eee Sy we FSD ene — a cALENDAR rOR OCTONRER, 1893, SW $ 42 , 34 LaaDi~ne Duly NeSwePaPrer or P. E. [sLanp, I * ert e office « , BLISHING COMPANY, in th I i ling, Que et ‘ SUBSCRI PTION NA A x) ‘ $i. 5 i 2.00 i ; i i a x M I 0.35 ~ : pa Canada the 1 ~ s ADVERTISING RATES I “ ents Ww le red " weeks charge is 3 s } firet sertion, and 2 cents for ea } huatio Rate cards are furnished o Api tLiunh a ‘ Special ‘ ra I « eta rad ate are quoted for may se 41e DLs ur wnes in size or larger, Which a to run for three months oi longer No special notices inserted unless paid for at the rat ; ite por ne, and ander no eircumstances will such paid notices appear in ‘ " “ye uw liscounts made on a ad vertise- ame seonnceced with Chureh Pairs, Bazaars, Picnics, ete. NO notices will be inserted with the same unless tl egular rate of 10 cents per line is paid That Tux Examiner is considered by our | Merchants and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Isiand, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising mediun through which to make their announcements public the fact that n order to accommodate our advertisers we >» enlarge the paper to is abundantly proved by have been compelied its present size Tue Datcy Examever is for sale by the fol- iowing agents K. Ii. Mason, Post O fee, Charlottetown Harvie & Co. Gt. George Street ‘ Theo, L. Chappelle, Queen = treet J. Metntyre. Malpeque Road, C. Paul, Lower Spring Park Road, W. M. Coffin, Grafton Street, rm. ¢ happell Prince Street ha’‘aar Store, Queer Street, S. Gray, News Stall, P. E. I. Railway, and he trains M. & T. J Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- inerside Harry McFarlane, Souris. n. DD. +. ordon, t eorgetown D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. U. M. Clarke, Alberton at - ¢* €5 —. ® The Weekly E ; yaure y ré yr ihe CC Y MxXaminel . Is issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. It is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper.—interesting and full of the latest news The subseription for Taz WereKxty Exam- INER, post paid to any part of Caneda or the L nited States, is one dollar per year. Acivertising rates on the same scale as given for Tug DAILY EXAMINER. Prosthetic Dentistry. il Teeth on Aluminum, ito mount Artifice kinds of plates : h lic . W att Met ‘ Reese's Metal, (these metals w xidize or turn black in the mouth). Yu Celluloid and Zylonite pR. J. P. MURRAY, Dentist. Stamper Block, Victoria Row. “DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Surgeon. Graduate of the Medical Department of the raity of the City of New York, late Memb ft Resident Staffeof Belle- vue Hospital and the New York Lyinug-in Hospital, New York City | OFFICE North Side Queen Square | OPPOSITE POST OFFICE “ict Near Corner of King and Queen Boi roots Charlottetown ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES Queen Street, Charlottetown Licst Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTSD IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX A. LEOFRED, of Laval and MeGill) ENGINEER. QUEBEC MONTREAL Gradnuat MINING MAIN OFFICE BRANCH OFFICE STAMPS WANTED. OLD Canadia ted States’ and other unpe, ae used 2 » 40 years ago For I pay $1 to $5 each GEORGE LOWE, i6 Spad na Avenue, Toronto, WINES | WINES | FINEST QUALITY. Port, Sherry, Claret, Cham- pagne, Ke. luese Wives have beer in ported from lirwt-claes European houses, and are pure, | reimile and well matured. BYRNE BROS., Great George Street. I DML EXAMINER Tate id, Re ‘ Aq? in ie TERMS Four Dollars a Year s true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the ’ Public, may speak free.”—-Euripides. NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN P. E. Breech and Powder, hot, Caps. Primer-, Covers, etc, ete. ESrass and SPORTSMEN’S SUPPLIES ! Muzzle Loading Guns, Revolvers Paper Shells, Loading ‘Fools, Game Bags, Gun Wads SMOKELESS POWDE it.—Cartridges loated at short notice. Agent for Wine Arms Company. hester Repeating W. E. DAWSON. Charlottetown, September 4, 1893—m w f WHERE TQ BUY THE FOLLOWING GOOD At the Lourest Prices. ane SS ae Men’s and Boys’ Overcoats, Men’s and Boys’ Suits, Me White and Grey Blankets, Bed Comforters (large stock), Naps, Beavers and Meltons, Dress Goods, Ladies’ Shawls, T Please look at our GREY FLANNELS at 10, 12 and 15 cents a yard. J.B. MAC G) / Charlottetown, October 4, 1893 | cee eer cree ss oe CUTLERY BOUGHT LOW AND WILL SELL LOW Ti... ae City Hardware Store. * KR. B. NORTON & CO tlic; Charlottetown, September 5, 1893 mon thu COOLonTAL HOUSE. MILLINERY DEPARTMENT. During s.ext week we will offer some very decided Bargains in Trimmed Hats and Bonnets, Parasols, Blouses and Shirt Waists, Ostrich and Cock Feather Boas, &e. TO VISITORS! i We would call the attention of our ners to our tock o | LADIES’ FURS, consisting of ! Ladies’ Fur Jackets, Lad'es’ Fur MMuff., Ladies’ Fur Capes. Ladie ? Par cans, Lacie,’ Pur Collars, Ladies’ Fur Boas, Our FURS are all made of NO. 1 STOCK, and consist of the ve late st Inspection invited HENRY MORGAN & Co.. Montreal, Corner St. Catherine Street and Phillips Square styles tu th gat 99 ae pts > _-_=— — -- ENMAN’S GROCERY STORE Fornerly J. D. McLeod & Co's. CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES, Flour, Tea, Biscuits, &c. We will Endeavor to give Customers Every Satisfaction. ES NS ES Ss. B. ENMIAN & CO. Charlottetown, Septean ber 21, 1893—cod & wky n’s and Boys’ Underelothing, Cw) Tweed and Worsted Cloths | rimined Hats and Bonnets. LD & CO. «* Don't travel Second Class when you can gv First Class for nearly the sams money. For that reason GO TQ B&sTuN via the FAST SHORT LINE—Charlottetown to Pictou via the Navigation Company’s Steamers: Pictou to Halifax via the Inter- colonial Kailwav, and H -lifux to Boston via the fast, modern-built and equipped Steel S. S$. “HALIFAX,” sailing from the Plant Wharf, foot of Sackx- ville reet, EVERY WEDNESDAY, at 3 a. m. ONLY ONE NIGHT AT SES, st and the privilege of going 6n board Steamer night before departure without extra charge. For Tickets and all information apply to } the office of the Charlottetown Navigation | Company sept7 EUREKA HOTEL, WAT: R STREFT. Free Coach to meet all Trains and | Steambeats. Moderate charges. Good table. C. A. BENOIT, Proprietor. Ch’town, July 31, 1893—3in m wf | i . Kerosene Oul. 1300 barrels best American Water White now landing ex Clayola from New York. 1100 barrels due by this week. N., B. & M. RATTENBURY. wy 21 A. J. MURPHY — IS SELLING—— 'Overcoats and Pants, MADE FROM HIS NEW STOCK, | schooner Satellite sopt25—ly lw so cheap that cnstomers see at a glance where the Bargains are to be found. S¢ pt22—‘f Visitors to the World's Fair Sil0TLD TAKE THE 'tatercolonial Railway, Which passes through a Country unn- valled for SCENERY. | Charlottetown to Chicago and Retura, $33 55. | Titkets gool for3'days from date of issue, | with stop wer privilege at points in Canada, alse at Detroit: and Port Huron. ' TOURIST TICKETS, CHARLOTTETOWN | to CHICAG: and RETURN, good to 15ta | November, 1993, $48.15, i and at correspondingly low rates from all other Stations. } In addition to the regular daily service, | | which is continued as heretofore, a superb BUFFET ANDSLEEFPING CAR, li ated by electric:ty, will leave HALIFAX EVERY MONDAY at 12.2), ctandard time, and will be run through ‘to CHICAGO WITHOUT CHANGE, arriving there WEDNESDAY | EVENING, making the FASTESt TIME between Halifax and Chicago, } ‘ Further information can be obtained of any ' Station Agent. ; : ; | PD. POTTINGER, | General Manager Government Kailways. j Railway Office, Monc'on, N. B.,? 4 2th Septem ber, 18s. 5 i dy ti 19th Oct ISL: | sale within a few AND, FRIDAY, ¢ ~ OLD AGE OF INDIANS. Defying All Rules of Health They Keep Well and S-rong. The Memarkable Longevity of the Indizn R we Explained.—For Every Human Ill Tiey Have a Cure—They Know Wher: to Fin‘ the Roots, Herbs and Darks that wili keep them in Good Health—The Se- cret Now Given to the World. Indians are long lived. There are many Kicka- poos now liv- ing who have trod parts of this vast con- IT tinentlong SE¢* P)\ betore white 4s, ‘Amen ever set i XL, JAhis ‘oot on the Laughing Dog. soil of their Age 100 Irs. vust domain, Their lives }ave ceen spent with nature, Born to goed healin,as the saying goes, they keep it. Think how they live, eat, sleep, travel about, exposed tocliunat:c changes, pois- onous night cirs, damp sleeping places, food half cooked, and eaten with utter disregard of all common rules of health, Yet, look at them! Pictuzes of health. Chronic Rheumatism? Never. Mal- aria and Chills? Veryrarely. Indiges- tion? Occasional symptoms perhaps but Chronic Dys»epsia, utterly unhear of. While any of the numerous effie- tions of the liver, kidneys or Lladder, so frequently found amony the whites, is rarely heard of among the indians. Why is it? - . For centuries these children of nature have studied her ways. For centuries they have known where to look in the forest and fleld for a certain cure for the ills which arise from the disobed- ience of nature’s laws. At the firstsign, the first symptoms of sickness, they re- sort to their “‘Sagwa’’—the most potent, remedial com bination of roots and berks known to the Indian or any other race. Acombination so valuable that the learned professor of Physiological Chemistry at Yale college commended it, and could offer »o suggestions. Science surpassed by {ndian craft! Nature undefiled by mineral poisons. Indians are subject to ills of the | flesh, but they have a remedy for all. Kickapoo Indian Cough Cure bresks up their colds and stops their coughs. ickapoo Indian Worm Killer keeps their children free from these troubles; and Kickapoo Indian Oil arrests croup, allays pain, heals bruises, and when kills all pains; Kickapoo Indian Salve heals, wounds, cuts, abresions of the skin, humors, eczema, etc, These remedies are now sold by every druggist in the land, and their best proof of gen- uine worth is in the fact that on their merit solely the have achieved th short years. Ask; for them at the Trading Post on the Frontier, and ou’ll find them ~ . here. Go intO Afraid of the Moon. the fashionable Age 117 Yrs. drug stores of New York City, and these remedies of the Indians are to be bought. Everywhere, high and low, they have made friends by their intrin- sic value. Sold by Druggists and Dealers. Kickapoo Indian Sagwa, The Incomparable Liver, Stomach and Blood Medicine. $1 per bottle; 6 for $5. Sold by Druggists and Dealers, INERVOUS MEN: EXHAUSTED VITALITY. The errors of Youth, Premature Decline, Lost Mamheod, and all Diseases and Weaknesses ef Man, from whatever cause, Permanently and privately cured at home. Exrunar Trearweyr. No Fattuns. Consultation and advice in person or by letter free. Address or call on PROVIDENT MEDICAL INSTI- TUTE, 16 Hanover Street, Montreal, Canada. Prospectus and descriptive pamphbiet, closely sealed, mailed free to all, Send now. tor thecure’ of ali the symptoms indicating KipwkY a\p. \[veR Uomplaint. If you are troubled with; estiveness, BD ess, Sour Stomach ¢ Headache Indigestion, Poon APreTiTE TIRED FF¥L ING, KHEDY ATIC Pars, dleeple Nights, Melancholy }ieling, Back Acwn, Membray’s Kidney and Liver Cu KIDNEY: AND (willgive immediate reliefand ErrecTaCare {Sold at all Drug Stores. , Membray Medicine Company of t’eterbereugh, (Limited), PETERD IROUGH, . . ON 8 q Pew ee eww eT sthelatest triamph iw Giese Ci THE PEOPLE'S HOME-GUARD! @ULEMULSION on SENTRY DuTy ; It will guard you securely from disease YOU Have a Very Bad Cough, Are Suffering From Lung Troubles, Have Lost Flesh Through Illness, Are Threatened With Consumption, IT WILL Cure That Cough, Heal Your Lungs, Put Flesh On Your Bones, SMALL & LARGE BOTTLES 50c. & $1.00. iT 1S VERY PLEASANT [0 TAKE. \sk for and be sure youget the “ D. & L. Emulsion.” ICTOBER 6, 1893. (Montreal Times, Independent.) | The alternative which the late Sir John | Macdonald offered to the United Sitates, | “Reciprocity in free trade or zecijracity | of taritts,” has received a pew interpreta- tion from the present Premier of the Do- minion. In his Belleville speech, Sr John Thompson stated that the Govern- ment of Canada had notified that of Wash- ington that if the Americans reduced ther tariff on Canadian products, Cana’a would reciprocate in the same way. He-e we have something positive at last on one phase which tariff [eblomen, contingent on action which eleewhere may be taken. Between Sir John Macdonald’s alteruative and the policy of the present Gove nment | there is this difference : the former looked to an increase of the tariff, the iatter has in view a reduction. accidental, the result of circum -tances, but the rule of action is the same in both cases. The Arerican tariff wae on the ascending sesle when tie alternative policy was first announced in Canada; now it is On the decline. It is easy to see that the Canad!an Gov ernment, in view of the demand for tariff reduction, might be glad to embrace tariff reciprocity as a measure of ti.e decline. A measure of reciprocity, in the direction of freer trade, would have been obtained; the lea t objectionable policy, of its hiid, in the eyes of manufacturers, would have been alopted, while the demand for the easing of the tram.mels on commerce would have been in some degree met This compromise, if it did not give eatir- faction on either side. would avsuave the fears of those who now dreal the uacer- tain, and tend to allay discontent on the other. To the out-and-out Free Trader, who admits that the ultimate goal of hi- ambition is far off, it might not be accept- able, though he would be obliged to ac- cept it as one of the instalments, which he is ready and anxious to get, if it came from other hands. Reciprocity of tariffs wonld not be like- ly to take us very far in the direction of Free Trade. The peculiarity of it is that, the distance being greater on their side, tariff reciprocity would take the United States far on the road, while Canada scarcely made any movement at all. To reach an equality ot tariff, Canada might even increase her duties. This comes cf the American tariff being «0 much higher thanours. Ifthe Canad‘an Government is to Le fureed into concessions, which look even remotely im the direction of Free Trale, it would no doubt prefer that te change should take the form of ree procity of tariff. In euch a form there would b: quite as much of shadow as of substance. Some would prefer the shadow, others, the substance, according to their interests, real or supposed. e+e NEWS NOTES. Fifty-four fresh cholera cases in Rou- mania. Between 1,200 and 1,500 silver miners have resumed work in the Colorado mines which closed with the big slump in the price of silver last June. Some 3,500 miners have gone beck to work auring t! e last ten days, Montreal Gazette: The comprom s: on the silver bill now before Congress sug- gerted by the silver men is that the United States shall borrow a hundred million doljars in gold which it does not need, and practically use it to buy silver with. The white metal gentlemen will never want for brass. Ireland’s Day at the World’s Fair was celebrated on Saturday in good style. A monster parade of military, c'vic and church organization» was a feature of the day. Speeches were delivered by Hon. Edward Blake, Lord Mayor Shanks of Dublin and others. Mr. Blake read an interesting letter which he received from Mr. Gladstone just before he sailed for Canada. The Departmen of Railways has in- formation that thetlast of the masonry of the lock walls of the Sault Ste. Marie canal has been finished. ‘The masons are now working at the power house and on the abutments and piers forthe bridge over the canal, the contract for the super- structure of which ‘vas let a few weeks ago to the Hamilton Bridge company. It is expected that the masonry on the piers and abutments will be finished in a few days. The contract for the lock gates, as already stated, has been let to Mr. Hugh Ryan, and unless some very unforseen oc- currence should intervene there does not appear now to be the slightest doubt but that the canal will be ready for use on the opening of navigation next spring. A Chicago {special says Chauncey M. Depew is quoted as saying: “The panic kept away more people from the Fair than the number that came. Farmers came, but the artivan, who was affected immed- iately, did not. If the Silver law had been repealed in the Senate within a week af- ter it was repealed in the House, every spindle would now be running and every coke furnace burning. The Senate in ne- glecting to act, inflicted ¢ heavy blow on our credit abroal and created conditions | which made resumption of prosperity | thuch more difficult. They have commit- | ted acrime against the United States, present and fature. They have done | more to diseredit the Senate as a deliber- ative body and to suggest the necessity of | changing its character than all happen- | ings since the adoption of the Pederal con- stitution.” The Crue! Calcul, Drop a postal card to Mr, George Rose, of Peterborovgh, and ask him what Mem- bray’s Kidney and Liver Cure did for him in relieving him ofthe intense pain caused by the passage of stone or calculi from the bladder. Hypodermie :»jections had to be resorted to in order to relive the agon- izing pains at times, but the use of Mem- | bray’s Kidney and Liver Cure enabled the kidneys to wash out the sand and debris | from the *ystem, and neutralized the acid | formations. Bare With Invalids, Yes! with invalids the appetite is cap- | ricious and needs coaxing, that is just the reason they improve so rapidly under Se: tt’s Emulsion, which is as palatable as cream. eeeeee } -— De. Maxyive’s German Remepry, the | greatest rheumatic, neuralgia and pain | cure of the age, both internal and external. | Price 50 cents. Dr. Chalmers, Veterinary Surgeon, M- |R.C. V.S., says: “I used Dr. Wonning’s | German Remedy for neuralgia. It cured me on first applicstion. I have never used anything to equal it. Have made | other uses of it and tind it excellent. | Tuomas Cuttugas, P.V.M.S.R.V.S., Ste. Truro, N.S., April 9, 1892. Beer & Goff have bought from Mr. Dr { lon the whole of the fine exhibit of Island fatory cheese, which attracted so much ¢itention at the late exhibitem They are 1 ow cutting ' ing them for sale at their store. oct3 B. RECIPROCITY IN TARIFFS. The diffe-ence is | them up and ote @) you. THE DAILY EXAMINER. Single Coy ies Two Cents VOL 32.—NO. 87. | THE SIZE OF THE GEA. | The Volume of Water ea the Glebe t» Beyend Our Comprebeasicn One gallon of water weighs ten nds, so the number of gallons in the acific is over 200 trilhons, eb emount | which would take more than a millicc | , et, put into a sphere, the whole of the Pacific would only measure 726 miles across. The Atlantic could be contained bodily in the Pacific nearly three times. The number of cubic feet is 117, followed by seventeen Ciphers, a number that would | ae to pass over the Falls of Niagara. | | be ticked off by one million clocks in | | 370,000 years. | tion tons. and the number of gallous in | it 73 trillions. A sphere to hold the At- lantic would have to be 5334 miles in diameter. If it crc s:ade te “Wa circu- | lar pipe reaching from the earth to the |} sun—a distance of 93,000,000 miles —the diameter of the pipe would be 1827 yards, or rather over a mile. with a pipe of similar length to coutain the Pacific would be over a mile and three quarters across, Yet the distauce to the sun is so great that, as has been poiuted out, if a child were born with au arm long enough to reach the sun it would nut live long enough to know that it had touched it, for sensation passes along our nerves at the rate of 100 feet a second, und to travel from the sun to the earth at that rate would take a century anda half, such an abnormal infant is an unlikely centenarian. _ The rest of tle sea iuciudes the Indian Ocean, the Arctic and Antarctic Seas, and various sinalier niasses of water. It covers an area of 42,000,000 square miles, and would form a circle of 7300 miles in diameter. The average depth may be put at 2000 fathoms (12,000 feet), and the contents at 95,000,000 cubi> miles. It weighs 390,000 billion tons, and contains 87} trillion gallons, while it would form a column reaching to the sun of 2000 yards in diameter. if wecombine into one vast whole these various figures we arrive at some stupendous results in answer to the ques- tion, ‘‘How big is the sea?” Its area of 140,000,000 square miles could be confined by a circle of 13,350 a.iles across. The reiative size of the areas of the whole surface of the earth, of the whole sea, the Pacific and the At. lantic, are represented by circles the diameters of which are in the proportions to one another of 158, 183, 93 and 62 respectively, or by a crown for the sur- face of the earth, a half-crown for the surface of the whole sea, a shilling for the surface of the Pacific, a three-penny piece for the surface of the Atlantic. Supposing the sea to be formed into a round column reaching to the sun, the diameter of the column would be nearly two and a half miles. The Pacific would form 53,000,000 miles of its total my h of 93,000,000 and the Atlantic ’ it it were a column of ice, and the entire heat of the sun could be concen- trated upon it, it would all be melted in one second, and con-erted into steam in ight seconds, which illustrates the heat the sun rather than the size of the sea,—Longman's Magazine. A Probiem, Read this paragraph carefully : Did it ever occur to anyone to go back a few generations, and consider the relation- sips each of us must have to others? For instance, a man has two parents, four grand parents, eight great-grand parents, sixteen great-great-grand pa- rents. Each of his four grand parents had four grand parents, which uals sixteen great-grand parents; each of his sixteen great-grand parents had had eight great-grand parents and sixteen grand parents four times removed, which equals 128 grand parents three times re- moved, and 256 four times removed. Hence a man, going back five genera- tions finds himself the grandson of near- ly es this is allowing an aver- age one child to a family! If each man were entitled to four or five hundred relatives, of whom he was the only offspring, the populations five generations ago must have been four hundred tines its present number. To turn the problem again, let us consider an average family of four children. A man would have sixteen first cousins, sixty-four second cousins, hundred grand parents, makes an exten- sive ees of the country is too small for the ratio, every one must be related to wo gg and somebody relat- ed to everybody. It wouldn’t be surpris- ing if the solver of this comes to the con- clusion that the human family are in reality bound to each other ‘by the ties of blood” —in reality, instead of the saving beinga mere figure of speech that is used between the factions of a race or language.—Pall Mall Gazet @. A Steam Bicycie, A steam bicycle constructed on novel pee is the invention of Konrad von , Meyenburg, a student of the Ropal Poly- technic school of Dresden, Saxony, who arrived in this city last Friday on a vacation trip. He has applied for tents on his bicycle in Germany, Eng- d ard the United States. In his opin- ion it will come into general use for long distance riding, as it can be run, he says, an ay e speed of 12 to 14 miles an hour and the cost of fuel isa trifie. A will weigh about 80 pounds and will cost atout $100 more than the safety machine, The tteam is generated in a boiler of vanized iron, acket suspended between the wheels, he wet steam is superheated through a long cireplar tube within the boiler. The steam then passes to the propelling machinery, which is cover by an air and water tight rubber pouch on each side of the rear wheel. crank shafts, directed by side bars on an original princi can be checked or increased at will. The by the same motion of the hand as the ordinary safety machine. The fuel used is petroleum or benzine, which is contained in a tank above the forward wheel. Enough can be carried to heat the boiler for three hours. From the tank the oil through a tube to a lamp beneath the boiler. The steam supply is practically inexhaustible. as it is returned to the boiler through the back wheel.—N. Y. World. Masterly E@ort by a Great Man. After deep thought it has been discov- ered that Paderewski probably had his ers would have to get new photograp'is of him. Theseare hard times and even musicians have to hustle, — Washing Ou liquid fruit laxative, Syrup of Figs, under all conditions make it their favorite remedy. It is pleasing to the eye and to the kidneys, liver and bowels. — | ing of food, dyspepsia or billiousness, take | Hawker’s Liver Pills. They will as a most reliable medicme bicycle fitted with the steam apparatus | having an absolute | For sick headace, sour stomach, loath- cure Recommended by leading physicians Its weight is 325,000 bil- | Wife and I were the first settlers in Moro, Aroostook Co., Me., 41 )Ts. ago. Tt was then a vast wil- derness. M/s With all its Patrick Darling, aged 78 yrs. hardships our lives had been filled with happi- ness until the fall of 91, when we were attacked with dyspepsia, sleep- lessness and their attendant evils. SKODA’S DISCOVERY ' LIFE'S SUNSET ALL AGLOW. CURED US we are agcali floating down life’s river with all bright and smooth before Skoda’s Little Ta cure kK } € ii pat : ¥ 73. SAODA UISLLNLAT Uo § I | drugg I d W. R. Wats Cha Pr. KJ LINIMENT for INTERNAL 2s EXTELMAL usa Im 1810 Originated by an Cid Family Paysician. Think Of It. Pui. Sc caress ey ears, and stillleadsa, Gene- ration after Generaiion have used and blessed 4, Every Traveler should have a bottle in his satchel, . From Rheumatiem, Every Sufferer co. Sennen Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,Coughs,Catarrh, Bron chitts, Asthma, Cholera Morbus, Diarrhoes, Lamenesa, Soreness in Budyor Limbs, Sti Joints or Strains, will find in this « oye relief and speedy cure, Should have Johnson's Every M other Anodyae Liniment in the house for Croup, Colda, Sore Throat, Tonsilitia, Colic, Cota. Bruises, Cramps ami Pains lable t ccur in any family without notice, Delavs may cost a iife. Relieves all Summer Complaints like magic. Price, % cts. post paid; 6 bot. es, 2 express paid. LS. Johnson + Co.. Boston Mas eens 2 When we assert that Dodd’s aww fen’ Kidney Pills $ Mame Aarn~nnnme Cure 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 «f CURE TO STAY CURED, By a» truggists or mail on receipt of price, e » Toronta, Dr. L. A. Smith & Co., go ceni« MEN OF acc AGES We may be cured t all sexual disor- / ne By 9 cers cf men, Four out Loe of five who suffer nerv- ) il 1 ousness, acntal worry, attacks cf “ the blues,” t paying the pen of early excesses cread alarm of I Otoney , the « haus 1¢f Spermatorrhoea, ! URED ricl confidence tr moderate expense Send for our free sealed book, “** PERFECT MANWOOD.” ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. a “You'll Feel Better ~ li you’rcall run down aad out of sorts if you take a few bottles of MALY PEPTONIZED ordinary | Circular | . give the speed, which | machinery is controlled as sim/ély and | cone | densers arranged in rows on each side of | as disordered kid- hair cut vo that al! his feminine admir- | the taste, gentle, yet effectual in acting on | "7 JolLn PORTER. It isa food. Beneficial alike to young and old, It strengthens the body, creates an appetite, aids di- gestion, invigorates the system. Ask your doctor about fh. j\'s good for every one. TRY IT. THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. } 7D TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. Druggists sell it “Backache | the means the kid- 4 of the neys are in “Delay ts trouble. Dodd's } dange-ous. Yap Kidney Pills give | lected hiane prompt relief” troubles reas “76 per cent. | in Bad Bloos of disease is | Dyspepsia, Liver | rst caused by | Complaint, aaa the moat dan neys. gerous of all, Brights Disease, Diabetes and ope. “The above diseases cannot exist where Dodd's Kidne > oe 2 ~ os ne <= © ~ <= without sewer- age, as good health when the kidneys are Star. i clogged, they are | Pills are used, The Ladies Delighted. : Jn ae The pleasant effect and the perfect Dr LA Smith & peur eafety with which ladies may use the | bool called Kudacy For Sale or to Let. The Pre mises recentiy O« cupied vy Mr. Fitzroy | Streets—a commodious and pleasantly sit i uated house fitted throughout with ho water heating apparatus — with good stable and coach house. 3cer, Corner Cumberland Apply to w. W. BEER Jy 9tf ee AA Al ae ee 4 Sd IOAN OS sae NN Rte te Ne