1 HE DAILY EXAMINER. Teams Five Dorans a Y RAR. ee : NEW SERIES. ———— R. AM. ii. >. a “ . "ry Tix. ? s+} Wy; no pstim:nial From Duiuth, Minnesota, | ean Mus. fos ilaving tested your «YAGIC HEALER,” I wish to express my watitude to you by this stimonial, whi hj ” ; +) ‘+ " . > } you can use, if gou think It will assist you in, gelling it Havi ny hand severely with chisel, the wel having en acute, * ore , tered the pain nd, Making a long and | ; at | applied sy “ MAGIC} deep out. ppu ; : Fay HEALER” at once, and ait are ppitca- | : — } | tions 1 was able to go towork, and ia three | days the cut was he lead up j yours traly : \LONZO H. LAVERS. | ; ' (HARES I. HORRISON, (Commission Herchant o AN Dinnne AUCTION DER, Agent for St John Dye Works, St. Joha, N.DB. ; } for i Unurns | : . «= unt ys ve Eelwa (,enerai agen’ ior ©riuce aiwa ? “fdeal” Washing Machines & ‘Id ' eemeaetaasentyeemrtnee ! ' | ' j 108 Queen St., Charlottetown, P. EI, Oct 7 Ce nee ACURE IS CERTAIN —— IN R¥ER Ls Ca5E—— | Wien a Faithful Trial is Giver eiiticed Oita | WOODILE’S | Worm Lozenges. nov}2 ee Try a Pair of the D. & A. COR- Sits, and you will breathe easy. If you once try them you will be convineed that they are WELL MAbY, ee EASY FITTING, | GOOD SHAPE. | For sale at PERKINS & STERNS, Cheap Dry Goods Store. nov4—tf f | | | af i ! i. } j | OF ORF ur ' : 1 NI! phe Ga VREHOUND ANDAN ae 0r | wenger es PL 7 Ro UP‘u gt COUGHS “Whooping Sac OLDS. 534.0 YEARS IN USE. cut PRICE 25°PER BOTT Bice) eas cath ches cht eo ake tee sdkabes 9 Sis abet oma ‘ ALE SOURIS LOTS FOR SALE. ee two beautifully situated Lots ad- joining the Court House, 100x100; alo two ethers, same size, on the bil) opp ysite Dr. Me'atyre’s residence. These Lots command a beautiful view, and ate desirable sites for private residences. Price low. JOHN COOMBS, Charlottetown, Cc. C. CARLTON, Seuris. Or to octl4—eod J. H. BELL, The Leading Custom Beot and Shoe Maker of the Province, _ Now READY with a good selection of LEATHERS and TOPS for the Fall and Winter trade, and woul respectfully invite all who require a tirst-clacs Boot or Shoe to laspect evr stock and prices before placing their orders, All our goods are gnoranteed not to squeak, ale» to fit x ell and comfortable. Orders always fillel uptotime <A full line of ourown make kept constantly en hand. Quality the highest, prices the lowest. REPAIRING of all kinds promptly attend- ed to, J. H. BELL, Upper Great George Street. , Ch town, Sept, 6, 1890 - 3in Zaw (thu sat) MENS SUITS! | “* Kverybody’s Pills having no unpleasant aft ‘recommend all who have suffered as I have to try Apply te , ee . . . 3 : This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”-—Evnriripss. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1890. READY- MADE Mien’s Overcoats. Men's Overcesats, Nien’s Overcoats. (x)— boys Overcoats, , Boys’ Overcoats, ESoys’ Overcoats. a ——(x) — Men's Reefing Jackets, NEen’s Reefing Jackets, Mews KReefing Jackets. alippenielie Spain BOYS SUITS! (x) We are showing a large stock of Clothing at moderate prices. & HARRIS & SEHWART, LONDON FtOU Ss. Charlottetown, Oct. 23, 1890—5i | te ew ere SRF RFE ORES EAE OEAOEPS = as OTe tas BDSCES CURE CONSUMPTION !n its First Stages. Palatable as Milk. Be sure you get the genuine in Salmon color wrapper; sold by all Druggis's, at 50c. and $1.00. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. te he ty he eee en a ee ee ee ee LOLOL LOL OL ~~ LOL LL LE LL LL LE LMM EM ee SOS FL OLE LEAS HEME REREAD DRAREMNERA ES TO LET @ NEW DOUBLE TENEMENT HOUSE ants on the 15th of November. lars apply to MRS. J. W. MITCHELL, Euston Street, D. R. BH. MITCHELL, Guardian Office, Or to novS—tf HORSES BOARDED For the Winter. ' } ——— (x) TUST RECEIVED:—A Full Line of ANNIE S. SWAN’S ei WORKS, said to be superior to tke Pansy Books. ‘hose who have the Elsie Series should get the Mildred, a continuation of Elsie. We have a large stock of late works by, the following good authors: - Edna J.yall, Chas. Kings- ley, R. M. Bailentine, W. H. G. Kingston and Louis Rousselet, Purses, Pocket Books and Card Cases. We keep a full line of STATIONERY at lowest prices. PRINTING and BOOKBINDING in all branches, Get our prices and see our work in this line before you place your order. HASZARD & MOORE, BROWN’S BLOCK. a Charlottetown, Nov. 11, 1890—dy eod — ™ PROMINENT CLERGYMAN, whose name | am at liberty to reveal on application, A writes as follows :— Mr. A. J. Jonnson :— Dear Sir.—-For a number of years I have been suffering from indigestion and its conse- Some months since, however, I was advised to try your * Everybody's Pills,” and.am happy to say I am now free from any symptoms of indigestion, I regard ’ as a thoronghly reliable Family Medicine, mild in their action, and er-effects so common to such remedies, and I would, with confidence, ‘* Everybody’s Pills.” Yours very cordially, quent troubles, EVERYBODY'S PILLS are sold only iu boxes at 25 cents each, and will be sent by mail on receipt of price. Sample free on application. Prepared only by ARTHUR S. JOWNSON, Pharmacist, Corner Kent and Prince Streets, Charlottetown. novi7 _ Nee ea TN NEWAND LARGE STOCK pin Pinon . fatches, Clocks, JEWELRY & SILVERWARE, cine Scene G.H. TAYLOR'S Ss" warm, ventilated Stables. Care- ful attention. Horses handled for speed. Colts broken. Feed and exercise as desired. Terms moderate, For further particulars apply to J. T. WINANS, 46 Great George Street, Charlottetown. Stablee in rear on King Street, Telephone octl7—dy 2m eod New Tannery. LONG BROS., Tanners and Curriers, ——DEALERS IN—-- Hides, Calfskins, Sheepskins, Horse Hides, Tail-HNair, ete. Market Rates paid for Hides, etc. MALPEQUE ROAD, Opposite Ch’town Woolen Mills. oct6—3m eod Dissolution of Partnership. HE Partnership heretofore existing be- been dissolved by mutual consent. Al}! debts due the Firm must be paid to Mr. LH. Davies, at the office of Davies & Haszard. L. H. DAVIES, J. M. SUTHERLAND. Charlottetown Noy. 15, 1890. CO-PARTNERSHIP. The undersigned have this day entered into a partnershfp as Attorneys and Solicitors, under the style and firm of DAVIES & HASZARD. L. H. DAVIES, F, L. HASZARD, OLIVER RATTENBURY. Charlottetown, Nov. 15, 1899. novl5—dy prs lw wy prs 3i PICKFORD & BLAGK'S WEST INDIA Halifax to Demerara via Intermediate Perts. IT IS INTENDED TO SAIL THE §. §. LOANDA, ERR, MASTER, On Thursday, 11th December, 1890, FOR DEMERARA, calling at Bermuda, St. Thomas, St. Kitts, Antigua, Guadaloupe, Martinique, St. Lucia, Barbados, Trinidad—returning via the same ports and St. John, N. B. : The steamer has splendid accommodation for first-class passengers. Tickets will be issued at low rates. Freight and Passengers solicited. Wy. W. CLARKE, Agent, NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE. Oct 7—dy 2aw w novi5 Charlottetown. ;when he brought the pelicy into being. This is what the Canadian Liberals would tween DAVIES & SUTHERLAND has: THE DAILY EXAMINER. NOVEMBER 27, L880. Notes and Commenis. —The captain of the steamer Luzitania reports that while the vessel was passing through the Red Sea a beautiful young. English girl, Miss McKuight, who took passage at Melbourne and was coming tu England to be married, jumped overboard. She was depressed in spirits, and was heard to regret that she had conseuted to wed. On the night of November 3rd Miss Mc- Knight suddenly broke cff a conversation | with some fellow passengers, and mounting the rail leaped into the sea, The steamer | was hove to and boats lowered, but nothing could be seen of the girl. It is supposed sie was eaten by a shark. | —There is no beating about the bush by| United States advoca‘es of unrestricted re- | ciprocity. As Mr. Chauncey Depew puts) it: ** Whatever tariff laws existed in the United States should be adopted by the: Canadian Parliament and become applica- ble alike along all the coasts of this Repub- lic and Canada as against the rest of the world.” This is what Erastus Wiman said | take from Washington. And whet a proud sight it would be to see a minority in the | United States Congress enforcing a McKin- ley bill not only on the opposing majority ° t . eat r) a 29 r > 7 - on Euston Street will be ready for ten of their own countrymen, but on the whole For particu. ‘of the commercially attached Canada ! — Canada, from the physical conforma- i tion of a considerable portiun of it, abounds in bridges of almost every conceivable style jand material. One of the latest and not the least remarkable of these structures is | the railway bridge across the Kootenay, near Nelson, B. C. It is one of the longest of the class of single-span wooden truss bridges in the Dominion, the main span being more than 189 feet long. The river at this point is so rapid that it is impossible to put up false work, so that it must be ! thrown across without the aid of that usual device. The castings forthe bridge were made at Montrcal, and the heavy est piece weighs 950 pounds. The timber used in ‘its construction was (all except the string- ers, which were broaght from the coast) obtained at points along the river between | | Kootenay Lake and Spreat. -~The last number of the Dominion II- _lustrated contains, as usual, an excellent variety of engravings and letter-press. A ‘charming series of landscape views of the! | rocky beauties of Muskoka—the sports- ‘man’s paradise—deserve special mention, while a couple of fishing scenes in Gaspe | are of acharacter. An admiral summary; | is given of the recent visit to Canada of the | members of the Iron and Steel Institute of ‘Great Britain to which is added an excel- ‘lent engraving of the whole party on the steps of the City Hall, Hamilton; while ithe sad event which so lately occurred at St. John, N. B.—the heroic, though un- snecessful, attempt by Fred. Young to rescue a lad from a watery grave—is fully | illustrated. The fourth paper of the series 'on ‘* Historic Canada” is devoted to Fort , Gabriel, near Montreal. A faithful portrait and sketch of our famous military writer, Lieut.-Col. Denison, of Toronto, and a life- like picture of the first eleven of the Van- couver Cricket Club give much additional | interest to the publication. Altogether the number is an excellent one, and should be in the hands of ail patriotic Canadians. | It is published by the Sabiston Lithographic and Publishing Company, Montreal. — The total quantity of coal mined in the county of Pictou in 1864 was 221,849 tons. If the condition of the mining industry | was then flourishing, what shall be said of jit in 1889,when the output of the mines jin the same county was 431,380 tons. ‘From the Acadian mine alone there was j taken last year 257,607 tons of coal, and jon the Intercolonial 125,957 tons. | 1864 the total output of all the mines on Cape Breton island was 349,902 tons. The quantity raised in 1889 was 834,458 tons, or considerably more than double the | product of the year 1864. In 1864 the Cumberland county coal field produced 18,- 077 tons of coal, In 1889 the Cumberland yield was 490,452 tons. Twenty-six- hun- dred per cent. will be regarded as a very fair rate of increase. The total output of the mines in Nova Scotia in 1864 was 589,- 828 tons. The output in 1889 1,756,270 tons—an increase of two hundred per cent. The year 1864 was the tenth full year of the reciprocity treaty. It is not improbable, therefore, that the coal inter- est of Nova Scotia stands to lose more than to gain by a return to reciprocity in that article. Nevertheless the broader consid- eration ot the greatest good for the great- est number would doubtless lead to the acceptance of free trade in coal ifthe Am- ericans would only consent. Literary Note. The World’s Desire, by H. Rider Haggard and Andrew Lang. After Odysseus returns from his second wandering and finds his home at Ithica destroyed, Aphrodite shows him the World's Desire, which is Love, in the form of Fair Helen of Troy, who is still alive. Odysseus forgets his troubles and grows young again at the sight, and after many dangers finds the fair Helen in Egypt. It is the time of the ten plagues, and we have some sensa- tional scenes in this portion of the book. Odysseus allows Sin to overcome his heart's love for the Desire ef the World, and is de- | ceived by the Egyptian Queen, who is in love ‘with bim. He breaks a vow he made the ' Goddess, and leses Helen. Finally, he dies in a great battle with his own people, and breathes his last in Helen’s arms. There is bloodshed and magic enough in the story to satisfy even admirers of She. ‘The aim ot the book seems to he to show that when Love and Sin come together, and the latter overcomes the former, nothing but mirery ensues. Otherwise the book has little to commend it, ‘although it is exeiting reading. Robert Bryce, Toronto, pub’isher. , train Inj } onli aee Sincie Copies Two Cents VOL. 27.—-NO. 5 The Kings of Englands First William the Norman, Then William, his son, Henry, Stephen and Henry; Then Richard and Johv, Next Henry the Third, Edwards, one, two and three, And agein after Richard Three Henrys we see. Two Edwards, third Richard, li ey 1 guess, Two Henrys, sixth Rdward Queen Mary, Queen Bess, Then Jamie, the Scotchman, Thea Charles, whom they slew, Yet received after Cromwell Another Charles, too. Next James the Second Ascended ihe throne, Then good William and Mary Together came on, Till Anne, Georges four, And fourth William all past, God sent Queen Victoria, May she long be the last. >? Sister's Heroic Saerifice. LITTLE EMMA ORKESCH GIVSS UP A BIG SLICE OF SKIN FOR A GRAFT, Derrorr, Mich., Nov. 24.—A remask- able surgical operation, involving an act of heroic sacrifice on the part of a child, was witnessed yesterday afternoon at Grace hospital. Matilda Oresch, a ten-year-old girl, had her entire scalp and left ear wrenched off last Saturday by her hair get- ting caught in a shaft. Attempts to place the scalp back and make it grow were futile, and to-day surgeons tried a new tack. The wound was so large thac it would require a tremendous graft to save the child. The little giri’s sister Emma, 12 old years old, who knew what was want- ed, offered to spare her skin for the pur- pose. The doctors put both girls usder the in- fluence of chloroform, and then cut a piece of flesh eight inches longand five inches wide from Emma’s side and breast, ieaving one side intact. The loose end was then at- tached to the flesh on Matilda’s head, and the two little ones were bound together so that they could not pull apart. Heroic lit- tle mma will be tied to her sister by those bandages for four days, in which the doc- tors expect the flesh and the union of the skin to be completed, It is the first case on record where a ‘graft of this size has been made, and the medical fraternity have been watching the case with great interest. To Give Stanley Points. FOUR YOUNG PITTSBURGERS TO EXPLORE THE MYSTERIES OF AFRICA, Four young men will leave Pittsburg, Penn., on Monday, to imitate Stanley and his co-explorers. They have been reading Stanley’s book, letters and lectures, and are of the opinion that he greatly magnifies the hardships and privations of exploration in the dark continent. They also take sides against the great explorer in the Barttelot controversy, and thatis one objoct of their proposed adventure. They think they can get wuthentic evidence in Africa to prove that stanley has mis-stated the case. The young men are Michael Hawkins, an iron worker of that city; Thomas Colins, a mill-worker of Cleveland ; Martin Conway, a roller in a Youngstown, Obio, mill; and George Jackson, a roll turner of Akron, Ohio. They will sail from New York to Liverpool on Tuesday. they are unmarried men and have each saved up several thousand dollars, which they pro- pose to spend in seeing darkest Africa’ Mr. Hawkins, before boarding the Cleveland sid; ‘*‘We are thoroughly pre- pared for the trip, and expect to show the American people thet it can be made without so much fuss and with iess misfortune, hard- ship or loss of life than Stanley leads the public to believe. At least what Stanley has one others can do, and we are are in for the trial.” a -- e ————— —— Giris Who Make Poor Wives. I never see a petted, pampered gil who is yielded to in every whim by servants and parents, that I do not sigh with pity for the man who will some day be her husband, It is the worshipped daughter, who has heen taught that her whims and wishes are supreme in a household, who makes marriage a failure all her life. She has had her way in things great and small; and when she desired dresses, leasures or journeys which were beyond the amily purse, she carried the day with tears or sulks, or posing as a martyr. The parents sacrificed and suffered for her sake, hoping finally to see her well married. They carefully hide her faults frora her suitors who seek her hand, and she is ever ready with smiles and allure- ments to win the hearts of men, and the average man is as blind to the faults of a pretty girl as a newly-hatched bird is bliad to the worms upon the trees about him. He thinks her little pettish ways are mere girlish modes; but when she becames his wife and reveals her selfish and cruel nature, he ia grieved and hurt to think fate Las been so \unkind to him.—FiLta WaeeLer WItcox ip Ludies’ Home Journat. nena eee: News Notes. The Neva river is frozen over and navi- gation is closed at St. Petersburg. tuildings were erected in Winnipeg the past sezson to the value of $600,000. The Paris Matin says a new French loau of 700,000,000 francs will be issued on January 1. : A number of children have of late com- mitted suicide in Vienna through over pres- sure in scaools. The Marquis of Queensberry has sent £100 to Gen. Booth asthe ‘‘mite” of a ** reverent agnostic ” Madame Patti, the great singer, is lying seriously ill at Leicester, England, from a chill caught while singing at a concert in London. From Heligoland comes the news of the arrest of a French traveller for speaking against the Emperor of Germany and de- nouncing the annexation of the island as an injustice to Denmark. Se tales Pi " Sie 6 ee os : oer. pd ae 5 Fd be a. ey ay ee a ae ape ees 7 , Epes wr 5 te man: eet A ANOS. “aa iby GEE pte PEM 5 Ae as a SA a 7 oe OE CECE COC 8 SRE CME SO, oa snap are re MA & . i