PA oo 8 atin: —_— ral PRDAR FUR FEBRUARY, 1494, Rew } . 2.8m., p.m. t ; hor m, W ” ™ + 4 av 6 4 > ae 44 NY ENUM vy News rom the office o : a Jnueen Street EB FY SUBSCRIPTION VANCE Bt. M ‘ a post pald to any part of Canada or +) ~l “tates ADVERTISING RATES tvertixements which are ordere weeks the charge for the first insertion, and 2 continuation. Rate cards ar m application at the office. Speci: yntract priee~ at a reduced rate are quote four inehbes in sie © to run for three months o “ma + ad rtiwo is tvertisenmic nis ars which are ted anless paid %& i and under n- such paid notices appea ‘N special no es inser nt« oer line, | a im? ante made on all adverti« sted w ; 4 te > notices will he inserted wit! fue Exa s considered by o s and ‘ER vdanulfacturers to be the lead wwepaper in P. E. isand, and conse e most valuable advertising mediun: o make the ¥y proved by the fact tha 4 advertisers w 4 abundan n » acooramocate ou; hav - mepelied Lo tven ia for sale by the fo Post O Charlottetown i ce, i yre Malp toad, spring Park Road rafton t ran! Prim Street e St. Jueen street “ ; . P. E. +. Railwa an M.x iI walsn, Eclectic Bookstore Sum mersice Harry MeFariane Hou. L. Gardon, DA Egan, Mt. + M. Clarke, A has A. G Soiria, eorgetow a. “te wart. ibe rton &, Urweil Cove. = es 5 —e The Weekly Examiner is pau biishe sued every Friday morninu from the office. [t is made up of matter ~ ADP the Daily editions, and ‘iret-class weekly newspaper—interesting end full of the latest news The subscription for THe WEEKLY Exam. tvEM, poet peld to any part of Canada or the United States is « Advertising rates on the same scale as give: hove for Tae Dairy EXaMINER. which bh ared aa yne dollar per year. “DOCTOR DORSEY Physician and Surgeon. Gradua ft partment of th University New York, late he Medical I y of the Cit yf Member of the Resident Staffof Belle- ~ Hospital and the New York Lying-in Hospital, New York City. OFFICE Nerth Side Queen Square OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Pesdence—Near Corner of King and Queen “treets. Chariottetown ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHAN'I AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES Queen Street, Cher ttetow 4'ee room Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS. MINCING LANE-----------(ON ON LEPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAS veal off = NE: y= eine Ce — Germa Remeds The Greatest > ~a.m, b hor Go CoMPANY, in Uh th Church Fairs, Bazaars | es the reguiar rate of 10 cents per | enlarge the paper t | TERMS: Vie W SERIES. Serate kead. Room CHARLOTTETOWN, P. + Ae ‘See next page for Coupon. ore ce Om wh E pal LY I; Wthcih» 9S da You have heard of the good man who prayed for RAIN and | hat is what happened with THE EXAMINER'S Portfolios ot | sther words, rannouncement- | N got a FLOOD! Wel the World's Fair, THE MAGIC CIiTy ! “YE KNEW IT WOULD GO, because it is the Best, the Largest, the Greatest, the | | irandest, the Most Beautiful, the Most der tainin Views and Historical Descriptions of the World’s Fair and the Midway id Photographic ’laisance. hey all want it and must have ONLY 0 'E ‘1 the Principal Buildings, reign abd State sui.dings, deueral Views, lgrit Views, rubiteciural Details, he consecutive weekly parts will calling at our office, at the uniform pri Jon’t .aiss the greatest and best of all the j | | | | Vonderful of all! All who have seen it are astonished at its marvellous beauty. ind beyond everything else relating to the Wold’s Fair. iN NATUR\L COLORS are a surprise to everybody. COU PON “THE MAGIC CITY” will be published in sixteen consecutive aumbers, each containing sixteen to twenty splendid Photographs « ind the Midway Plaisance, with accurate Historical Descriptions. — | will constitute a large and beautiful oblong volume, 11x13 inches, illustrated with OYER 300 CRAND YIEW/S, —— INCLU DING ——— Containing over 300 Splen it. Nothing like it! Nvthing equals it! Jon Fail to Get a Sample Number of “The Magic City.” It is away above [ts GRAND PHOTOGRAPHS REQUIRED. weekly parts or of the World’s Fan The complete series Apeat Pi tings, Celebritel -tabaary Glimp e: of the Art ‘allery, Gharagtar 3k3tsh93 in tha Mid sy Curious Foreign Types, And all the Grand and Wonderful Features of the Great Fair, taken at the height of tue Splendor of the World’s Exposition by a Special Corps of Artists. be mailed to any address, or delivered to persous ce of TE CENTS «ACH, and ONE COUPON. World’s Fair histories. THE AMERICAN $8.00 Typewriter. /tuation marks (71 in all) on fall width poper, jast like a $190 instransat. This is a well-in we, practical nvchine, writing crpitals, s null letters, figures, and pune [tis the first o' ts kiad evee oferel at a popaler peice for wiich th? above clu ver oe trathfully med. | itis asta toy, bat . typewriter built for vial crpudle of REAL WoRK | the large muchines so neti oes bec me ia expert hunls, it is stili wt leost 23 repid as the pei and has the advantage of such si nplicity tht it cv be aalerstord vad arstered al nost at \ We cordially com.nend it to helpful parents and tewhers every where. Zlance. Writes capitals, small letters, figures and marks 71 in all. rites just like a $100 machine. No Shift Keys. No Ribbon. Prints from the type direct. Printe on flat surface. Writing always in sight. Vile mot as rapid a E.sy to understind —learned in 5 minutes Weighs ouly foar po .ids-- nost portable. Compact, takes up bat little room. Built solid and simple; can’t get oyt of order. Capital and lower case keyboard ailke- easily :mastered. | KNOWLEDGE | Brings comfort and improvement and itends to personal enjoyment when | the value to health of the pure liquid | laxative principles embraced in the | | met with the approval of the medical li | rightly used. The many, who live bet- | ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest remedy, Syrup of Figs. | Its excellence is due to its presenting | in the form most acceptab's and pleas- | ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly | beneficial properties of a perfect lax- | ative; effectually cleansing the system, | dispelling colds, headachea and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and | profession, because it acts on the Kid- | neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- gists in 75c. bottles, but it is manu- factured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every oackage, also the name, Syrup of Figs, -and being well informed, you will not ccept pny substitute if offered. W, R. Watson, Druggist, Charlotteown | jymwtf E TAand, “You’ll Feel Better” When your appetite is poor, if you take a - ene oe , MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER. about twenty minutes before you. meals. It builds up the system--gives strength to the invalid--relieves ic and is nourishing gorating. Buy a dozen THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PCRTER CO. LTD. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. * Jnlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies —OoR— Other Chemicals = are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’S BreakfastCocoa Lt which is absolutely ' \ pure and soluble. {@ It has morethan three time- a |} the strenyth of Cocoa mixe with Starch, Arrowroot «. S Sugar, and is far more eco- somical, costing less than one cent a cup {t is delicious, nourishing, ana EASILY DIGESTED. ion iieatialamnnidia Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER &CO., Dorchester, Mass MEN av. AGES be cured. We treat all sexual disor- ders of men. Four out of ive who suffer nerv- may f=yousness, mental worry, atiacl:s cf “ the blues,” are but paying the pen- «ty of early excesses. The dread alarm of Impotency, the exhaus- tion cf Spermatorrheea, my be CURED in strict confidence at moderate expense. Send for ovr free sealed book, “ PERFECT MANHMOCD.” ERIE M=DICAL 6O.. Buffalo, N.Y. Store To Let. The smal! Store in the Cameron Block, | next door to Messrs. Reddin Brothers. Apply to i HORACE HASZARD. janll—2w eod DYEING COMPANY. i0ld Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, MONT*EAL. WE ARE PREPARED TO DYE all lass of goods and garments equal to any fouse in Europe. FRENCH CLEANING a specialty. All information regarding shades, prices, te., furnished by CHAS. IVES MORRISON, Agent, Qneen Street. ept25—end | Greenland, | fields open. | servants. Aan dll tnaiedlie “ae memen “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Buripides. ISLAND, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1894, ONLY ONE OF ITS KIND. THE CRYOLITE MINE OF FAR AWAY GREENLAND. A Curious Find of Ninety Years Ago Now Used in the Manufacture cf Alu- minuom—An O¢¢ Camp, Where Only Three Women Are Allowed to Lire. In the month of April of every year a eurions fleet of vessels that at that time is | usually scattered about “ the widest in tervals in the ports along beth coasts of tre Atlantic Ocean puis to sea and heads away for a point in the lee of Cape vesvlation, op the southwest coast of The ships of this fleet have he strongest and best of canvas and. -at ; a ft w il t ehulis not only urscnally sirong everywhere, but is built solid at ¢ bows, covered with an extra layer of p)ank there, and then armored with steel plates. The passage before this fleet is at the best, one of the most erduous in the world, The destination is but a few mies sonth of the artic. circle. ocean river aweeps along the coast, exring masses of field ice hundreds of | miesin extent, and into and across this varrier the fleet must fight ita way to the arvor for which it is bonnd, and when loaded there the fight must again be under- taken in order toreturn. IJtisa fight &tto turn @ landsman’s hair gray even under the most favorabie circumstance; but when the gales arise, and especially gales from tie south, and their black fogs, the posi- tion of the ship as it tosses about between the threatening ice masses is so frightful as to be beyond the power of man to des- eribe. During last summer, ont of a dozen ships that attempted the passage one suc- ceeded, after beating about in the ice for over thirty days; two failed to get in and retnrned with crews almost worn out and ~tarved, while a fourth was never heard of i:ter leaving port. The rest had very suc ve sfal voyages, happening to find the ice The voyage is undertaken by ne fhe in erdert* carry ts civilization | tie product of the cryolite mine in the Arsox fiord. This mins is so odd that it is nniqne. There is no othercryolite minein the world. It is worked in odd fashion, vy the men of an odd mine camp, and it was dis-overed by an old prospector. In 1803 a German prospector named Gie- secke went to Greenland, landing at Cape i‘arew ll, where he lived with the Eskimos, . .d with whom he traveled up the rugged vast in the skin-cov. red comiake until he eached the Arsuk fiord. An Eskimo who i’ed there told him that ¢ few miles up / ¢ Lord was a curious stone, which his peo- le called the ice-that-never-melts. They .se it in dressing pelts, rubbing the stuff on the flesh side, where it acted somewhat s soap might, Giesecke went to the place ani found at the priter's edge a cropping f white, soft roti, that when wit looked xac ly like wet, snow-mixed ice, It \as sa entirely novel substance, so he gathered samples, prospector fashion, and he had ard Inck with them, which is also after the fashion of prospectors. On his way heme in a Danish ship a British cruiser captared the outfit, and Giesecke lost al] e had. However, the chemical world learned that Giesecke Lad found the floride of sodium and aluminum, and it was nam- ed cryo.ite, which means ic+-rtone, No one but chemical students took note of it, however, until-Prof. 7, Thomsen, of Uenmark, made some experiments with it bout 45 yeare afterit was found, and « -monstrated that chemically pure alum c ud be cheaply made from it as well as xa! soda, bicarbonate of soda and some other nseful substances. So a company to work the mine was formed, and, about 1860, men and materials werenent up there to mine the stuff and ship it to Copenha. ven. Thereat Ivigtut came into existence as amine camp, and itistothis day the only white settlement inGreenland. It is. of course, a Dutch settlement, for Green land is ona of the colonies of good old King Christian, First of all they built a house to live in, using timber and boards to build up walls and stuffing the spaces between ceilings with moss. Then most of the houses were shingled oyer all, but that built for the superin‘ endent was covered with smooth Norway pine. There were double aoors and double floors and double windows, and ihe best of coal-burning stoves, while huge coal bins were erected close hy. So, the storehouses to hold other supplies suffici- ent to last three years were erected and filled, and they heave been kept full con- tinnously. The cryolite deposit was walled in and covered over with gray granite. When the covering had been cieared off they found a mass of pure white cryolite about $00 feet rong and 200 feet wide. Investigation -howed that this was the top of a pocket or chimney of the material that plunged down to an anyle of 45 degrees with the uorzon into the mountein that rises there. lt was als: learned that thecrvolite, though pure on top, was mixed with much car vonate of iron in the chimney of ore. For several years the working of the de- posit did not pay, but in 18644 Yankee tirm, contracted to take two thirds of all that the mine could produce, and since then the mine men haye been getting rich while paying the crown a royalty of one- fifth, The most interesting use made of the stuff is in the production of alumi- num, the metal that has made euch rapid strides in the arts recently. Not only aro the homes of the miners odd. It is an odd cummunity. It consists of 130 men and three women in summer, and sixty men and the three women in winter. The women of the camp are interesting. The superintendent only is allowed to have his wife and children and a maid with him. Two children have been born in the superintendent's home in this odd camp. The first, it is interesting tt know, was Dan Smith, the artist, whose father wae tue first swperintendent of the mine. Tie third woman of the camp is Maria, a very fat and very jolly old Eskimo. She and her son Julius have a little stone house by themselves, and both are employed as No other women are allowed there becanse, in the estimation of the authoritis, the presence of numbers would arouse passions and jealousies that would lead 1o crimes difficult to punish in that far off land.—Frank Leslie's Weekly. Propelling the Whale, What is the horse power of « whale ? This is the problem which has been solved by a brace ot Scottish mathematicians. <A whale was stranded on the western coast of Scotland some weeks ago, and the interest- ing calculation was made that power equal to 145 horses would be required to propel the whale through the water at the rate of 12 miles an hour. : The Shoe Heel. fi The German mother saya that should she by accident lose the heel of her shoe one of her children will die before the year is out, while should a French lady meet with such an accident to her high-heeled slippers disappointment in love is sure‘: ollow | & metho | €eOB.c | profitable | younger | afterward by Seneca that the number of | | characters grue to 7,000, inure of time, or that the men gaue it over | Single Copies Two Gents VOL 33.—NO. 186 BEFORE THE CHRISTIAN ERA. Shorthand Practiced by the About 2,000 Years Ago. Cicero is said to have been the inventor of shorthand writing, and the Freedman, Mareve Tuilius Tire, his friend, the fret to and he undoubtedly did use of shorthand writing as early as The first English treatise was by Timothe Bright, entitled, “An Arte of Shorte Swifta and Secrete Writing by Characture, Inuented by Timothe Bright, Doctor of Phisike, Imprinted at London Bomans | by L Windet, the assignee of Tim Bright, Cur priuilegie Regiae Maiestatis. | 1388, Forbidding all others to print the same.’ Dr, Bright in this work says: ‘‘Cicero did account ‘* worthie his labour, and no less ‘» the Roman common weale (Most Gracions Soueraigne) to inuent a », eedis kinde of wryting by character, as Plutarch reporteth in the life of Cato the This invention was increased Whether through for tediousness of learning, nothing re maineth extant of Ciceraz’s inuention at thie day.” The stenographer who rpcalls the efforts | required tc properly master the few char- | acters used to the art to-day will wonder | that of Cicero's system, witn its 7,000 char acters, nothing remaiue at thie day. It was | not until 1642, according to the New York World, that the art became of any practical use, and it was first used in the house of | lords in 1699 in taking testimony in a div- | orce suit. Stenographers were not regul- arly employed in parliament, however, until 1802, In many «* the public schouls of the country stenu.rephy is a part of the train- ing. An evidence of its recent remarkable growth is shown by a circular issued by the bureau of education at Washington. Here it is shown that from July 1, 1889, to June 30, 1890, 57,375 persons received instruction in the art of shorthand in schools and col leges in the United States. five hundred and fifty of these were in New Yerk and Brooklyn, A like circular was issued by the burean in 1884, in which it umber of ie receiving such instruction was 12,470 tis therefore gnite safe to say ‘iat the number for 1893 exceeded 75, 000, But this number does not take int consideration an army probably equally large who receive instruction from some other souree or from professional steno graphers. Out of this vast army, how- physically or mentally qualified to be- come court reporters or even office sman- nenses, MASSES OF LIVELY ATOMS. Diamonds Are Composed of Myriads of Molecules in Continuous Motion. Sir R. Ball, who is fond of revealing the of a diamond is as truly surprising as any- planets, Every body is composed of a multitude of extremely, but not infinitely, sraall molecules, and it might be thonght, says Sir Robert, according to « contributor must be clustered together in a compact mass. But the truth is far more wonder ful. Were the sensibility of our eyes in- creased so as to make them afew million times more powerful, it would be seen that the diamond atoms which form tlie perfect gem when aggregated in sufficient myriads are each in a condition of rapid movement of the most complex descrip- tion. Each molecule would be seen swing- ing toand fro with the utmost violence among the neighboring molecules, and quivering from the shocks it receives from encounters with other molecules, which eceur millions of times in each secord. The hardiess and impenetrability « characteristic would at first sight 64 to refute the supposition that it is 1:,) imore than a cluster of rapidly moving particles ; but the well-known impenetravility of the gem arises from the fact that, when at- tempt is made tc press a steel point into the stone, it fails because the rapidly mov- ing molecules of the stone batter the metal with such extraordinary vehemence that they refuse to allow it to penetrate or even to mark the crystallized surface. When giass is cut with a diamond the edge which seems so hard is really composed of rapidly moving atoms. The glass which is cut is also merely a mase of moving molecules, and what seems to happen ia that as the diamond is pressed forward its several par- ticles, by their superior vigor, drive the little particles of glass out of the way. ~ Staiactite Caves in Utah. Two of the most wonderful stalactite caves of the world are located within the territory of Utah—one five miles south of Toquerville and the other 25 miles west of St. George? Ne.ther is remarkable on ac- count of size, and, according to the St. Louis Republic, the dignifying tide of ‘cavern ” has never been bestowed upon either of the two. They simply come with- in the category of the wonderful because of the immense number of stalactites of various tizes and colors which depend from their roofs. The first, the one near To querville, is known as ‘‘ La Virgin,” and the other by the name 4f the ‘Black War- rlor.” The Virgin was discovered a few years ago by the contractor of an irrigating company, who was engaged in driving a tunnel through a mountain called La Vir- gin Bench for the purpose of tapping the river beyond. Whenthe light was first let into ihis wonderful underground cham- ber the effect is said to have veen startling, the roof and floor glittering with cub:s and points of crystal alum and the roof studded with millions of rain-colored stal- actites. The Black Warrior cave is a counterpart of the Virgin and was discovered by min- ers ata point where their tunnel was 365 feet beneath the surface. Disease Among European Pine Treés. A new diseas* bas attacked the pine for- ests of acertain locality in Alsace, and from Strasbourg comes the information that ihe pine forests of Grendelbrnch, a village situated at the foot of the famous castle of Guirbaden, have been entirely destroyed. No remedy has so far been dis- covered to stay the destructive malady. At first it was thought to cut off the dis- eased branches would stop the ravages, but this has been found insufficient, be- cause it does not show itseif until the branchea are hopelessly diseased. The foreste of Grendelbruch have been visited by a number of prominent scientists from France and Germany, and Professor Schwaz*z, of Ebersfeld, is now examining disear¢3*brenches, but so far without re- sults. Paper Money Statistics. In 1840 Great Britain bad £35, 000,000 of paper money, in 1890 £39,000,000; at the former date France had £9,000, 000), at the latter £115,000,000; Austria had £70, 0v0, - 000 and £128,000,000 respectively. Genuieu mae | Five thousand | was shown that during the year 1882 the | ever, but a very smal! minority are either | thing he has told us about the sun and the | | Soreness in Body or Ff a j Harvey 7 H Lacerville, O. Catarrh, Heart Failure, Pa- ralysis of the Throat “I Thank God and Hood's Sersa- parilla for Perfect Heaith,”’ “ Gentlemen: For the benefit of suffering I Mr. maaity J wish to state a few facts: For several years I have suff { from eatarrh and he failure, getting so bal | tuld not work Could Sooresty Watk j Thad a very bad spell of 71 Wis Oo ily i some ti eis ed closed ana 1 contd mai ewoitew ihe doetors said it WARS Caused bw he ' igave medict v ! } but nots p> 3 co ! wi ' a me wire telling ro do , whe ~ =. At Death's D r : 23 I ed byt * Sarsaparilia. Att tal with Mr. Smith, I ¢ luded ta ived’s Sarsapariila When I had takea » bottles I fell very much better. I have im? iteineg i, Rud aim aOW fociing excel Lih 14 God, ad 7. 30d’s Sarsapariila my restoration to perfecs va Sh suvey Deep, Lac te « f : ts te aut pur path vt Kripo, on . ‘ y aud ofc.er an ri the great nerve SKODA’S LITTLE TARL! cure dyspepsia, indix He says: * I aim perfect!) MEDICAL ADTICN mr SKODA CiSCCVERY C3., LTO., WoLT siti For sale by all druggists. Trade eup nied by W. R. Watson; Charlottetowa , | P. BT. marvelous, has been studying the mysterious action of molecules, and what he has to say | concerning the movements of the molecules Wiss WARY DOULL, STUDIO, STAVWPER BLOCK. Instructions given in the various branch ) es of Drawing and Painting. in the Newcaatle (England) Chronicle, that | in a solid, at all events, the little particles | nov249—2m eo 4NopYNE LINIMENT neler OTHE, Yor INTEDNAL as EXTELNAL usa Im 1810 Originated by an Oid Family Pnysician. Think Of It. f.nr Scary, tan Byenty ration after Generation have used it. Every Traveler should heve a bottle in his satchel, Every Sufferer tix. Meacstiem, N adache, Di Coug. Desanth ~ chi iti Asti inae Chet pe Diarrhora, willl find in this old instphs sehet aad eben ao Should have e Every Mother « nodyne Linimient in the Sore Th Tonsilitis, Cuts, Brutses Cramps api Pains liable to occur %, family without notice. Delays may cost a life. Re teves all Summer Complaints like magic. ce, 35 cts. post-paid; 6 bot tles, $2. xpress L8. Johnson & Boston Mass What’s the time? If you have a Cough it is time yon were taking GRAY’S ,, RED SYRUP ~ SPRUCE GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURE FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS. Gray's Syrup has been on trial for more thar 50 years and the verdict of the people is that it is the best remedy known. 25c. and We. per bottle. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Propnicrenc MONTREAL. OF PURE NORWEGIAN VSR LIVER OIL WIFKH HYPOPHOSPHITES 9 LIME & SODA alatable as cream. Oo Olly taste .ike others. In big bottles 60Oc. and $1.00. When we assert that ° Dodd’s ane AAA Kidney Pills ren. ON aE rE £ cones FE A Le BA SI Hs RRURNNt 6 sre ve ae Rheumatic morte ia Cur Suecess produces [mitations. More “margin play” for the sinall letter: | er pay Pond’s Extract is sold only in bottles, with | which do mest of the work. Cure Backache, Dropsy, Corrections and insertions easily made. Deafness Caused by Cattarrh. Christy [fakes any -vidth of paper or envelope up : Capt. S. F. Belyea, of Greenwich, King’s landscape view on buff’ wrapper. Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- to 84 inches Takes good letter-press copies. Co, N. B., suffered from an aggravated = e z Bg i form of catarrh which had in his case in- ease, Rheumatism and all Of the duced serious deafness, closed the nasal a ee en ee — | other forms of Kidney Knives 4 ‘ ; . . esages so that he could scarcely breath s nwa QUSEHOLp Rime, Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.00, eae cecal him great pain end trouble. that they are permanent. They start from Troubles, we are backed oh PAIN GURE ‘| in registered letter, money order or certified check. We guarantee every machine, and are BREAD— CARVING—PARING He tried many remedies, but all failed | the solid foundation—Pure Blood. » W : ‘ — i 2 4s her inf. ati to thi achine and also the “ Yost.” ’ until he got Hawker’s Cattarrh Cure, three nomitjmem by the testimony of ail BOTH INTERNAL AND EX) glad to answer all inquiries for further information as is mé . 35 cont quokagee of whieh aiiicted «cure, |. Ahead of all ethere—Hankes's Tole h Ath ‘ t FOR SALE BY “I can honestly say” says capt. Belyer | and Wild Cherry Balsam, the favorite | who have used them. “that lam practically well, and I take | Cough cure. TH + CURE TO STAY CURED, IRA CORNWALL, MANUFACTURED QNLY BY & | ” ; R. B. Worton & Co., great pleasure in recommending Hawker’ _ ie aaa i | a THE HAWKER MEDICINE QO”. b | General Agent forMaritime Provinces. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. Catarrh Cure to those who may be suffer- : USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the great gocentn Dr. L_ A. Smith & Con Teme % Re ST JOHN, N.B. i dee20 aug 16 ing from this very troublesome disease.” ° biood and Nerve Ressedy. D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlot etown ‘Ss os 7 . FS