CALENDAN rOR OCTOBER, 18953. ‘ mS. W , i We s ‘ nn. S.W j , No ~ ~ Veeck H wa ¢ ; ’ f ‘ 7 " mI ” ~* i ’ i ) , 4 9 58 1G 10 ; | i4 n 0 » . 2 0 43 ae i 2 oe ‘ 5 } iF) a . 3 s tl} 4 58 } oo _ j > | 6 | 8 Zt Vi 34 54] ’ be » 49 2 Wed LY 7 rl 10 22 5 50 .. 2 4 $5 hl 0 av i] it al iG s ‘ ' to 26 M 4 43 2 24 ; it 4 42 4 = il NIL EAANINER wNG DarLy NEWSPAPER . Zo | ~ 9 ¥ 7 - . acN 4 SS ik e 9 29 N KW es Puas Use rue ! or P. E. ISLanD Ia ina l every afternoon, from the office of Tee Examiner Postisning Company, in the London House Building, Queer Street RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE; } VRa $i. Six Mowrus 200 THREE Monru 1.00 Use Monti 0.35 | of Canada or the } i sent | paid to any part Ua is ADVERTISING RATES For smal! advertisements which are ordered for © » weeks the charge is 3% cents pe neh for the first insertion, and 20 cents for ea mtinua Rate cards are f Ap} at the office. Special e t prices at @ reduced rate are quoted for ad isem ir inches in size cr larger, w h are to run for three months or ving No speeial notices inserted unless paid for ai tue rate of 1) cents per line, and under no circumstances will such pail notices appear in the local column. Speciai ments connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, liscounts made on all advertise- Picnics, ete. No notices will be inserted with i the same unless the regular rate of 10 cents per i line is paid. That Tux Eximrner is considered by our Merchants and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing, newspaper in P. FE. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, is abundantly proved by the fact that nordes to accommodate our advertisers we have Leen compelled to enlarge the paper to its present size Tae Darcy Examines is for sale by the fol- lowing agents : it. H. Masen, Post Ofiee Charlottetown Harvie & Co. Gt. George Street, “ Theo. i. Chappelle, Queen Street J. Meintyre. Malpeque Road, ¢. Poul, Lower Spring Park Road, W. M. Coifin, Grafton Street, D. Chappell, Prince Street, Masaar Store, Queen street, S. Gray, News Stall, P. E on the trains M. & T. J. Walsh, Ex merside Harry McFarlane, Souris I. Railway, and ectic Bookstore, Sam- Hon. D. Gordon, |. eorgetown, Db. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton est .. , . The Weekly Examiner » Is issued every Friday morning from the publishers’ office. [| is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and {s a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and full of the latest news The subscription for Taz Werexiy Ex.4™- INBR, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same seale as given bove for Tug DatLy EXaMINER. A. J. MURPHY -IS SELLING Overcoats and Pants, FROM HIS NEW & cheap that customers see at a glance: where the Barvains are to be found STOCK, MADE eptl f DOCTOR DORSEY. Physician and Surgeon. Graduate of the Medical Department of the University the City of New York, late Member of the Resident Stifforf Belle- vue Hospital and the New York Lying-in Hospit New York City OFFICE North Side Queen Square OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Residence—Near Corner of King and Queen Sicceta, Charlottetown IUREKA HOTET Kl RE \/ Ad tds WATER STREET. Free Coach to meet all Trains and Steam : Moderate charges Good tal aa ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES BENOIT, Proprietor ; 1293—3in m wf Sales Queen Street, Charlottetown RAILWAY HOUSE, Opposite Railway Station, JOHN BOLGER, Puls HOUSE orought|y painted [ ie and le Good aceomm aation for trave re ail and steamboat la ippied at a mode ate fare Please give ua Ll Aug 15—3in eod pd Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, WINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX STAMPS WANTED. OLD Canadian, United States’ and other tamp*, as used 25 to 40 years ago. For many I pay $1 to $5 ench. GEORGE LOWE, 346 Spadina Avenue, Toronto, PROPRIETOR. | TERMS : Four Dollars a Year. = i <memanmaa OU CANE TELL a frog will jump at it, Wright until HOW FAR by looking What Mark for You can't tell & Co. you ‘an do you try them. Hundreds buy Furniture from them and save money on every deal. Have you tried it ” 13, 1293—t COAL. 3 Charlottetown, Octobe: Loading and to Arrive : 000 Tons Coal. Gid Sydney Round and Slack, Victoria Round and Slack, Acadia Round and Nut, Intercelonial Nut, Vale Nut, All the Lowest Prices C. LYONS. Chaalottetown, October 5, 1893. which will be sold at of THE CHEAPEST STOVES Are at Dodd & Rogers’. Charlottetown, Oetober 4, 1893—tu th sar FIRST-CLASS MiVER & GOLD WATCHES AND OTHER GOODS b. W. TAYLOR, CAMERON BLOCE. Charlottetown, September 14, 1893. Branch Confectionery. —_—— — (1) — I have opened a BRANCH CONFECTIONERY in_ the Store in the Stamper Block recently oceupied by Mr. Theo. L. Chappelle of the Diamond Bookstore, where I will keep everything usually found in a first-class Confectionery. Iam fitting up a new and improved Soda Fountain, which I will have in operation in a few days. ‘I will keep only the best Fruits and the purest Confectionery. Wed. HUTCHESON, Confectioner, STAMPER BLOCK, VICTORIA ROW. lis also a CHARLOTTETOWN P. E. ISLAND, MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1893. Single Copies Two Cents = - eS ee ee = a en ee ee VOL 32.—NO, 103 —_—_— —_ mee HAD A HARD TIME. THE POISONINGS BY MUSHROOMS. Farm For Sale. ‘She THE subscriber offers for sale his farm | on the mile and a half from the city, well and Mount Edward Road, about one | favorably known as the “Welsh Farm.” | The farm consists of sixty acres, and con tains a good Dwelling House aud five | Outbuildings, all in good condition. There | good orchard in Terms easy. Apply to C. BENOIT, Water Street. July 3, 1893. TO LET. FOUR DWELLINGS on Pleasant St., connection. | | | with Stable and Coach House, all in good | order. Rent moderate to good tenants. Three rooms also fur office, lately oceu- pied by Messrs. Davies & Haszard, on Queen Street. WILLIAM DODD. Ch’town, Sept 21—2aw. Annual Meeting. The General Annual Meeting of the Hillsborough Skating Rink Company will be held at the otlice of M. & D. C. Me | Leod in Charlottetown, on WEDNESDAY, the 25th day of October, inst., A. D 1893, at eight o’elock, p.m. Db. C. McLEOD, Secy.-Treasurer. Ch’town, Oct. 11, 1893—dy 3i TO LET. The Store and Premises on Lower Queen Street, at present occupied by Mr. George H. Toombs, Wholesale Dealer and Commission Merchant. The premises are adapted for a business Of any kind, having a frontage on two streets. Will be rented for any term from one to twelve years. Possession given November lst. Apply to F. L. HASZARD, orto CAPT. JOHN AYLWARD, octl3—tu fri tl Nov Ist Southport. SHIPPING BAGS The subscribers have just received, ex S. 8S. Polina from Montreal, 10,000 Grain Bags direct from the factory, suitable for shipping grain cargoes to West Indies and elsewhere, which will be sold ai fectory prices. LONGWORTH & CO., Water Street. octl0—2w Jaw sa Don't travel Second Class when you can gv First Class for nearly the same money. For that reason GO TO BOSTON via the FAST SHORT LINE—Charlottetown to Pictou via the Navigation Company's Steamers; Pictou to Halifax via the Inter- colonial Railway, and Halifax to Bostou via the fast, modern-built and é¢quipped Steel 8. S. “HALIFAX,” sailing from the Plant Wharf, foot of Sac«- ville Street, EVERY WEDNESDAY, at ONLY ONE NICHT AT SEA, and the privilege of going on board Steamer night before departure without extra charge. For Tickets and all information apply to the office of the Charlottetown Navigation Company sept7 P. KE. Fsland Hospital. As the present cl: of Nurses under training in the P. KE. Island Hospital ex pect to graduate this wintes, there will be several vacancies on the nursing staff. Applications from persons desirous of becoming professional nurses will be re- ceived by the Matron at the Hospital. JESSIE M. SHERATON, Matron. iss octl1— ly 2w eod To Boston PER “CARROLL” ip iats.- “Worcester” Only $5, Everybody should take advantage -ot this very, very low fare. On awd after the 5th of October, the Boston Steamers will sail from this port at 4. p.m. CARVELL BROS. Ch’town, July 17th, 793. i: Ex th m, pat ws, guar tu f Removed! I HAVE REMOVED MY Bookbinding Business AROUND THE CORNER ON Grafton Street, (IN THE SAME BUILDING), where I will be pleased to see all my old enstomers. The cheapest place in the City te get your Books. Day Books, Ledgers, Journals, Cash Books, ete , a Specialty. J D. TAYLOR sept23 S. R. FOSTER & SON, Manufacturers of Wire Nails, Steel and Iron cut Nails and Spikes, Tacks, Brads, Shoe Nails, Hungarian Nails, &e. Sr. Joun, N. B. Looketh Well to the ways of her household.” Yes, Solomon is right; that’s what the good housekeeper everyw@:re does, but particularly in Can- ada. But her ways are not always old ways. In fact she has dis- carded many unsatisfactory old ways. For instance, to-day she is using the New Shortening, instead of lard. And this is in itself a rea- son why ‘‘she leoketh well’’ in another sense, for she eats no lard to cause poor digestion and a worse complexion. CoTTroLENE is much better than lard for 2ll cooking pur- poses, as every onc who has triea it declares. Have you tried it? For sale everywhere. Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., Wellington and Ann Sts., MONTREAL, Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies —oOR— Other Chemicals bs are used in the - preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’8S “ABreakfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soluble. | It has morcthan three times the strenyth of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or _ Sugar, and is far more eco- nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and BASILY ESTED. Seld by Grocers everyw W. DAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass DIG EXHAUSTED VITALITY. ‘The errers of Youth. Premature Deeline, Lost Mankeod, and aj] Diseases aud Weakuesses of Man, from whatever enue. pormauéntiy and privately cured at home. karan ‘Txearuext. No Firnves. Consultasion and advice in person or by letter free. adress or eall on PROVIDENT MEDICAL INSTI. TUTE, 16 Hanover Street, Montreal, Canada. Prospectus and descriptive pamphlet, closely sealed, meted free to all, Send new. [F YOU WANT TO TRAVEL throngh life by the rough stages of coughs, colds and consump- tion, be careless of yourself during the damp, cold weather and DON’T use Allen's Lung Baisam for that nasty cough of yours, But if you’d like to live toa green old age in health, and consequently in happiness, use Allen’s Lung Balsam as a preventive and cure of alJ Throat and Lung diseases, — PRICES — 25¢, 50e & $1.00 Per Bottle, FOR SALE. Cranberry Point Farm, Lot 36. To be sold at Auction, at the Court House, Charlottetown, on FRIDAY, the 10th day of November next, at noon, under pow.r of sale ina Mortgage dated 4th October, 1883, made between Jane Hayden and Frances i ot the one part, anl Malcolm McLeod and Char- les Palmer of the other part :— That Farm on Lot 36, north of the Hills borough River, bounded on the west by land now or formerly in possession of Horatio H. Braddock ; east by the Afton Road and land in pessession of the Heirs of Angus McKen- zie; north by land conyeyed to John Alexan- der McKenzie, and south by the Hillsborough River, as delineated on a plan thereof on Gov- ernment Deed to said Me agors, dated 12th May, Is58I, the whole containing 200 acres, be the same more or less. For further particulars appiy to M. & D. C. McLeod, Charlottetown. MALCOLM MCLEOD, octlé—m s tl sle Assignee, Christy Knives BREAD—CARVING—PARING. FOR SALE BY mR. B. Norton & Co., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. J. aug Mi. | Stowaway Went for 16 Days on One Day's Rations. A remarkable adventure of hardship coupled with human endura:ce is relat- | ed by Capt. Evans, of the British steam- ship William Auning, which arived at Sparrow's Point yesterday with iron ore from St. Jago, Cuba. The case occur- red upon the trip between Baltimore and Bordeaux, France. T.e Annin sailed from here May 13th with a ful eargo of wheat. On the 16th day out the chief officer reported to Capt. Evans that there were strange sounds in No. 3 hatch, which could be heard at intervais The sounds continued until all ou board were more Or less impressed with the necessity of investigating what were thought by some to be spirit ra; pings, as all conced- ed that no human being could be in the small space between the bagged wheat and the iron deck above. At last Capt. Evans devided to investi- The battens and tarpaulins were removed aud one of the batches was taken off. Suddenly an emaciated man, who looked like s maniac, struggled on deck. He looked about and then made a rush for the ships side, panting like a reon who is «driven wild by thirst. Seeing that the covl water of the sea had allured the man, Capt. Evans ordered his crew to seize him. Then water was given the man in smal! quantities, not- withstanding his piteous apyeals for more. Brandy and water were also ad- ministered him with good effect. As soon as possible Capt. Evans drew out the man’s story, and recorded his name, home and age, in case he should die before reaching land. He said he belonged to Denmark and had stowed away on the Auning in Bal:imore. When he hid in the told le had one loaf of bread and asmail can of water, which he thought would be sufficient until the vessel reached sex, when he intended to come from his hiding place. To his as- tonishment, when the hatch wus fasten- ed he saw his last chance for liberty cut off. and he made the voyage in the dark under the most terribie suspense and agony. Much that he told Capt. Evans of his experience was awful to hear. He had probably fasted the whcle time, except the first duy of his imprisonment. the tried to eat wheat from the cargo, but his mouth produced no saliva and he could not masticute the grain. Capt. Evans cared for the man. When Bor- deaux was reached he went ashore with the determination to walk to his home in Denmark. Capt Evens thinks if he could or 17 days in the ship's hold he would be equal to the task before him,.— Baltimore American, | Man and Weman. Man is a creature of cast-iron methods; woman adapts herself to circumstances, says a correspondent of Tne New York World, A man refuses to drive a nail unlesshe has a hauimer, A woman doez not hesitate to use a poker or the heel of her ehoe or the back of a brush, Man thinks it absolutely necessary to have a cork:crew to draw a cork. Wo- man will gouge it out with her scissors, or a knife or Lutton hook. Ifit won't come out it will go down, and, after all, the contents of the bottle are what is waoted. A man regards a razor as consecrated to one calling, A woman 4 hasa higher op.nion of its versatility, and uses itto sharpen pencils. This office surreptitivusly performed leads her husband to suy malignant things about razorsandtheir makers, When a man writes hedemards pomp andcircum- stance, and as wide an orbit as one of the planets. Pen, ink, and paper must be “just so,” and he siiuts up the whole farnily in a tower of silence, and nobody is allowed to think hard. Whena wo- man writes 6le guthers up pondescript paper, stray copy-book leaves, backs of old envelopes, sharpens her pencil with the scissors, ani, piacing her material on aa old atlas, tucks ove foot under her, rocks comfortably back and forth, bites her pencil, perivdically, and produces literature. Sie is oblivious to Tommy, distractedly adding and subtracting in a higher key, to Mollie beating French verbs into her brain by & succession of sudible thumps and much vibrant buz- ting; to Sallie running séales; to the cook, who demands supplies every few moments, She makes her ‘overs woo and quarrel and marry and tue villains kill each other in the most circumscribed space. How to Mrandy Peaches, One of the best peaches for brandying is the White Heaw, though any white clingstone of fine Mavor, perfectly ripe but of firm flesi:, will be suitable for the pur For trandying peaches it is desirable to use the fruit whole, and re- move the skin eutire without leaving the marks of tie knife. To do this put abouta dozen peccues ata time in a wire basket and iimmer-e them in boiling water. In about two rrinutes remove them and rub off the peel with a flannel cloth or a clean kitchen towl, Drop the fruit at once into the syrup as they are peeled. The syrup should be pre in the proportion of six pounds of sugar and three pints of water to every nine pounds of fruit Let the sugar melt iu the water before you peel the fruit. When the sugar has thoroughly melted, begin dropping in the fruit as sou peel it. When all the ches are in the syrup, draw the kettle orward and begin cooking them. Let them cook just 10 minutes in the syrup. lt requires a large, shallow kettlé to prevent the peaches being crowded in the cooking. When they are done take them up and put them into glass jars, The pint size is more convenient for the ordinary family use. As the jars are filled pour in Loiling syrup enough to reach half way up the height of the jar, and complete by filling with white brandy, wnchcau always be procured at any first-class grocery store dealing in such supplies. The brandy and syrup will become sufticiently comminglet by* moving the jar gently about. A yellow peach is seliom or never used for this purpose. Screw the jars of brandy peaches up and set them away in the preserve civset. They will keep indefi- nitely. The Ch.uese Razor. The Chinese shave nearly every day. A queer lit\le razur it is thatthey use, too. Itisin no respect like our razor, except in t.e matter of the keenness of its edge. It is a wee bit of a blade, nice- ly curved into asemicircle. With ths tool the Chinese! arber scrapes the al- most hirsuteless face of his customer and then shases him around the ears and down the neck to the first bone of bis spinal colurnn. The rounded point of the razor is also inserted into the celes. tial ear, and every ambitious hair that dares to show itself in the auricular lobe ia clipped vefore it proceeds very far. Testing His Honesty. Your druggist is honest if when you ask him for a bottle of Scott’s Zmulsion he ives you just what you ask for. He nows this isthe best form in which to take cod liver oil. Warp offthe cholera by getting your system in healthy working condition. Hawker’s Nerve and Stomach Tonic, with a course also of Hawker’s Pills, will excite every organ of the body to healthy action and afford the surest safeguard against disease. | ; i Danger Involved in Exuting Fung!—Edible | ’ * Species. The cases of poisofing by mistaking injurious fungi for edible mushrooms multiply. They have been mostly among Italians. In France,and in parts of Italy as well, people gather musi- | rooms in the forests as a staple article of diet, and seem to gather all sorts of fungi haphazardly. Before cooking them, however, these French invariably wash and soak them in salt and water, which acts asa powerful solvent of al- bu minoids and other organic compounds, There are other wholesome and nutri- tious food which may be poisonous in | their natural condition, but rendered in- | nocuous by treatment. is another example. Other continential cooks treat their dried fungi with boiling vinegar before cooking them, and are thus enabled to use spevies that would be othe: wise uneatavle, By these treatments right mushrooms lose their aroma and a good deal of their soluble nutritive properties, Drying may lessen the virulence of harmful species, but it isat the risk of favoring decomposi- tion. It has been shown that poisonous species exist which are capable of re- taining their noxious property several months after drying. Even the right mushroom has been observed to be capa- bie of giving rise to symptoms inade- quately described by the term: ‘‘An at- tack of indigestion,” Various rules liave been laid down for distinguishing and identifying the edible fungi. Thus it is said that the skin can be separated from the table or pilus. So it can, but the skin can equally be separ- ated jin one of the more poisonous vari- eties, The stem ought to be cylindrical and solid; it is undoubtedly well to avoid mushrooms that, from any cause, have hollow stems, ‘here are instances in which the right edible mushroom has produced symptoms of poisoning—diar- rhoea, vomiting and a certain amount of collapse. So may tomatoes and other vegetables in a state of incipient decay. he color of the gills is to be noted. These in the common mushroom are pink in young specimens, black in old enes, while between the two are found all shades of chocolate brown. But edi- ble mushrooms are not all of one vari- ety ; there is one called the horse musii- room, which, however, we are told, might better be avoided when very large. Andthere are many species of edible fungi besides the mushroom. These area neglected source of food. Some of them are quite as palatable as the mushroom and more common and more abundant. As long, however, as food stuff continues to be as cheap as it is in America the fungi are not likely to receive critical attention. By the time food becomes dear they, too, are likely to become relatively scarce. The at- tempts that have been made from time to time to popularize accurate know- ledge of the edible fungi have not been successful.—N. Y. Sun. Errors of Speech. In English a great number of errors have been so well reproved that they are ow rarer. “And which,” and the als ocation of ‘‘only,” which a few years ago were everywhere, are some- times hardly to be met with in the whole of a leading article, On the other hand, new outrages are gradually getting com- mon. ‘“Infer,” for “imply,” which would some little time ag, have been smiled at as a mere vulgarism, is incre- dibly frequent in conversation and by no raeans uzknown in print. But far more hideous is ‘‘human” for human being. And this has appeared of late in London newspapers that ought to know better. Our own complaints as to this offence have been met by a plea that the word so used is English poetry as well as colonial prose, and may be found in the pane of Mrs. Browning. Obviously, owever, she uses ‘‘the human” not in of **the man,” but precisely as ‘‘the autiful,” ‘‘the true,” were so constant- used by the ante-penultimate Lord y tton. New follies are the more to be resisted as the language of the press is shedding old ones and is gaining much in sim- plivity. The jaded phrase, being spent, is at last allowed to dropout and die. Aud with it will by degreas pass away the habit of exaggeration, boisterous, cold, disay pointing, from which a read- er turns with chilly disapproval. The weak exaggerate often and ‘the strong exaggerate now andthen. Exaggera- tion is quite a diiierent thing from ex- travagrance, viclence delirium, These may lawfully claim their moment in aii. But they can never cover or diguise the intrusion of exaggeration instantly un- mistakable, and forever unpardonable. Then there is the opposite of exaggera- tion, which is less mischievous but sil- lier. It is not common in literature, but it isa mostfamilizr note in a certain kind of respectable journalism. Here is an excellent instance in Thursday's Times (Dukes Ernest’s biographer is de- scribing thet prince's action and inflence as contributory to the work of German unity): ‘Theremark of the Emperor William to him at Versailles, ‘This I owe partly to you,’ was in a certain measure justified.” The jaded phrase, the silly phrase, and the phrase of exaggeration are to be avoided simply by simplicity. To at tend, to wait upon what you really think ; not to interrupt yourself with too loud a word ; not to translate your wacertainty by too much talk.—Pall Mal! Gazette. Of these tapioca — A Peaceable Race, The Javanese manner of settling quarrels is original. When one man has offencei another the injured party gives notice that he is angry e drawing in the sand before the door of the offender a circle with a straight line across it, indi- cating that his affection, which would have been eternal, has been cut in two. Friends of both parties then shut them up. They parley awhile. then pretend to be n ain, rattle as tittle children, and finally as men become re- conciled and embrace. Should one be re- fractory and refuse to be conciliated he is ostracized by the community so effec- tually that he is soon brought to terms. It is just possible that our enlightened ciizens might consider this method better than knock-down arguments, and | certain! much cheaper than going t law.— s Bazar, Morsefiesh in the Celestial Empire, Beef, says a writer on Chinese customs is much supplanted in the celestial em- pire by horse flesh. The poor eat horses that have done their work and died, but for the rich a special breed of horses is preserved, whose function is to be fat- | tened and nothing else. These horses | are tiny of stature and possess but little strength. Their inherited capacity for waxing faton the cheapest straw and is a tribute to natural selection and the cenius of Chinese breeders. Dr. Mayxixc’s German Remuepy, the greatest rheumatic, neuralgia and pain cure of the age, both internal andexterna! Price 50 cents. Dr. Chalmers, Veterinary Surgeon, M. R.C. V.S., says: “I used Dr. Manning’s German Remedy for neuralgia. It cured me on first application. I used anything to equal it. Have other uses of it and find it excellent. Tuomas Cattuers, P.V.M.S.R.V.S., om Truro, N. S., April 9, 1892. made ; have never | | uated house | water heatiag USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the great | Blood and NerveRemedy. : ’ R. Bryce- Gcemmel, : x exami . a cs fyi After a careful Skoda’s German Soap, 1 find it composed of ingredients of a ¢ m- ically pure and healing naturé It ear ; be too highly recommended, both tor medicinal and toilet us« la fluc Skoda’s German Ointment perfectly pure and posses } medicin al qualities. It t eafety the t t at i exceilien i ever} . i. I re anne ra a vove who for vase 1 in the act _w : under date of F 4 . t soft and } unadt Ww Ll! ’ \ 1 \ 4 : te tm . | 7m" he LINIMERT yw! KE - anol ° THe PR For INTESNAL as EITERNAL cea, im 1810 . . Originated by an Otd Family Paysician. * I» use for more than Eight Thi nk Of It. } cars, and still leode. Gene ration after Generation ‘have used and blessed tt. Every Traveler should have @ bottle in his satchel, From Rheumatism Every Sufferer y=, ™ccmsum. Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,Coug?! «,Catarrh, Bron- ehitis, Asthma, Cholera-Morbu« Diarrhoea, Lameness, Soreness in Baiyor Limbs, Sift Joints or Strains, will find in this old Anodyie, relief and speedy cure. Should have Johnson's Eve ry M other Anodyne Liniment in the honse for Croup, Colds, Sore Thr t. Tonsilitis, Colic, Cuts, Bruises, Cramps and Pairs Jable to oceur in any family without notice, Delays may cost a life. Relieves all Summer Complaints lixe magic. Price, 3 cts. post-paid; 6 bet tlea, S2. Express paid. LS. Johnson & Co... Poston. Mass B2042204000 When we assert that Dodd’s RA LIInyv Kidney Pills CAA” ERMAWANO* Cire Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney @ lroubles, we are backed by the testimony of all who have used them. Ti rf CURE TO STAY CURED. ~ By a ge cenia fruggists or mail on receipt of price, Dr, L. A. Smith & Co., Toronta, 3O0O280088080' on fi ‘ How attained-—how re- stored—how preserved, Crdinary works on Phy- siology will not tell yous |} the doctors can't or } . \Laywon’t; but all the same rn Yiaed aii «} , "on A AS )\ 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 vt \gor lost through folly, “or devel p members weak by nature or wast d by disea mld write fra our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.”” No charge. Add ERié MEDICAL €9., Buffalo, N.Y. pe . } ¢, sh lress (in confidence), “You'll Feel Better ” Everybody does, after taking a iew bottics of MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER. It builds up the 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 Plitulency. THE ALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LID. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. Highly Reconimended by? hyeicians. ith “Backache | the 8 means the kid- + of the neygs are in “Delany (ta trouble. Dodd's | dangeous, Nag lected kion trouble: reap in Bac' Bicoa DOyspesia, Liver Compiant, and the most dan Kidney Pills give prompt relief.” “‘75 per cent. of disease is first caused by disordered kid- neys. gerous of ail, “Might aswell | Brights Disease, try to have a| Diabetes aud healthy city Oropsy.” without sewer- , The above age, as good | diseases cannot health when the | exist where kidneys are| Dodd's Kidney clogged, they are | Pills are used, Sold by all dealers or sent by mail on receipt of price go cents. per box or six for Dr. L. A Smith & Co. T book called Kidacy Talk, to Let, or ent by Mr The Premises r tly occupied Join Beer, Corner Cumberland Fitzroy Streets—a commodious and pleasantly sit - ed throughout with hot apparatus — wilh good house, A ly to W. W. BEER siuble and coach oy Sti aA «? “> new ee pean Eran manne wens » gohan / eororras eee es ee te eg as gee - — sea ttgs Atti oe ae. a LS fee ET TT IT a TE ET ET TEE LT EE LT AG I ET ARE” Wee one } - “ . ; tr . 5 a a any SS — - m 5 > ome ; SS Ce oF Seema . RE RRA EN ON EE ERR Nm INT a a cs fF ~~ | ee ne om re on ' te usm ste tam Se em MAR NE nig an LBs he (im 4 pt