ee becomes one of the first its of danger and of a3 a Matter of fact It is only be werth \ AY, 196.9m., p.m. b 7 pm, S W *.9 a.m., N FE . yw ee | | Water * @s ' a i i ’ ' ' * i "na “ 1 4 6 34 Y : a ; 2 j " : : ' . son. ; Dili y ”__Euripides ingle Conie : a i 2 8 2 TERMS. Pov Nars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free,”—Euripides. Single Copies Two Cents 2 9 i3 Sey . “iife 40 22 S 6 . ( Keag ——E LR I ae ao re — ee meee at ne As 23 | 0 35 | . . , - “ ' / “UO? = iS } 2 13 . ~ 1 rm , ’ Y Y r - Y * ~ : :| NEW SERIES TTETOWN, P.E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, JANUARY 2 )L33.—NO ~ = 8 NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1894. VOL33.—NO. 169 ” > mor * ‘ ; . os " —) oe > LS LT See Ne ee ee ee ee —— > i 30 54 ' mi oy i BULL BAITING, : 2 2 8} ; . 8 . ; > ~ ‘ if 2 50 uP? i ig It Was Practiced ai York Until the Close of THE DEADLY ELECTRIC WIRE, § i atl i the Last Century. ae eee > | 3 40) ‘ ga | The custom of baiting bulls in open Hlow to Handle It In Accidents Without ' $54) i \ SRA 7 ie ee ae ee et a ee : : Danger tu Life. { ; 6} | f Ne | apaves has beea indulged in from time im : to bei: > Za : j \ Sg : | memoria}, and probably had its birth in | Now that all of our cities and many of : s a d a rr , the arcnas of Greece and Rome. It was an | %# country villages are threaded w:th live “2 41 5 ui ; SKyS ; 5 | exciting but dangerous and disgusting electric wires, it 3 . hoe oe | EXSSIA\N 2 | amusement; yet until the birth of the | “Ssentials of practical education ty instruct : ‘ 3} 10 50 = present ceutury it was publicly observed it classes and conditions of people re- :9 i4 Ll 33 a ee in almost every village and town of the garding these eleme is | aft 4) ‘ country, and relics of its existence are | ?oSsible death. Now " ; i7 0 42 still to be found in various places. In is quite possible to handle a heavily 45 1 19 ' ‘ York two places were used for this ignoble aarged clestete wire, without danger, if } 50 | 1 5s I tice. One was in Thursday Market it ts done in the right way. - | 9 24 F place, or St. Serapson’s square; th other necessary that the agent used shall be a ; “ a on ‘ J Sj = . % wes inthe street of Pavement. As the | "©ucondnetor of electricity, and that great \f aa | 2 SN two places were markets, they each hada | “*Te shall be taken not to allow the dan- " , : = + . cross or corn chamber, and the fight in gerous \Wire to touch the human flesh. An é 56 » 40 OnNxyS ENyYOYS Variable took place near to such ails a exnerierced electrician gives the following UaY Pt os | oa fw) iis ! rae oe iaitediaiad i nee suggestions, which if would -_—— (1) — y ; sa ia i that the people who were in .osition t a Both the method and results when | (St Ths peor could have b sacod view at: | While tot every thadee Se beet: ta. aaa {EMAMIME nG DifLy Newsraren -F SLAND, ja j iflernoon, from the office of Tr nm Pcsitsnine Company, tn the l House Building, Queen Street RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION pu ABV ARCH ‘ : flects, prepared only from the mast One Vaan. o1.00 | publishers ot realty and agreeable eubstances, ite Tuxke Mowntns 1.00 nanyexcclentqualitiescommendit | s Moxte oo-+ OSS o all and have made it the most Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the ular remedy known. l States Sv.up of Figs is for sale in T5e¢ — rt all ADVERTISING RATES rilsements which are ordered sma uive f e or two weeks the charge is 5 | and ® | wr the first insertion, Rate cards are Special ‘ : ‘ munuat ion . { ipplication at the office, at a reduced rate are quoted or months or ‘ Meu ts four meches size in to run for three nserted unless paid for | and ander no | a L) cents per line, will such paid notices appear n Syrupcf Figs is taken; it is pleasant refreshing to tle taste, and acts THE GREATEST WORLD'S FAIR BOOK IS READY! oe <S em effectually, dispels colds, head- whes and fevers and cures habitual | constipation. Syrup of Figs is the mly remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste ol ptable i. the stomach, prompt in | ts action and truly beneticial in its anc ace We take pleasure in announcing that we have made arrangements with the thes by leading druggists Wry reliable Seu it or fand will procure it iymptly for any one who wishes fto supply this celebrated work in Weekly Parts to our subscribers at the very low price | « try it. Manufactured only by the » canal “tetaiens 3 " “a he ee ae uN CE? e @ issue sixteen consecutive ekly Parts,| } f TEN CENTS per number. It will be is ied in sixteen consecutive - Weekly Parts, CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CQ, ach containing sixteen to twenty magnificent Photographic Views and Historical Deserip- | gah ¥RANOIBCO, CAL. _tions of the WORLD'S FAIR and the MIDWAY PLAISANCE. by the famous American | . ,uyssvrtu8, KY. NEW YORK, N. ¥ Author, MR. J. W. BUEL. The Photographs are the finest that have ever been offered it te 1% on, Druggist, Charlotteown : : : : . | P. E Island, jviwtf to the public. They constitute a splendid series of Store To Let. — The Magic City ive = scounts made on ell advertise- cae aeneenhartialiendied ei | | next door to Messrs. Raidin Brothers. aS tne reguiar rate of lv cents p j Apply to . eet Stik ineiiits ail acdiliiiaar Gites HORACE HASZARD. . ceeetinatins & > aii y , 1 ‘ . . oe > { janll 2w ead Mi ae en ge tea 2 inet }in NATURAL PHOTOGR‘PH COLORS, embracing all the wonderful features of the} - oe tng spay in . » island, dad conse- r . a . . . aur > “ TUES . . quently the most valuable advertising medium | World's Fair and its surroundings, and the famous MIDWAY PLAISANCE. with its VSO VCS alta, te ubaachcacie tetrad by the tet tha | Curious and interesting character sketches of life in foreign countries and among wild | g eS > sabundantly proved by the fact that | . . . | + ee < be rder to aceousmodate our advertisers we | *N@ curious races of people. Bate Ge as a ha spelled to enlarge the paper to | i Pe a ; sf mn is for sal rt fol- | ‘ . a ee | fhe Greatest, | RK. H. Mason, Post OF ce Charlottetown | ™ ; 5. M : faly e Road, ‘ | » oe he ' Hcintie saipeyee oa [tT Is | The Grandest, | Ww { fin, -rafton Street ” rr ‘ e ; & Grey. cor. Water and Prince St | The Most Beautiful, Bazaar = Queen street uy , ’ Geo Carter Co, Queen sire, | The Only Complete | | &. Gray, News Stall, P. E. L Railway? and | e } iss spe ” M. & r. i. Waish, Ec c Bookstore, Sum- | ran mersicte } . ° — * : “ce ? ” Harry McFarlane, Seuris | History of the Fair that has been published. The Photographs, in natural colors, are | You'll Feel Better pee. Barden, corguews : : . | gEverybody does, after taking a D gan, Mt. Stewart. | S few bottles of M arke, Alberto ie $MALTO PEPTONIZED ' . OARS ee | B | eautiful asSa Dream | rT , . ' The Weekly Examiner | 5 PORTER. sae f th } it builds upthe run-down sys- = inne every Diy qeting Gam Me) | @tem,—is strengthening and appe- i shers’ office, [t is made “at enatier | ' tizing. Itis readily borne by weak which has apy ared in the Daily editions, and | as i . j ‘ mm stomachs, regulates the bowels, is « Gret-ciass weekly newspaper—interesting | While the historical descriptions give the work a value beyond all computation. The | @and is invaluable to those afflicted nd full of the latest news i = ee ee : . i ean ca nie ies | author spent nearly the whole summer at the Fair, preparing his notes and superintend- a tee Hees Ree I st paid to any part of§Canada or the | INg the work of the corps of artists employed in taking views. [These pictures are the} ‘HE on evn poculinihyataselnir eae | finest in existence. They were taken by trained ar ists of more than national reputa- ; Advertising rates on the same scale as given bove for Tak DarLy EXaMINER. DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Surgeon. Graluate the Medical Department of the University of the City of New York, late Meint {the Resident Staff of Belle- vue Hoxpita! and the New York Lying-in Hospital, New York City. OFFICE North Side Queen Square | OPPOSITE POST OFFICE ' 1wce—Near Corner of King and Queen | Stree Cnariottetown. i ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES Queen Street, Cbher'ttetown SS Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX | . .* fi ¢ q a TUE The Greatest Rheumatic and Neuralgia Cure Ofthe Age | anne AND PAIN €URE » “(80TH INTERNAL AND © “we > MANUFACTURED ONLY BY (HE HAWKER MEDICINE COV lon. >! JOHN.N.B. DR. 1 | Highly Recommended byPhysicians. | tion, who knew how to secure the best results es Their beauty and splendor will be a surprise to | has ever been seen in pictorial representations: and the fact that they were obtained | inlike the Duteh Process especially for THE MAGIC CITY, and will not be made common by promiscuous publi- | CF No Alkalies . . e ° ' “£ a 4 ‘ }cation in other works, adds a hundredfold to their value. YF —or— | it a | £-& Other Chemicals “oe oe are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & CO/S and the most favorable points of view our readers. Nothing equal to them | There are other World’s Fair Series being issued, cheap, unreliable, garbled affairs but the price charged for them is no lower than for the magnificent “ WHITE CITY’ | Series. You only need to compare the specimen of “MAGI: CITY” with other book: | }to show you that the “MAGIC CITY” will sweep the field and over-run the busines: | being done by these inferior World's Fair Series in the field now. | | » which is absolutely pure and soluble. 'l Ithas morethan three times ' the strength of Cocoa mixe-t with Btarch, Arrowroot o¢ Sugar, and is far wore eco- omical, costing less than one cent a cup t is delicious, nourishing, anc EASILY JIGESTED, dicicbinsianinnseiibitagale Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained—how re- stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- sioicgy willnot tell yous the doctors can't or Best | First Gran The Examiner Always Gets the Watch Our Advertising Columas for the Announcement | Portfolio of “ THE WAGIC CITY.” of the aS THE AMERICAN $8.00 Typewriter. you wish to know. Your SEXUAL POWERS are the Key to Life and its reproduction. Our book lays bare the truth. Every man who A would regain sexual vi gor lost through folly, or cevelop members weak by nature or wasted by disease, should write fcx our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), ERié MEDICAL C0., Buffalo, N.Y. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and pun: _tuation marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just like a $100 instrument. It is the first o its kind ever offered at a popular price for which the above claiua can be truthfully mad [tis not a toy, but a typewriter built for and capable of ReAL work. While not as rapid . the large machines sometimes become in expert hands, it is still at least as rapid as the pe and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastered almost at glance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers every where. ‘Gold Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, MONTREAL. WE ARE PREPARED Easy to understand—learned in 5 minutes ' Weighs only four pounds—iost portable. Compact, takes up but little room. Writes capitals, small letters, figures and marks—71 in all. Writes just like a $100 machine. TO DYE al! CHAS. IVES MORRISON, ; : , : i : } House in Europe. | No Shift Keys. No Ribbon. Prints from | Built vq and simple; can't get out « | FRENCH CLEANING a «pecialty. | the type direct. : _ Orn er. at ail ; | All information regarding shades, prices, | Prints on flat surface. Capital and lower case keyboard ailke-- | o¢. farnishet te easily mastered. More “margin play” for the smull letter: which do mest of the work. Writing always in sight. Corrections and insertions easily made. Takes any width of paper or envelope up Agent, Queen Street. } } sept25—eod =» ST | to 8§ inches. Takes good letter-press copies. Christy | v | " | Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.00, | wes |in registered letter, money order or certified check. We guarantee every machine, and are glad to answer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the “ Yost.” | | IRA CORNWALL, General Agent for Maritime Provinces. | D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlotietown. dec20) BREAD ~CARVING—PARING. —. FOR SALE BY R. B. Norton & Cc., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. 1. aug 16, ruggist who may not | OYEING COMPANY. | class of gouds and garments equal to any | ‘ sport. Pavement “ame, has lost all evidence of the in St. Sampsen’s square the to which the bull was fastened stil] iins, Itis a very beavy stone let into the ground fully 2 feet and firmiy fasten- ei into the exrth with cement. lormer!y astrong iron ring was attached the hy two hook t into but to which were lh ‘ onsequent traffic, this ring became ‘OO years agoand was taken possession of by Mr. Thomas Bell, who lived the stone, and it was presented by him to the Yorkshire Philo tical society, who still have it in their keep pS The hooks which held the ring end the lead running remain on the stene The fasten the bull te this ring; out aring, within the cirele no person was permittcd to go ent those necessary to the performance given signal, dogs were slipped by it Owners, and they attacked the chain- , Which in turn sought to gore or toss them, and very frequently in the ac- ; tion it killed them. As fast as the dogs ; were killed or maimed or weeried, fresh dogs were let locee on the maddened bull, and the fight was continued for hours, un- | til the dogs were exhausted, or the people sickened with the sight cf blood. s.one . the stone and run with lead. on the weer cf SOM oppesite To } were ; The animal was then led away, io the ! danger of these who bad witnessed the | show, or more particularly those who had taken part in it At York the market cross formed a peint vantage eagerly taken up to witness ' the vulger and demoralizing exhibitions. Happily, in the course of time, the wealthy withdrew their patronage and from tbe scene, and the people } who attenéed were of so much lower grade | that the custom Cied out. A century, at | least, has passed since the last bull fight in the city of York.—Newcastle Chronicle. citizens cresence hKatorga, "When the laws of the white czar con- demn the hapless Russian, and when hope dries up in his breast, three prospects loom up before him. Of these two are to he con- templated with comparative equanimity, ‘end the mere thonght of the third is ; enough te turn a man’s brain. hey are, ' being hanged and Katorga. leing is tolerable, being hanged, without being so desirable, is nevertheless a fate than which many are worse, but Katorga is as the blight of God. It with | ers many, it kills many, and many it turns j into beasts, It is truly the living death. i The sun shuns Katorga, the knot cuts the flesh into mince, and unless ron are very lucky in Katorga it takes you years and years to die. In Kussia you often see families wher wear no mourning, and yet there are gap: in the home circle, and the women pray } long in the churches even as they pray | for loved ones that are dead, and their eyes become black ringed from sadness. If you ask them why this grief and sorrow, they fear to even answer, but when you gain their confidence and ask for him you fancy ;} may be dead the whispered response is ‘*Katorga.’’ By Katorga is meant the con- vict island of Saghalien.—San Francisco Examiner. being shot, shot teindeer Meat as Food. \ clergyman, the Rey. Mr. Wallis, who | has lived for several years on the Porcu | pine river in the British northerly posses- sions, writes entertainingly of his manner of life in that frigid region. ‘*‘Many times,’’ he says, ‘‘I have sub- sisted exclusively on reindeer ment. It is very good, and I may say it is about the } ouly kind of meat you don’t get tired of. [think in is better, all things considered, than beef, and that you can eat it longer without its pallingon you. It is 2 veni son more than anything else, The Indians eat it almost exclusively, and they are very bigand streng. Some of them are 6 feet iin height, and the average is about 5 feet 10 inches, They are genuine North Amer- ican Indians, and not the Aleuts, Eskimos , or a mixture of the two. ‘‘{ keep an Indian hunter, and he sup- plies me with all the reindeer meat I want. Ile also brings me a grouse, duck, bear and other game as I need it. I have learn ed to shoot pretty well myself, as the white men do in that region or anywhere contig- uous to it. The ducks and grouse, like the | reindeer, are remarkably good eating.’’—— | New York Medical Journal. } Swallowing a Pin. I have often looked with alarm at the amateur and professional dressmuker, who invariably makesa pincushion of her mouth, regardless of possible conse quences, and in my ignorance I have won dered, ‘‘Now, if one of those pins lodged in that dressmaker’s throat, how should | attempt to extricate it?”’ Today I am wiser. If there were a brisk fire at hand, I should instantly proceed to make a stiff little dumpling of flour and water, bake it till it was quite hard, and then give the unfortunate victim a piece about the size of a small walnut to swal- low. The echances are that the point of the pin would adhere to this and lose its ten- sion of the flesh. Another thing to do in the event of swallowing a pin or tack is to take a stiff bread poultice and to swal- low quite a quantity.—London Gentleman. She Wanted to Know. Mr. Beerbohn Tree, the English actor, | has a 4-year-old @aughter who hasa fond- ness for snakes. She keeps a pet snake in the house, to the intense sorrow of the maids. New, however, she wishes to en | large her dumb retinue by the purchase of a pony. She told her father. ‘‘I’m afraid,”’ ' said that gentleman, ‘‘that I can’t afford to give you one just yet.’’ ‘Then,’ said the child, with great severity, ‘‘why don’t you act better and get more money?"’ | Skeptical. “Yer look bad, Jim. weather?’’ ‘Sorter. Today's the first time I've been out er doors in three months.”’ ‘‘What was the matter with youf’’ *‘Nothin, but the judge wonldn’t believe it.’’—Brooklyn Life. Been under the For Over Fifty Years. Ax Orp Axp Wet, Triep Rewepy.— | Mrs. Winsloc’s Soothing Syrup has | beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- | nig, with perfect sncccss. It soothes the | child, softens the gums, allays the pain, | cures the colic, and is the best remedy for | Diarrhoea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold | by Druggists in every part of the world. | Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is | incaleulable. | Wins}oe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no | other kinJ.—m. w. f. wkly—l y USE SK OTA’S DISCOVERY, the great | blood and Nerve Remedy. Be sure and ask for Mrs. | | edge as is here given. ; Woukd throngh several thicknesses of a | @ Wire than a stick. | ap object and held suspended while it is | being removed, without danger to the per- | 0Us wire, there is nothing better nor more since £O One can possibly tell when it may | be hecessary to_spply some such know]- ‘‘For the purpose of removing a danger- convenient than the coat one bas on his back. ‘There is not a wire in use in Bos- ten that cannot be handled withcut the slightest risk with a piece of cloth. It is rlmest as good & hencondnctor as rub- her, sid a coat is realiy betier than rubber gloves, as they are thio, aud ihe wire will burn through them more quickly than it coat. ‘here is nothing safer for removing With a stick or a piece of board a wire can be lifted from son holding the stick. “Iu fact, anything that is net metallic is a perfect safeguard from an electric cur- rent if it is properly and carefully handled; | that is so that the hand is completely re- | wire moved from ail danger of contact with the ju the use of all these appliances there should be no delay, as there is al- ways danger, if much time elapses, of the | wire’s burping through the article used In fact, ii and thus coming iii contact with the hand. piece of iron, and the precautions to be ob- { served) are much the same. For the want ' | i ' is much like handling a hot | } ' of used with saf hettes y*i anything newspaper can he n handlivg even a heay- i ily charged v ire, but it should be folded 48 many timesas is practicable, ou account | things anything metallic should be avoid- ed,”’—Good Housekeeping. Wheel Molding Machines. By means of a peculiarly unique im- | provement in wheel molding machines, | wheels are now cast in sections in the | same mold, so thet the various parts fit ; with perfect accuracy when finished and i ; t of its burning so readily. But of all | ' i ; ' | | belted_together. In the ordinary types of } wheel molding machines the block ia car- | i “ Kose » eS > Toe b made . ‘Fr: . Children of Mr. and Mra. M. M. Soller Altoona, Pa. Both Had Eczema In Its Worst Form After Physicians Failed, Hood’ Sarsaparilla Perfectly Cured. Great mental agony is endured b:- parents who see their children suffering from diseases caused by impure blood, and for which there seems no cure. This ix turned to joy when Hood's Sarsaparilla is resorted to, for it expels the foul humors from the blood, and restores the dis- eased skin to fresh, healthy brightnes Read the following from grateful parents : “To C. &. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: “We think Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the most valuable medicine on the market for blood and skin diseases. Qur two children suffered terri- bly with the Worst Form of Eczema for two years. We had three physicians in at Sp, bet eatiner ot them succeeded in relict At last we “ried Tek Bees &@ month both children were - fectly cured. Wo recommend a0 Hood’s Sarsaparilla as a Standard family medicine, and would not be without it.” Mr. and Mrs. MM. Sse 1412 2nd Avenue, Alwona, Pa. . HOOD’S PILLS cure liver ills, eoustipation, billousness, Jaundice sick ueadache, indigestion, en This beautiful ship was built by Mr. C. Durgess, a prominent shipowner, of Wolt. ville, N. S., and named for the popular rem. cdies thatare doing so much good in the U. S.and Canada. It will carry Skoda’s Discovery, Skoda’s Little Tablets, Skoda’s German Soap, Skoda’s Ointment and Skoda’s Pile Cure, not only to keep her own crew in healia, but to introduce them into foreign ports. In proof of their high standing read the tollowing. ~ Nervous Prostration & Chronic Dlarrhors CAW BE CURED. I have used several bottles of Skoda’s Dise covery in my family, aad regard it an excel lont remedy, especially for nervous prostrs tion and chronic diarrhea. in my extensive travels, [hear frequent and favorable rc erence to these remedies, REY. ISAIAH WALLACE, M. A. General Home Missionary for the Baptist Home Miseloe Board of the Maritime Provinces. Medical Advice Pree. SKODA DISCOVERY 60., LTD., WOLFVILLE, WN. §. For sale by all druggists. Trade enp | ried round the mold on a radial arm, sup- pried by W. R. Watson; Charlottetown { ported on a column in the center of the | P. E. 1. ; mold, or the mold itself is rotated while | ~~~ st oe ee ee ee the block remains stationary, the center of | W iss WW A R 1 DOULI rotation in eitherScase rematising fixed. It | ° —_ : ; 4s i is obvious that if the whole of a wheel re- ! molded at once in a machine having a fix- i ed center of rotation, it would be found | when removed from the mold, and the parts would be less than a semicircle to | the extent of the metal removed by plan- quired (o he cast in two sections were edges planed up, that each of the two ing, so that the whole would net form a true circle, It has been customary, there- fore, to mold each half separately in ¢dis- tinct molds. In this new machine, how- ever, as described in the Philadelphia Rec- ord, the radial arm is mounted on an axis | which may be set at any required degree } of eccentricity to the center of the pillar, #0 that, while the axis of rotation of the radial ari is in one position, any desired portion of the wheel can be molded. The axis of rotation may then be altered to another position, and then another portion of the wheel molded until the requisite sections are completed.—New York Suan. | Queer Negro Names. j I knew an old negro in Tennessee who rejoicees in the name of Niagura Falls. His companions have shortened it to Nig- i ger Falls, but be was really christened | after the great cataract, | panion, edge of it yet.’’ I also knew a colored woman who proud- ly tells you that her name is Virginia | Georgian Alabama South. Another, who | enjoys the cognomen of Amanda June Day | is a schoolteacher and signs her name A. June Day. } : : In a Mississippi town I was passing | along a side street when a coal black ne- gress came out of 4 door shouting,“ Glory, Glory Halleluiah!"’ I thought she was crazy and stopped to see what she would do next. She looked around a moment and then repeated her call, louder than before. This time I heard the answer from behind a fence. : ‘*Yere Tis, ma’am. What yo’ want?’’ ‘‘Nebber yo’ min what I want. You come here.’ j Immediately there appeared from he- hind the fence one of the blackest picca- ninniés I ever saw, and on inguiry I learn- ed that his name was Glory Halleluiah Jones.—St. Louis Glohe-Democrat. Famous Auimals. A returning traveivr from Italy tella the | story of an American fellow wanderer in Rome. Like some other traveler’s tales, itis to betaken no doubt with certain | grains of allowance. ! Phe second American, who had come from the plains of the west, visited the Vatican and was courteously shown over the papal palace. He asked many ques- tions and desired to see everything. After all the customary sights bad been shown the priest who bad attended him asked: “Is there anything else, Signor Ameri- can, that you would like to see?” “There’s one thing,’’ answered the American, ‘‘that I want to see more than anything else, and I hain’t been on the ‘* What is that, signor?’’ ‘The cattle pens.’’ “The cattle pens? Why, we have noth- ing of the sort, signor.’”’ **You hain’t?) Tnen where in the world do you keep them papal bulls that we're always hearin about?’’—Youth’s Com- A Personal Matter. } end’s reception? / , contains Phosphorous (brain food) in the He—I staid awayon account of a per- sonal matter. She—May I ask what {t wes? i He—Will you promise to keep it secret? She—How is it you were not at West- | ' | | She— Yes. He—Well, they failed to send me an in- vitation.—London Chaff, The Crete Baby. Mr. Noopop-—My baby cries all night. 1 don’t know what to do with it. Mr. Knowitt—I’ll tell you what I did. As soon 23 our baby commenced to ery | used te turn on ail the gas. That fooled him. Iie thought it was broad daylight and west to sleep.— Westfield Union, EAL MERIT is the character. | istic of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It | cures even after other preparations fail. Get Hood's and ONLY HOOD’S. ’ Nursing Mothers and delicate children should make free use of Puttner’s Emul- sion, the best Jung healer, strengthner, and flesh productor. } Clergyman, students and overtaxed busi- | ness men will finda wonderfal recuper- | ative agent in Puttners Emulsion, which most assimilable form STU DIGC, STAWPER BLOCK Instructions given in the various brat es of Drawing and Painting nov29—2in eod JNSON' - ANopyneé LINIMENT Yor INTERNAL as EXTERAL esa in 1810 Originated by an Oid Family Paysician, Think Of It. S.2% Srmerp han Bignty vation after Generation bave used and blessed it, Every Traveler should have a bottle in his satchel Every Sufferer fom | Bheumatian Neuralgia, | Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,Coughs,Catarrh Brow ms 7 me 6 “he yr a, oreness iu Bodyor Limbs, Stiff Jol Strai will find in this old Anodyne relief ana, pe y cure? speed e Every Mother sotyneiinintorin the (esses sapiens in ee ourse for Crou: Sore Throat, Tonallitis, Colic, Cuts, Hrulses! ‘Cramps and Pains liable to oceur in family’ without antice. Delays may cost a Mfe. Re ia Pe a like magic. 3 s , 35 cts. post-paid; 3, “2. Expresspaid,L 8, Jobnson& oben ee Martin’s Cardinal Food FOR INFANTS AND INVALIDS. The most palatable food prepared, and is unequalied by any other prepar.dion ofits kind. ‘The best food and the bes value, | 2» cts mit up in one pound Tins, pri . per Tin. Sold Retail by aN 1 cers and Whelesale by KERRY WATSON & CO. Prornirrors MONTREAL rugcistsand Gra- R_DRUGGIST FOR ST NORWEGIAN me CDOS _ LIVER OIL TES OF LIME & SODA alatable as cream. © oily taste .ike others. In big bottles 50c. and $1.00. When we assert that ; Dodd’s wee AAA Kidney Pills wen. Cure 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+? CURE TO STAY CURED, By a gists or mail on ipt of pri go cents. . L. A. Smith bon, tee