CALENDAR POR JANTARY, 1894 ae Ma Si. p. m. b 4 m,p.m, S W ‘ h 58.9 am. N } NW ' io ' et walk | f after: i + 49 4 is o HI wn ' i9 72 —_ = ; 28 | TERMS: Four Dollars a Year i ai i e al | ‘9; 22) 9 bal. : = — 2 is 23 LO 36 | . —— . a oe es ‘o| 2%) Tl tay. tn sw a v1 ™ x “ “ ‘ “ 2/) 0+) NEW SERIA cw] 29] 02, | _ COR ‘ i7 30 0 4 ww. ———— a eT a 3] ] 31 | ' 3s 2 8} 3 ' « is See mest page for Coupon. \ i 35} 3 43] +t | 4 5i | i ‘ 7 | ae } " - . Ca , $2 0) 7 39] st Sie — tice 2) al] 8 4] a ie Weegee ks p OF ** Oe . : 4] 42; 9 45 uy Bl ah A) | A s 40 43) 10 50} B % Vn ;, AIL M > } 39) 44 | li 33] 4 \p hey ‘ee 9 ee Th bill ae : 33 | 15) aft ‘| 1 4) OH ANI } - A P| TS Mii i Ly wi i 6a! piel ay ¥4 4 AY i | is | 1 18 4 : an oe « > vy | | & z - . a} 62a} $ wi 82] 54 4 3! t 5 4 ay : re | 7 5 | Hi DML EXAMINER Datiy NEwsParer or P. BE. Ishanp, i ev sfierneeon, from the office oj Ewa) ex Pcstisnine Company, in the if Building, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION UN ADVANCE) One Vea tie Six Mores . 20 Tugesk MewTis 1. Oxe Monwrn 0.35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States ANVERTISING RATES 1G VeTtisements which are ordered for o or two weeks the charge is B®} cents per inch for the first insertion, and 2 eenta for each continuation. Rate cards are shed on application at the office. Specia “atra prices at a reduced rate are quotea for advertisements four inches in size oF arvyer, whieh a: ») run for three months or _ special notices inserted unless paid for a * of lv cents per line, and under no i ocal column. i = iiscounts made on all advertise- [ ments connected with Church Pairs, Bazaars, Picuics, ete. © notices will be inserted with the asme unless the regular rate of lu cents per * is pela That Tux ExXaMtner ts considered by ous Mer and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. E. Istand, and conse- quently tue most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, is abundaniiy proved by the fact that in order » accommodate our advertisers we | ha been compelled to enlarge the paper to Tree D ¥ EXa™MIner is for sale by the fol- lowing agent t. H. Mason, Post O *ce, Charlottetown } Mcintyre Malpeque Road, . C. Pa Lower Spring Park Road, W. M. Codfin rafton Street, ~ Water anid Prince St. i App Prince Street, o t J ueen street, G urter & Co., ¢ 1een Stre t. ” S. Gray, News Siall, P. E. 1. Rullway, and Ou the trains M. = T. +. Walsh, Eelectic Bookstore, Sum- merside Harry McFarlane, Souris. Hon. D. Gordon, eorgetown. Db. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. t}. M. Clarke, Alberton ‘ aa A. Gillis, Orwell Cove eS Se The Weekly Examiner the ! every Friday morning from pubiisners’ office. in a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and ful! of the latest news. } The subscription for Tue Weexty Exam. INER, f paid to any part offCanada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advert ¢ raies on the same scale as given Tux DatLy EXAMINER. DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Surgeon. G . Medical Department of the | he City of New York, late i ber the Resident Staff of Belle- vue Hospital and the New York Lyiag-in Hospital, New York City. North Side Queen Square OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Residence—Near Corner of King and Queen “treeta, Charlottetown. ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES. Queen eaeroom Street, Cherlottetow? Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX Rheumatic andN smu Cur Of the Age nee HOUSEHG: wn PAI N CURE Meo, |” |» QBOTH INTERNAL AND E20 ERNALDD | 7% acs yeline bh VUFACTURED ONLY By § ME HA WKER MEDICINE COV, n,. 2) JOHN.N. B. ack we sv » Oise. es will such paid notices appear | {t is made up of matter | which has appeared in the Daily editions, and MERCHANT | THE DAILY EXAMINER. | | | | CET IT NOW! i You have heard of the good man who prayed for RAIN and got a FLOOD! _ Wel |that is what happened with THE EXAMINER'S Portfolios of the World's Fair, in ther words, THE MAGIC CITY! — WE KNEW IT WOULD GO, because it is the Best, the Largest, the Greatest, the | | Grandest, the Most Beautiful, the Most “onderful of all! Containing over 300 splen- | rv. did Photographic Views and Historical Descriptions of the World’s Fair and the Midway i . i . : . . . : . * : ” , Plaisance. «hey all want it and must have it. Nothing like it! Nothing equals it! Don't Fail to Get a Sample Number of “The Magic City.” All who have seen it are astonished at its marvellous beauty. It is away above | Its GRAND PHOTOGRAPHS | j jand beyond everything else relating to the World’s Fair. IN NATURAL COLORS are a surprise to everybody. ONLY ONE COUPON REQUIRED. ’ ; “THE MAGIC CITY” will be published in sixteen ‘consecutive weekly parts on numbers, each containing sixteen to twenty splendid Photographs of the World’s Fai }and the Midway Piaisance, with accurate Historical Descriptions. The complete series | will constitute a large and beautiful oblong volume, 11x13 inches, illustrated with OYER 300 GRAND VIEWS, _ — INCLUDING j AJ! the Principal Buildings, Foreign and State Buildings, ‘General Views, ‘interior Views, Architectural Details, reat Pei tings, | Celebrated “tatuary | Glimpe of the Art Gallery, | Character Sketches in the Midway, Curious Foreign Types, Prose d x | height of | And all the Grand and Wonderful Features of the Great Fair. taken at the | the Splendor of the World’s Exposition by a Special Corps of Artists. The consecutive weekly parts will be mailed to any address, or delivered to persons | calling at our office, at the uniform price of TE CENTS «ACH, and ONE COUPON. | Don’t miss the greatest and best of all the World’s Fair histories cm THE AMERICAN $8.00 Type.zuriter. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, s aill letters, figures, and pune | tuation marks (71 in all) on full width puper, jast like a 310) instrament. It is the first ot | \its kind ever offered at a pupular price for waich the above clain caa be truthfully made | [t is not a toy, but a typewriter built for and cepudle of REAL work. Woaile not as rapid as) the large machines sometiines become ia expert han ls, it is still at least as rapid as the pen, | , and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and ‘nastered almost at a) 'glance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. | Eisy to understand —learned in 5 minutes. | Weighs only four pouuds—-.nost portable. | Compact, takes ap bat little room. | Writes capitals, small letters, figures and marks —7! in all. “ rites just like a $100 machine. No Shift Keys. No Ribbon. Prints from } Built solid and simple; can’t get out of | the type direct. order. | f " Sais al cevboar ilke-- | | Prints on flat surface. Capital and lower case keyboard ailke-- | Writing always in sight. easily mastered. Corrections and insertions easily made. More “inirgin play” for the small letters which do most of the work. | Takes any width of paper or envelope up \ Takes good letter-press copies. 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 certifiel check. Ye giiriatee every on whine, and are ‘glad to answer all inquiries for further information as tu this muchine and als» the “ Yost. | IRA CORNWALL, General Agent for Maritime Provinces. swadifiipmae vext door to Messrs. | | D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlot etowa rAT KYOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than sthers and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the nged?of physical being, will attest the valde to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the 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, headaches and fever and permanently cu ing constipation met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels withort weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectiouable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug. gists in 75c. bottles, but it is manu ‘actured by the California Fig Syrvy ». only, whose name is printed on every ckage, also the name, Syrup of Figs sod being well informed, you will nc scont sny substitute if offered. W. R. Watzon, Drugzgist, P. E Island. Charlotteown jymwif Ah A A “A, “er, a . . wwe ewe “You'll Feel Better” ‘ Everybody does, after taking ag few bottles of ‘ MALTO PEPTONIZED: PORTER. | It builds up the run-down sys-¢ tem,—is strengthening and appe- ‘izing. 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BAKER & C0.’ ~ \BreaktastCacue w: 58 i ‘ i | which is absolutely \ pure and solubie, P79 4°") Ithas more than three time ) )) the strength of Cocoa mixe with Starch, Arruwroot « mtr Sugar, and is far *:.ore eco nomical, costing less than one eet a cu, Ie is delicious, nourishing, anc EAsIL. DIGESTED. oe sei Sold by Grocers everywher». _W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mas Store To Let. The ~mal] Store in the Cameron Block, Reddin Brothers. Apply to HORACE HASZARD. 2w eod janll DYEING COMPANY. Gold Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, MONT*EAL. WE ARE PREPARED TO DYE all class of goods and garments equal to any House in Europe. FRENCH CLEANING a specialty. All information regarding shades, prices, | e ¢., furnished by CHAS. IVES MORRISON, Agent, Queen Street. -ept25—eod Christy Bnives BREAD—CARVING—PARING. FOR SALE BY R. B. Norton & Co., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. aug 16, ~ \ Other Chemicals “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Euripides eg CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E. ISLAND, WEDESNDAY, JANUARY 24, SOUTH SEA TRADERS. the Genuine Article Versus the Romantic Creation of the Novelist. We should expect the South seas to ex- ercise a sobering and subtly refining in- fluence on the men—seldom very gentle— who find their way thither. The region | exercises a charm, insomuch that Euro- penas who settie there seldom leave it, but as for the refining influence—pray excuse | us. Most white men become degenerate. |i i4 80 much more easy to sin, to get drunk, |} nm to loll round, with a native woman to do the little work needful, and with an at- mosphere that kills all energy. The author of Kidnapped” is an exception, and the ulobe trotter only touches at a few of the principal points and does not stay long cnough to succumb to the insidious and enervating influence of the climate. It is a most melancholy fact that the islands attract in an overwhelming pro- portion some of the most desperate ruffians that ever trod timber. Mr. Stevenson has glorified thetrader. Take that individual apart from the glamour cast over him by a great novelist’s art and you will find him an exceedingly unlovely creature, though not always unlovable periaps, when fin contact with men of bis own color. We exclude the man who repre- sents a reputable Muropean house, because, us a rule, he is fixed, and it is his policy to ' keep on friendly terms with the natives. The ordinary beachcomber may also be set apart. He is too lazy, as a rule, to be very bad, and his only self imposed task is gen- erally to advise the chiefs, for which servy- ; oe | ices, and for acting as interpreter between It has given satisfaction to millions and | them and the natives, his usual rensuner- ation takes the form of ‘‘chain lightning.” The man we have more particularly in mind is the individual who, in his own or somebody else’s schooner, carries ‘‘no- tions’’ up and down among the islands, to be bartered for copra, or anything else that is marketable and that wil! fetch in Syd- ney 20 times as much as was originally given for it. The average trader is a man ef absolutely no bowels. He has no eye for natuve’s marvels. The poetry of the southern clime hever yet slid ipto his soul. Tis class is made up largely ofthe riffraff | of all Australia, and of some honest men ' on whom the itch for wandering has carried board a trader, or who have drifted | thither from Sydney after experiencing | that sickness of heart that comes from | hope deferred and from the final stoppage | i you cold. of the parental supplies. His horizon is limited to ‘‘bilking’’ the savage, and he | makes enough in a few years to retire toa handsome villa in the suburbs of Sydney —uniess he shor!ld happen to get killed be fore attaining that consummaticn of re spectability. His tricks would fill a book. His vocabulary of cuss words would make On the whole, it is not to be wondered at that, now and again, the sav- age worm should turn round, and not knowing any better slay him.—Pall Mall | Gazette, | To Tell Pare Silk or Wool. A simple but effective practice is in | vogue in Germany for determining, with- ' out the aid of a chemist, whether a fabric | ' vegetable of silk or wool is free from admixture of ' cotton fibers, of flax, china grass or other A piece of the {| - constituents, stull to be examined, say about 3 inches | square, is, after careful cleaning, planged into strong sulphuric acid, water being afterward added, and the whole boiled. In | about five minutes the fluid is poured into n clean vessel an:t made strongly alkaline by saturation with caustic soda, then add- ing a few drops of dissolved orchil, and the mixture is warmed for several min- utes up to a temperature of 180 degrees. Now. if only | per cent of vegetable | fibers exists in the fabric, the reddish vio- | let color of the orchil is precipitated, or, ff this takes place only after heating for | | more |; amounts to less than 1 per cent. | solutely necessary, than five minutes, the quantity It is ab- however, that starch | should be removed carefully from the stuff | to be examined, as the presence of that | substance vitiates the result. In testing goods alleged to be silk the result is at- tained more easily by plunging the sample into hydrochloric acid, the fiber of silk be ing very soluble in such acid, and if the material contains wool or cotton. it re mains behind.—New York Sun, Bleetric Mattery In His Mouth, Not long agoa Pittsburger had one of | his back teeth filled with amalyym—that | composition filling that is so la: | ployed on account of the facility sely em- with } which it can be used. While in New York | the other day the tooth above the one that bad been repaired began to ache terribly, so that the gentleman was forced to goto | To economize time | a dentist in that city. the dentist filled this with amaigam also, and the Pittsburger started for his hotel. On his way he noticed that every time his | | teeth closed’ he received a sort of an elec tric shock. This increased in intensity until, when he arrived atthe hotel, the sensation became absolutely painful. He hurried back to the office of the dentist. ' The doctor had # good laugh when he fo nd that when the metal used in his amalgam and that used by the Pittsburg dentist came together they formed a mag- netic current, having a battery in his head, so another kind of filling was substituted.—Pitts- ourg Dispatch. Testing Wer Love. “Maria.”’ said the stalwart young man | as he gazed ardently at the blushing little fairy of a gir! by his side,‘‘do you really and truly love me?’’ ‘*Far more than life, dear George,”’ was | | the earnest reply. “T would even go | through fire and water for you if it were | necessary.’ , plied the noble young man in fond and , ‘‘Make no rash promise in regard to water, Maria, unless you can swim,”’ re- loving tones. ‘‘But in regard to fire, if you are perfectly willing to promise me that even on cold winter mornings you will not hesitate to get up early and wrestle with it, I will summon up courage to ask you to become my wife.’’—London Tit- Bits. Sir Andrew Clark and Parnell. it is not generall$ known that Sir An- | drew Clark numbered among his patients | Mr. Parnell, who consulted him toward the end of 1887 for a chest affection. Mr. Parnell often stated that he bad received much benefit from a direction of Sir An drew’s to inhale an essence of pine. Even when consulting a physician Mr. Parnell’s strange passion for secrecy displayed itself. On being asked whether Sir Andrew knew who his patient was, Mr. Parnell smiled and parried the question by the reply, “I | do not think he did—at least at first.’’— London Star. Splendid Idea. Joe Kerr—I was in bopes you would take that joke. Editer—I never buy a joke unless I can see the point to it. Joe Kerr—What’s the matter with buy- ing it and starting a guessing contest!-— New York Herald For Over Fifty Years. Ax Orp Axp Wett Triep Remepy.— Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup _ha+ beed use for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snecess, It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. | Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is , | incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. —m. w. f. wkly—1 y USE SK 0PA’S DISCOVERY, the gress blood and Nerve Remedy. The patient objected to | Single Copies Two Centa A PAIR OF BAD MEN. si WireTE OF TEXAS AND SAM SAUN DERS OF NEW MEXICO, The Former'’s Daring Challenge toa Band of Rustlers—‘‘Jim White Does the Rest of the Killing Today''—How: Sam Saan- ders Opened a Prayer Meeting. [ think that Sherif? Jim White of Fl aso, Tex., was the best type of the gen- ; wine had man I ever knew. He was a gen | ‘iceman, cultured and refined, good con- versutionist and # pleasant companion. imet hin first im 1882, when he was an | luspector of customs at E! Paso under Col | lector Abner Tibbetts, and to jook at him | no cue would have supposed that beneath | thet calm exterior beat as brave a heart | as ever (hrobbed, that fear was unknown ‘o him and that he had frequently faced death against fearful odds, Once, when John Kinney’s gang of cat- tle thieves or rustlers rode into El Paso aud in pure wantonness of erime began | shooting and killing on the principal street of the town, some one ran te summon White, who was then acting as town mar- shal. There was a delay in finding him, | and in the meantime the business men Sarricaded their doors and closed their shutters, One Xantippe of a woman, Hanneh Burns by name, alone remained in the | open street, where she stood cursing the | rustlers, using s vocabulary which mixed Celtic, Castifinn and Aztec expletives with such raré skill that the rustlers re frained frou shooting her out of sheer ad- | niration for her ability as a vituperative artist. ‘Three dead and wounded citizens lay in the street—the rustlers had found shelter behind the cottonwood trees which stood along the sidewalks. Here and there some venturesome householder or mer | chant was endeavoring to pick the acoun drels off with his rifle from behind closed | shuttcrs, but the town was practically in , possession of the desperadoes, having only lhe opposition of Mrs. Buras, who with | dishevelied hair raved up and down the | | dusty street, cursing the air into blue va- | por, 2s she poured out her wrath and ex | vermtion upon the scoundrels, | Then Jim White appeared. Alone with a 45 caliber six shooter in each hand, he sprang into the middle of the street shout | ing, ‘Jim White does the rest of the kill ing today!’ This was a boast, but be made it good. His first shot shattered the head of a man who exposed it in an | attempt to bring White down with a rifle With the other hand he almost simultan eously sent a bullet into the shoulder of xnother rustler. The remaining half dozen icsperadoes made a dash from their bid tug? places down the street, in an effort to rexnch the place where their horses were tial, White never moved from his posi tion in the center of the street, and he sent | bullets after the fugitives as‘long as they | were in range. Four out of five of his missives found their mark, and the rus- ( «pain, An entirely different and much more tumerous type of the western bad man | could be found in Sam Saunders. I first tnet him in Deming, N. M. <A desperadc of the name ef Doc’? Cane had just kill | ed an inoffensive man, a railroad conduct ' or, named Richard Tabler, and Saunders, | who waethen in the government employ | as an juspector of customs and engaged in | riding the Mexican Loundary line west ot the Thres Hermanna monntains south of Deming, was asked by the citizens te no , tify Cane that he must leave town. Saun ders xecepted the task without any hesi tation, and walking up to Cane said to him: ‘Get out of here now. I'll blowa | tole through you if you are in sight more han three minutes.’’ Cane looked inte he small black eyes of the speaker and (hen, withont a word, started west along the track of the Southern Pacific railroad ite was heard of next ata little ranch close town to the Mexican line, where the horse thieves and cattle smugglers found safe harbor, Finally a considerable number of stolen and smuggled horses were reported to have been gathered at the ranch. Saun ders beard of it and rode off alone to in vestigate. After an absence of five days he returned, bringing with him a dozen | borses which he had ‘“‘stolen’’ out of the | smugglers’ corral at night. The event so enraged the people at the little camp where | & oceurred that they sent word that ‘Saunders would be made to say his pray ers if he ever rode into that camp again.’ When this reached Saunders’ ears, he ; promptly saddled up and put out for the | boundary line, ‘There's no necessity for your running | Into danger there now,’ said the deputy collector. “Yea, there fs,” was Saunders’ reply ‘If there’s any camp along that line which , | cannot ride into I may as well throw up my commissica,”’ He reached the camp about dusk one day, but Cane had got | wind of his coming, and the first thing Mr. | Saanders knew he heard the command, ‘Ilands up!’’ and there in the sage brush, net 10 paces off, steod his old enemy, Doc’ Cane, with his bright eyes gleam | ing behind ‘a big 45.” “You've got me. I surrender,” said Sunnders as he dropped off his horse with tis hands above his head. ing to give you a lesson," said Cane ‘Shooting’s too good for the likes of you, and the boys have decided to make an ex- | your blank tribe of customs officers for awhile—come here, you long legged scoun rel”? Saunders began to whine and to beg. ile held hia hands up and advanced trem | olingly, apparently to surrender. All | this time his wits had been at work, how j ever, and he saw that Cano was alone | Tremblingly he aproached his captor. whining and almost crying for mercy When he got close to Cane, that worthy, who was thrown considerably off ‘is guard by the apparent ease of the capture, put out bis left band to take Saunders’ gun from bis belt. Like a flash one of Saun- ders long legs shot upward, kicking the pistol arm of Cane square upon the ‘crazy hone,”’ the heavy 45 was discharged as it flew out of the desperado’s hand, but the miilet went wide of its mark, and in one tine aod half a motion Saunders drew his own gun and felled Cane to the earth with it. “It’s a prayer meeting you want, eh? Well, your friends can pray for you after | that blow, I guess.’ Kefore riding off Saunders fired half a | dozen shots from his revolver into the air as a sort of notification to the little camp, | not 500 yards distant, that “something | wis up.”? Cane was not killed; bis friends found him 10 minutes after Saunders’ de parture and carried him intocamp. The | breaking up of that smugglers’ ranth was uot accomplished by regular legal meth- | ods, but as the deputy collector said tc me | “the result was quite satisfactory, ‘Doc’ ; Cane’s crowd haven’t done any smug- | gling since."—Exchange. ___ REAL 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. i } tlers who escaped never returned to FE] Paso | ' } } ' } “Now, blank your blank eyes, Iam go- | | ample of you that won't be forgotten by 4 as ee Mrs. Sarah Muir Of Minneapolis For Women Hood’s Sarsaperilia is Especially Adapted to Cure Difficulties Peculiar to the Sex The restoring and invigorating properties of Hood's Sarsaparilla, combined with its power to vitalize and enrich the blood, render it pecu- jarly aiapted for all troubles peculiar to women —that tired feeling, or debility causert by change of season, climate or life. Hood's Sarsaparilla has accomplished very gratifying results in many cases. ead the following: * I was for a long time a sufferer from Female Weakness and tried many remedies and physicians, to no good pupose. One day I read one of the Hood's Sarsaparilia books, and thought I would try a bottle of the medicine. It made so great a dif ference in my condition that I took three bottles saore and found myself perfectly well. | have also given Hood’s Sarsaparilla to the children, and find that it keeps them in good health. I am willing that this shall be used for the benefit of others.” Mrs. Sanau MUTR, 308 16th ay., So. Minneapolis, Minn. HOOD’S PILLS cure all Liver ills, Biliows- Bess, Jaundice, Indigestion, Sick Meedaci< PERPECTLY WELLE, eohn FH. Varn x. I M Was all run down, pocr fn tf. { not sleep, tris food distressed him, an, felt tired all the time. He 1 . ee Skoda’s Discos >: the great nerve and tissue builder, oi SKODA’S LITTLE TABLETS, that cure dyspepsia, indigestion aud head: He says: “Tam perfectly w MEDICAL ADVICE 1 SKODA DISCOVERY C2., LTD., WOLFVILLE, For sale by all draggista. Trade sup plied by W. R. Watso: * a4. Charlottetown WiSS WA FY DOULL, STUDIO, STAMPER BLOCK. Instructions given in the various bran es of Drawing and Painting. " 90 n, ead LINIMERT er eae ur” ee . ee ve Originated by an Oid Family Prysician.” Think Of It. Por Stray tae Rigner ~ation alter Generation have used and blessed tt, Every Traveler should have a@ bottle in his satchel. Ever ufferer Fre= Nervous J _Suferer sintica’ Nearaits chitis, Asthina, Cholera-Morbus, Diarrhoe: Soreness in Body or Limbs, Seif Selatp or wiil find in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure Should have Johnson's Every Mother Anodyne Liniment in the tors Th Tonsil —y Bruises, Cram ari Pains liable. - ‘tomer we without notice, Delays may cost a life. Bummer ; 6 bot. Baby Wants It. Martin’s Cardinal Food FOR INFANTS AND INVALIDS. The most palatable food prepared, and is unequalled by any other preparation ofits kind. ‘The best food and the best value, put up in one pound Tins, price 25 cts. per Tin. Sold Retail by all Drug cers and Wholesale by (sand Gro- KERRY WATSON & CO. Propnirrors MONTREAL. Clergyiman, students and overtaxed busi- | ness men will finda wonderful recuper- ative agent in Puttuers Emulsion, which contains Phosphorous (brain food) in the most assimilable form. | (OUR DRUCCIST FOR LAY NORWEGIAN LIVER OIL WITH HYPOPH oT") = Palatable as Cream. ° taste .ike others. 50c. and 81.00. oily In big bottlee When we assert that Kidney Pills 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, Bya. 4 go ceals gists or mail on receipt of price, . L. A. Smith & Co., T Yo ee ee mm mwemenee 0 ates ee ee