to the Wold’s NEW — HE DAILY EXAMINER. , é TERMS: ““e , “ollars a Year “ag 4 SERIES “ =——m other is tesued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. [t is made up of matter whieh has appeared iu the Daily editions, and | is a first-< and full of the le The subscription for Tak WEEKLY EXaM. INER, post pald to any part of Canada or the ('nited States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as giver re for Tue DatLy EXAMINER. atest news. bers DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Surgeon. Graduate of the Medi eal Department of the University of the C ty of New York, late Member of the Resident Staff of Belle- vue Hos nl and the New York Lying-in Hospita al, New York City. UFFICE North Side Queen Square OPPOSITE POST OFFICE e<dence—Near Corner of King and Queen Btreets, Cl arlottetown. ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION" MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES Queen Street, Che-'atretown earoom : Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX Rheumatic and Neura noe Cure Of the gpnnet AND "2860 gy PAIN GURE ((BOTH INTERMALAND EXTER +4557 Zo SO CENTS MANUFACTURED ONLY BY ) THE HAWKER MEZICINE COY, Dee ST JOHN, N.B. i 3 ‘ | | ‘ § 3x : m Saati? ener eg TERRE: cere ani oe ‘lass weekly newspaper—interesting | good man who ~ THE happened with You have heard of the that is what words, EXAMINER’S gee next page for Coupon. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, E MAGIC City ! WE KNEW IT WOULD GO, beeause it Grandest, the Most Beautiful, the Most Wonderful of all! Containing over prayed for RAIN and got a FLOOD! Well Portfolios ot the World’s Fair, in is the Best, the Largest, the Greatest.” the 300 Splen- did Photographie Views and Historical Descriptions of the World’s Fair and the Midway | } . Plaisance. All who have ‘Lhey all want it and must have it. seen it are astonished at its marvellous Nothing like it! 1 be: auty. Fair. Its GRA IN NATURAL COLORS are a surprise to everybody. ONLY ONE COUPON REQUIRED. “THE MAGIC CITY” will be published in sixteen consecutive weekly Nothing equals it! Don't Fail to Get a Sample Number of “The Magic Gity.” away above ND PHOTOGRAPHS parts or ‘numbers, each containing sixteen to twenty splendid Photographs of the World’s Fair ‘and the Midway Plaisance, ‘will constitute a large and beautiful oblong volume, OYER SOO CRAND ‘tuition marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just like a $100 instrument. its kind ever offered at a popular price for which the above | [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 and has the advantage of such simplicity that it ean be understood and mastered We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. See ! 1] ; with accurate Historical Descriptions. The inches, 11x15 —— INCLUDIN( All the Principal Buildings, Foreign and State Buildings, General Views, Interior Views, — Architectural Details, And all the Grand and Wonderful Features the of the Great Fair, Splendor of the World’s Exposition by a Special Corps of Artists. ‘Lhe consecutive weekly parts will be mailed to any address, calling at our office, at the uniform price of TEN CHiN iS EACH, Great Paintings, Celebrated Statuary, Glimpses of the Art Charastar Sketches in taken at Don’t miss the greatest and best of all the World’s Fair histories. complete illustrated with series VIEWS, Gallery, the Midway, Curious Foreign Types, the height of or delivered to persons and ONE COUPON. THE AMERICAN $8.00 'T’ypewrriter. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and punc- Slance. Writes eapitals, 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 -vidth of paper or envelope up to 84 inches. claim can be It is the truthfully While not first of made. as rapid as as the pen, almost at a Kasy to understand—learned in 5 minutes. Weighs only four pounds—most portable. Compact, takes up but little room. Built solid and simple; can’t get out of order Capital and lewer case easily mastered. More “ margin play” far which do most of the ke yboard aillke- small jetters the work, Takes good letter-press copies. Packed securely in handsgme case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.00, {| D. BESTEWART, Agent, Charlotietowa. in registered letter, money order or certified check. glad to answer al! inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the “ Yost.” IRA CORNWALL, (Jeneral Agent forMaritime We guarantee every machine, and are Provinces. dec2) eens ane | KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and | tends to personal enjoyment when | rightly used, The many, who live bet- | tar than others and enjoy life more, with | ies expenditure, by more promptly dapting the world’s best products te the needs of physical being, will attest the valug to health of the pure liquid laxative principles em sbraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is duce to its presenting in the form most acceptab’2 and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreehing and truly | beneficial properties of a perfect lax | ative; effectually cleansing the system | dicpelling colds, headaches and fever: | and permanentiy curing constipation. It has piven satisfaction to millions and vet With the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neya, Liver and Bowels without weak- i ig them and it is yx rfectly free from ey objectio: able aubstane: Syrup of Figs is for sale by > all drug- ‘3 in Jie. bottles, but it is manu tured by the California Fig Syrup oa only, wh ose name inprigted on every pas age, also the name, Syrup of Five. and being well informed, you will no’ ecept rny substitute if offered, W.R. Watson, P. E Island. Charlotteown iymwtf Drugzgist, alike the Dutch Process — GR No Alkalies oR-- Other “Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & COS | \BreakfastCocoa which is absolutely { 1} pure and soluble, 1 | pv tilthas morethan three times 5 : t 1 ' far if ; the strength of Cocoa mixed 4} i with Starch, Arrowroot o we Sugar, and is far wore eco- nomical, costing less than one cent uw cup It ia delic ious, nourishing, ane ZAsILY OIGESTED. Scld by Grocers e Grocers everywher % W.BAEER &€0., - CO., Dorchester, Mazs PHL OWUYY v SOWOOEE wr -_wTrewretefewnfeftefreweweeeeekewnvere,rt.-* | “Vou’ll Feel Better ” | S Everybody does, after taking | 5 few bottles of MALTO PEPTONIZED: $s PORTER ? i . builds upthe run-down sys- ¢ | em,—is strengthening and appe-¢ laine It is readily borne by weak stomachs, regulates the bowels, ¢ ~ aad is inv ‘aluable to those afflicted 6 with Indigestion and Flatulency. 4 "HE KALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LTD. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA, Ilighly Recommended by Physicians. ~ ae Information Wanted of | JAMES WALLACP, a — and seaman, who came to Bos ton about 20 years ago. “Address GEO. WALLACE, South Abington Station, Mass. jan29—dy & wy PERFEGT MANHOOD! How attained—how re- stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- siolcgy will not tell yous the doctors can’t or =swon’t; but allthe same you wish toknow. 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 fox our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), __FRIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. "7 Sh Ab“ 2D $O062300808OG0080888 the relatives of Gold Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, MONTREAL. WE ARE PR class of goods and garments equal to any | House in Europe. FRENCH CLEANING a specialty. etc., furnished by CHAS. IVES MORRISON, Agent, Queen Street. sept25—eod a BREAD— CARVING—PARING. FOR SALE BY CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. ang 14, Ne eee “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. Single Copies Two Cents FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1894. NOVEL TELEGRAPHING. Looked Like Shabetes Senma@enenee, the Exph nation Was Simple. A prominent lawyer thought he had dis covered a wonderful instance of thought tranference the other day. He has two typewriter operators. One works in his private office and .he other has a desk in an adjoining room. Of late he has been puzzled upon giving instructions to his private stenographer, to be delivered to the other typewriter, to find that she neve: quit the room, yet the girl in the next room would always execute the order, just as if she had been told explicitly what was re quired trying to aceount for this seeming tele graphic communication between the two young ladies. Yesterday he thought he would make a test of the matter, calling his stenographe, he said: ‘‘I want you to take down this article of agreement and give it to Miss Blank to transcribe.’ He then dictated a lengthy and technical document, trying to make it as difficult as possible, he stenographer took it down and then went to her machine and began cperating it. The attorney watched her closely, and saw that she never stopped her work, He waited for a half hour, then he turned to his typewriter and said: Miss So-and-So, I think you have for- gotton to give Miss Blank that dictation | gave you for her.” “Oh, no,” replied the young lady, ‘‘Miss Blank has it finished and waiting for you ont there.” This nonplussed the attorney. He was sure his private stenographer had not left the room, and did not see how it could be possible for such a complicated agreement o be trausferred by telepathic communi cation. He went out to Miss Blank, who handed him the agreement completed. The atiorney cou'd not contain himeelf any onger as he said: ‘‘Miss Blank, I have been noticing something strange for the past month. Will yon tell me how you re eive my instrnoctions from Miss So-and-So without her leaving my room? Here you have trarscribed a very difficult, dictation, and Tam eure you have had no communi ation with her.” The young lady began to smile and said : “Mr. youshonld not be so shure that we have had no communication. We can converse with each other when the door is open just as well as if we were in the same room. No, its not thought trans ference, but plain telegraphy. You see, Miss So-and-So, and [ have lesrned tele «raphy recently, and we practice in this way. ‘We found the space bars of our type writers made perfect telegraph keys, so that we can send messages just as well as with a regular telegraph instrument. So ite not so mysterions after all.” The young lady showed her employer the manner of seuding a message, and he be yan to think how easily some mysterious incidents cou!d be explained if we only knew the truth. The Guecha or Geisha. Outside the temple there still are a thou- sand things to see. Every varivsty of amusement can be had in this enceinte, which contains a circus, a theatre, shoot ing-gulleries, and numerous tea-houses in which the young exquisites of the town organize charming little ies. They hire jesters, musicians, and singers, or, if they are very refined, they send for a Gu echa. It is very difficult to define what a Guecha is, ag there is nothing at all re sembiing her im our Western civilization. A Guecha is a dancer, but her slow diyni fied graceful dance, like that of the Japan exe women, is the least of her talents, or rather of her merits. Chosen from amongst the most beautiful women, bronght up with the greatest care by an old Gnecha who has become a professor, these dancers, like the Roman veatals, are the very ideal of purity, beauty, and grace \bsulutely chaste, of perfectly correct depertment, supremely elegant, a Guecha is the model, the example, the rare flower cultivated with loving care. A princess may consult her on the laws of good breed- ing and etiquette; if a poet compose a madrigal in her honor, she will reply to him in the language of the gods, with as much modesty as spirit; and if she inspire passion in a man marriage is the only pos sible denouement. The amusements of the young men of the world at Tokio are then often of a very retined character. If the dancer consents to come at her invitation, it is that ther may enjoy the charm of her exquisite con- versation, the grace of her toilet, her beauty, the song she sings to the accom paniment of the chamisan, and her plastic dancing, which will carry her spectators back to the world of the gods and heroes. In former days if a Guecha sinned against chasity, the chief Shogun himself punished her by condemning her to pass several years amongst the fallen women vf Yoshiwara, But the Guecha is beginning, like every thing else, to degenerate, and before long she will disappear. —Harper' 8 Weekly. Onions For the Compleaton. Walter Besant says: ‘‘May I help you madam, to an onion? Will you prefer the vegetable raw or fried? Or you may have it hoiled, baked or sliced in vinegar. You decline the offer? Fie! It is because you know not the sovereign qualities of this vegetable. The praises of the onion have been recently set forth in an American pape:, which says: ‘If ugly girls will eat onions they won't be ugly. Ugliness i- another term for sickness, Well people feel good and look good. Health is beau tiful, and onions are health-giving.’ The writer goes on to explain that ovions, raw or cooked, stimulate all the organs, aid di gestion and—which is perhaps of greater importance—brighten the complexion. Some of the best people, particulariy in college and literary circles, are not ‘at home’ even to their intimate friends on Sunday. The ladies stay at home on Sun day to consume ‘leeks for the lily cheeks. After the leek sonp a cup of strong black coffee is recommended, with seclusion Ayain, madam, may I*help you to a few slices of the Bermuda variety for the good of the lily cheek, which they will trans form ints a cheek of rose ard lily?’ ZEPARED TO DYE all | All information regarding shades, prices, , R. 3B. Worton & Go., | A Ripe Side to the Orange. There is a ripe side to the orange as well as to the peach. The stem half of the DYE! NG COM )MPANY. orange is usually not so sweet and juicy as ee other half, not because it receives ess sunshine, but possibly because the “le gravitates to the lower half, as he orange commonly hangs below its ‘aia. Pleased With the Relief, Fair Shopper—I fear you will think me very tiresome. Clerk—I like to wait on you, madam M throat is so sore to-day it hurts me tv \calt “Cash !” An Accomplished Japanese. The most famous Japanese actor of this generstion is Ichikawa Danjuro, He cau swallow swords, walk on razors, chew fire end p drug. Tis ingredients are wholesome ani- mal and vegetable substances, and it may be taken indefinitely without dangerous re- sults. aaa OCD'’S Sarsaparilla wins its way into the confidence of the people | by the good it is doing. | euarantee Bs rmgnent CURES. | : ! | | | Toothache, Faceache, Inflamed ~ and | | Sore Eyes are certainly cured by Por - 5 ’ Bxtract: sold in o.> hettles only. bat | rhe attorney for along time had been | and | ae Puttner’s Emulsion contains neither | Quinine, strychnine, nor other harmful | Fair trials | a VOL 33.—NO, 204. YACHTING NOT UNMIXED PLEASURE. Some Experiences Possess None of the Charms So Often Painted. Oue commonly thnks of yaching as the | most delightful of summer pastimes, and the very word calls up yisions of a ‘‘wet sheet, aud a flowing sea, and a wind that : lows fast,” and whistlings through the igging. blve sky, white caps, driving clouds and all that sost of thing, to say nothing of the possibilities of delightful companionship and the delicious nncon ventional ty of meeting one’s fellow men and women with all tne formality an.’ restraints of on shore life thrown off; no making talk or anything of that kind, bu knocking abont carelessly and easily in tlannel suite and having ‘‘a real good time Or, again, racing, with its excitements, and ernising, with all the possibilities of ad ventnre. Such is the pepular and accept ed view of yachting, but there is another | and yloomy side tothe picture which the writer, who ia son.’ mes inclined to grow! can set forth clearly in three distinct state | ments, with an open challenge to contradic tion-—first, that to ‘‘go and take a sail” in setnall boat belonging to some oye else aud to sail aimlessly abont on the open lake is ‘‘au awful bore’; secondly, that to go as ‘‘nmateur crew’ on a rowing yacht is not only a bere, Vata bardship, and laacly, that cruising is a lottery absolut-ly depen dent on the weather. PFogs, calins, storms and head winds are quite as usual as free winds and sunshine. Observe that nothing has been said about s*a-ickness, which makes yachting im porsible tu so many, There is no place on earth where the sun can strike down out of the sky and b‘eac and blister and sizz'e as it can pen 4 “8 yachtt deck. There is no place that can be hotter o7 more stuffy or more uncomfort able than a yacht’s cabin on a hot day. when there is no wind or when the wind is dead aft, and when it is rongh, and the water is diving across the yacht’s deck ina sheet of white foam, and the crew are all nuddied behind the shrouds, into which old oilskins have been stuffed to make a sereen, and the man at the wheel has life lines ranning from the main sheet to the main shrouds on either side of him to keep him from being washed overboard, and the fire is ont in the galley and the cook has been scalded by the soup stock jumpi: ng ont of the boiler, and the barometer is dropping like mad, and the skylight leaks so that every wave which comes aboard sends bucketfuls of swash iown into the cabin, and whe» every now and thea a ware comes aboard and pounds down on her deck like a load of pig iron, and those below are shaken about like corn in & popper, and those on deck simply hold on nnd duck their heads—when such is the condition of affairs, yachting would nut be constietale pastime. : ‘ne deiguts «f being “‘amatenur crew eau be biietly summed up. They consist in lying flat on your face either in a het sun of a pouring rain, end if you turn ovet having the owner shont at you: “Keep still! Do you think that you're a wild elephant? You jarred her all over that time. Furthermore, all yachts are not rigzedd alike, and if the amateur crew is told ata critical point inthe race—siy just betore rounding the leeward mark—to let go the spinnaker haly ards and let the balloon ji) halyarde go instead, so that the whole sail goes over to leaward, the remarks which wil} be made to him will be “unfit for pub lication.” 4n Image of Gold. Two miles out from Kamakura and about twenty miles from Yokohama, Japan, or a terrace, near the temple of Kamakura, sits the most gigantic idel, or heathen ged now known toexist. This immense brazen image of a deityywas built or made during the reign of Shomu, who was forty sixth in the present line of Emperors, and died iu the year 748 A.D. This ido!, which has been prayed to daily for more than 1,2) yeais by the crowd of devotees that hourly cluster about it, is still in perfect repair, aud justly reckoned as one of the greatest wonders in the Orient. Frank Dobbins who visited Dia Butsu the rane eumnmer thatthe writer worshipped (1) at the shrine, and has given the best description of the yod that has yet been written, saya: “The dimensions of the god are truly colsal. His height from the base of the lotus flower, upon which he sits. w the top of his head is 634 feet; and above this rises an aureola 14 feet wide, and above which again rises for several feet the flame like glory which encloses or arches in the whole figure. The face proper is 15 feet long; ite width 94 feet. The eyesa ¢ 3 fees Yinches long from corner to corner; the eyebrows 54 feet. and the ears 8 feet. The chest is 20 feet in depth, and the middle finger is exactly 5 feet long Around the sides, shoulders and head of the god, in front of the aureole, are 16 fi; urea, each in a sitting posture, and each & feet in height. The leaves of the immense ous, upon which tbe god sits, are each 1() feet long and 6 feet wide, there being 55 of them in the eluster. The casting must have been wonderfully well executed, although the fineness of the leaf edges and other parts which i was able to examine, and the elaborate engravings which can still Le traced upon the lotus flower itself in the uninjured parte, leave no doubt that the founder's art was supplemented here and there by artists with file and graver. The right hand is open and raised upward; the left rests upon the lap.” The image weighs about 450 tons, and ie made of a combination of gold, tin, con per and mercury in these proportiors: Pounds ON Fo ci vba a tes eons as 500 We fukn cous ; 16,827 POPE oo 5 oi bene ees oe gg Mere 1,955 OG ss isc cssnvntsia .+'¢+ oy» - 986,080 Total, - 005, 361 All other existing colossal images are pigmies compared with Dia-Butseu, whose hard visaged face has looked down on the meaningless rites of heathen idolators for more than 12 centuries. Another Watson utter ler soronte. Probably the most important addition to Toronto's fleet of yachts next year will be Mr. George H. Gooderham's 35-footer. G. tf. Watson, of Glasgow, the famed de signer of the Valkyrie and many other English and Scotch racers, has the desig in hand. The design will be soon com- pleted and the frames are expected to ar rive next month The building will be doue here, as was the case with the Zelma and the Vedette. The advent of the new boat should add grestly to the interest of next season's racing. Mr. Gooderham has asked for a racer and not a cruiser and the summer of ‘94 should see some great con tests between the Watson cutter and the Fyfe luggex Vedette. The plans will probably be ready in February. The dimensions call for a deep, powerful boat of cutter type. There are two Watson boats already in Toront» the Vreda, Commodore Bosweli'e flagship), and the Aileen, Capt, G. Myles’ cruiser, The Vreda, of course, with the last few years’ revolutions in yacht designing, is of an older vintage, but still possessing grea: POT, eae e. 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 really il] he consults physician; if constipated uses the gentle amily laxative, Syrup of Figs Se eee 2 tt | For Sudden Colds, take Hawker’s Toln } and Wild Cherry Calsam, It cures USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY the great Blood and Nerve Remedy ing the ; | Hood’s Cured After Others Failed Scrofula in the Neck—Bunches All Cone Now. Sangerville. Maine. “C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: “Gentlemen :—I feel that I cannot say enough in favor of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. For five years I have been troubled with scrofula in my neck and throat. Several kinds of medicines wiich I tried did not do me any good, and whea I con. menced to take Hood's Sarsaparilla there were large bunches on my neck so sore that I could Hood’s** Cures not bear the slightest toueh. When I had taken one bottle of this medicine, the soreness had gone, and before I had finished the second the bunches had eatirely disappeared.” Biancnx ATWOOD, Sangerville, Maine. N.B. If you decide to take Hood's Sarsava- Trilla do not be iv duc: te d to ob uy auy other. Hood’ 's P: iis cure constipation by vester- the alimentary istaitic action of stoi, Olid age an. Childhood REDD Sprcial Cal AND THE) Depend upon Others POR Guide and Support. Little Josephine Libby. HOW PLEASANT it is to see an aged person with an elostic step, a bright smile and a kind word, and hear the child with its mer- ry laughter ringing in ovr ears: these denote good health, whica can be found in Skoda’s Discovery. Mr. Chas. Libby, of Auburn, Me. says: “My little girl Josephine, had congestion of the. lungs, which left her very nervous and weak. She also had a humor break over her body ; after wiving her & bottle of Skoda’s Discov- ery and using a tube of Skoda’s Oint- ment, the humor entirely left her. She is now weil and strong.” Medical Advice Free. SKODA DISCOVERY C2, LTD., WOLFVILLE, N.S, For -a’e by all druggists. Trate suy miel by W. R. Watson; Charlotten wn P. E. 1. DHNSON'S 4NopYnNe LINIMENT ynUlkE any OTHE, Yor INTERNAL as ETERNAL vce Im i810 ee oe Paysician. Think Of It. = In use for more than ration alter Generation have used Ye arenes = ote id blessed tt, hvery Traveler should have a ote i his ssthet, Every Sufferer fo". n Neurgiea se Rei eer er bane Lair will find in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure E ve ry Mi oth er Amodyine Linimeat fu the up, Critda, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, Cone, c ~Ay pi, Cramps ani Pains liable to occur in an fami} without notice. Delays may cost a life. Relieves all Summer Complaints like magic. -paid; 6 bot ce, 35 tles, 2 xpress raid. LS. Johnson & ‘Ons 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 put up in one pound Tins, price 25 cts. per Tin. Sold Retail by all Druggtsts and Gre- cers and Wholesale ly KERRY WATSON & CO. Prornictore MONTREAL. value, YOUR DRUGGisT FoR ect NORWEGIAN niece Pais WITH HYPDPH alatable as cream. of ; In big Settles taste .ike others. 50c. and 81.00 When we assert that Dodd’s ee een Kidney Pills wee Cnre Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of all who have used them. TH:+7/ are TO STAY a. gists or mail on receipt of wes et L. A. Smith & Ca, he ta maceseseeeees- 4 ain mnt tle Li