ll ital OE ae caaiendilllll ON: cS i —— [ {k L, ‘ NI ys THe © ‘ Loud Brx Tre ie M * fe eonis cents * a ipruis eon for @ “ jetse : jlougr’ ing ' *t isin ‘ tise ees Re The Weekly Examiner Is ine 1 ¥ morning from the gab i ; ‘ m ®! : lea vspa ‘ ani s T Tus Wi ¥ Exam: INER, > pa vr sda or the United States Ar per year. Ad . Sa scale as giv bo t EXAMINER, . = LIDAY, ith I it ~ ti Railiwas tally (San da . Rea \ I i uy i ee Arrive P. M 7h reer = » N \ . . if i4 } _ = #2 : K x i223 oD) A s Ly li4 I A. Mi 3 «4 Suan rs Ar om Mi- : oy W Mwlon ° , H at ' ‘ 5 B : 7 ; ‘ uo 4 Ly ¢ r. M A.M ‘ Ar 0a I 101 4 M s é Ly 85 ; I Mo = War Ar 9 065 ‘4 (sores be I 7 , A.M \ = ‘ “a5 ii for 5 . = P . 74 nA se I 2 } { A. M. } id Ar 8B) Ar ty it Ly 7 w i. | TINGER fz : t. Ra ays DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Surgeon. Graduate of t Medical Ix partment of the Un reity th y of New York, late Member of t} Kt lent Stiffof Beile- vue Hosplial aad the New York Lviug-in Hospital, New Yorks OFFICE North Side Queen Squar UPPOSITE POST OFFICE Resist -Near Corner of King and Queen | Btreeis, Char-otictown DAVIES’ OINTMENT Old Sores, Burns, Bealing Sores, Salt | Rheam, Eczema, Itch and all Sores where there is any Inflammation. TRY A BOX, PRICE 25 CTS DAVIES’ DRUG STORE, The Greatest Rheumatic and Neuralgia Cure Of the Age MANUFACTURED ONLY BY & nm, 5T JOHN, NB. NY EXAMINE THE DAILY EXAMINER. four Dollars a Year. Re, = “ *00n, ‘This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1893. VOL33.—NO. 145, Single Copies Two Cents Oammnat, This we can explain: ELLO, iVERYBODY! ihe Bazaar Company are right to the Front with the Grandest Variety of Xmas Goods ever shown in the City. At the beginning of the season we had three times the quantity of DOLLS that any of our competitors had, but we hav been forced to send for a duplicate supply, Just view our DOLL DEPARTMENT. and you will be convinced that we ean seli Dolls at prices that other competitors pay for them. We have a numbér of Oak Cases, in uding Glove and Handkerehief Cases, Photo Cases, Jewel and Cigar Cases, which we are offering at cost to clear. hese are New Goods and extra value. Our prices are so low everybody is ashamed to ask for We buy our vsoods direct nglish houses, and not from Local, Montreal and Toronto houses. Come one and all to > , rh . ’ ° ° * the BAZAAR sTORE, and we will be bound to suit you both in quality and price. BAZAAR COMPANY (Old Diamond Bookstore), from German, French and A. FULTON, MANAGER. GOFF BROS _ NEW BRICK BUILDING Charlottetown, December 15, 1893—m w f BEAUTIFUL SKATING BOOTS ines oeesiine OUR OWN MAKE. FOR THE XMAS TRADE Lamps, all kinds; Hockey and Acme Club Skates USEFUL XMAS PRESENTS. Charlottetown 2Veccmber 11, 1893—m J Oak and Leather Plush and Leathe Rovers Bros’. Silver Spoons, Knives & Forks: Granite Steel Ware: Incande only arvers, in Ket Cutlery, over 409. patterns ¢i-sors, 1 ’ , Poc > ceuts. . ‘ OD to select from; © \ wf . al for THE HAWKER MEDICINE COY me Large, Juicy Raisins. nice, clean Currants. fresh Candied Peels. extra strong Flavorings. pure, unadulterated Spices. fine Pastry Flour. cheap Cooking Figs. English Mince Meat. pure Honey in the Comb. cheap, pure Candy. Fruits of all kinds. Confectionery, § & 1 Ib. bxs. Christie’s Fresh Biscuits. English Pickles and Sauces. omen & x zm rs ms s 453 @ = ee ~~ —- * os so — — or = ay — ov = = Cae RP ROGER & DODD upplies. Removei | ’ 7 o — nomical, costing less than one cent a cup Ladies, Misses and Boys,» . sng co Have Removed their Stock of A N.ce Lot of Imported Ladies’ Slippers Boots & Shoes —TO THEIR— ACROSS THE STREET. Please to look at our Stock in the New Store - the LARGEST and CHEAP ST in the City. | J. B. Macdonald & Co. Charlottetown, Oct. 19, [893—eod Good Profit & Value TO THE GROCER OR HOUSEKEEPER WHO HANDLES WOODILL’S GERMAN BAKING POWDER ‘QUALITY ABSOLUTELY PURE. PRIC 5, 10 ALD 20 CE*T:. nov28 Harpers Weekly. ILLUSTRATED. Harper’s Weekly is, beyond all question, the leading journal in America, in its sp'endid iliustrations, in its corps of distinguished con- | tributors, and in its vast army of readers. In special lines it draws onthe highest order ot talent, the men best fitted by position and | training to treat the leading iopies of the day. In fiction, the most popular story-writers | contribute to its columns. Superb drawings by the foremost artists illustrate its special | articles, its stories, and every notable event ot public interest; it contains portraits of the distinguished men and women who are mak- | ing the history of the time, while special at- | tention is given tothe *rmy and Navy, Ama- teur Sport, and Music and the Drama, by dis- | tinguished experts, In a word, Har. er’s Weekly combines the news features of the | daily paper and the artistic and literary quali | ties of the magazine with the solid critical character of the review, HARPER'S PERIODICALS Per Year: | HARPER'S MAGAZINE..............-- $4 00 | BARPSR OS WEES .........ccccevcsess OO | HARPER’S BAZAR HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE.......... 20 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada and Mexico The: volumes of the Weekly begin with first | number forJanuary of each year. When no ) time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin | with the Number current at the time of re- | ceipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper's Weekly for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail post paid, or hy express, free of expense (provided the freight does_not ex- ceed one dollar per volume), for $700 per yolume. Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, post-pa d, on receipt of $1 00 each. Remittances should be made by Post Office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. are not to copy this advertise- Shelled Walnuts and Almonds, outa thout the express order of Harper & all kinds of Xmas Groceries. Charlottetown, December 8, 1893~m w f Brothers, dress; HARPER & BROTHERS, decl4 New York, Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to tle taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bo-vels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habituai constipation. Syrup of Figs is the on'y remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste anc ac- | ceptable ti the stomach, prompt in | ; and the men were secking such warmth as its action and truly beneficial in its ofiects, prepared only from the most many excellent qualities commend it to alj and have made it the most pepwur remedy known. Sr.up of Figs is for sale in T5¢ bottes by all leading druggists. | Ax y reliable Cruggist who may not | have it on hand will procure it prvmptly for any one who wishes | to try it. Manufactured only by the | CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP 60, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, | LUUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, i. ¥ W.R. Watson, Druggist, Charlotteown, P. BE Jsland, jymwtf Unlike the Dutch Process Gh No Alkatlies Se —or-- | ae Other Chemicals 3 - are used in the Bp - = preparation of ar «W. BAKER & C0’S ~ BreakfastCocoe . which is absotutety ie Peel pure and soluble, | er i Ithas morethan three times }) the strength of Cocoa mixe t with Stareb, Arrowroot G? Sugar, and is far »nore eco- It is delicious, nourishing, anc EASILY DIGESTED. jcacaali Sold by Grocers everywhers. _ W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass MEN av. AGE n~ may be cured. We treat all sexual disor- ders cf men. Four wut ef five Who euffer nerv- pusness, racnial worry, attacks cf “ the blues,” cre but paying the pen- alty cf early excesses. a2 €recd alarm cf mpotency, the exhaus- 1cfSpermatorrhoea, <7 l> CURED in Sfrict confidence <t J a 3. Bt 57 moderate expense, Send for our free sealed book, “ PERFECT MANHOOD.” ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. “You'll Feel Better ” Everybody does, after taking a few bottles of MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER. It builds upthe run-down sys- tem,—is strengthening and appe- tizing. Itis readily borne by weak stomachs, regulates the bowels, and is invaluable to those afflicted with Indigestion and Flatulency. THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LTD. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA, Highly Recommended by Physicians. THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. “GAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000, : bour ther approached a frozen stream, and A Society established with a view to! disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage | and help artists. Incorporated hy Letters Patent of the | Government of Canada, the 27th February, L93. GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Nos. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., Montreal. EXHIBITION AND SALE. ADMISSION FREE, from 10 o’clock, | a. m., to 4 p. m. The only chance in this country to pur chase works of masters. All the Paintings are originals, mostly | from the French School, the leading modern school. Eminent Artists, such as Francais Rochegrosse, Aublet, Barau, Pesant, Petit Jean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sanzay and a — many others, are members of this iety. Ask for our CataJogues and Circulars. H, A. A. BRAULT, oct26 Slit: Director, | ona hill, at the foot of which iay the fair | anything should happen to me tomor- | snow was falling faster now and obiiterated | the men’s footsteps as they walked on. The | country was bleak and open. There were KRYNIS TO ASTARTE. What foreland fledged with myrrh, Vocal with myriad bees, What pine sequestered spur, Vrhat lone declivities Will draw thee to descend, Creation’s cradle friend? The sun feeds at thy smiles, The wan moon glows ther@y, The dewdal ovean is!es Terraced in rosemary, The brushwood in the bed Of the dry torrent head, The rolling river brink, With plumy sedges gray, The ford where foxes drink, The creck where otters play, Yearn upward, all ef them, To grasp thy raiment’s hem. ~Lord de Tabley, A SACRIFICE, ft was an evening in that fearful winter ef 1854-5, memorable for the Crimean war, whose terrible stories of danger, privation and beroism the veterans delight to tell by the fireside at homie. The cold was intense, snow lay thick upon the ground and was still falling nofselessly through the gray aud dusky air upon an English camp in the Crimea. A | space had been cleared around the tents, | was to be obtained around the campfires. | | ; re », | It was the eveof battle, as one versed in healthy und agreeable substances, its | the ways of wars could tell by the anxious | looks ov the men’s white, anshaven faces. There was none of that reckless bravado of | which romancers teils us. The men were silent or spoke only in whispers. Their thoughts were doubtless too oppressive for more loudly spoken words. It was ike ter- rible Russian winter. ‘Tomorrow they were | to fight, and the air was heavy with preph- ecies of death. Sergeant Easterbrook sat there, gazing into the glowing depths of the fire. He | was a tall, broad shouldered man, of about 35, but grizzled and unkempt as he now was yon would have taken him to be old- er. Crouching close beside him was little ' Charlie Hilton, a recruit—almost a boy, in- tween these two, for both came from the same village at home, in the garden of | ; | | deed, but there was asort of friendship be- | i England, a quiet little village perched up- weald of Kent. “Sergeant,’’ the recruit whispered, “i or —- ‘Why, you talk just like the old hands!” “Well, why not? There’s as much chance of my getting potted as any one else.”’ “Are you afraid?” “Afraid? No! Are you?” ‘Yes,” the elder man answered, witha sed, quiet smile. “I don’t believe there can be a man living who does not fear death—aye, the bravest of them; it goes along with the fear of God!” “But if anything should happen to me,” Charlie persisted. “Oh, you'll be all right, youngster.” “Itis not because I am a youngster that 1 am any safer. Those confounded Rus- sians don’t pick out whom they'll hit. I want you to promise me, sergeant, that when all is done tomorrow, if you should find my—if you should fird meamengthe | dead—you will take this letter that is in- side my jacket. The other fellows might langh if they knew, and she would not like it. But you know her. Weare to be mar- ried if | come safe out of this. If I don’t, i think she would like to know that I fell with my face to the encmy!” This timethe young fellow fairly broke down. 1 “You say I know her. MaylI ask who | she is?” i “Yes, | don’t mind telling you. It is | Mary Ashford.’ “Mary! The daughter of Farmer Asb- ford?” “Yes.” Then there was a dead silence between | them, during which, asthe flickering fire- | light danced upon his features, ¢ny one | who had been watching him would have read a world of unspoken thoughts upon the sergeant’s face—a short but pathetic history of human woe. Such an observer | would have read his secret, would have un- derstood that Noe] Easterbrook loved Mary Ashford too. That he had imagined and hoped that his love might some day be re quited, until these words came to dispel hig dream~—words spoken in all innecence, but which pierced his heart as fatally as could have done a Cossack’s lance thrust. It was Hilton who first broke silence, “You have not answered me, sergeant,” hesaid. ‘Won't you promise me what I asked you?” “Yes,” Easterbrook replied in a quiet, subdued tone, which betrayed no emotion, “f will do you this little service if you should require it, and if I am in a position to perform it.” “Thank you so much. And you will take the letter back to her?” “Yes,” with some hesitation, “I will take it back to her if I live.” At this moment aa officer came among | them, and the soldiers rose and saluted. “We want some men,” said he, “to go for- ward and reconnoiter the enemy’s outposts. The duty may be adangerous one.” “I'll go, if you please, captain,” Sergeant Easterbrook said, stepping forward. “Very well. Take three men with you.” “]’ll come with you,” said young Hilton, “No, not you, youngster,” the sergeant exclaimed hastily in a strange tone. “Let him go, since he has volunteered,” rejoined the captain, who was a strict dis- ciplinarian. ‘let the lad learn his duty. Jt is just this sort of daring pluck which upholds the honor of the union jack!” Easterbrook was silenced, since he must needs yield to his supericr officer, and afew minutes later the sergeant, Hilton and two other soldiers were passing over the snow- clad plain, with their muskets upon their shoulders, flitting like four shadows in the twilight out of the British camp. Not a word was spoken. Everything de- pended upon silence and discretion. The tnly a few trees here and there, which tossed their great bare branches in the win- try wind like giants writhing to be free from some spell. After they had marched for nearly an on a hillock upon the opposite bank could dimly desery the fires of the Russian camp, half hidden by their outworks. They crossed the river, and then halting Sergeant Fasterbrook spoke for the first time. “My men,” he said, “in case anything should happen to one or other of us we must all keep our eyes open and watch what we can see, so as to report at head- quarters tonight.” Then he turned, and again they went on silently. asterbrook, with his quiet re- serve and firm but kindly manners, was very popular with his squad and never fouad the slightest difficulty in enforcing implicit obedience. Soon they were creeping stealthily along riczht under the verv fortificatinne af the Testing His Honesty. , Your druggist is honest if when you ask him for a bottle of Scott’s Emulsion he gives you just what you ask for. He knows this is the best form in which to take cod liver oil. Warp off the cholera by getting your system in healthy working condition. Hawker’s Nerve and Stomach Tonic, with a cour-e also of Hawker’s Pills, will excite every organ of the body to healthy action | and afford the surest safeguard against | disease. ecotee USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the grea E Blood and NeryeRemedy, Physicians Exporse Them, and we CG. CARANTES them to Mrs. Eimer E. Miiett, P. O. Box S11, Livermore Fails, Maine. SALT RHEUM and all diseases of the Boop & °: Skoda’s Discoveniion Lot No. 2? , AYN “and Chestnut Street ted having ; ee meee First Of | Siccct and Sl het 9 noke n 0 1" truthfully made. | Stre« t, in tu oe a te ' ling peer and cach; While not as rapid as | ‘rements on Chestnut Street. and each weakness, s¢ast as rapid as the pen, ser@e them . last they turne: ec! ves suddenly *Y W here 2 in along cloak at the top of the red« thrown out in bolwged in 5 minutes. | the campfire not mc Our friends weve very ghost portab] e. their movements, but on¢xggm,. gleam of his bayonet proba: | himself tothe Russian sentinel act out cown into the gloom, for the latte: somne works in his own tongue, challengic them to declare themselves. “Confound it!’ muttered Sergeant Mast- erbrook half aloud, “we have ventured too far—right into the lion’s den--we must turn tail, boys, and run for our very lives till! we ara out of gunshot. That is the best sort of courage that we can show now.” They accordingly all four turned and ran | at full speed, for since their object was to obtain information there was no real bray- | ery in staying to face the foe. But they had a)ready gone too far in their eagerness to determine the position of the enemy’s lines, and no sooner had they turned to flee | than the sharp report of a musket was heard behind them. The sentinel had aroused his comrades, and a moment later a voliey of balls was whistling through the night air past the little English squad. “Oh, this is terrible!’ young Hilton said | breathlessly as he ran, “if we should fall | | like this, sergeant—to be shot from behind , —I had rather go back and face them.’ The young fellow doubtless fondly im- | agined that the eyes of all Europe were } upon him individually, and had not yet | } come to learn that so many men must go | down like corn before the reaper’s scythe. | | only to be regarded at headquarters as | many casualties. He s*ill thought that to | peril life and limb in other men’s quarrels | | was glory. “You must not go back,” the sergeant an | swered, with a strange mixture of gentle- ness and authority. “I could not allow | } youtodo that. Every man’s life that is | out here belongs to his country, and no one has a right to risk it rashly. They are } only firing wild—don’t be afraid.” ; “I’m not afraid—I--my God! I believe | I'm hit!’ The sergeant, notwithstanding his ex- So had indeed been mistaken. He he did sot allow for the fatalities of chance—those terrible chances which gov- ern the world’s history. Hilvon said he had been struck, and Noel Easterbrook could also feel that a bullet had entered his body, but still they both kept on bravely as long | as they could. Hlere in the cold, silent night the lust of battle was not upon them, there was only the mute desire of wounded beasts which would fain be at rest away from their pursuers. They had now crossed the frozen stream end were safe from further danger. By this time the weather had changed. The wind had driven the sno wclouds away, and from a steely, blue sky the moon was shedding her silvery light upon the four Englishmen struggling over the white | Crimean plain, They were still a long way from theirown camp—probably three long, weary miles and more—but they were now in safety. Sergeant Easterbrook called out, “Halt!” and the others noted with alarm the faint voice in which he spoke the word. His fictitious energy had given way at last, and with a stifled groan he sank down at the foot of a great, black, gnarled tree. Young Hilton’s wound was also overmastering his strength, and the next moment his form, too, was lying in an inert mass upon the snowy grceund. “What is the matter, sergeant?” one of the other soldiers asked feelingly. “I did | not know you had been hit.” *Hit—yes, Dawes—here iu the left side— | ft was foolhardy of me to have ventured so far into their lines—and there is the poor | lad. Oh, Dawes, i am done for!” “No, no; do not say that, sergeant. We will carry you back to camp all right be tween us, won't we, Kyan? You will be out of tomorrow’s fun, that is all.” “Tomorrow! Yes; there will be no to- morrow for me.” “Nonsense! You will be sent to the rear, that is all. The old saw bones will put you straight in no time. See, we will carry you as gently as a nurse. Come on; give us your hand, Ryan.” “No,” Easterbrook answered in a fecble but decisive tone. ‘Leave me.” “Leave you? We'll see you hanged first!’ Ryan said with rough good nature. “Look at the youngster—he is wounded too. You surely don’t think of leaving him behind.” “Well, we are not going to leave you anyway. Wecan come back for him.” “And find him dead!’ “We must take our chances of that. These are not times to pick and choose what we do. Come on, Ryan.” ““No, Isay. Take young Hilton back to camp and leave me.” “No!’ > But Sergeant Easterbrook, with a su- | preme effort, now rose to his feet, and sup- porting himself by the trunk of the tree said in a stern tone of authority: “Are you commanding this squad or am I? Isay I will be obeyed! Take up the lad and carry him back to camp!” They yielded tothe force of discipline, which is so strong as to become nearly an instinet, and raised the half conscious form of Charlie Hilton. The latter understood only dimly what was going on, or he him- self would have been the first to protest against his friend’s heroic sacrifice “Goodby, Charlie,’ the sergeant said. “I shan’t be able to keep my promise to you, but when you get back to England tell Mary Asiford that I, Noel Easterbrook, did my poor little best to send you safe bome to her!” And as the two soldiers, with their bur- den, walked silently and sadly away over the white desert plain, Noel Easterbrook sank again heavily upon the ground and rolled over once—sank this time never to rise or speak again. * * a * 7 * * Charles Hilton returned safe home to be united to Mary Ashford, and there is a tender place in both hearts for that silent hero, whose bones are whitening in the Russian Chersonese—the man who met his death to save her pain, for it was, indeed, to send her lover back to her that the brave sergeant had thus courted his doom, ~Exchange. — ———— Roscoe Conkling’s Opinion of Jay Goaid. Jay Gould, as soon as Roscoe Conkling was out of the senate, and although Mr. Conkling had bitterly denounced him, of- fered Mr. Conkling the first retainer which he had after he opened his law office in New York. The amount was large and was most acceptable to Mr. Conkling, and it was in the acquaintance thus begun that Mr Conkling was led to the opinion that Jay Gould would have been the ablest poli- tician and the finest diplomat this conntry has produced nad he chosen to enter chose fields of activity rather than that of busi- mace . Dhan dalnhia Deaea A Ratlhway Manager Says: “In reply to your question do my | children object to taking Scott’s Emul- sions, I say No! on the contrary, they are fond of it and it keeps them pictures of I ota ed oo a Hexpreps of ladies in ill health have been or are being restored to health and strength by the use of Hawker’s Tonic it has become the great and popular family remedy. cooeee vod and Nerve Remedy. i mastered almost at a! of USE SKOxA’S DISCOVERY, the great | i } Barn, adjoining Mr. Maurice Blake's. ta ning three acres. 5. Farm « {75 acres on fownshin } | McEachern. 6 Building Lot and House at Summer- | side, south of Church Street, vow ox subscribe: All or+ Have You Watson; Char ~ Anything To Print re ne a a oe BRING IT TO US AND WE WILL PRINT: IT Promptly, new that the Russian soldiers could not | | have taken accurate aim in the dark, but In Good Style, At Lowest Prices. TRY US. The Exammer Pad. C0 Londen House, Queen Street, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND A Letter From His Dad Yours to hand yesterday, lt gives me great pleasure in — | sending you acheque for $10, | Thanks to Prowse Bros. & Co. | They lave done the people of this country more good and saved them more money than iny firm that ever started business in Charlottetown. 1 un glad you are buying your Furnishings and Carpets from nen you can depend on. They won't misrepresent an article ‘to make a sale. You spoke bout me recommending any- yne who might want a Carpet to trade there. It would be | impossible for me to tell any- me who has not already heard ' ot Messrs. Prowse Bros. & Co. Why, your sisters, your cousins ind vour aunts all trade there. hey say their store is like a fair on market days. Crowds of thankful buyers are found pressing their way up to the counters to have a share in the bargains which they daily ofier. Good bye. From your loving FATHER. JOHNSON 4NODYNE LINIMEN ynelke any OT & As much Yor INTERNAL as ETERNAL usa, im i1s810 Originated by an Oid Family Paysician. Think Of It, P.2k fotmore than Hignty ration after Generation have used and blessed it, | Every Traveler should have a bottle in his satchel. Every Sufferer 27m... Becumatiam, Neuralgia, | Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,Coughs,Catarrh, Bron chitis, Asthma, Cholera -Morbus, Diarrhowa, Lan: eness, Soreness in Body or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, will find in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure. Should have Johnsen’s Every Mother Anoayne Liniment in the house for Crou Cold. Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, Colic, Cuts, Bruises, Cramps and Pains liable te occur in any family without notice. Delays may cost a life. Relieves all Summer | Complaints like magic. Price, 35 cts. post-paid; 6 bot- tles, £2. Express paid. LS. Johnson & .. Boston Mass ; When we assert that > Dodd’s PLE LLP LAL Kidney Pills wee. Cure Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of all who have used them. TH «/ CURE TO STAY CURED. By as 4 ists or mail on receipt of price, socents Dr. L. A. Smith & Co., Toronta, 4. That Feld in the Re vaity, with Red 1 38, in King’s County, adjciamyg the rail road and next the farm of ihe late Donald ») pied by Jobn FE. Delaney as tenant to th 54 ~peagygemee a NIN Ramana he alia i la nies a ie aN eb, i ns ee an as ETERS ——— are PNR ed em wy Rea 2,