‘Rh FOR: MARCH 18906 F ” ———— — - — — eee t . a ™ ” — b h } : Sun | High ; 2 a : ; = TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. Single Copies Two Cents nat NEW SERIES" CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1894. VOL 33.—NO. 214 i : 1\\ ee UIT MANLY | AMMA VSPAPER me mee ym the office of MPANY, im the sc. Qi h Street SUBSCRIPTION ‘ ANCE Sim Lia a Mi as ~ j t Canada or the SING RATES serTments which are orc lered weeks t charge is »& ha neertion, and @ he Rate cards are ‘ Specia ta reduced rate are quotec es it sive oF ‘ r for three months o7 v such paid notices appea rrt acle mi all advertise- h Fairs, Bazaars nserted with nless paid for reg ar rate of 10 cents per : — sidered by] Me acturers to be the lead- ms i Istand, pd conse- jar ve advertising medium thro ' iake their ansomincements pu I ed by the fact that iB : ste onr advertisers we ba n wiled to enlarge the paper fo ite 5 T vy Exa™Mtwvenr is for sale by the fol- low i a! Charlottetown ‘ vw ' ' : ‘ ~ s k Road abe - ™~y st 3 ; : “ ' eur ‘ “treet i : ie t. es a ‘ews Stall, P. FE. i. Railways and ~ I : f Beokstore, Sum- H : r “ my A Mt. Stew GM Alin ~ ric es es = , Weekly E The Weekly Examiner so ise Friday morning from the Pobiis lee, fit made up of matter wh ippeared the Daily editions, and lea . ’ aly ! Vspaper teresting an fest n a %e sabscri for Taz WereKty EXAM. tv piel ny part of Canada or the Unite! Sta : lollar per year. Advert g rates the same seale as given bove fi ’ I LY EXAMINER. DOCTOR DORSEY, i ’ Physician and Surgeon. Gradnat M al Dey ment of the U ‘ y of Ne wo York, late M thesjdcout Staffor Beille- 4 } the Ni ‘w York nh rio#p — Ne Ww York ¢ OFFIC! Nor Side Queen “Seypmare . POST OFFICE r of King and Queen | ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND CTIONEER. FERENCES Fale: , Street, Che=‘ttetown Robi. Balloch & Co., MERCHAN’ G LANE----------LONDON ‘ANADA BY rrr 4 Lc MINCING rED IN ( MORRISON, HALIFAX J. A rina ier Sy ~The Greatest Rheumatic and Neuraigia Cure Ofthe Age | ABle HOUSEHO! p REMen, | AND W PAIN € CURE (BOTH INTERNAL AND £0 ERNALD) MANU FACT URED ONLY "BY AWKER MEDICINE COV LID; ST JOHN, N. Be | for use; FOR SPRING HOUSE CLEANING — Se —— ——— The Magic City Have You seen Part 7 Cut out Coupon on Paze I. THE AMERICAN $8.00 Typewriter. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and pune- tuation marks (71 in all) on fall width paper, just like a $100 instrument. It is the its kind ever offered at a popular price for whiehthe above claim can be truthfully [t is not a toy, but a typewriter bailt. for aud eapable of REAL work. While not as rapid as, the large machines sometimes become in expert hands, it is still at least as rapid as the pen, ind has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastered almost at a glance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers e verywhere. figures and | Easy to understand—le in 9 minutes. Wet chs only four por inds—-imnost ports able, Compact, takes up but little Built sdlid and can't order. Capital and lower case easily mastere od. More “margin play” for the small which do mest of the work. Takes good letter-press copies. staall letters, all. a S100 machine. Ribbon. Prints Writes capitals, marks—71 in Writes just like No Shift Keys. the type direct. Prints on flat surface. | 1 aur ned room. ret up from simple ; out of keyboard ailke- Writing always in sight. Corrections and insertions easily fakes any er to 83 made. letters vidth of or envelope up paper fithes, Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.00, in registered letter, money order or certified check. We guarantee every machine, and are glad to answer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the * Yost.” IRA CORNWALL, Agent forMaritime TD rovinces. dec20 Gener il D B. STRWART, Agent, om FIRE INSU RANCE. Your patronage by the following great Fire Companies ia respectfully solicited :— The Royal Ins. Co of Liverpoo!. Charlot‘etown “THE LOYAL CIRCLE OF INTEND GIVING A Musical & Literary Entertainment The London & Lancashire Ins. Co. of Liveprool IN— The United Fire Ins Co of Manchester. The Phenix Ins. Co. of Brooklyn. ST. PAUL'S SCHOOLROOM, These Companies command ENORMOUS MONETARY ON STRENGTH, and are noted for their prompt and _ liberal Thursday, Avril 5. settlement of losses. Remem JOHN MACEACHERN, hes b24—law (sat) AGENT FOR TI. E. ISDAND. - Long Waist, Gorrect Shape, Best Material, Combined with the best filling in the world, makes the ‘‘ Featherbone ber the cate Particulars later t Corset ’’ ITRyY A PAIR. unequalled. This is the heel of the GRANBY RUBBER. Look for this pattern the heel when you buy a Rubber or Overshoe. It guar- antees a perfect art cle. Granby Rubbers Wear Like Iron. The Woman’s Holiday SUPPLIES. _—Paints and Floor the Paints, | read y on all latest artistic shades mixed also Kalsomine, all shades and colors to make any shade; Brushes, Var- scsi sour dealer tor tiem. mehl4 “| nishes and Painters’ supplies as well, at the ee ee ‘“Oity Hardware Store.” —_ Al J al r cm The brick store on Queen Street, lately R. B. NORTON & CO. eR SS Ot ‘at office ot trustees Connolly Estate, Charlottetown, March 20, 1894—tn fri Queen Street eod t—jan?5 first of made. | KN OWL EDO GH Prings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- | tor than others and enjoy life more, with es expenditure, by more promptly la udaptin y the world’s best products to 1e needs of physiéal being, will attest the value to nealth of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remddy, Syrup of Figs. lis excellence is due to its presenting 'n the form mos§ acceptal’s and pleas- aut to the taste, therefreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ; effectually cleansing the system, ling colds, heaca ‘ea and fevers and permanently eu). ¢ constipation. {; has gigen Satisfacticn. So millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels withort weak- ening - om and it is perfectly free from »-ery objectionable substa.ce. Syn ~ of Ad t~ fur sale by all drug- fsts in ttles, but it is manu red ty the California Fig Syrup Sa only, whose name is printed on every o Lage, alsa the name, Syrup ef Figs, and being well informed, you will not ‘cent eny substitute if offered, W_ 8. Wetson, Druggist, PE Tolanig. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies —orn— \ Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & CO/S ALIVE aispes i . Toe Charlotteow 1 iymwtf which is absolutely pure and soluble. VN Ithas more thon three times | the strength of Cocoa mixe with Starch, Arrowrovt o. , a far more eco- pomical, . costing less than oné cent a cur lc is delicious, nourishing, ane SAsiLx DIGESTED, Sold by Grocers everywhes >. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained—how re- stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- siolcgy will not tell yous the doctors can’t or won't; but allthe 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 disexse, should write for our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- | hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), ; KING'S DAUGHTERS | | ! | ration alter Generation have used and blessed it | Every Traveler suould have a bottle in his satcheb | i i No You Recoz nize |i? | notice. ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. OHASONS ANODYNE UINIMERT ypUrke ANY OTHe As much Por INTERNAL 23 oe Im1s810 Originated by cn Cid Family Pnysician. | Think Of It. Yeon Shoo chan Eine From Rheumatism | Eve ry Suffe rer Sciatica, Neuraigia, Nervona tl -adach*, Diphtheria,Coughs, Catarrth, Bron ebitis, Asthuna, Cholera Morbus, Diarrha a, Lameness, Soreness in Body or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, will find in this old Anodyne relief and speedy cure Every Niother Should have Joh nsou’s piety ne Liniment in the house for Croup, Colda, Sore Throat, Tonsilitie, Colic, Cuts, Bruises, Cramps ar’ Pains liable to Occur in any family without Delays may cost a life. Relieves a 1 Summer Complaints like magic, Price, 35 cts. t-paid; 6 bet tles, ~. Exaress vaid. LS. Johnson & Co., Boston. Mase AFTER HAVING BEEN KEPT be ALL NIGHT With that COUGH, if you do not want to repeat the experience, buy a bottle of the OLD STANDARD REMEDY Gray’s Syrup of Red The best Cough Cure in the world. Sold everywhere 25 cts. a bottle. KERRY WATSON & CO. Proprictons MONTREAL. Spruce Gum ; rT FOR RT| OF PURE NORWEGIAN LIVER. Pyne atable as cream. as taste .ike others. In big bottles 50c, and $1.00 | throat, if not actually impossible. | that day, | enjoy THE LIONS’ FAST DAY. Captive Antesats Receive No Meat on Sun- days, Only Milk. Trained animals do not like Sunday. One would naturally suppose that on when they do not have to go throng their paces in the big ring in the arena, and show off to an audience what they can do, but lie comfortabiy in their cages and sleep, that they would themselves very much better than on any other, but such is not the case. ae is medicine day. Any one rho knows anything abont a lion will ac Selbehe vledge at once that to get one of these animals to take a nostrum is simply ont of the question. The sense of smell with the lion is in a very high state of development, arid, no mat ter how subtle the physician may be, medicines are hard to get down a lion's P,’ , fessor Jarling, who is perhaps one of | the best informed men at present oa the question of hons, was found | stroking one of his brute’s maner | through the bars of the cage the other day, when he :arned and said: “Did you ever see a lion drink?” Now the popular idea is that a lion eats, but does not Crink. No one ever heard of any one else ever telling about | slion drinking. No one ever associated trinking with the lion, yet the lions do | triuk, and Sunday is drinking day. It is the one day of seven that they take off and devote to drinking, that they devote to fasting. Said Frofessor Darling: ‘‘Frorm Satur day afternoon until Monday night my | lions never get one bite of food. This may appear onthe surface very cruel; 1 t may look as though they were half | starved, and to many | we overfeed our animals it miiy look like a horsible prevarication, but it is a fact nevertheless. Each lion during the | week is fed once a day. This feed is riven them directly after they have inished their work, never before, and it consists of a chunk of meat weighing | tw renty ponuds. | i ‘After | have ended my performance for Saturday night wy lions wait until Monday night after the performance before they taste meat, and all they get is milk. You know the lion belongs to the cat tribe. You have often seen a retty little pussy sitting over a sancer fcreain and lapping itas daintily as van be imagined and seeming to enjey t. Well, a lion is simply a great big vate They all come from the same ouree, and they all have instincts slike, ui@pas w matter of protection to the vealth of my animals, I give theia on | sunday only milk. This acts as a tonic. sud tones up their systems. That is why I have been able to keep these five chat I have fon, so many years and work chem hard ( these | ) and still have them look- ng £0 well “Would you like to see the lions lrink?” ho said, turning to me. and, uever having had that opportunity, i aaturally said “Yes.” ‘he big, brawny keeper was called, and an order given for some milk. The lions when they are about to be fed jump over.each other, rash around, and wake wu great fuss to get their various pieces of beefsteak, but when the milk same in they seemed to iook at each other with an expression of ‘‘Well, here it comes again!’ and there was no par ticular hurry as to who wonld first be- gin to lap the milk. About a quart and a half of rich milk was set down to each of the five brutes, and slowly, seemingly reluctant ly, they got up and began to drink it. there was a great deal of difference be tween the little red tongue of the pussy cat, which daintily laps up miik from a saucer, and the great rough tongue of the king of beasts that went at their medicine. They seem to go at it more is a matter of duty than as a matter of taste; yet in a very few moments after the dish was put in front of them it was ewpty. Still, there was no clamoring for any more, but they turned over, looking drowsily at their keepers, as it to say: wanted to; not because you wanted us to do 7” i “That,” said Professor Darling, *‘is all the medicine my animals ever get. At | times I have attempted to put a smal! amount of sulphur in the nilk, but the animals do not take it. Too much meat would completely upset the aystem of a lion just as it would s man. “I know very well that lions running | in the jungles do not get milk to drink, yet. on the other hand, you must re member that a lion running in the jungles has more room for exercise than a lion behind the bars.” c olors From Coal- ‘tar, Writing about that marvellous color producer, coaltar,a writer in Long inan's Magazine reminds us thatit is only thirty six years ago that Perkin ‘‘vathered up the fragments” in coal-tar and produc ed the beautiful manve dye. Now, from the greasy was ¢ considered useless is produced mad der, which makes coal-tar worth £100 a ton. ‘his coloring matter alone now employs an industry of two millions ster- ling per annum. One tone of good cannel-coal, when distilled in gas re torts, leaves twelve gallons of coal-tar, from which are produced a pound of benzine, a pound of toulene, a pound and a half of phenol, six pounds of napthaleue, a small quantity of xylene and half a pound of anthracene for dye- ing purposes. According to Roscoe, there are sixteen distinct yellow colors, twelve orange, thirty red. fifteen blue. seven green and nine violet. besides a number of browns and an infinite num- ber of blendings of all shades.—New York World. Trying to Kecape. “There!” said the young wife proud- ly, as she deposited the hot plate cure fully on the table. “That's the first mince oe that lever made without any help, all alone myself.” “So it is!” exclaimed her husband en- tiusiastically, looking it over. critically meanwhile. ‘And as long as it is the very first, my dear, don't you think that, instead of cutting it, it would ve nice to keep it fora souvenir? How would it do to have it framed?’—Somerville Journal. Ae It Struck Bessie. “I had to come back, mama,” said Bessie, who had made a most heroic effort to give her doll a sleigh ride in the back yard while the blizzard was on. The wind blowed all the air away so I couldn't breathe !”—Chicago Tribune. When to Hit. - Honor tells us not to hit a man when he’s down, and discretion warns us to be careful about hitting him when he isn’t lowne A Perfect Cure for Cold in the Head, cold in ~+eoe “Tt cured me of the heal,” is what Framboise, C tarh Cure. ents. a revere Mr. A, D. , B., says of Hawker’s Soll everewhere, Cat- only 25 Now is the time to get your supply of crockery as we are selling off cheaper than ever to make room for new goods to arriva as seon as navigation opens. The cheap crockery store.—W. P. Colwill.% feb 6 dy&wky owks. USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the great | ‘ Blood and NerveRemedy. but at the | same time itis the one day of seven | who imagine that | becanse it is hard work for | Vell, we did it because we | material which | McDonald of | WOMEN OF EGYPT Iateresting Sketch of Their Manners at Home. The most ancient moralist that we | know, the Egyptian Ptahhotpou. spoke | of womer as bundles of mischief and bags tall of lies and wickedness. ‘The testimony of the wall paintings of T..e bes, of the bass reliefs of L and: the antique papyri written by the remote predecessors of Boccaccio and Saccheiti, goes to show that the ladies of oi! Egypt, with their plaited hair and jewelled bosoms, were ardent to attack and weak to resist. Princesses, dangh ters of the priestly class. or peasants all resembled the wife of Potiphar, Ways and nasor we may lclieve the ingenious stories the popular tales and the golden legends which have for centuries | aususe i the ennui of the mummies in their silent tombs, and which tue mol ern readers of hieroglyphics are now de cipher.ng for the better comp: hension of the most ancient and perl: gayest of civilizations. The Egypt the Pharaohsis no longer figured in our aps ¢ imagination asa land of hieratic con templation, but rather, like our own conutry, asa place of joy ani of tears of hopes and of fears, of illusious aad | emotions, a land peopled by human beings like ourselves, who laughed sang, ioved and passed. Modern eraci tion has even succeded in decipheri sg love-lyri-s that were sung four or fiy: thousand years ago on the banks 0! the Nile—lyrics in which the ancient Egyptians expressed the sentiment: that devoured them—sometimes with | exquisite sweetness, at other time with an exuberance and «4 boldne of imagination that alarm our more so ' ber Western minds The Egyptian | made all nature partic weet in 1 his awor ons emotious—the song of | =. the per } fume of flowers, the murmur of the | breeze. Egyptian love is a manifesta | tion of the joyous and splendid ha mony of triumphant nature, bat at th: same time it is tempered by a veil o: sadness, and by the ever-present cen sciousness of the fragility of things and the brevity of bliss The Egyptian woman was almost t) eqnal of the man; she was free to com: and go, to tempt and to be tempted and she made use of her privileges. ‘ih+ land of Potiphar'’s wife is not the lan either of the barem or of the veil 1 | is in the palaces of Assyria that we must | look for the haram. It isin th valley: o: the Euphrates aad the Tigri’, in tic cradle of civilization, that we shall fine the veil, that emblem of modesty an: submission which became one ot thi arms of coquetry almost as soon as il was invented. The first woman wh« saw her own image reflected in the stul waters of the river, whether Pisv:. Gihon, Liddekel, or Euphrates, wak the first coonette, and when she ia arrange her hair, to smooth it. te lick it with trae -*? the art of coiffure was invented. —Har- per’s Bazer. The Wonderfal Temples at Baibec. so mach has been said and heard, stend npon an artificial platform rising aloai thirty feet above the level of the sur rounding In some respects the foundation is dike tliat: of+ Solomen > Temple. - This fact. has led sou to as cribe the work to Das il. Even totinis das of the lost arts. On top of this platform of masonry stand tis Temples of Balbec three of them)—the Temple of the un, the Temple or Jupiter, and the Great Circular Temple. The first was 290 feet long. 160 feet wide, and was surroanded by Corinthian columns 75 feet high ind | ? feet 3 inches each in diameter et the base. The cap stones were each 15 feet square, and reached from one column to | the other. Six of these col are still standing. The Temple of Jupive ; wans is almost perfect, even in its rains. hi is & most magnificent and imposia; structure. Its outside dimensions bein; | 230x120 feet Some Big Trees. by the encalyptus of Australia, whi. the redwood may claim the honor uf b+ ing the third largest tree in tie wy The largest known redwool is 306 fee in height and twenty feet in diameter. | The big iree attains a greuter diameter, but does not reach a proz-:~ticnatel: greater height. Thus there are big tree: recorded having a diameter of forty-one feet, but we have seen none mentionec { as being over 400 feetin height : The height of tue largest kuown en | calyptus tree is stated to be 470 feet, bu the diameter is only twenty seven feet | So while taller than the larvest big tree if their proportions are the same, the California tree has about twice the bulk of the one which grows in Australia Si. Nicholas. A Paste for Foot-rot. A writer in National Stockman tells how to make a paste to cure foot-rot and | other sores on sheep a equal parts gunpowder, blue vitrioF’ sweet or castor | oil and pine tar; the powder and vitriol | to be pulverized and mixed with the oil and tar, and all simmered together. ' OR) Fg P, cae BoP co Wosth Five Glass Beads. j In certain parts of Africa cows rate higher in the market than women do Among the Masal a woman is worth | only five large glass beads, while a cow | ia worth twice that number. Friday—Lucky or Unlucky. There are some persons who believe that death and destruction stalk abroad on Friday, and who have any numver | of facts on hand to prove their position Well, here is an array of facts from | which almost anything pro or con, | might be proven Lee surrendered on Friday Moscow was burned on F riday Washington was born on F riday Shakespeare was born on Friday. America was discovered on Friday. Richmond was evacuated on Friday The Bastile was destroyed on Friday The Mayflower landed on Friday Queen Victoria was married on Fri ¢ lay : King Charles was beheaded on Fri day. . Fort Sumter was bombarded on Fri aay. Napoleon Bonaparte was born on Fri day. 3 vulius Cresar was assassinated on Fri “The battle of Marengo was fought on Friday. Friday. a veil Or shAWI fo conceal onc | part of her face end to reveal another. | Those teinples in Syria, about which | the ruins are grand in their im nensity, | like those of the Colisenm at Rome At | one place in the foundation, at the heigut | of about 2u feet, there ure three im | mense stones, each measurin,s 63 feet | long. 15 feet wide and 13 feet ti How | | these stones were quarrie |. transported | and raised into place is in the category } | The big tree is surpassed in size only | The battle of Waterloo was fought on Jean of Arc was burned at the stake | on Friday —Boston Post, “s wegen Charlottetown ladies are delighted with | Priestley’s dress fabrics which are out Canada. They have a fineness of tex- ture and a softenss and teanty of surfac all their own. a PECULIAR in combination, pro- portion and preparation of ingredi- | ents, Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses great | Surative value. You should TRY IT. USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY the grem * Blood and Nerve Remedy. now i | sold by the better class of dealers through- | FR ann LEAKE ‘ wa. Ont. Pains in the Joints Caused by inflamn atory Sweiling A Perfect Cure by Hood’s Sarsa- parilla. “It affords me much pleasure to rec Hood's Sarsaparilila. My son was afflicts great po in joh accom] swelling so bad that he could not get up stairs to bed without craw! — vis and k : Was Very ai m, and havir Hood gest ? Cures 80 much about 0's rsaparilia, mired to try tt, amt t a halfloze t four of which entirely cured him Mars LAKE, Oshawa, Ontari N.B. Ne sure ta get Hood's Sar Need" s oa ret ¢ ry pr i efiiciently, on the | t nn Se AE hes i >». ma \ ghia | fe 1 ‘ent BD : ’ Riga Be) } ea pL e sf y 7 2 j STODDARD’S PICTURES. » } nore beautiful Photo Engravings are iasned than Stoddard’s ryreuree i Views of Famous Places and Se Th pictures eqna) the finest sebagai i detaul. Charming!y written explanations anid | descript: ons aera otal photograph | The - ‘etures areeRxl@ in Single | photog rege of the euine subjects would | out $i 00 each. They are bound tip in | covers, ‘a are exact. the eame size our fanicus World's Fair Portfolios Sample copy may be seen at this office. This mune of pictures is isened® in 16 | parts. ach part will contain 16 photo- rraplis at tie least. The price for each putis 10 ecnts; and an Examiner con pons mst be sent with the moner HOW TO GET THESE PICTURES. Stoddard’s Photographs i{ > Pats 193 & 4 Now Ready. (ut it this pon anc send with 10 cents to Tue I XAMINE k OFFICE, and the Sank anit ted will livered to you. Or ders from the country fille return mail, No chirze for postage. Tho Exam ner Pub. Co. March, 1894. THE MAGIC CITY. This x s of World’s Fair Phe itograplis will Le pablia hed in 16 parts. Singk parts ec et 10 cents each Coupons hil aleo be sent for cach part wante d 220 ch eae* to THe Ex- ah SAS Spon ees and no charge will bi or bring if. in person, he Part wanted of THE MAGIC CITY attention, on SR As prompt ENO eI eae e9 nh silver,ane F, COUPON FOR dy eA eee he €6 +a, 7a Cut out this coupon and mail it, ae. The Examiner Publishing Coma'y CHARLOTTETOWN “UFR 5 SUNSET ALL AGLOW. Wife and I were the first settlers in Moro,’ Aroostoo! Co., Me 41 yrs. It was then & Vast acy wil- Coe 1eSs, Vith all its Patric i Darling oe hardship our lives had becn f ied with han; ness until the fall of 91, when we were attacked w ith dy spepsia, slec} lessness end their attendant evils SKODA’S DISCOVERY CURED us, an: a foating down avain life’s river with all bright and smooth before na” Skoeda’a Litt! Tableta cure pict headache, onst pation and dys ia peia. 3 ™ = Medica! Advice Fre Buvacr. Do SKODA CISCOVERY &Q OIT4 For sale by all} druggists. by W. R , Watson; — Trade ei, Charlotteicwa ee ae rte! hi 4 pt .g iin > : so ee et: Be —————————— a " eee an.