rot i ee ae ~ nye y\ Vu? | nh ~tu th ja ba AERA 4 | ‘ y New APRR ex var - TRETEN COMPANY, im tie | rH i ~ h Street SUBSCRIPT N ANCE y 21.0 ~ ‘ hf \ io Mi 3) ~ anada ¢ IN RATES met ry : 1 : Ww . try 4 iw : <s F t s from the It is made up of matter “ aily editions, and sw n19 V¥spaper nteres 4 at 4 ari; » f rue WeeKkty EXAM \P ' i r ti s s ‘s ar per yea - : , » >. tsk ‘ Yt AMINES fy DOCTOR DORSEY j irceon. (? { | th N york “ Stiffor B nd 3 New Yo sf Hospit ew 1 OFrk ) ? N Sid 0) Sona = ST OFFICE g arid Q aa | DAVIES OINTMENT »E f Old Sores, Barns, Bealirg Sores, Salt Rheum, Besom3, Itc and al) Seres where there is avy Ir flimmation. TRY A BOX, PRICE 25 (TS For the: t 4 . ks we will s¢ STORE, Phariva GAVIES’ DRUG ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES Queen Street, Uhariottetown OFFICE TO LET IN MORRIS BLOCK. THOS. MORRIS RAILWAY HOUSE, Opposite Railway Station, JOHN BOLGER, PROPRIETOR. | hi rH ; we th nghly painted ' ie and inshic. Good accomnico- travellers by rail and steam boa ‘ jied at a modeate fare ] i give usa Lag 16—Sm el pol Robi. Balloch & Go., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESEN rED IN CANADA BY ! A. MORRISON, HALIFAX Christy Eniwves BREAB—CARVING—PARING. FOR SALE BY RFR. B. Worton & Cees CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. 1b. DYEING COMPANY. Gold Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, ‘Store in the Stamper Block rec MONT® EAL. DYE all WE ARE f good nia equal to any C:2°%s Hou-e j ‘ Eur ype. PREPARED TO ie and garny FRENCH CLEANING a epeciaity alj information re gar { ng shades, prices, Re., futpishe | by CHAS. IVES MORRISON, Agent, Queen Strect. sept 35 he wd ' ' i TERMS : Four Dollars @. ®0om ~ erat, eh ys eer ER pee riltiie ‘ Niele Bae Ait “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” — Paripides Single Copi s Two Cents NEW SERIES. CHARCLOPPETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, — THURSDAY, WHAT MUST GO :---Bad keys, double scales, ete., abolished them. and no othe: THE NEW YOST combing invented the “ Remington” 1 ‘atest and best improvements perfect typewriter. put is clern cut and beautiful are no longer t)> he = ver 2 Ss TT sypewriter. «shrte” pastry alignment, . ’ : ain them and live. can ret life-] »3 the 1 1873, the * Cal have been added during 1802, maki The New Yost prints direct from steel type; its work is never blurred. The alighment is absolutely perfeet and permanent. illegible work, foul ink tolerated or pardoned. paper is an ideal success, the best ever applied to a typewriter. perfe ot. Send for Illustrated Catalogue Provinces, 134 Prince William St., St A ; John. or to the only Perfect Writing Mach- ine. The Ribbon, the Shift Key and other antiquat- ed devices discarded. NEW MACHINE, NEW MANAGEMENT NiW PRINCIPLES, NEW PATENTS, NEW MEN, NEW LIFE, NEW BRAINS, SEW METILODS, NEW CAPITAL, The LATEST and BEST ribbons, bothersome shift The NEW YOST has ife-long experience of the inventor, G. W. N. Yost, who . ee . ’ igraph” inl8S0, anl the “ Yost”? in A889: the ne the New Yost an ideal. The The line spacing absolutely to IRA CORNWALL, General Agent for the Maritime D. B. STEWART, Charlottetown. The Elections Are Approaching! Removed ! x The subseriber does not offer as a can didate fer political honors, but he does offer the best FURNITURE at the Lowest Prices. NEW FURNITURE arriving daily in all) the latest styles, in manufacture, Lot of Specialtic are in consequence having JOHN NEWSON. NEW BRICK BUILDING Charlottetown, addition to We 's Offering low. sales, oe saATee November 15, 1892—mon wed fri it * R Valencias, Layer Vat Basket, Imp. Cabinet, Box, Layer or Pound. Currants, Candies EVERYTHING FOR THE XMAS TRADE, &#00Ht ot oxeeenen sNCLaAS, Sult: acai Bunch Dehesa, Black mas, CU what we} Boots & *hees Ei ba i Plea ec tO Kx k at our 1 Xew Store - the LARGEST and CHEAP ne ? ST in the © ty. by the Box, Half, | Peels, Lisseaces, Spisas, ete, Pagd Profit& Value | } | J.D. MACLEOD & C®., One Door North © + 1.o° i . Charlottetown, Decei be o. Flatform Scales. Disston’s Crosscut, Cir tu thu sat of the Old Stand, calar and Hand Saws. Barb and Combination Fence Wire. Iron, Sleigh Shoe and Caulk Steel. Horse Shoes, Horse Nails. English Coal Vases. Gaivsnized and Japanned Coal Hods. Chariottetown, November 30, 1893—t FENNELL & CHANDLER. u fri Branch Confectionery. ee ( X — I have ope L. Chappelle of the Diamond everything usually found in fitting up a new and improve have in operation in a few days. a first-class Confectionery. ned a BRANCIL CONFECTIONERY in the ently oceupied by Mr. Theo. Bookstore, where I will keep Iam d Soda Fountain, which I will Fruits and the purest Confectionery. W. A UUTCHESON, Confectioner, STAMPER BLOCK, VICTORIA ROW. june 27—eod. j j GERS’ BUILDING. QUEEN STREET, rai: 5, 10 axw 20 casts IOLPUNOH i ; ans from the Plant Wharf, foot of Sac%- | Ville 4 | 8 a m. | | | } ; j I will keep only the best { i | Steamers; Pictou to Haliiax via the Inter- / $9.50. Do not let a good thing slip J 3 MACDONALDS CC | their Stock of | Have Remove ACROSS THE STREET?. k in the | Qs S.O€ B. Macdonald & Co. 19, L893—eod Charlottetown, Oct. TO THE WOGDILL’S GERMAN BAKING POWDER. QUALITY ABSOLUTELY PURE. noves ee Don't travel Second Cliss when you can g» First Class for nearly the same money. Fer that reason GO 18 BYsTo: via the FAST SHORT LINE—Charlottetown to Pictou via the Navigation Company’s colonial Railway, and Hlifax to Boston via the fast, modern-buiit and equipped Steel 8: 8. “HALIFAX,” Street, EVERY WEDNESDAY, 1 ONLY ONE NIGHT AT SEA. and the privilege of going on board Steamer night before departure without extra charge. For Tickets and all information appl’ to the office of the Charlottetown Navigation Company, sept? JUST RECEIVED ! A Lot of New Overcoatings. HT We are making a very nice Overcoat for through your fingers. WORSTED PANTS, $3.25. A. J. MURPHY. gh’town, Nov. 24,139) —tu frisat and Tie Ney vost “Shorter” Bills. We eretalking about a “ shorten. will not cause indi- gestion. Those who “know a thing er two” about Cooking (Marion Harland among a host of others) are using COTTOLENE but the cleanest ing’’ which insteal of lard. Nor: purest, ingredients fo to make up Cote Lard isn’t healthy, and is ‘Those who use will be healthier and than who use lard —UHealthier because they will get “shorter” wealthier because they will get “shorter” grocery Lills—fer Cottolene costs no more than Jard and goes twice healthicst and tulene, not always clean, Cottolene those wealthicr t re ad > as far—so is bit half as expensive, Oyspeptics delightia it! Physicians enverse itl Chefs praise it! Cooks extol it! Housewives weicome itl All live Grocers sell it] Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., Wellington and Ann Streets, MONTREAL, ‘eS — “EE “You’ll Feel Better ” Everybody does, after taking a few botiles of MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER. ft builds upthe run-down sys- tem,—is strengthening and appe- tiziag. Itis readily borne by weak stomachs, regulates the bowels, and is invaluable to those afflicted with Indigestion and Flatulency. THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LID. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA. Highly Recommended by Physicians. PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained-—how re- stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- siolcgy willnot tell yous 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 man who would regain sexual vi gor lost through folly, or develop members weak by nature or wasted by disease, should write fer our sealed book, “ Perfsct Man- hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), Brae hero untike the Dutch Process GP No Alicaties : N Other Chemicals Ay are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & CO's i BreaktastCoco which is absolutely pure and soluble. Ithas morethan three time, the strenytit of Cocoa mixe with Starch, Arrowroot ©: aa Sugar, and is far »nore eco- nomical, costing less than one cent a cup It is delicious, nourishing, anc. EASIL\ DIGESTED. EE SS Sold by Grocers everywher >. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Maas THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. CAPITAL STOCK, - - $100,000. A Society established with a view to disseminate the taste for arts, to encourage and help artists. i f! Incorporated by 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, Sauzay and a great many others, are members of this Society. . Ask for our Catalogues and Circulars. H, A. A. BRAULT, oct? Ql: Director, a DECEMBER 14, 1893. VOL 33.—-NO., 140 “GIRLS WHO ARKIN LOVI THE SPICE OF SCIENCE. AND ESPECIALLY THE GiRL WHO [S DISPOSED TO BE JEALOUS. Such a One is Very Wretched—The Pre and Conus in Her Case as Discussed bys a Social Philosopher and a Sympathetic Person. “I think that if some one were to offer i prize to the silliest girl it would be car ced off by the young woman whe 1 uways afraid that sone other yirl is ving lo cupture the affections of her best young man,” So said the social philosopher whos words of wisdom are reported in tv esieemed Chicago Record, “she is noi obly silly,” suid that sapient individual, “oul She inikes uiany vier people ua and = uucomiortable, Spitefui tiris who are aware of ner litthe weak- eis take huge delight in teasing her by irting with what she considers her 0wu pre perry. oappy “Now,” said ¢.e thougitfal philoso poer, “if sie would vuly sit down and argue the question with herself i: wouldn't tise her very jong to see the errors in her metuod, Tu the tirst plice, Haman thinss that one girl doesti’t | street curs propelled | crushers. A NEWSY BUDGET FOR PRACTICAL MINDED PEOPLE. Montana’s “Klectric City’”—How the Subtie Fluid Has Supplanted Steam at Great Falls—“ig Guns Now Made of Rawhide, Great Falls, Montana, appears fairl e..titled to the distinetion of being calle! the Electric City. At Black Eagle Falls, three miles above the town, an immense dam has been thrown acros» tie Missouri, and hydraulic works anc power houses erected. Not only are th and lighted b electricity from the power-louses, bu: ' they are beats] as well by elecirie radi itors, phiced’ in Elevators, printing presses, kind. of machiuey are operated by ihe ubiqui tons force, Taere are autouaticexcava tors, electric pusity abd elecivic rock Nol Lunoatmnou sight oi eucu cranes aad all cur. | the streets is a mertar nuxer attached | cer to griad tis ¢ feo. vant him to tise ahnotuer girl he'll best | to notice how sweet and lovely the other girlis aad will eventaally lose sight of the tist ote eutireis, ulwava that wan Liman enjoys being contrary at Lives, JUsD aS Nuch as 4M WOMAan audatter awhile wuen he sees tliat girl is jealous of him he won’: coutide in heratall, but will dance attendance on all the other giris that he cares to with- out her knowledge. “If there is one thing that a*man can't | endure it’s a jealous woman, fier ques- | tions bore him, and when he her the honest truth she doesn’t believe it, so he sneaks ont of answering just on general principles. aud iu the best Way he can, Sensible women hate the girl who is jealous, because they say ail women dou’t see through her Therefore, they dou’t look upon the man as the iinmdsomest and cleverest in cres- tion. They elso say that there is posi- tively no excue for her, and that a jealous miau is an angel compared with her. les Vay, telis eves, *Tiat sll sounds very well,” came froma grumpy bit of femininity who sat doubled up on a little footstool, and who looked for all the world as if slie | didn’t care whether school kept or not, as the sayingis. ‘Phat sounds pretty —very pretty. It's jnst the way a philo- sopher ought to talk, Just give it to the girl right and left, but at least Jet her uave an opportunity to defend herself. You folks who aren’t naturally jealons don’t know anything about it at all, and the girl who is jealous does. Dy you suppose she’s jealous because she enjoys being jealous? Do you ever think wow miserable and wretched and u- happy she is? You might just as w. | say to her: ‘Now stop breathing.” would be quite as easy for her to do tu. as to keep from entertaining jealous thoughts. And the worst part of it is she knows that she’s a goose and she makes the biggest and stoutest resolu- tions that she simpiy won’t be so silly, vut you see it’s something she hasn't any- thing to say about. ‘It makes me wild to hear everybody | abasing the jealous girl, and it would | do me good to have some people whom | | know develop a good case of jealousy themselves so they could understand what a jealous girl has to endure, “And you needn't tell me that it bores aman to havea gri-fret abeut him,” stie said as a parting shot, uis vanity to think she cares enough for uim to be jealuus and all the time the the girl feels so small and mean and con- teimptiile that she'd like to hate herself to death.” “Both of you have been talking non- sense,” declared the third person who is always supposed to be sensible and level- headed. ‘Ln the first place, one bas to be in love to be jealous, and what is stupider than being in love Id like to k:ow? You can’t tell me anything about it, vecause [had a little experi- ence. And l’ve come to the conclusion —after considerable thought and mental arguments with myself—but it you want to be happy and contented and at peace with the world in general you don’t want to beinlove. It’sa bother. You can’t eat. and when you du eat you don’t know whether you ave chewing a sefi- shelled crab or a tongue sanieica, You do all sorts of foolish things, like walk- ivg along the street with an idiotic grin on your face or riding three blocks past your getting-off place. If the man for- gets lo say jusc so many sweet things to you your heart is filled with fear and you wonder if he’s found a handsomer girl, There is always something to worry you—something to explain or some silly quarrel to untangle. “It's all right, I suppose, for girls who have nothing to think about besides gowns and society’s doings, but I haven't time to fool away in that extravagant fashion.” And the sensible third person gave a jerky nod and followed it up with an empuatic “That's so !” Mr. Gladstone’s Wonderful Energy. Among the old hands on the Treasury Bench. Mr. Giadstone has, of course, more than maintained his acknowledged supremacy—a supremacy by head and shoulders. It has, indeed, been a “Gladstone Session.” In conducting the Home Rule Bill through committee he displayed almost a spirit of monopoly in regard to the speech-making. There was scarcely a clause, a line, or a word whose entire defence he would intrust to his lieutenants. Night after night he sat through long hours, answering dazzling, speecilets, soon breaking through the doctor's rule of retiring from the debate at nine o’clock, and at the end of the session more persistent in attendance than any of his colleagues. Never—we can say without fear of contradiction--has he | reached to a higher level of sustained eloquence than during the — session. Whether we take his great speeciies on the first, second, and third readings oi the Home Rule Bill, his hundred and one little constitutional discourses in com- mittee, hisinnumerable displays of wit and argument in the personal combats with Mr. Chamberlain, and last, but noi least, his many important speeches on open qnestions like the opium traffic and the eignt hours day, he has shown the same unrivalled and unchallenged pre- eminence. ‘This, indeed, is the great historical center of the session—the per- formance of Mr. Gladstene on the grea: stnee at Westminster, — Westminster Gazette, According to latest advices from Africa Major Forbes is in hot pursuit of Loben- | gula, and expects to capture him at once. | King Lo seems to be as hard to capture as | Emin Bey was to kill. African soi: is very productive of canards about its dis- tinguishe 1 sons, The cable has captured | the Matabele chief several times. Hewxprens of Sadies 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 ani popular family remedy, “It tickles” | by electricaty ; q ivries | an electric © ire ieadins down from a pole, The re tauraiuts coos by electri- ciy, the buticiet emiplo sitto chop hi Siusayes aad und the gro- i und so likewise does t. e Gailor to wat guose. The subile fluid is « weicore biessing in every home ; the housewives run their sew lng machives and beat their flatiron-: they bake their cakes in vooden electric cake ovens that can be set away on a shelf like pasteboard boxes, They have electric boilers and broilers and teakeitles. What a singu lar anomaly wien One pauses to think of it; that of broiling steaks and heating flatirons through the instrumentality ot a waterfall !—Engineering Magazine. diaiit aroegr, wis GUN MADE OF RAWHIDE. Ite Chief Advantage is That and Vasily Handled, it je Ligh A gun of rawhide is the invention ol Frederick La Tulip, Sr, of Syracuse, N. Y. In general appearance it resem- | bles an ordinary canuon and measures five feet six inches in length, six inches | jiu diameter at ;} inches at mouth and nine It consists of a the base, the | central tube or bore of forged steel two and one-half inches in diameter. Around this tube are wound cemented coils o! rawhide prepared by a process origina: with the inventor, and which is found by actual test to pussess the strength oi steel with a degree of resisiance not in herentin this metal. An outer layer of steel wire completes the gun. The ad- vantages of this gun are its light weigiit makes it readily handled, and it doe- not become leated by rapid or continuous tiring. BREAD DOUGH CHARGED WITH GAS. It Is Said tc Be Superior to Yeast, and a Germ Killer, \ number of methods have been pro py sed, s.vs the Paris edition of The New York Herald, for the purpose of repro- ducing by chemicals the same action that yeast has on bread dough, All of ! these proportions are basea on the faci i that an uustable chemical | ammonia, : ; s | uation, every amendment in strings of little, | substance containing carbonic acid can be made to decompose, by being mixed with the dough, setting free carbome acid gas and often another. volatile substance that has the same action as itself, as in the case with the sesquicarbonate o! Another nrethed f-18 add t. the dough a salt from which the carbonic acid gas can be set free, by the addition of an acid, for instance, bicarbonate of seda and muriatic acid, or bicarbonate vf soda, chloride of potassium and acid phosphate of lime, or else bicarbonate of soda and tartaric acid. These, how- ever, come under the head of adultera- tions, on accourt of the chemical suv- stances thatren ain in the bread after the above-named reactions have taken place, M. Villon has recently proposed that the mixture of flower, water and sali should be made in a closed apparatus, and that carbonic acid gas be obtained from the siphons that can now be pro cured in trade should then be introduced, A pressure of six kilogrammes per square centimetre should be maintained for an hour, and the dough stirred continuously, at the end of which time it can be made into loaves and put in the oven at once, It is claimed that bread made in this way is excellent, especially if to it are added the aromatic principles of ordi- nary bread, which can, it seems, be readily done, In any case, it is a very rapid process, and one that will probably furnish bread almost free from microves, as the carbonic acid gas destroys the greater numbec of them in the water and flour, which, on the other hand, are not contaminated by any east. This is an important matter, trom a hygienic point of view. Prevention of Diphtheria, A physician in a paper on diphtheria urges upon parents the importance of teaching children to gargle at an early age, and mentions the fact that during an epidemic of the disease in his city he taught his baby girl, only a little more than two years old, to gargle as weil as her nine-year-old brother, and kept uy the practice regularly three times a day throughout the prevalence of the dis- ease. This is one of the smali points in keeping with the tendency of the age, which is toward preparation and preven- tion rather than relief, None, perhaps, except physicians and nurses realize the obstacles which obstinate and spoiled vhildren make of themselves in cases of illness, and the helpless mother who stands by with her despair- ing “the won’t take it and I can’t make him,” adds to the hopelessness of the sit- A child who is old enough to understand what is said to him is not too young to learn that he must do his share in the fight for recovery when sick- ness assails him, ‘The same paper states that it is a noticeable fact that a much larger number of girls have diphtheria than boys, ascribing as a probable cause | that girls, as a rule. spend more time in- doors than boys, which should be an- other note of warning to mothers and cause them oftener to turn the girls out | of doors after schoo! hours than is done. | The Benefit of Good Stock, One of the principal advantages in | having good stock is that with a litth extra feed and care a much better gain can be secured and they can readily be made ready for market in a less time than scrubbs; and at this season this will often be found quite an advantare. Whenever the hogs or cattle are fulls ready, sell. There is no possible advan cage in feeding a day after they a: realy for market. How to Get a Sunlight Picture. i Send 25 “Sunlight” Soap (wrappers bearing the words “Why Doe» a Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man”) to Levev Bros.,Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto. and you will receive by post a pretty picture, | free from advertising, aud well worth | jraming. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is the best in the market and it wlll only cost le. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully, wrappers } eae ~ Palpitation ee | Heart, ; / Nervous Exhaustion AND Trouble, sland, a nehter, Mrs. Mars, has heen y from the above diseases lor l emploved all the i sadine Physicians i en specialists in Boston, » relief. They said it was a | state of the blood. sleep nights; bowels palpitation of the bel she could hardly walk. tO taken 4 bottles of &>%,- ric > es ¢ SHIGE S Discovery, 1 Sxopa's Lirtis: Tantrrs, Now werk ever eat well aid } Lcan eX PPTess my CROWELL. ; : : , . LAG rok vee i O3., L735. WULPYRLLE, fi. §. For sale by all druggists. Trade sup piel by W. R. Watson; CLarlottetown P. E.T. Have You Anything To Print eter Sat tt 4 hp ht te fetid He d+44-4 ttt bt tt +444 ee bth t4+4+ ++ “Tt + ~~ cee Be ttt++et4 +447? pe + He ftp tt++ 444+ ee 4. Hit +443 Seager : — | TE SO BRING IT TO US AID WE WILL PRINT I? Promptly, In Good Style, At Lowest Prices. TRY US. ‘The Exaniuer Pub. Co London House, Queen Street, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND ‘A Letter From His Dad. Dear Sox— Yours to hand yesterday, It gives me great pleasure in sending you acheque for #100. Thanks to Prowse Bros. & Co. They have done the people of this country more good and saved them more mouey than uny firm = that ne ever started business in Charlottetown. I um glad you are buying your Furnishings and Carpets from nen voucan depend on. They | won't misrepresent an article to make a sale. You spoke ibout me reeommending any- me who might want a Carpet o trade there. It would be mpossible for me to tell any- ne who has not already heard ot Messrs. Prowse Bros. & Co, Why, your sisters, your cousins and vour aunts all trade there. They 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 offer. Good bye. From your loving FATHER. JONSON'S 4NopyYNe LINIMEN gneike any OT He Por a ° aes um. Originated by an Oid F Think Of It. ore ' rears, and still leads, Geos. ration after Generation have used and blessed tt, Every Traveler should have a bottle in his satchel. From #heumatiman, Eve ry Sufferer emia simatian, Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,cougha Catareh Broa. enitia, Asthma, Cholera-Morbus, Diarrhoea, Lameness, Soreness in Body or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, will find in this old Anctyae relief and speedy cure. Should have Johnson’s Every Mother Ancayne Liniment in the house for Croup, Cc ida, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, Colic, Cuts, Bru and Fains Nable to oceur in eny family withou notice. Delays may cost a life. Relieves h Summer Complaints like magic. Price, 35 hot. WI en We assert that ; Dodd’s ww See Kidney Pills Vnwnwnew. Cnre 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 ¢«f CURE TO STAY CURED, By 2» druggists or mail on receipt of price, gocenia Dr, L. A. Smith & Co., Toronta, Hine ities Silage oe NIE ayo NR ens tc te (te td ri en ln ee los diet ve EELS IE RO BE Me eat cate tiniest etal atin Mittin ae aA: rae Spe ee oi aii aie ~ i Seo. a. Cz et = eRe ek ick mae ein eennaii