CALENDAR FOR MARCH, 1896, IHL DAILY EXAMINER WRADING ry : ’ st ay or P. E. I1Stan sted every a , m the office o EXAMINER PuBLisHING COMPANY he xion House I g, Queen Street RATES s si PTION YA VANCE y : Si = VM 4 Zi I xs VMoNnTHs 1 ON MONTH 1S Re post paid to y part of Canada or the ' 1 ed States ADVERTISING RATES uwivertiserments which are ordered fr wo : ks the charge is & r first insertion, and 2 s fo ! Rate cards are : i ' ‘ at t office. Specia nite st @ reduced rate are quotec . ~ ] aire or ‘ ‘ sche ¢ N ss paid s d und es WwW such paid notices appea ~ s ma ‘ ad vertise- mer is ce th Ct ch Fairs, Bazaars } “ ‘ sw ~ inserted with t? as e regular rate 10 cents per : T Ex . : « 1 i by jou M ‘ and M 4 bx e lead : . i } I a and ns qa ~ al ‘ ertising ¢ tarenug s oO mak ‘ i € its pul tu I vt that ’ n late ‘ ser we ua g paper to its pres s Ta ) ¥ EXAMINer is for sale by the fol- jowing agents R. H. Mason, Post 0 fee, Charlottetown J. Meintyre Malpeque Road, ' «. Paul, Lower S iz Park Road, W. M. Coin r i Street, 4. Grey \ i Prince St. I Lamy ?’ Pazaar Store, Q Str i) i Str t S. Gray. News Stall, P. E. 1. Railway : ind @n the t-ains | mM. & T \ E jookstore, Sum- mMeresid Ha MeFar e, Souris. Dp. G in eorge low kh. I Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke. Alberton \ a NE sta Bridg =x Sees es Se 7 \ , . . » Lol , r The Weekly Examiner * # isened every Friday morning from the | publishers’ office. [t is made up of matter | whic ss appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting Sud tu Of tie atest news The subscription for Tue WEEKLY EXAM. NER, post paid to any part of Canada or the United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given beove for Tur Dar_Ly EXAMINER. DOCTOR DORSEY, Surgeon. Physician and Graduate of the Medical Department of the i’niversity of the City of New York, late Member of the Kesident Staff of Belle- vue Hospital and the New York Lying-in Hospital, New York City. North Side OFFICE Queen Square OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Re<idence—Near Corner of King and Queen | | Streeta parlottetown ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT | AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES Faleeroom: Queen Street, Cbh*-'attetown Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRKESE NTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX ee Re ee le o = g Aemedy The Greatest Rheumatic and Neuralgia Cure | Oftheage || gp tAee END Reveen || jw" PAIN GURE ((BOTH INTERNAL AND Ext ERMA PRICE SO CENTS: x | MANUFACTURED ONLY BY | THE HAWKER MELICINE COV LD; | » | Writes capitals, small LOBSTER PACKERS’ SUPPLIES, !phone TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born NEW SERIES The Magic City Have You seen*Part 6? Cut out Coupon on Page 3. THE AMERICAN $8.00 Typewriter. This isa well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and punc- tuation marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just like a $100 instrument. its kind ever offered at a popular pricesfor*whielfth@tabove claim can be truthfully made. [t is 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 and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastered Blance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers evérywhere. almost at a letters, figures and marks—71 in all. Writes just like « $100 machine. Weighs only four pounds—most portable. Compact, takes up but little room. No Shift Keys. No Ribbon. Prints from | Built solid and simple; can’t get out of the type direct. order. Prints on flat surface. Capital and lower case keyboard ailke- Writing always in sight. Corrections and insertions easily made. Takes any width of paper or envelope up to 84 inches. easily mastered. which do mest of the work. Takes good letter-press copies. 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 D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlottetown. Provinces. dec20 Agent forMaritime INSURANGE---FIRE, MARINE, LIFE, === For . eee First-class The undersigned represents the following first-class British Companies : Footwear, IRE. Fauttiess Fit and Finest Finish, ina Foremost Fashions, Fairest Figures, Find Granby Rubbers and Overshoes, North British and Mercantile’ Insurance Company Union Assurance Society (1714) Manchester Fire Assurance Company. MARINE. British and Foreign Marine Insurance Company. Reliance Marine Insurance Company LIFE. London and Lancashire Life Assurance Compan; at — Fire and Marine Policies all written here. - Sterling Certificates, payable in any part of the world, issued on shipments ALSO—The Nova Scotia Marine Insurance Company and the Dominion Burglary Guarantee Company of Canada. ba” OF FICE—Stamper’s Block, Villages THEY WEAR LIKE IRON Agencies in all Tewns and | FRED. W. HYNDMAN. Charlottetown. ' ALL DEALERS SELL THEM. febl3—1 vr law (eat) jan20—t ts & wy Company. Meeting of the tteeendllmeneilibiiliiaiccteiis sicaihianinien ) “Telephone Company of Prince Elward | Island,” for the election of Directors and 500 bys Bost Coke Tin. jaeenesiceiion sroaeninge, snl: harties 4,000 Ibs L. & F. Ingot Tin, be held on 25 bars Copper. 200 bundles Galvanized Iron, 200 ” Black Sheet Tron, 3000 Ibs Cotton Heading Twine, 2.000 Ibs Manilla Marline, 4,000 Ibs Pig Lead. WRITE FOR PRICE a a a General The Annual deal with and determine, will evening, at the office of the President, King Street. H. J. CUNDALL, President. mehl Steam Navigat'on Company. Inland The Annual General Meeting of the | Sharelolders of the Inland Steam Naviga- tion Company will be held in the Room in Queen’s Building, King Street (now ocen- vied by the Harbor Light), on SATUR- R@ GER & JAY, the 17th inst., at 3 o’clock, p. m. DODD & >| L. C. OWeN, Secretary. [i Charlottetown, January 30, 1894—tu thu sat Ch’town, March 1, 1894—eed tl dte | It is the first of as the pen, | Easy to understand—learned in 5 minutes. | More “margin play” for the small letters! WEDNESDAY, the l4th day of March, | 1894, at the hour of eight. o’clock in the | \ : | All information regarding shades, prices, | awrrws * r ~ & TAT TY TW KNOWLEDG! Brings comfort and imnrovement and ends fo personal enjoyment when rightly used. Lhe many, who live bet- ter thay ot hers and enjoy life more, with loss @Npenditure, by more promptly \ibteg the world’s best products to } 1 being, will attest the yalue to nealth of the pure jiqu’d latat#¥o principles embracsd in the | reme@y, Eyrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting 5 i : ' in the form most acceptab’s and pleas- autte the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of @ perfect lax- ative 3 effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers aud permanentiy curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and 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 very bjectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug. ists in Y5c. bottles, but it is manu tuted by the California Fig Syrvy only, whose name is printed on every ‘cage, also the n ; wd bamg well inforn you will no’ ‘evt *y substitute if offered. WR. Watson, Druggist, ” © Tsland. ame, Syrvp of Figs, ned ivmwtf } “You'll Feel Better ” When your appetite is poor, if you take a dose of MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER. about twenty minutes hefore you. mecais. ee lt builds up the system--gives strength to the invalid--relieves ihe dyspeptic and is nourishing and invigorating. Buy a dozen and try it. TRE BALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LTD. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. ° Unlike the Dutch Process No AlKalies —OR— Other Chemicals , are used in the ey preparation of Y. BAKER & CO’S 4 BreakfastCocoa i ; , RE to ji ' (Vb) which is absolutely pga ret pere and soluble. = i) \*}) Ithas morethan three times | t % | |) thestrength of Cocoa mixes Wj with Starch, Arrowroot t? Sugar, and is far wore eco- nomical, costing less than one cent a cup It is delicious, nourishing, anc EASILY DIGESTED, ieattintitlieantinipeti Sold by Grocers everywhera. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass Information Wanted JAMES WALLACP, a carpenter and seaman, who came to Bos } ton about 20 years ago. Address GEO. WALLACE, South Abington Station, Mass. jan29—dy & wy PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained-—how re- stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- sioicgy will not tell you: the doctors can’t or won'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 maa who would regain sexual vi <= "7 g08 lost through folly, Terns"? or develop members weak by nature or wasted by disease, should | write for our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- | hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), | | __ ERIE MEDICAL C0., Buffalo, N.Y. | DYEING COMPANY. ‘Gold Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, | MONTREAL. | class of goods and garments equal to any | House in Europe. FRENCH CLEANING a specialty. | ete., furnished by CHAS. IVES MORRISON, Agent, Queen Street. sept 25—eod Christy Knives BREAD—CARVING—PARING, FOR SALE BY CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. fag 16, Charlottcor a | WE ARE PREPARED TO DYE all | R. B. Norton & Co., Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”-—Euripides. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1894. OUR PUBLIC MEETINGS. OR. BOURINOT, CM.G., TELLS HOW THEY SHOULD BE CONDUCTED. Ogland Our Example in Canada—Growtlh of Representative Institutions—Various Interesting and Parliamentary Vrocedure Explained. “The conduct of Public Meetings was the title of a recent lecture by Dr J. G. Bourinot, C.M.G., a subject of ne little interest in a country like this where every man is called upon at some time or other to act in a public capacity quently bound to be con versant wore or less with the mental principles and rules that should overn public assemblies of all | He commenced by saying that period of the world’s history is noted for one Characteristic above all others—its inordinate of talk. It was once tersely said that “the wise part of Par liament were those who use the greatest silence,” but those were words of ove three centuries ago. This is the milen niam of lawyers, politicians and talkers One could wish in these days for a re | vivalof the Pythagorean system, and the establishment of a party of silence jut. as itis, acountry like the Doimwin ion, with its frequent public meetings free government, its admirable municipal system, its many Legislative Assemblies, its ecclesiastical synods | scientific and literary gatherings, must be swayed more or less by talk, or, in other words, debate The ancestors of the English race who emerged from the forests and marsh- lands of Germany and Denmark had al ways the right of discussing in public assemblies the questions of the day. In these days, however, instead of a clash spears, asin the old Teutonic mectings of which Tacitus wrote, we |} havea constant clashing of tongues These old public meetings were directed xv dukes or heretogas, who were called ealiormen. from whom have gome down to these prosaic times the weil-known an Loften abused designation of alder man. In the filtration of centuries the has undergone a considerable modification, but nevertheless he was quite sare the modern inheritors of the name can certainly make us more com fortable than could the ealdormen of other days, when there were water | Works, sidewalks, street paving, or suburban improvements to represent an overweening civic ambition, and those necessities of our civic life which help | t» make municipal taxation so light and | bearable. | bud is Cons Tuna Litas 43 tills s0ve ing of nae Common Law of Parliament, Dr. Bourinot then went on to say that all meetings, from the simple primar} ward, village, town and city assembly, to the complicated session of Parliament. are more or lese coverned by the lead ing principles of the common law of Parliamwent—that system of rules and conyentions which has been adapted | from the elaborate system of the Eng- | lish prototype of all Legislative Assem bles, and established by usage and prescription in this country to meet.ex isting conditions. Asa matter of fact, the differences of law and procedure are relatively few—the method of putting tnotions and amendments thereto being ne of those differences: but where they lo exist they should necessarily govern ail assemblies in Canada that have a wrder end debate for their guidance. The lecturer then gave an interesting historical sketch of the first meetings of Canadian Parliaments at Quebee and Newark a century ago, when was laid the basis of the rules of order and pro cedure that govern all public assemblies in the Dominion. The first Parliament of Lower Canada met in the chapel of an old stone building at Quebec, gen erally known as the Intendant’s palace, and overlooking a noble prospect of mountain, river and plain. The litile Parliament of Upper Canada assembled in astmall frame building. a short dis tance from the humble village of New | ark (Niagara), below which rushed the iark river, seeking rest in the bosom of | the great lake not far beyond. From that day to this the same principle has guided the Legislative Assemblies of Canada, to conform as* nearly as prac ticable to the parliamentary regulations of the parent state. Now, when an Englishman, familiar with the linperial Com:uons, looks down for the first time on the Canadian Houses, he will at once | recognize the fact that he is in the presence of an assembly where the most essential British forms and usages are still observed. Public Bodies in Canada. Dr. Bourinot then left the historic phase of his subject, and proceeded. to | state briefly the leading principles and rules that should govern public bodies | in Canada. Every assembly has neces | sarily its special rules adapted to its | peculiar organization, but each and all should be, and are in fact, governed by those old rules of Parliament which | regulate debate, the making and putting | questions, the introduction and passing of bills, the procedure of Committees of the Whole and of select committees, and, in short, such other proceedings as are well calculated to ensure calm deliberation, full discussion and sound legislation. Firmness, courtesy, tact, impartiality, and willingness to give every one an opportunity to express himself on the subject under considera tion, are the essential qualities of a chairman. Heshould occupy an entire ly independent position, and should take no active part in debate in ordinary public meetings; and the limitation of the chairman to a single vote, given only when an equality of votes occurs, | is the most expedient course. In board. business and society meetings, however, jt is necessary he should be entrusted with the general conduct of affairs. and | the explanation of measures and ques tions affecting the body, but in the case | of large assemblies, called for public purposes, this arrangement is wholly inapplicable, as the antagonistic re sponsibilities that attach to the leader ot the debate cannot, even under the most favorable circumstances, be united without risk. The Previous Question, With respect to the ‘‘ previous ques tion,” that rarely intelligible motion. Dr. Bourinot explained that the misap prehension that so often arises as to its yroper use and necessary consequence oe arisen from confusing the rules of Legislative Assemblies of the United | States with the common parliamentary jaw of Canada, alone applicable in this country. The motion in the United States is not debatable and must be “put” at once; in other words, it means | the closure. In Canada it shuts off amendment, but not debate. On the costrary, the debate goes on as before | | { } | | | Puttner’s Emulsion contains neither Quinine, strychnine, nor other harmful |drug. Its ingredients are wholesome ani | mal and vegetable substances, and it may a indefinitely without dangerous re suits, —_—_- -o2 -——-— THE PAST guarantees the future. It is not what we say, but what Hood's Sarsaparilla does, that tells the tory. Remember HOOD’S CURES | USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY the great Blood and Nerve Remedy, Instructive Points of permanent code of rules or by-laws of VOL 33.—NO. 214 under our general and itis oniy when the meeting pro ceeds to give a final decision that the effects of the previous question is at once felt. Ifthe meeting decide by a majority vote that *‘the question be now put,” then a vote must be im:nediately taken on the original question; or, if the meeting negative the motion that “‘the question be now put,” then no vote can be taken at all on the original motion, since the house hes decided that the juestion shall not now be put; in other words, itis practicaliv effaced or super eded for the time being. If there is to be a debate when the previous question the rule of an assembly specifically. state in th absence of this or other definite rule of close, the law of Parliament must pre vail. As respects “‘reconsideration’ of + question already decided, if an as ly has no speciai rnle on the sub ect. then a motion to reconsider must e regarded in the same lizht as any tuner motion and as subject to no other ruies. For that reason he urged a defi nite rule on the subject in every society or asseinbly. Questions were constantly arising in this country on acconnt vl it confusing’ Umited States | methols of precedure with the common | law and usages of Parliament. He would, therefore, emphaticaliy impress {| this principle on his audience:—U aless | the rules of an assembly are made clear in every particular, and there is a refer ‘nce in all cases of doubt to recognized United authorities, all such dilatory and subsidiary motions as the previous question, to adjourn, to lay ou ihe table and to postpone, can only be | subject to the rules that govern all | motions in Canadian Parliamentary procedure and to no other Divisions of the Subject. The lecturer then proceeded to explain sucveinctly the following divisions of his subject :-— 1. How presiding officers are chosen. Parliamentary law, iS propose 1, inst so ?; SseuHies t- . States 2. Order of business 3. Notices of motions and proceed- ings 1. Minutes of proceedings hi, Proposal of motions. 6. How motions, and amendments | thereto, are put 7. Eiow the sense of an assembly is taken. +. Debate of a motion or question. *. The previous question. 10. Relevancy of debate. 11. Committees of the | select committees 12. Reconsideration of a question 13. Dilatory motions—to adjourn, to lay on the table, to postpone, ete. whole. and Susiness Habits of Englishmen. In drawing to a conclusion the lec turer drew attention to the fact that all the leading rules which govern public assemblies in Canada are the result of the business habits of Englishmen end | their descendants, as well as of their love for free discussion. They illustrate, like the English constitution, “The clear and written law—the deep trol footmarks Of ancient custom.” Laxity of procedure is antagonistic to the successful prosecution of business. Every rule is intended to give an oppor tunity for due deliberation, to ensure relevancy of debate and prevent anyone being surprised by the sudden consider ation of an important public question But ifasked what is essentially most important proceeding in legislative wasembues, he would reply system of party, which, with all its i: herent defects, appears the only practic il and workabie method of reaching lefinite resuits in governing a State the most important proceeding in a House of Commons is when the Speaker orders the “yeas” and “nays” and the division bells, set jangling sharp and clear by the electric spark, summon the members to take their places and vote the climax of all debate in and outof Parliament. It is to make these bells ring that political parties combine to meet in conilict. Party gov Commons Honse. All rules of proce dure, all political organizations, have their real significance when the bells ring in the lobbies of the people's House, where Governments rise and fal). Dangers to be Avoided. But divisions are taken to no purpose votes are thrown away, rules of proce dure are valueless, if peoples and Parlia ments are not governed by discretion justice and patriotism. Our system of government—its executive, administra tive and legislative methods—has all the of race, religion and language which exist in Canada. One great must be always avoided, and that 1s the sectarianism which represents the bigotry of past ages of religious feuds and means not simply divisions in polit ical parties, but national disintegration In studying the form do not let us for get the substance. No constitutional rules, no mere forms of procedure, can great, unless their rulers recognize in the fullest sense their obligations to the State, and exercise their power with discretion, and endeavor to elevate pub lic opinion. The machinery of the most admirable constitution that men can frame from the experience of the world’s history may be relatively worthiess while the large powers and responsibili ties that are entrusted to the governing bodies—powers and responsibilities never embodied in acts of Parliament personal ambition or pecuniary gain Gleanings of the Bengal Census. | The report of the late census in Ben | gal, which has just been published, up sets several beliefs which hitherto have found general acceptance. For in stance, it proves that the natives, in ancestral villages, are steadily moving from more ed; also that widow remarriage is prac tically universal in Behar, Orissa. Cuota Nagpore, and among the lower castes of Bengal proper, and is unknown ouly among a very fev: high castes everywhere and the more respectable Soudras of bengal proper. This report also states that infant marriage does not exist to any appreciable extent excent in north-east Behar and among the Brahmins, Kayasths, and other purely | Soudra castes of western Bengal. It also shows the great in the last decade, while the increase of Hindn sm is less than 5 per cent. This fact is explained to be due to the desire on the part of the lower castes to adopt & relizion which treats all men as equal. = _ jnochiaanlidiea In war, itisa name, not an army. In polities, it isa name nota moh. In com- | merse it is preeminently a name for pecn- | liar distinction. The name of Priestly is assoc.ated with the manufacture of fine dress fabrics, as Worth is* associated with | the cut of a gown. | now sold in Canada by first-class dealers, They are made of wool, and wool aud «lk, | anp are distuinguished by an exquisite fineness of texture and a beautiful draping | quality. The trade mark is “the varnie*4 | Board ” on which the goods are ro**' | | ' wrens penn | USE SK0.4’°S DISCOVERY, the great | i load and Nerve Reme*¥- the | Under our | This division | is the logical sequence of all diseussion | ernment means a vote on the floor of the | essential elements of strength when | worked in this spirit of discretion, Un der no other system would it be possible | to harmonize the antagonistic elements danger | of themselves make a people happy and | stead of being averse to leaving their | densely peopled areas to | those where the population is less crowed - | progress for | Mohammedanism, which has increased | more than 9 per cent. in Bengal proper | Priestly’s fabries are | KN >) : We Ak oe si SS U (J AAD JMR GEOMERRETTNG Toronto, Ontario, As Well as Ever After Taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cured of a Serious Disease. “i was suffering from what is known as Bright's cisease for five years, and for days nta time I have been unable t traighter ryself up. I wasin bed for three weelts; Curtng that time I had leeches applie and Cerived no bene- fit. Secing Ilood’s Sarsaparilla advertised is ‘ilel to try 2 bottle, I found HOOD’S Sarsaparila CURES rolief before I had finished taking half of 2 bot- tle. I gotso much help from taking the first bottle that I cecised to try r, nmd sines taking the second botth ns eve 1 didinimy life.” Geo. Mr Hoocd’s Pills 4 Teient easyctaction. x 23c ¢. voi i the artim 1 ai i n* ' | ill Sc minary, _ © ¥ °°? ¥ Vv > ‘ 4 i iy I roici AN Mi ‘ ‘ 9 % wn ~ “> ee oe eee - ‘ koe “a < J baw yory my wi'e, % " she hes taken h e 1 esuits, s | mie to iry S<oda’s German I s tr od a great deal as itive J which sawing iin ~ » kocda’s German Soap entirely vi Pasaistrouble, Por ening and clearing rpt ipeots .* ee ekin one ; only o try rt erpnreciate its su- oriLy over é Lot! ‘Skoda’s Discovery es you eat, it makes yon sleep, it es vou well. Medical advice free, ago ner ay mires on $:9BA SISSOVERY CO. LT3., WOLFVILLE, 71.8 For sale by all druggist«. Trade sup pied by W. R. Watson; Charloueuwse LP. Bo ODYNE LINIMENT yHElke ANY OTHE, As much INTEINAL as EXTERNAL usa in 1810 Originated ty an Oid Family Paysician. “Think OF It, essere ei Years, and still leads, ration atter Generation have used and blessed it, Every Traveler should have a bottle in his sat-Lel. ‘ro. Rheumatism, Every Sufferer frm... Rcumatian. Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,Coughs,Catarrh, Bron. ebitis, Asthma, Cholera-Morbus, Diarrhaea, Lameness, Soreness in Bory or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, will find in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure. Should have Johnson's Eve ry Mother Anodyne Lintmentinne . house for Croup, Colda, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, Colic, Cuts, Bruises Cramps avi Pains liable to occur in any family without notice. Delays may cost a lite. SSleves 1 Summer Complaints /ike magic. Price, 35 cta, | ; ties, 32. xpress paid. L 8. Johnson & Co., ase AFTER HAVING BEEN KEPT UP ALL NIGHT With that COUGH, if you do not want to repeat the experience, buy a bottle of the OLD STANDARD REMEDY Gray’s Syrup of Red Spruce Gum The best Cough Cure in the world. a bottle. KERRY WATSON & CO. Prornicrons MONTREAL. Sold everywhere 25 cts are forgotten ia view of party triumph, TSR NORWEGIAN 4 Ee a ee OO) LIVER O ITH. HYPOPHOSPHITES oF LIME & SODA Palatable as cream. © oily In big bottles taste .ike others. 50c. and 81.00. When we assert that Dodd’s ~~ eee Kidney Pills PRADA RANA rn. Cure Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Brisnt’s Dis- ease, Rhexmatism and all other forms of Kidney Juubles, we are backed gby the testimony of all who have used them. TH «f CURE TO STAY CURED, By a» truggists or mail on receipt of gocentn Dr. L. A. Smith & Con. ob amg 2004040046004 7s ee anes As ance Sais gl