— CALENDAS FOR MAZBCH, 1894, New M a1 sit S |} t ‘ N + : < S i] water @°9 ~ ; “ 2s 4.8 i 92 5; \ J ; | { . j ) { ; i _o—_o Se AIL EAANIMEL | y Ne WEPAPER ’. E. IshaxD, afte on, from the office of . : I isHING ComMPany, in the ig, Queen Street TES OF SUBSCRIPTION ‘ ANCE oN y $4.00 SX YON : 2.00 T M 1.ue | Os | 0.35 Gent post paid to an y part Canada or the Un VERTISING RATES For : riisements which are ordered eer tw weeks the charge is rs . first insertion, and 3 ‘ ‘ Rate cards are | at ‘ } e. Special cont? it a reduced rate are quoted fer ad enes ib size OF larg ‘ » run for three months or long ¥ : nse t unless f nid for at sf ne, and under ne eir em such paid notices appear ts made on all advertise ( ch Fairs, Bazaars, will erted with i Z ar rate of 10 cents per ' x t™e s sidered by] our Mer Viarufecturers to be the lead- u s 4 j } lsiand, and conse- qe aluabie advertising medium throug AK eir announcements pad! wroved by the fact that ‘Border to mmodate ou uivertisers we Day i; i to enlarge the paper to até 5 Tr tNER is for sale by the f lewing agenia R.H. Mason, Post O fee, Charlottetown J.m y Vi a! pe wad, ' ' Ll“ = g Park Road, W . Co : street = y \ and P ? St. D. Chapoell. Prince S Faazvar score, Queen street ty arter & Co Ju street & Gray. News Stall. ?. E. 1. Railway and on th Ains | M. & Vaish, I Bookstore, Sum- mers. 2 la ; fer ari =r + i i). Gord g v D. A. Eg Mia t G. M. ¢ ‘ A.J. M “ I z os ES ES ~~e> »W -E : The Weekly Examiner s ise ' Frida mo i from the pudii« : it ira ip of matter which has ‘ i the Dally editions, and is a first > : y ews teresting and i t The su w Ti Wrernty EXam. INER, po ito any part of Canada or the Unitei & ea, ts ed art r Adver g rates on the same sca as given bove for T Dy air I iM RR. ) v = j ae ae ‘ Physician and Surgeon. Graduate of t Medical Department of the University of the City of New York, late Me t» {the Resident Staff of Bet! e- v fospita tnd cn New York Lyiag-in H oe , New Yor rK Uily. OFFICE North Side Queen Square TE POST OFFICE Resici- Near Cort Rt poeta ROBERT BEAIRSTO )MMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES Cr Ps . Orig “i reget ‘ Sberlattetown er of King and Queen | Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, _ LANE-----------LONDON ESENTED IN ( CANADA BY 2 | The Greatest | peeves P Neuralgia Cure Of the Age yaclé HOUSEHOLD k WPA N CURE — , ((eoTH INTERNAL AND EX1ERWAL)) ‘ PRICE: ¥-i-2 ae MANUFACTURED ONLY B is y HE HAWKER MEDICINE COV. wrcsemne ar Le (" ‘s \ ae 2A ; ‘ eocnne - ; - : i an 3 A, + W Fire and Marine Policies all written hen re. Sterling Certificates, payable in any | / so wy S <e art of the wurld, issued on shlemnonte oot —————— THE DAILY EXAMINER. TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when NEW SERIES' CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, MARCH 24, =e wes a. he W Cut out Coupon on Paze Il. THE AMERICAN $8.00 Trypewrriter. his is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, smal! letters, figures. and -pune- tuation marks (71 in all) on fall width paper, just ‘like a $100 instrument. it is the first of 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. While not as rapid as 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 Zlance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. Writes capitals, small letters, figures and Easy to understand—learned in 5 minutes. marks—71 in all. Weighs only four pounds—-most portable. Writes just like a $100 machine. Compact, takes up but little room. No Shift Keys. No Ribbon. Prints from | Built solid and simple; can’t get out of the type direct. order. Prints on flat surface. Capital and lower case keyboard ailke- Writing always in sight. easily mastered. More “margin play” for the small letters which do mest of the work. Takes good letter-press copies. Corrections and insertions easily made. lakes any width of paper or envelope up to 84 inches. 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, and are glad to answer all inquiries for farther information as to this machine and also the * Yost.” IRA: CORNWALL, General Agent forMaritime Provinces. STEW aR. Avent. Charlottetown. INSU RANCE. ‘PEE LOYAL CIRCLE OF KING'S DAUGHTERS INTEND GIVING A dD B. FIRE Your patronage by the following is respectfully solicited :— The Royal Ins. Co of Liverpoao!. = great Fire Companies _ Lopise 4 saneae i. Co. of Liveprool oe The United Fire Ins Co of Wanchesier. The Phenix Ins. Co, of Breok'yn. ST. PAUL'S SCHOOLROOM, sete Aillniiainen These Companies command ENORMOUS MONETARY STRENGTH, and are noted for their prompt and liberal ew Avril 5D. settlement of losses. JOHN MACEACHERN, a AGENT FOR fF. E. ISDAND. | — - : Particulars later janil + sovsos 0808 TNSURANGE--FIRE, MARINE, — LIFE, Do You Neneize It 2 The undersigned represents s the foll following fet-clacs lass British Companies :— FIRE. North British and Mercantile Insurance Company Union Assurance Society (1714). Manchester Fire Assurance Company. MARINE. ' British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company. Reliance Marine Insurance Company. i LIF=. Assurance Company. | London and Lancashire Life i. 7 . . ALSO—The Nova Scotia Marine Insurance Company and the Dominion Burglary Guarantee Company of Canada, pee OF FICE—Stamper’s Block, t } ’ illage ; | This is the heel of the in all Towns and | GRANBY RUBBER. | Look for this pattern on the heel whes i you buy a Rubber or Overshoe. It_guar- | antees a perfect article. Granby Rubbers | Wear Like Iron. Charlottevown. Agencies FRED. W. HYNDMAN. febl3 1 yr law (eat) Place a Cake of B BY’S OWN SOAP in your linen drawer, and it will impart to your : - Ask your dealer for them clothes the delicate aroma of fine | \\ 3), French Pot Pourri in a modified | —— degree. The longer you keep the TOLET Soap before using it the better. | Beware of imitations. The brick store on Queen Street, lately occupied by fh. H. Norton & Co. Apyjaly THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP Co., Mo trea}, at office of trustees Connolly Estat.e, jen6—ev sat tf SOLE MANUFACTURERS. Queen Street. eod tf—jan2s ~ re , Musical & Literary Entertainment MP Pa lg ! Gray’s ill hin tte te TrAT ST EN OWLE DGE 14 Briags comfort and improvement and | torgis to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, ‘who live bet- tor than others and enjoy life more, with \o%§ expenditure, by more promptly alapting 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 renedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptab’e and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- | ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headoclics and fevers and permanently cu constipation. It has given sac.afacti: .‘o millionsand | met with the approval of the medical | profession, because it acts on the Kid- CYS, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable : substance. Syrup of Figs is forsale by all drug- vists in 75e bottles, but it is manu. factured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, ed will not -eceut eny substitute if offered Shietetninene ivmwit . R, Watson, Druggiet, Island. dating the Dutch Process No Alkalies — OR— Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & COS -\BreakfastCocoa ; a which is absolutely pure and soluble. ' 4 Ithas more than three times ' the strength of Cocoa mixe-t fwith Starch, Arrowroot oc Sugar, and is far wore eco- nomical, costing less than one cent a cup It is delicious, nourishing, an@ EAsiLy DIGESTED. ‘Sold by Grocers “everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mase PERFEGT MANHOOD! How attained—how re- Cheiyooksentie. - siolegy yill not tell yous the doctors can’t or = won'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 for our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charge. Address (:n confidence), Enle MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. ——— JONSON'S ANopYNE LINIMERT Verse MOTHER Tor INTEBNAL es EXTERNAL use Im 1810 Griginated by an Oid Family Physician. Think Of It. Yur, ana'suttieada “ens vation after Gen raiion have used and biessed It. Every Traveler sould have @ ott in his satche} From Rheumatism. Ever UTFErer Fotice nomsista. Nervous Headach +, ae eeeriaConghs Onterre. Bron chitis, Asthma, C’ olera eet rbus, Diarrhoe: Soreness in Body or — Joints or Straips will find in this ola Anodyine re ae one as eeeeyae cure ee Every Nother Anodynetininentin no ae gine Sore Throat, Tonsllitia, Cole, « Cuts, Bi Cramps ant Pains Hable to occur in any family’ without notice. Delays may cost a life. ce jeves a © laints like mi Price, % cts. ; thes, o> Express pai LS. Johiwon © Co.-Boston Maas oan fER HAV ING ELEN KEPT UP ALL NIGHT With that COUGH, if you do not want to repeat the experience, buy a bottle of the OLD STANDARD REMEDY Syrup of Red Spruce Gum The best Cough Cure in the world. Sold everywhere 26 cts. a bottle. KERRY WATSON & CO. Propnicrons MONTREAL. MILLERS LUN OF PURE NORWEGIAN Sayre ye ITH HY miles ae: Palatab fs taste.ike others. In big bottles _ his long association | men—black, brown and _ white. . few whites are soldiers of Queen Vic , toria, then in occupation of Suakim (for Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—EFuripides. Single Copies Two Cents 1894. MAN AND LION FRIENDS | | AMICABLE RELATIONS BETWEEN A FAMOUS ANIMAL AND HiS TRAINER. How Leo Was Taught to Obey—-Takeu in Infaney, Treated Kindly and Made to Understand That Man Was His Master The Lion's Intelligence. ‘Why dol love Leo more than tise rest of the animals under my care?’ arena. The professor, who. owing to with the king of beasts, has grown to resemble a lion himself, stroked his tawny beard medit- atively as he put this question. ‘‘Leo is more than my pupil,” continued. ‘‘He is my bosom friend and may yet become my protector should the other lions ever turn against me. Our affection dates from the day we first met in the bazaar at Suakim, in Egypt. the mention of that meeting brings before me the whole strange scene, as flashlight does a darkened picture. “Overhead, ahead in the copper, yel- low African sky, east and west, stretch- esthe long bazaar, gaudy with many ; colored cloths, reeking with a thousand odors, and crowded with all manner of The war with the Mahdi had just been con cluded) and my own party. “To the south lies a hazy waste of | sand. broken by the crooked lines of palms which mark the track of the Nile. Suddenly I am called from the reverie into which I have fallen by the voice of Herr Kohn, Mr. Hagenbeck’s Soudanese agent. He apprises me of the arrival of two lion cubs. I look southward and there comes through the crowd a camel, bobbing and swaying, as camels do, and bearing two wicker cages, swung trom the ends of a bamboo pole lashed across his back. Turban and fez give way before the advancing beast, nd I can distinguish two fine baby lions through the bars of the cages. “LT am on a mission to Africa to gather lions for Mr. Hagenbeck. Stepping u to the cage on the right of the oy am greeted by a low growl. The occu- pant is the lion whom we now call ‘Pasha,’ the brother of ‘Leo.’ Trying | my luck at the other side, I am received wth purring like that ofacat. I put uy hand into the cage. The lion cub rubs his soft back against it. We are friends from the start. Opening the ‘| cage door, I take the little fellow in my ; arms. He nestles near my breast, and near my heart he has remained ever since. That lion cub was ‘Leo,’ and I shall never ferget it to him, that, while his brother was sulky at our first intro- duction, he himself welcomed me as a friend from the first moment our eyes inet. Prof. Darling probably knows more about lions than any other living person other than s Nubian or a Kaffir. He went into the menagerie business as a pony trainer at the age of 18, but speed- ily saw that his training talents de- manded moreimportant objects. From teaching tricks to shaggy Shetlands he gravitated toward the eection occupied py the lions. The lions took to him and he to them. In 1888 the idea of training lions to perform in o- arenas, instead of in cages, occurred to him, and he suggest- ed it toKurl Hagenbeck. The latter at once degpatched him to northeast Africa to obtain lions for his big experiment. Mr. H beck has agents all the world over. But Mr. Kohn, his representa- tive in the Soudan, is looked upon as the greatest trader in wild beasts alive. A fortnight after Mr. Darling's ar- rival in Suakim, Mr. Kohn received news of the capture of the two young lions in the far south. He sent messen- ers for them, and they were brought own the Nile to him, hanging from the back of 2 camel, described by Mr. Darl- ing They had been caught by Nubian 7 nunters in the usual manner- ~ namely, by shooting their dani and stealing them from her breast. ‘We bonghi those lions cheap,” said Mr. Darling. ‘We gave their captors a few pieces of fancy patterned cloth and an ola revolver for them. The value of the goods for which q they were exchanged did not exceed $5. | Now you could not buy ‘ Leo’ alone for 000, Mr. ‘Darling brought his lion gemini down the Nile, stopping at Shepheard's, in Cairo, fora few weeks, and finally reached Port Said, from whence he took ship for Trieste. To his surprise the cubs were not a bit seasick during their first voyage. He has, however, since learned that animals do not get sick at sea. ‘‘I never saw a lion seasick,” he declared, ‘in my experience. Once a lion of mine was ill at sea, but his in disposition was caused by the bad air in his cabin and not by the motion of the vessel. Camels are pretty good trein- ing for seagoing people, anyhow. The mai who can ride camelback with im- punity can safely attempt the Dover- Calais trip, and ‘Leo’ and ‘Pasha,’ you may remember, had been carried by a camel all the way from Nubia.” The lion Leo has one other affection besides that which he bears for Profes sor Darling. It is the feeling that binds him to his twin brother Pasha. The old saw that blood is thicker than water certainly holds good in this case. The two lions love each other, and show their love a great deal more than do human sons of a common mother. They help each other loyally against the attacks of the other lions who share their cage, they lie down to sleep back to back, and are intensely unhappy even when separated for a brief time Professor ling has experimented upon this fraternal feeling by giving no food to Leo while he fed A sumptu- ously, The result was that Pasha, see- ing his brother's plight, actually pushed some of the raw food given him under the bars of the cage in which the hungry Leo was confined. A few weeks later Leo attacked and defeated a third lion, named Tom, who had scratched Pasha’s nose in one of the many quarrels that occur in the lions’ quarters. Professor Darling recognizes fully the tremendous risk he incurs in his per- formauces with the lions. ‘Very few lion trainers,” he said, “leave the busi ness sound in brain and limb. The great majority eventually get hurt in one way or another. It does not do, however, to lose one's confidence. Every lion tamer must look upon himself as certain to be ne of the exceptions of the rule of sufferers. Thisis the way I re- gard myself. Of course, they are dan- five but I do not fear them as long as have my nerve and a stout whip. ‘The older a lion grows the less amen- able to captivity he becomes. The lions now with Mr, nbeck will soon te be Wearing Low Shoes. Wearing low shoes in the fall simply invites a cold. If you take cold, then take Hawker’s Tolu and Wild Cherry Balsam; it is a sure cure for coughs, colds, Hoarse- nest, Bronchitis, etc., Sold everywhere, only 25 cents. ——_—»—-______——_ Now is the time to get your supply of crockery as we are selling off cheaper than ever to make room for new goods to arrive as 800n as navigation opens. The cheap crockery store.—W. P. Colwill.” __feb 6 dy&wky 3wks. USE SKODA’s DIS DISCO VERY ,the great eter . 5Oc. and $1.00. Blood and NerveRemedy. ————— | that two years ago Leo | asked Professor Darling, of Hagenbeck’s | he | 212) VOL 33.-NO. too old for safety. chanzed for others pro “So give an examp\ crease in size of my They will be ex bably next year e of the rapid ts pets, let 4 + state cahanal only 240 pounds, while to-day he tips the beat at 510pounds, The best fighter in America would stand smail chances with 510 pounds of live lion hurled at his -breast. An old trainer generally knows in advatice when wild beasts in his charge feel any hostility toward him. For instance, at the Arena perform- ance yesterday I observed that the lion Pasha was suiky. He is naturally brad tempered: quite different. in fact, from Lis twin brother, Le I} saw him joox ing at me ina furtive way that b little good to ine should [turn my bac} tected You know I am wholly unpr | save by mv eyes and my Whip, when in | during | ‘ | Tarest chance tomeet i the cage with thelions. What did I dc? I simply kept my face toward Mr. Pasha the whole performance. He never found me off my guard. If! needed any proofs of his evil intentions 1 found them when it came to his turn to perform. He is generally very slow and unwilling in going through hi tricks. Ou this occasion his conscience sade a coward of him, and he just ex- celled all the other lions in the ! quickness | and ease with which he Cid lus act “You see lions are very much like men. Pasha knew instinctively that I suspected him. He also knew that he hadintended toinjure me. A cowbin his | Iceurables.’ «a | ation of cunning and remorse led him to | be more than ordinarily pliable, and it will be weeks, probably, before he medi- | tates further evil toward me.” GONE OUT OF FASHION. The Art of Conversation No Longer Under- stood in English Society, Another thing which has gone ont of fashion is the art of conversation, says the Pali Mall Gazette. It has of late years been so neglected that it is the with a young man who can converse at all in the real sense of the word. Amoag his own set he can babble about mutual acquaint ances, the new ginver, the next race or the lust scandal. But throw him among strangers .ud he is silent and dull, per haps making short remerks in a jerky ‘and confused manner, but « rt — be craying no intelligent inte ifa new discovery be mentioned, a Pie iece of im portant political news told or some in iormation given about a subject of real vaive As a consequence he is not only bored, but he shows ti, because he has never cultiv a that py lite in terest in his fellow creatures which wouid enable him to respond sympathe tically. One of the old Freach noblesse was lately heard to remark that when he first went into society_his father used to impress upon his mind thar at a party hé was bound to insure its success 60 far as he was individually concerned. To make himself agreeable was a duty not to be neglected withont a grave breach of courtesy, both to the guest- and the friends who invited him. In a modern gathering no such antiquated sentient would find adisciple. Young people, if they do not meet some one t lirt with, will ostentationsly pr their boredom, and wouid in as tonishment if it were snggeste|d that at a friend's house it was the duty toward the hostess to pay attention to those who seemed neglected, or who found them selves amoug strangers. To hint that old ladies and ugly girls should havea little share of consideration would be to subject one’s self to the charge of being old-fashioned. Small change is indiapen sible in going abouta city. To haveonly a five-dollar bill im one : » purse when riding in an omnibus or car is alriost as bad as to have no money, One requires small change, and the-thoughtful husband supplies bis wife with bright ten cent oe and shining quarters just as regu arly as with fresh greenbacks. A wo man prefers new and fresh money to that which is greasy and soiled, if she can havo her choice, and a certain good man, known and loved 1 a large circle, always makes a point of bringin gh ome to bis family the wherewithal for domestic expenses in a very dainty shape Ile is deservedly a favorite Sma)l change is as valuable in the commerce of life in other departments asin that of the exchequer. There are ee who can talk earned and serious subjects. but th have no smal! change. The quick jest and easy repariee of the drawing room are not for them. Welplessly an: d hope lessly, with gloom settling over their faces, and despair in their s: vals, they sit by while less gifted people chat and laugh an: dhave goodtimes. Thetrouble is they are destitute of small change This puts thein at a disadvantaye in society where there is no time for hom ilies and treatises, but where everrthing is froth and foam. The airy butcerfly flight of their neighbors confuses an: disturbs them. Their forces must speak, be dr awn up in order pared to charge on the ene foot, and an ms. All this and ithought, but the enemy is un and away, skirmishing triuinphantly else where, before the unlucky opponent has arranged his line of battle. By all means let those who would succeed in society carry about the sma)! change of witty conversation.—Harper’s Bazar. stere , 8 to ana pre iny b vse takes time Igor lil-Bred. hes, your servants affairs is to stamp yourself ill-bred. (ieneral conversa tion is the only sort tolerated in the best circles. Do not talk and laugh at the theatre or other places of amuse ment, annoying those about you who came to enjoy the performance and not your conversation. Do not stare at people and then discuss them so that there is no possibility of their mistak ing the topic of vour conversation; in fact, let consideration for oth- ers be your watchword and refine ment your code, and your manners will improve steadily under such personal discipline. Dishonest Ingenuity. At Corydon fair this year two swin dlers conducted a lottery of 5 cents a ticket. A monkey did the drawing An observant policeman noticed that all Never Appear To discuss your clot or your domestic | the prizes were drawn by men he knew | to be sharpers, so distrusting the inno cence of the monkey, he investicated and found that there was an almost un- noticeable difference between the tickets | drawing prizes and the others, and that the monkey had been trained to distin- guish between them and thus defraud the public. A Cold Night Recalled. On the night of the 11th of June, 1852, there were heavy frosts all over New England, u2d in Livingston County, New York, 300 sheep that had been sheared a few deys before were frozen to thy a el dea Puttner’s Emulsion contains peither Quinine, strychnine, nor other harmful drug. Its ingredients are wholesome ani- ma! and vegetable substances, and it may . be taken indefinitely without dangerous re- sults. ociaim extremely we M on | } THE PAST guarantees the future. | It is not what we say, but what Hood's Sarsaperilla does, that tells the tory. Remember HOOD’S CURES) USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY the greai Blood and Nerve Remedy i i i | perfectly ‘a A / é w2 : |B oid ae : ee = oO « os Ee st -—— BS z SO « 238 { = sé = F S size Pe - & | Sm as re pi — ~ =z * : Ses qm iS 8 2: be Pam & Er s % cw sa | A — eee a OS * it xi —— « =" 4 5 a it kl O me @ i: ox SS a= i — « eee ic -—— 2 £5535 3; OD fH ELzeS ui CS 2 5255s t ae oats x a> Rises — E=°3 =e <E & Consumption—Low Condition Wonderful Results From Hood's Sarsaparilia. baking Miss me nnah Wyatt , Ont Toronto | “Four years ago while in the old country ( England ), my daughter Hannah was sent away from the hospital, in a very low condition with consumption of the lungs and bowels, and weak action of the heart. The trip across the water to this country seemed to make her feel better for a while. Then she began to get worse, and fer 14 weeks she was unable to bet off the bed. She grew worse for five months and lost the use of her limbs and lower part of body, and if she set up in bed had to be propped up with piliows. Physicians Said She Was Past All Hieip and wanted m ud her to the ‘Home for But [ said as long as I could hold my hand up sheshould not go. We then began -Hood’s*“Cures to give her Hood’s Sarsapariila. She is getting strong, walks around, Is out doors every day; has no trouble with her throat and no cough, ‘ om to s and her hear i seems sto be alright again. She has afir ss # tit We regard her cure § nothing short oi a rmiracte.” Wyatt, 8 Sireet, Parkdale, "Fecente, Ontario. Hood’ 8 Pills are purely vegetable and harmless, Sold by all draggists. 25. Mario =~ ame mee A TRIP ROUND UND THE WORLD STODDARD’S PICTURES. No more be sntifal Photo Engrav ing are issued than Steddard’s Portfolio of Views of Famous Places and Scenes. The yictures equa) the finest photographs in detail. Char nig gly written explanations and lescriptions accompany each photograph The pictures are &x10 in Single rraphs of the same subjects would $1.00 each. They are bound up in and are exactly the same size as yur famous World's Fair Portfolios, Sample copy may be seen at this office. This series of pictures is issued in 16 Rize photo rad ‘ vost covers, parts. Each part will contain 16 photo- : rraphs at the least. The price for each partis 10 cents, and an Examiner cou- pons mast be sent with the money. HOW TO GET THESE PICTURES. Stoddard’s Photographs Paris 12 38 & 4 Now Ready. Cut out this coupon, and send with 10 cents to lH EXAMINER OFFICE, and the * art wanted will be delivered to you. Or- ders from the country filled by return mail, No charge for postage, The Examiner Pub. Co. March, 1894. THE ‘MAGIC CITY, ‘his feries of World’s E orld’s Fair Photographs be published in 16 parts, Single part ecst 10 cents each. Coupons must ilso be sent for each part wanted. wi The Examiner Publishing Comp y, CHA RLOTTETOW! N. — = | Injured Nerves. A Sad Accident. ‘Thrown From Carriage, and > Suffered Eight Years. i'r. Ghee. Ph itbetek, fast, ine \ use in the Hospital 4 yrs, Light years ago I was thrown from a carriage, Striking on the back of iny neck, completely shattering mv nervous system. I could not was very constipated, and the hing worried me; my friends feare:i Ly vould become insane, I tried physi- clans and patent medicines, but I re- ceived no benefit until I teok Skoda’s Discovery, The great Blood and Nerve ' sieey; least Remedy. I AM PERYECTLY CURED. Skoda’s Little Tablets cure constipation and sick headache. 35 cts. Medicai Advice Free. SHODA DISCOVERY CO., LTD, WOLFVILLE, w, $. For sale by all d . Trade sap ad A W. RK. Watson; Charlottetowa = ES renee ntiar ¢ mage BEE pilin pe cmc ome os gumh maneeee CR TIN RII SANIT in ily 8 gS HO 1» alae nce ctenaaree ener a & + font