Pee ene CALENDAR FOR JANUARY. 1a04, ‘ a n 4.9% p. m. b 7 m,p.m, S$ W I NY VY W tiigt | water i : { 4 i a il ] s 26 Il 48 5 2? morn 7 e! | 0 23 4 th , 56 : I 1 | ot ; oe ; ; = : 2 50 : ; 43 ' i b4 6 16 , : 4) 34 ; 8 47 > 42 ’ 45 _ 4 : 10 50 i ] ; a i aft 4 ‘7 0 42 : l M i i AIL) EANMIMAA LY NEWSPAPER ISLAND, m the office o sHING COMPANY, in the g, Queen Street rES F SUBSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE) VAR $i.c0 x MonTus 200 I ek Mowtus 140 One MoytTu O03 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the ADVERTISING RATES advertisements which are ordered for ¥ one or two weeks the charge ia 3% wh for the first insertion, and enta for each continuation. Rate cards are shed on application at the office. Special t a reduced rate are quoted “iv isements four inches in sizé or arger, which are to run for three montha or fact prices es inserted unless paid for a ste of 1) cents per line, and ander no such paid notices appear pecia liscounts made on all advertise- th Church Fairs, Bazaars, Pienies, et notices will be inserted with e regular rate of 10 cents pe! rind’. E. Isiand, an uivertising medium eir announcements ccom late our advertisers we large the paper to e by the fol- ttetown and M.*& T. |. Walsh, Ecleetic Bookstore. Sam- Ha MeFarlane, Souris. H I. .orden, eorgetown. ; t. Stewart i}. M. Clarke, Alberton lia, Orwell Cove a RS ES ee } r . ° The Weekly Examiner Ie issu very Friday morning from the padiis s office. It is made up of matter has appeared in the Daily editions, and 4 a firet ae weekly newspaper nteresting aba itest news. T subscription for THe Wrexity ExaM. paid t ny part ofgCanada or the is s, is one dollar per year I I ¥ EXaMINER. ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. \OD REFERENCES. r Queen Street, Cher'attetown “~ Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX DOCTOR DORSEY, Surgeon. Physician and Graduate of the Medical Department of the University of the City of New York, late Meraver of the Resident Staff of Belle- vue Hospital and the New York Lving-in Hospital, New York City. Square OFFICE. North Side Queen OPPOSITE POST OFFICE 4 £72, a al e . ~ x La of Rheumatic ‘and Remaigie Cure Of the Age £ HOUSEHOLD ynrse AND Rime, *" PAIN GURE _ ((SOTH INTERNAL AND EXVER “4S Sa _Mé NUFACTURED ONLY BY » /HE HAWKER MEDICINE COY G..... ST JOHN. NB. BB menemne: - “4 same scale as given | e--Near Corner of King and Queen | ow. “harlottetown THE DAILY EXAMINER. Single Copies Two Cents SG ———$——$ Important Announcement ! Oe A Grand Treat for Subscribers to So X ) ree eee ene The Examiner. THE GREATEST WORLD'S FAIR BOOK !$ READY! a aR | Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts sently yet promptly on the Kidneys Live: aid Boweis, cleanses the sys tem eflectually, dispels colds, head- | aches and fevers and cures habituas constipation, Syrup of Figs is the | only remedy of its kind ever pro- We take that we have made arrangements with the | publishers of The Magic City ‘to supply this celebrated work in Weekly Parts to our subscribers at. the very low price of TEN CENTS per number. It will be issued in sixteen consecutive | Weekly Parts, each containing sixteen to twenty magnificent Photographic Views and Historical Deserip- tions of the WORLD'S FAIR and the MIDWAY PLAISANCE, by the famous American Author, MR. J. W. BUEL. The Photographs are the finest that have ever been offered | to the public. They constitute a splendid series of OYER 300 YIEWrS in NATURAL PHOTOGR:> PH COLOR , embracing all the wonderful features of the | World’s Fair and its surroundings, and the famous MIDWAY PLAISANCE, with it curious and interesting character sketches of life in foreign countries and among wid and curious races of people. IT Is History of the Fair that has been published. pleasure in announcing The The The The Greatest, Grandest, | Most Beautiful, | Only Complete The Photographs, in natural colors, are | Beautiful as a Dream, while the historical descriptions give the work a value beyond all computation. The | author spent nearly the whole summer at the Fair, preparing his notes and superintend- ing the work of the corps of artists employed in taking views. These pictures are the finest in existence. They were taken by trained ar-ists of more than national reputa-| tion, who knew how to secure the best resulfs and the most favorable points of view Their Beauty and splendor will be a surprise to our readers. Nothing equal to them has ever been seen in pictorial representations; and the fact that they were obtained ‘especially for THE MAGIC CITY, and will not be made common by promiscuous publi- | ‘cation in other works, adds a hundredfold to their value. There are other World’s Fair Series being issued, cheap, unreliable, garbled affairs, > > ° . ‘oe ‘cc Ty mi Wr y $9 /but the price charged for them is no lower than for the magnificent WHITE CITY” | “eries. You only need to compare the specimen of “ MAGI; CLUY ” with other books | ‘to show you that the “MAGIC CITY” will sweep the field and over-run the business | | being done by these inferior World’s Fair Series in the field now. | | . | | | | The Examiner Always Gets the Best ! Watch Our Advertising Columas for the Announcement of the First Graw Portfolio of “THE MAGIC CITY.” THE AMERICAN $8.00 Typewriter. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and pune | tuation marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just like a $100 instrument. It is the first ot | its kind ever offered at a popular price for which the above claim can be truthfully made. | {tis 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 suclr simplicity that it can be understood and mastered almost at a glance. We cordially commend,it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. Easy to understand—learned in 5 minute | Weighs only four pounds—most portable. | Compact, takes up but little room. | Built solid and simple; can’t get out of) order. Capital and lower case keyboard ailke-- | easily mastered. “| More “margin play” for the small letters | which do mest of the work. Takes good letter-press copies. Writes capitals, 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 width of paper or envelope up to 8} 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 further information as to this machine and also the “ Yost. IRA CORNWALL, General Agent for Maritime Provinces. P, E Island. dec20 D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlottetown, duced, pleasing to the taste anc ac- eptalle ti the stomach, prompt in . . . . ; ! its action and truly beneficial in its | oflects, prepared only from the most | healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commendit | o all and have made it the mos ! opular remedy known. Sr.up of Figs is for sale in ott.es by all leading druggists ixy reliable Cruggist who may no aye it on mand will procure i wumptly for any one who wishe ) try it. Manufactured only by tb CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO., SAN FRANCISOO, CAL. “"av7Ty.y .£, EY NEW YORK, N. * W.R. Watson, Druggiat, Charlotteow: jymwtf 75. “You'll Feel Better ” < Everybody does, after taking ag | few bottles of MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER. » It builds upthe run-down sys-@ | » tem,—is strengthening and appe-@ | tizing. Itis readily borne by weak stomachs, regulates the bowels, and is invaluable to those afflicted with Indigestion and Flatulency. THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LTD. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. Highly Recommended byPhysicians. | of an TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. TT wasn om . . — se ne — ee sea ; y ea . : ~ . YryyY , i NEW see. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 1894. i . /OMm . — eee aera ee — a SACiVED IN ALL LADS DEBTS OF HONOR, NOT COLLECTIBLE BY LAW, SO REGARDED. fu Austria, France and England Gambling Debts Take Precedence Over Those Owed i a ~~ ~ — es ~~ 7 - hae Co aw Si4E KITCHEN CF THE FUTURE. When Cock Will Touch the Button and Blectricity Do the Rest, When cooking is done by electricity, as Herr Shoex of Austria says will be the case ina few years, the kitchen of today | will have taken its place along with other | acup of tea? to the Butcher—A Chinese Will Sell His | Wife or Daughter For Debt. One of the most curious illustrations of the kinship of nations is had in the results iquiry made by the state ¢epart- cient concerning debts of honor. it the request of the national board of trades sircular letter on the subject was sene to the consuls in foreign countries, and the repttes have been published ia the cirgular reports. Debts of honor are defined as those not collectible by law, wnd the al most uniform practice in all tae countries from which reports have beer made {+ to regard drinking, gambling end betting chligations as paramount to cebts to the botcher, the baker and the candlestick maker Cousnl General Goldschmidt at Vienna writes that gambling and betting debts, -s Well us usurious louns, are paid because | ton rope bas an insulated wire in its cen- honor is at stake and from fear of pub | licity. Drinking debts are settled with a view to obtaining more drink, while the payment of fees for physicians’ cafes and matchmaking may be considered as uris ing from gratitude. . Any debt contracted ou a pledge of honor by an officer of the ar- | my or navy is not only collectible at law be fore the usual courts, but the officer, if he fnilsto discharge hisdebt of honor in fall, ‘nay also be calied before a military court of uonor. Belgian law is hostile to gambling debts, and George W. Roosevelt, consul! at i Brassels, writes tha8 it is now held by the | ~uperior court of Belgium that it is a ques tion of public apd moral law not toac | | doors so that when the porter leaves ai knowledge a gambling or betting debt, ind ander the force of this new view there s no doubt that many people will find nat they are pot in konor bound to satisfy ua pay such debts. Honorary debts in France arise mostly between chibmen, says Consul Chariea P. “illiams at Rouen, and uonpayment of im would incur expulsion and degrade | 1e person who could not pay. Therefore | ibmen do their utmost to pay these | pts. Although absurd, it is a fact that man can become quite isolated and cut | from society if he failsto pay 1,600 nes loston the turf or at his clubin } ‘chrat er some other game, but can niain his standing if he owes 10,000 s to b's uphoilsterer, bootmaker or r This is the fashion, nothing else former times a man nnable to meet his | ‘bts of honor committed suicide. Now a retires from the place for a greater or 8 time and sometimcs fails to retura A man once disgraced in his club seldom returns to satisfy his debts of honor, Though gambling debts in Germany are | not recornized by the code, drinking debts re collectible, but Frank Hi. Mason at rankfort writes that the obiigations military and naval officers are in the high- t degree sacred and binding, and that wy are paid xt any sacrifice and in pref rence to # legal indebtedness of a com vwreial character, for the reason that if 4maudiated or neglected they would ruin j he social standing of the delinquent. Lorin A. Lathrop at Bristol is of the pinion that Englishmen would pay their | ‘nts of honor before they wou'd pay their | cal debts, thongh he understands that wkmakers at the races Jose largely by | | woman who wears them they are beanti ' ful, but otherwise they are a vulgar adver bad debts. The penaiues of social ostra ‘ism nre so severe againsta defaulter iu “ngland that the most reckless of game <ters will pay his debts of honor, while his | tradesmeo seek im vain for their money \ similarstate of affairs exists in Ireland, | Unlike the Dutch Process GA No Alkalies —\ Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & COS pure and soluble. It has morc than threetimes the strength of Cocoa mixe i with Stareh, Arrowroot v- Nw Sugar, and is far ‘sore e€co- nomical, costing less than one cent a cup It is delicious, nourishing, anc. EASIL: DIGESTED. ae aie Seld by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained—how re- stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- siolcgy wiil not tell yous the doctors can’t or =ywon't; but all the 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 foe our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. THE SOCIETY OF ARTS | tions of this type a Chinaman will pawn | all his personal property and borrow from | all his relatives. of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. ; iaries. | what is considered right and proper by but the coutrary is the case in Scotland, where gaming and betting are forbidden. Probably China furnishes instances of Does madam want | She attaches a tiny ropeof | cotton to a vessel of water, and in three minutes the water is boiling. This cot- old fashioned affairs. ter that is connected with the nearest elec- tric light plant, and a little lever smailer than the smatiest glove Luttoner turns ou or shuts oi the power, IS it desired to prepare axoup? Then two or turee, or maybe four, of these little levers taru on an increased degree of heat. Does the family want a substautial dinner? The small cotton rope is attached, and another one like itis fastened on each side uf an oven ard the levers turned cn. A current of electricity of 30 amperes | van hent this oven in 16 minutes, and the cost will be 15 cents an hour, according | to the rates charged in Chicayo. With | three amperes of power bre: kfast for six can be prepared st a cost cf 2ewmisa, A cinner for six people requiring six am peres of power would cost 8 cents, and there would be heat enongh for this mon ey tO covk a soup, roast, vegetatles, heat | water enough fer ten or coffee aud for the asual culinary purposes bevides. The same wire that transmita the beat for cooking by a simple device e:n abso be made to farnish light for ilaminating purposes at a diminished cost. And thi- | is the kitchen of the future, to be lighted and heated without fire at a cost less than | the price of candles would be in the good | old times. —New York Worl:d. ; Ilow the I¢’ea Came io Him, A great many large business honses | have ap apparatus attached to their front night and locks the door be at the same | time shuts off the water in the main pipe | ieading from the street and se prevents all | danger of flooding if some cxreless person aas left 2 cock turned on up stairs. i That «pparatu. is the invention of Mr Oscar }HIammerstein, who telle an inter esting story of how the idea came to him “T owned a big warchouse down town,’ he said, **the upper part of which | used wa printing office for @ paper | was run ting then, and I rented the lower floors as t tobaces warebouse. Well, one night he printers went away and left the water inning. The next morning | was called pon to pay $500 for the damaye done my ‘nant’s stock by the flood. 1 paid, and hen | begun to think. At last an idea ame tome. I had a plumber bring the nain water pipe of the building up right wside tue front door, Then I connected 1 cock in this pipe with the lock so that when the door was shut end locked the water was cut off. In the morning, when he porter came and unlocked the Goor, the water was turned on again. “The plumber who did the work for me was struck by the iden and asked how unong professional men, students and | much I'd take for i. “<Pifteen hundred dollars,’ I said. “* All right,’ said he. j “He had it patented and has madea good bit of money out of it. I made just in even thousand by the deal.’’--New York Herald. rr eeeneS Jewelry. _ Edmund Rosseil has recently said some | very clever things concerning the vulgar ity and refinement of jewels. He main | tains that when they fit the particular | tisenient of the husband’s business. True | refinement, he says, will not come until the | | secret of making gems by chemical forma the most vigorous adhesion to the rules | f honor. »nd of inertia and contradictions, Consul Kdward Bedloe at Amoy found ‘tno great In the Flowery Kingdom, the | agazines, no trusts, syndicates, pools, | ; : i uwents, copyrights or monopolies and few f those influences or causes whose end is ind.ruptey.”? the United States and England every statute were stricken out, the writs and nere especially such enactments as the | tatuteof frauds, the statute of limitations | nd the statutes of descent and distribu ion, the remainder would bear a striking ! | resemblance to the present jur'spradente of the Chinese empire. The lawbooks, so called, of the country are hardly commen They profess to be statements of ‘he community at large. In the second nince, the Chinese regard litigation as an vilaud try to reduce it to a minimum here are no lawyers, no costs, fees or al .awunees. There are no calendars, rules § practice, judgment rolls nor eny of the nachinery which makes the attorney 80 wrominent a feature of civilized life. <A nagistrate hears and determines a case very much asa father does a dispute be tween two children. In the third place, litigation being an evil, public policy has | increased to a very large extent the num- ‘er of obligations which have no legal uatare except the honor of the debtor. Drinking, gambling and betting debts are not collectible at law in China. The tirat samed is practically unknown, The only saloons and barrooms are those owned and patronized by Europeans, The na tives regard alcoholic stimulants as food or food accessories, using them at meals, and Then 'n minute quantities. Drunkards and total anostainers are almost unknown | lt isa disgrace of the deepest sort fora Chinaman to be a dipsomaniac. It is | equally disgraceful to suppiy him with liquor or todo business with him when | nuder its influence, For.this reason drink- ine debts are extremely rare. It is very different with gambling debts. They are pre-eminently debts of honor and are more willingiy and speedily paid than debts of any other kind. To meet obliga Numerous cases ure re corded in which he has sold a daugbter, aconcubine or even ason to obtain the | means to discharge a gambling account CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arta, to encourage | | and help artists. Incorporated by Letters Patent of the Government of Canada, the 27th February, | 193. GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Nos, 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., Montreal. EXHIBITION AND SALE. —_-——— ADMISSION FREE, from 10 o’clock, a. m., to 4 p. m. The only chance in this country to pur | chase works of masters. All the Paintings are originals, mostly | from the French Schooi, the leading | modern school. } Eminent Artists, such as Francais Rochegrosse, Aublet, Barau, Pesant, Petit ean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a | — many others, are members of this | iety. i Ask for our Catalogues and Circulars. H. A. A. BRAULT, oct26 Director. Nor are such actions regarded as anything but praiseworthy by the general public The debtor is held up to praise aa an ap right man, and the luckless subject of the sale is highly esteemed for being willing to be sacrificed in order to pay the debt of him he orshe loved, Several cases have oc- ! eurred in which a daughter, concubine or wife has sold herself without the knowl- edge of a father or husband who was heav- ily {nvolved and unable to clear himself. In such instance the | #%%ue has been uni- versally lauded for filial or domestic piety. But the same people will allow their trades- man. creditor to starve to death without the least compunction. Equally remark- uvle is the fact that a Chinaman will not accept the credit of a gambling debt, nor will be bay or sell one, no matter how re- sponsible pecuniarily the debtor may be.— Washineton Post. For Over Fifty Years. Aw Ovp Asp Wett Triep Rewevy.— Mre. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snccess. It soothes the If from the legal systems | tion has been discovered. Then they will be combined and worn according to their beauty and art, not according to their size and dazzling qualities, People will say- “Oh, Ino longer wear my neck}ace rince they have had diamond doorknobs on the flathouse opposite. I now wear this won derful piece ef filigree I bad in my drawer so long and thought nothing of,’’ or ‘Since they have been using diamonds as headlights on the cable cars 1 have brought out those Jeypore enamels from ; India that they wanted me to lend to the | ground, with their massive paws out | mouths half open, with their tongues loll j | art museum.’’ | | and in some cases even the honse in which The five stones for men’s wear, he says, are the chrysoberyl catseye, Alexan- drite, cinnamon diamond, star ruby and star sapphire. A woman should decide on a colored stone suiting her type and then wear it with colorless gems as a back | ground. Colored stones, he maintains, should never be mixed. i Plain women, according to this autbor | ity, should wear interesting things, an | tiques, curios and what he calls ‘‘gro | tesques.”’ For street wear nothing better | than Japanese gold and bronze ornaments are to be found.—New York Evening World. Consumption Quarantine. That consumption was contagious was an old theory,and the Spaniards, centuries , were in the habit of destroying the bedding and belongings of consumptives, they lived, for fear of the spreading of the plague. That it is not very actively con tagious is proved sufficiently by the fact that the dwellers in cities are alive at all, for statistics prove that from one-tenth to one-fifth of all the deaths in large cities are due directly or indirectly to the dis ease, and that consequently a namber of sufferers from the disease must be present in every large gathering of people. Ex cept in the later stages the patient is not confined to his bed. He mingles in all so cial and industrial avocations of life. Not infrequently he is ‘the life of the party” or the “hardest worker of the office.’’ In the present state of soclety, at least, such men cannot be condemned toa leper cam: nor sent against their wills to a sanii.- rium, however excellent.—Baltimore Sun Lions In Repose. When at last the lion pulled up, he trot ted slowly back to his comrade, and then they both lay down on the bare, open stretched, their heads held high, and their | ing out, for it was a very hot day. ' of Landseer’s lions in Trafalgar Square, | and it is quitea mistake to Bay that that They lay almost exactly in the position | great artist has made an error in repre senting lions lying with their forepaws straight out like adog. Whenon thealert, | a lion always lies like this, and only bends | his paws inward like a cat when resting thoroughly at his ease.—Selous’ Travels and Adventures in Southeast Africa. en Political Note. “Pa, when a politician goes Into office, does he have to take an oath!" “Yes, my son.”” “And when he goes out of office does he take «1 oath?” “y+ bat there is nothing compulsory abou: ic. '’—Texas Siftings. Pond's Extract, Used alike by the medical profession and the people, it holds a position held by no other medicine in this country, or, perhapg, the world. Nursing Mothers and delicate children child, softens the gums, allays the pain, | should make free use of Puttner’s Emul- | cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diurrhcea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold Twenty-five cents a bottle. | | by Drugg’sts in every part of the world. | 4 «gaye Its value is | ness men will finda wonderful recuper- sion, the best Jung healer, strengthner, and flesh productor . Clergyman, students and overtaxed basi- , incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. | ative agent in Puttuers Emulsion, which | Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no | contains Phosphorous (brain food) in the | ’ other kind. —m. w. f. wkly—1 y most assimilable form. tees i of Cornwallis, Nova Scotia. $200 Worth Of Other Medicines Failed But 4 Bottles of Hood's Sarsaparitia Cured, “It is with pleasure that I tell of the gr benefit I derived from Hood's Sarsaparilla. th | For 6 years I have peen badly aMflicted wi Erysipelas breaking out with running sores during hot summer months. I have sometimes not been able to use my limbs -or two months ata time. Being induced to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla, I got } one bottle last spring. commenced using it; felt 80 much better, gol two bottles more; tock them during the summer, was able to do my housework, and Walk Two Miles which I had not done for six years. Think I am cured of erysipelas, and recommend any person so afflicted to use Hood’s Sarsaparilla Four bottles has done more ior me than $200 worth of other medicine. 1 thhuk it the best biood purifier kuown.” Mrs, H, D. Wes, Church street, Cornwallis, N. 3. Hoce’s PILLS cure liver ile, constips- tion, biloustiess, jaundice, sick headache. Ye >} ° coh .2 ays aS Exponse Them and we GUARANTER them to Cure. (or money refunded ) Mrs. Elmer EB. Millett, P.O. Box 511, Livermore Falls, Maine. SALT RHEUM and all diseases of the BLoop & Stix. Skoda’s Discovery, Skoda’s German Ointment and Skoda’s German Soap, are specially adapted to cure inherit- ed and chronic diseases. Mrs. Mille writes: “I have had Salt Rheum eve: since I could remember; tried many remedies, but received no benefit until I took Skoda’s Discovery. Skoda’s Cures. My husband says it will cost too much to board me if [ take any more of Sko- da’s Discovery. Skoda's Little Tablets eure sick headaches constipation and dyspepsia. 5) in a box, 35¢ MEDICAL ADVICE FREE. SKODA DISCOVERY CO., LTD., WOLFVILLE, N. . For sai vy a druggiat. rade sap jied by W. R. Watson; Charlottetown Pe. %.1. Hiss WARY DaULt, STU 010, STANPER BLOCK Instructions given in the various brancn ai at. es of Lirawing and Painting son ANODYNE LINIMERT yrelke AMY OTHE, Yor INTERNAL as SITERMALom «20 Originated by an Oud Family Paysiclan Think Of It, 2% Summa a ration after Jeneration have wu tw Every Traveivr should have a bottle in his satchel, nov2%—2m ec Every Sufrerer = oa. Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,Coughs,Catarrh, Bron | enitis, Asthma, Cholera-Morbua, Diarrhoea, Soreness in Kalyor Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, | will find in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure Every Mother Anstyne'inimentjn the Sore Throat, Tonsiliti«, Cotte, Cuts, Bruises, Cram ) and Pains liable to occur in pA. | without ves aotice, Delays may costa life. Re Summer Complaints like m . Price, % cta. tes, 2. Express nm co besten. Mans LS. Johnson & Co_ Fiity Years ae AS AND SALS Gray’s Syrup o Red Spruce Gum For COUGHS, COLDS and all LUNG AFFECTIONS. 25cts. « bottle. Sold every where KERRY WATSON & CO. Proprictone MONTREAL. Claas NORWEGIAN TSE TANT SS LIVER OIL WITH HYPOPHOSPHITES OF LIME & SODA alatable as cream. ‘Oo Olly taste .ike others. In big bottles 50c. and $1.00. When we assert that Dodd’s Kidney Pills een”. 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+? CURE TO STAY CURED, By a. druggists or mail on receipt of price, ge cent . L. A. Smith & Co., Toren