_ , CALENPAR FOR FERRUARY, 1894. New M ay, 5h 2.8m., p. m. b hor ’ N A b> hc } vl Sy -S FE j 4 S 7 . m W \W ‘ 5 H i sets wat | , » i » ® S 2 42 ‘ . § 0 ; ; ° ri ¥ : si lbs 0 29 ~ | 1 ’ ~ i2 ‘ 4 26 7 30 ; 8 4 ~ 4 > if 11 - at . 8 O7 e 45 3 4é 4 43 Nee ee DAILY NEWSPAPER Til, DAILY EAAMIMA x . E. ISlanp, ts ise sfternoon, from the office of TH aN PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Leud : . ig, Queen Street } 3 F SUBSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE) Owe ¥ $1.00 Six M 2.00 THnek MenrTits 1.00 Ove Mon 0.35 = post pald to any part of Canada or the | United Sta ADVERTISING RATES vertisements which are ordered for oa ; r two weeks the charge is 50 cents e first insertion, and 20 venta r each continuation. Rate cards are fu » application at the office. Special contra t s at a reduced rate are quoted for advertisements four inches in size or larger, which are to run for three months or nger No special notices inserted unless paid for ai the rate of WW cents per line, and under no es will such paid notices appear ca. COMMA. liseounte made on al! advertise- ‘ ynected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, Menics, ete. NO notices will be inserted witl he came unless the regular rate of 10 cents per é ils paid. Special rm } t That Tue Exawiver is considered by joui Merehanis and Manufacturers to be the lead- iag newspaper in P. E. Island, and conse- quently the most valuable advertising medium through which to make their announcements public, in Order i& have been compelled its present size. Tue Darcy ExamrNver is for sale by the fol- owin I g @gents :— t. H. Mason, Post Office, Charlottetown J. Meintyre,. Mailpeque Road, : ©. Paal, Lower Spring Park Road, W. M. Coffin, Grafton Street, & Grey, cor, Water and Prince St. D. “happell, Prince Street, Bazaar Store, Queen Street, tie arter & Co., Queen Street, ¥ S Gray, News Stall, P. E. Ll. Railway} and on tne trains M. & T. J. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- mersicdk Harry McFariane, Souris. Hon, D. Gordon, Georgetown. Db. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. G. M. Clarke, Alberton Chas A. Gillis, Orwell Cove. wus 5 0S The Weekly Examiner Is issued every Friday publishers’ office. It which has appeared in the Daily editions, and -interesting is made up of matter is a first-class sad full of the latest news. The subscription for Tue WEEKLY Exam’? IER, post paid to any part of Canada or the weekly newspaper United Siates, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as giver bove for Tus DaiLy EXaMINER.- DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Surgeon. Graduate of the University of the City of New York, late Member of the Resident Staff of Belle- vue Hospital and the New York Lying-in Hospital, New York City. Side OFFICE North Queen OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Res<idence—Near Corner of King and Queen Streets, Charlottetown. ROBERT BEAIRSTO AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES. Salesroom: Queen Street, Cha-lattetown Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX Of the Age yunere NOUSETOLD i PAINGURE BOTH ex MANUFACTURED ONLY ' morning from the | land beyond everything else relating to the Wold’s Fair. Square | | | i the Principal Buildings, is abundantly proved by the fact that | aceommodate our advertisers we | to enlarge the paper to | | Grandest. the Most Beautiful, the Most Wonderful of all! | | pecemnnemenediinoees THE DAILY EXAMINER. TERMS : Four Dollars a Year * Se, ; “a ‘ite } NEW SERIES. fen, RO You have heard of the good man who prayed for RAIN and that is what happened with THE EXAMINER'S Portfolios o1 other words, OFFICE, LATHE DAILY i | Cadi | got a FLOOD! Well the World’s Fair, in THE MAGIC CITy ! WE KNEW IT WOULD GO, because it is the Best, the Largest, the Greatest, the Containing over 300 Splen- did Photographic Views and Historical Descriptions of the World’s Fair and the Midway Plaisance. All who have seen it are astonished at They all want it and must have it. Nothing like it! Nething equals it! Don't Fail to Get a Sample Number of “The Magic City.” beauty. It is away above Its GRAND PHOTOGRAPHS its marvellous IN NATURAL COLORS are a surprise to everybody. ONLY ONE COUPON REQUIRED. “THE MAGIC CITY” will be published in sixteen consecutive weekly ‘numbers, each containing sixteen to twenty Medical Department of the ‘General Views, COMMISSION MERCHANT | Iptepigp Views, ST JOHN. N.B. es THE HAWKER MEDICINE COV i ‘and the Midway Plaisance, with accurate will constitute a large and beautiful oblong volume, Historical Descriptions. parts or splendid Photographs of the World’s Fair The complete series 11x13 inches, illustrated with OYER 300 CRAND YIEWS, Foreign and State Buildings, ‘Architectural Details, 4 The consecutive weekly parts will | } | i i ' j ' | | : INCLUDING Great Paintings, Celebrated Statuary, Glimpses of the Art Gallery, Character Sketches in the Midway, Curious Foreign Types, And all the Grand and Wonderful Features of the Great Fair, taken at the height of the Splendor of the World’s Exposition by-a Special Corps of Artists. be mailed to any address, or delivered to persons calling at our office, at the uniform price of TEN CENTS EACH, and ONE COUPON. 'Don’t miss the greatest and best of all the World's Fair histories, THE AMERICAN $8.00 Typewriter. | : This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and punc. ‘tuation marks (71 in all) on ful! width paper, just like a $100 instrument. It is the first of its kind ever offered at a popular price for -whickh the above claim can be truthfully made It 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 1s still at least as rapid as the per, Writes capitals, small letters, figures and marks—71 in all. Writes just like a $100 machine. No Shift Keys. No Ribbon. Prints from the type direct. Prints on flat surface. Writing always in sight. Corrections and insertions easily made. Fakes any width of paper or envelope up to 8} inches. ‘and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastered almost at v Slance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. Easy to understand—learned in 5 minutes. Weighs only four pounds—most portable. Compact, takes up but little room. Built solid and simple; can’t get out of order. Capital and lower case keyboard” ailke- easily mastered. More “margin play” for the small letters which do mest of the work. Takes good letter-press copies. D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlottetown. Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.00, in registered letter, money order or certified check. a ¢ glad to-apswer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the “ Yost. IRA CORNWALL, We guarantee every machine, and are General Agent forMaritime Provinces. dec20 ~-"ARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, | Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy life more, with leas expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value 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.e and pleas- ant to the taste, thé refreshing and truly beneficial properties of @ perfect lax- ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently 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 without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of he for sale by all drug- giste in 75c. bottles, but it is manu- actured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not sccept any substitute if offered. W. R. Watson, Druggist, Charlotteown P. E Island. jymwtf “You'll Feel Better” Everybody does, after taking a few bottles of WALTG PEPTONIZED PORTER. it builds up the 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. TRE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LID. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA, Highly Reeommended byPbysicians. WS WOOD VECTBCSF Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies —oR— Other Chemicals . are used in the preparation of " W. BAKER & C0.’S \BreakfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soluble. i fi It has morethan threetimes || the strength of Cocoa mixed ‘a With Starch, Arrowroot or _— . Sugar, and is far more eco- pomieal, oct ‘ing tess than one cent a cup. It is ic! » nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mase Store To Let. The smal! Store in the Can:eron Block, next door to Messrs. Reddin Brothers. Apply to - HORACE HASZARD. janl1—2w eod WEAKNESS o MEN Quickly, Thoroughly, Forever Cured by a new perfected scientific method thet annot fail unless the case is beyond human aid. You feel improved the first day, feel a benefit every day ; soon know yourself a king among men in body, mind and heart. Drains and losses ended. Every obstacle to happy married life removed. Nerve force, will, energy, brain power, when failing or Jost, are restored by this treatment. All smail aud weak portions of the body enlarged end strengthened. Victims of abuses and excess- es, reclaim your manhood! Sufferers from folly, overwork, early errors, ill health, regain your vigor! Don’t despair, even if in the last. stages. Don’t be disheartened if quacks have robbed you. Let us show you that me- dical science and business honor still exist: here go hand in hand. Write for our book with explanations and proofs. Sent sealed, free. Over 2,000 references. , ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. DYEING COMPANY. Gold Medalist Dyers and Cleaners, MONTREAL: WE ARE PREPARED TO DYE ail class of goods and garments equal to any House in Europe. FRENCH CLEANING a specialty. All information regarding shades, prices, etc., furnished by _ - CHAS. IVES MORRISON, on Agent, Queen Street. Christy 5 Knives BREAD— CARVING—PARING. a a — “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Euripides. HEALTH BETTER THAN WEALTH. Exercise the Go By. keynote of radical improvement in the general health of city communities tor of present day ailments is the abey- ance into which the muscular system is allowed to fall by dwellers in cities, who are daily becoming mors and more dependent on artificial means of loco- motion and labor savirg apparatus, un- ‘til disorders of digestion and nervous maladies are now as common among the comparatively poor as they are among the wealthy. The rich man en- deavors to overcome the mischief wrought by his sedentary life by horse- back exercise or golf, bat the poorer man, whois unable to afford these recre- ations, neglects his muscular develop- ment and invariably tumbles into his train or mounts his street car rather than waste the time necessary for a brisk walk or a half hour in the gym- nasium, The popularity of the bicycle has tended to counteract the disuse of mus- cles engendered in a large proportion of town residents, but there are still nu:n- bers of persons of both sexes who re- quire vigorous muscular exercise in or- der to maintain health. Women are the victims of modern, social and com- mercial changes almost if not quite as much-as men. The centralization of many domestic industries may have im- proved the character of the products thus manufactured or of the work per- formed, but when bread was made and washing was done at home the female members of many families fairly well oft, but sot too richly endowed with this world's goods, were profitably em- ployed in kneading the dough and iron- ing the linen. One of the results of this general disinclination to take the amount of exercise essential to health is the revival of a practice which is re- corded in the earliest medical papyrus in the British museum, The introduction of massage may be regarded as specific evidence of the ten- dency in these latter days to the neglect of muscular exercise, and Dr. Eccles holds that if it be true that the abey- ance of function in certain glands is productive of diseases which can be cured by the injection of organic lq- uids derived from a similar source— and modern research has established this belief—-much more is it evidently true that the tailure to employ the great bulk of muscular tissue, which is so large a portion of the human frame, will, and invariably does, give rise to disordered function and altered structure in the other organs and tissues of the body, which are interdependent on the activ- ity of the muscles and each other. Men- tal and nervous overstrain is rarely disassociated from muscular disuse and flaccidity. The burden of Dr. Eccles’ exhortation is: ‘‘'Even if you make 6 little less money, take more exercise. You will save the difference in doctor’s bills and bring more happiness not only into your own life, but into other peo- ple’s.’’—Pittsburg Dispatch. _ The Walls of Jerusalem. : The lofty wall of Jerusalem and the. massive towers of the citadel are im- mediately before us. We are on the outer slope of Mount Zion, the sanctu ary and the abode of David. The pon- derous blocks which form the lower strata of the wall might have been shaped and put in place by some pre- historic race of giants. More than al- most anything else to be found around Jerusalem, or within, this wall beare an appearance of great antiquity. We can easily believe that its foundations were laid in the time of David, though its upper portions are unquestionably modern. The books vary. One says it was the work of Sultan Suleiman in the six- teenth century, another that it was erected much earlier, and my guide, a most intelligent and well informed Jew of Hungarian origin, told me that it was built by the crusaders after they had got possession, for the purpose of protecting the inhabitants against the rascally Arabs, who would ride up in small parties, rob some rich family and be off with their plunder before any- thing could be done to stop them. But, however this may be, the wall, from 16 to 20 feet in height, fully incloses the town, and although {t could soon be knocked to pieces by a 10 pounder can- non it stands in good order, solid enough for all peaceful purposes, and perfectly separates the city from the country about it.—Charles A, Dana in Mc- Clure’s Magazine, Egypt's Monuments. Recent discoveries in Egypt and Chal- dea indicate that, although the monu- ments there carry us back about 5,000 years before the Christian era, they do not constitute the limit of our sources of history, They indicate the orizin of these people to have been in western Persia. Kurdistan and Luristan show more ancient remains than have been studied in any part of the world. The old Babylonian civilization and Chinese civilization both come probably from this region, and it may yet yield us knowledge of times far earlier than any that we know of.—Chicago Tribune, Sure Preventive of Disease. The Duchess of Edinburgh is the hap- iy r—from the Russian and su- perstitious point of view—of two genu- ine bezoar stones, one of which was left to her by her imperial father and the other by her aunt. The bezoar stoné is cut from a-very rare animal and is re- garded asa sure preserver of health and happiness, —Exchange, Whe Flower Language. Mrs. Murray Hill—There was a time when you called me a daisy, a sweet vie olet and a lily of the valley. Mr. Murray Hill—Yes, that was be- fore you began jawing me every night. Now, the only flower I wish you were js a ‘‘four o’clock.’’ That shuts up sometimes. —Texas Siftings. ————EEEEEEwee Deafness Caused by Cattarrh, Capt. 8. F. Belyea, of Greenwich, King’s Co., N. B., suffered from an aggravated form of catarrh which had in his case in- duced serious deafness, closed the nasal passages so that he could scarcely breath and caused him great pain aud trouble. He tried many rernedies, but all failed until he got Hawker’s Cattarrh Cure, three 25 cent packages of whieh effected a cure. “TI can honestly say” says capt. Belyea “that Iam practically well, and I take great pleasure in recommending Hawker’s FOR SALE BY R. B. Worton & Co., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. L. ang 16, atarrh Cure to those who may be suffer- ing from this very troublesome disease.” And You Can't Retain the Formerand Give | Dr. A. Symons Eccles has struck the when he says that the most potent fac- | Single Copies Two ¢ =-- i89 i VOL 33.—N9. SHE GOT A BARGAIN. Better Than That, She Knew How to Use It Afler Getting It. A lady surrounded the bargain coun- ter of one of the big retail] stores on Sixth ayenue the other day and cap- tured a fragment of china silk with which she wanted to make a screen. To accomplish this required a degree of stratégy and physica! exertion sufficient to equip a college eleven for active sery- ice on the gridiron. But she got there. “lL epent the whole afternoon,’’ said | she to a friend, ‘‘and when I got home I figured the whole thing up. 1 conld | have bought the same stuff up stairs at the regular counter tor 39 cents a yard, | and I wanted only 3!j yards. Well, that mean little clerk sold me four yards for 335 cents—it was a remnaazt, you | .- know—so I found I had been trodden upon for about two hours and squeezed | black and blue and had lost just 3 cents by the operation. ‘But, law, that’s nothing! What do | you spose? Why, when I examined | that silk the next day, I found a bole in | every fold. ‘‘Mad? Well, 1 think I was mad! My husband laughed at me. He says wom- en were born to be fooled, don’t you know—that most of us haven't sense enough to spread an umbrella when it rains. *** What would you do?’ I asked him ** * Do,’ says he, ‘I'd throw that away and never go back to that store again.’ ‘** ‘Not much,’says1. ‘I’m going to make them take that back if 1 die for it. Now there! Andif you shonld miss me when night comes, you'll find my re- mains at the foot of the china silk coun- ter!’ “‘l went back. Aiter another two hours of shuffling and crowding [| got a chance to confront the young inan who sold me that silk. I was prepared to make him ashamed of himself, now ! tell you. But he merely looked at it and said in a bored sort of way, ‘Oh, yes, that is thesame picce of silk Mrs. Blank returned last week,’ ‘*Yes, | was stricken dumb. If there had been room enough, I'd have drop- ped. But that’s nothing. Let me tell | you. While he was making out my re- bate check another lady glanced at the silk I had just laid down. ‘** *That’s real pretty,’ said she, ‘How | mary yards?’ ** *Four, ma’am,’ says he, } ‘* *How much?’ ***Forty cente,’ says he, with the | most unblushing face. *It': the last piece of that shade in the house,” says he. | ***I’ll take it,’ says she, pulling out | her purse just as he gave m2 my ticket | for the return of that identical piece. | Well, then I knew that young man de- | liberately cheated me and was going to | cheat that lady right before my face, But | I got my breath quick enough te tell her. | And 1 did. 1 said: *Madam, I’ve just | this minute brought that back. It’s damaged. Look at these holes! He knows it’s damaged. Here's my ticket for the rebate for its return.’ ‘Well, if you could have seen the look she gave him! Then she turned on her heel and went out. Yes, I should say I'm about even with that house— one of the finest stores in town too,’’— New York Herald. Old John's Translation. Every one in Boston knows of old Jobn the Orangeman, that picturesque and almost historical personage who presides over the affections of all Har- vard men. And every one who knows John knows also. that his life’s motto is that familiar phrase which expresses briefly and tothe point the wish that Yale may be forever relegated to the re- gion of sorrow and perpetual darkness. One afternoon strangers were walk- ing through.the yard at Harvard, and on every hand they saw the college sea] bearing this motto, *‘Christo et Eccle- siz.”* Not being on speaking terms with Cicero, Cesar and the other Romans, this did nothing but to arouse their cu- riosity. Finally they met John. “I say!’’ said one of the visitors. ‘‘] see these words everywhere, Can you | tell me what they mean?”’ John looked carefully at the Latin in- sciption, bit his pipe a little harder and then replied gravely: “Oi don’t jist know, fr’nd, but Oi t’ink it means ‘To h—— wid Yale.’ ’’— Boston Budget. Some Timber Sirength Tests. It would be difficult to convince the average man, especially the Missouri pioneer, that fir is astronger wood than | oak, but such has been proved by ac- tual tests that were made by a fair and impartial committee appointed for the purpose. The timbers used were each 2 by 4 inches and 4 feet long, both ends solidly braced and the weight applied in the middle of the span. Yellow fir stood a strain of 8,062 pounds, common Oregon oak 2,922 pounds. Fine grained yellow fir from near the butt stood a strain of 8,635 pounds, and best Michi- gan oak snapped with a strain of only 2,428 pounds, These tests were made by the Northern Pacific Railroad com- pany at Tacoma.—St. Louis Republic, ‘*You intend this novel for the Bos- ton public, do you?’’ said the publish- er, leaning back in his chair. **Yes, sir,’’ said the novelist. **Well, Mr. Pensling,’’ said the pub- lisher, “‘the work basits merit. It is pointed, interesting, and the style can be readily read and understood, and ] think,’’ he continued as the novelist’s face broke into a smile of hope, ‘'l | think therefore that you should give up | all effort to get Boston people interest- ed in it,’’—Chicago Record. | Rie ae Eee } Not Obscure Enough. } Proving the Proposition. . | When a man writes to another chal- | lenging him to fight a duel because that | other has called him a fool, the chal- | lenging party betrays lamentable igno- rance as to popular understanding in regard to what a fool is.—Buffalo Com- mercial, ———_____— Snecess produces Imitations. Genniou Pond’s Extract is sold only in bottles, with landscape view on buff wrapper. eee }4oon’s Sarsapariiia wins its way into the confidence of the people by the good it is doing. Fair trials quarantee permanent CURES. Ahead of all others—Hawker’s Tolu | and Wild Cherry Balsam, the favorite | Cough cure. USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the grea | Blood and NerveRemedy. «\* ’ yp mA Children of Mr. and Mrs, M. M. Soller Altoona, Pa. Both Had Eczema in its Worst Form After Physicians Fuiled, Hood’ Sarsaparilla Perfectly Cured. Great mental agony is endured by parents who see their children sufering from diseases caused by impure blood, and for which there seems no cure. This is turred to joy when Hood's Sarsaparilla is resorted to, for it expels the foul humors from the blood, and restores the dis- | eased skin to fresh, healthy brightnes Read the following from grateful parents “ToC. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: “We think Hoou’s Sarsaparilia is the most valuable medicine on the market for bl land skin diseases. Our two children suff tcrri- bly with the Worst Form of Eczema for two years. We had three phrsicians that time, but neither of them eedel turing te or eve giving t na it felief. At I iH Is Sarsaperiila and 1onth both children were per- feetiy cured. We rec i Ram chile © . see "coa S oarsapariia 5 ftanda fam Y i ly ithon .” Hr : mud ya ’ uid Mes. M. M. Sou? Physicians ENDORSE Them, and we GUARANTEE Mrs. Elmer E. Millett, ?. O, Box 511, Livermore Falls, Maine. SALT RHEUM and ail disease. of the BLoop & Si; Skoda’s Discovery, Skoda’s Germ Ointment and Skoda’s German Soa are specially adapted to cure |} ed and chronic diseases. Mrs. }ii!! writes: “I have had Sali Rhenia o since I could remember: tri remedies, but received no ber I took Skoda’s Discov« overy.. m9 eam % Skoda 3 Ce BCs My husband says it will cost ; to board me if I iake any moi ‘ da’s Discovery. Skoda’s Little Tabet Constipation and uy »; { MEDICAL ADVICE FP SKODA DISCOVERY G2, LTD., WOLFVILLE, K.* For sale by all druggists. pried by W. r, me i MISS WARY DOULE, STUDS, STAMPER BLOCK. Trade snp Rh. Watson; Charlottetcwn Instructions given in the various branch es of Drawing and Painting. nov29-—2m eod JOHNSON'S ANopyNeé LINIMER yrelke ANY OThe As much Yor INTEDIAL as CITERNAL use, im 1810 ss Originated by an Oid Family Peysician, . In use for more than Eigaty Think Of It. Years, and still leads, —~ ration after Generation have used ard blessed tt, Every Traveler should have a@ bottle in his satchei, Every Sufferer critica’ Neunisin Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,Coughs,Catarrh, Bron chitis, Asthma, Cholera-Morbus, Diarrhoea, Lameness, Soreness in Body or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Stralios will find in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure Should have Johnson's Eve ry Ni other Anodyne isniment in tho ouse for Croup, Sore Throat, Tonsilitia, Colic, Cuts, rates’ Cremes ani Pains liable to occur in any family without notice. Delays may cost a life. Re leves all Summer Complaints like magic. Price, 3 cta. pose pase; 6 bot. tles, #2. Express paid. L 8. Johnson & Co., Boston. Mags AFTER Tt sk BEEN KEPT —_ UP ALL NIGHT With that COUGH, if ’ uf repeat i experi bottle of the OLD STANDARD REMEDY Gray’s Syrup of you do not nee, buy a Red Spruce Gum The best Cough Cure in the world Sold everywhere 25 cts. a bottle KERRY WATSON & CO. Propricrons MONTREAL. Yama TT NORWEGIAN = aaa GOD-- © Dr ee WITH HYPOPHOSPHITEScf- LIME & SODA alatable as cream. No taste .ike others. In big bc 6Oc. and $1.00. oily ttles 22222482 When we assert that Dodd’s Kidney Pills ene Cure Backache, Dropsy, 5 Lumbago, Bright’s at . ease, Rheumatism and ail other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of ail who have used them. THs/ CURE TO STAY CURED, By a+ druggists or mail on receipt of price, go cents. Dr, L. A. Smith & Co., Toronta eee ae a OR se