: ; i _——————— id ] 7 git i \ L subscrig THE EXAMINER aise M EF Dot.ars 4 Vea wo NEW SERIES “iverywhore. 21-2 Ounce Packets, - - 45 cents, 5 ‘i ti oo. id ‘i 10 a ‘i a i yal ‘i “ WOODILL'S 1. - ? BAKING GERMAN (| POWDER ia wel! suited for Familiy Use. D., LL. D., Chemistry of nov; **Grorae Lawson, Px Fellow of the Institute of Great Britsin and Irelan?.” J°MES A. MOR7180%, H .LIFAX. WARRE ., GAREBREAD & C0.. TEA MERCHANTS, Loadon, == Hngiand, ——AND ALSO--— First-Class West Firms, ete. SPECIALTIES: Tea, Sugar and Molasses. Several India Careful attention given to consignments of | Prince Edward Island Produce. REFERENCE—Bank of Nova OFFICS Pickford & Biack’s Wharf. Halifax, August 13, 1891—dy & wy Scotia McDONALD & MARTI, BARRISTERS, Solicitors, Notaries Public, &c. OFFICES : § Gaffney’s Building, MONEY TO LOAN. H. C, MCDONAL':. B. A., M. P. P. K. J. MARTIN, B. A harlottetown, Dec 2, i89t—e dw im CAUTION. EACH PLUG @F THE +T Myrtle “liavy IS MARKED i. & BE. LETTERS, GURU IRE. IN BRONZE NONE OTHE? dy & wky jan? SooTHina, HEAtING. tnstant Relief, Permanent Cure, Failure impossisk. ¥F Mauy so-called direasos are ge simply symptozns of Catarrh, such as headache, losiuy suse of smeH, foul breath, hawking and spitting, geucrsi feeling of debility, ete. Jf you are troubled with any of these or kindred symptoms, you have Catarrh, and should lose no time procuring @ Dotie Nasa, Bats. De warnce time, neglected coid in head results in Catarri, followed by constmption and ceath. §old by al! druggis‘s, or sent, “et paid, on recci >t of price {5 cats and $l by .ddressing RO & CO. Bro «vilic, Oat, GRATEFUL—COMFORSTING EPPS'S GoGuA BREAKFAST “By a thorough knowiedge of tre uatur laws which govern the operations of Gi bik and uutrition, and Sy a caroiu: aprlicutia fine properties of weil-selected (eces, Mr Epps hes provided our breakfas’ tab: vith a deuti- cately flavored boveraye which May save u many heavy doctors’ bills. it is vy the juiciour use of such articles of diet that a consti ation may be gradually buut ap antil strong enuugh k resiat every tendency to disease. Hundreds «uf subtle maladies are floating around us ready ic attack wherever there is a weak point, We may escape many @ fatal ehaft by keeping our selves well fortified with purée biood asada pre perly nourished frame.”—Civil Jervice Gasette, Made simply with viling wsaier or mile Sold only in packeta, by Grocers. labelled shve JAMES EPPS @ O0O.. Homaopathts Chemic .. ianion, Eayland, Octlil-~tye dy & way i j Cee ; ; !whose Book bi for the month of December. few words about business. _— *“ Thia is true Liberty, when Free Bern Wen, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxiripxs. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. rx Ru. THE LAST yvOR MONTH ' Fancy Holiday Geods, and f pays has been made apparent by our largely increased sales we We are name is guarantee nder in the Province. enough to Ve are now in a better position than first-class work at shortest notice, and at ibe beaten. have that advertising ad vertisin been { © truthful now gging to say a Gar Pristine and Bookbinding Departments. | Close attention, go0l workmanship and low prices have | as we expected, wonderfully developed this branch of our We now beg to say that we have secured the ser-) vices of MR. WM GILLESPIE (late of Taylor & Gillespie) the claim of the first ever to turn out HASZAERD & MOORE, Ch’town, Dec 28, 1891. BROWN’S BLOCK. { , INSURAN es ~nae{ X) —- URQUHART & A a Nae OR me are a GENERAL AGENTS, Office, Brown's Block, JA ) Morris's Building, Charlottetown, | Summerside, } UARY, ae IO Oe a ren ey SE Ce, ee ce Charlottetown. A. a aoe nee i892. oe Big ReductiOns } i ——-ON BALANCE (x; Remnants at Cost! Fur Caps at Cost ! Jon OF—— WINTER Gl 19,0090 yds. Cloth in Stock ! (x) #L09 & 0D, MERCHANT TALLORS, Rogers’ Buildiaz, Queeu Sireet., Charlotthtown, January 12, 1892 —eod & wky Goff ftros. Boots CALF TOPS. (x) NOTHING UK: SOLID LATHER Beat Them All! (ft HAND MADE CUSTOM B) I's are the best. Just \UR () receivea from England, a lot of the genuine FRENCH Shoemakers’ Findin zs constant!y on hand; Sole Leather, Tops, French Calf, Goat, Imperial Kip Kid, Rhone and Awls. Nails, Bristles, Wax, Rasps, Thre.d, Pincers, Pegs, Eyelets, at GOn Fy BROTH HES. Charlottetown, December 26, 1891. ment of our busine write for prices. CARRIAGE BUILDE: We are closing out this Depart- bound to get Uargains. Stock is large and close it out this year. or oe ~~? a 2. Wou are Call or well asserted, and we are bound to NORTON & FENNELL. Charlottetown, January 8, 1892—2aw & wky prices that cannot) — ——ae ee ee ISLAND, SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1892. "Searing | | | | py Kh yer” : . CN Both the method and results when | Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant | and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, uiver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its eflects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popularremedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 75c bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Manufactured only by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO., SAN FRANOISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, EY. NEW YORK, N.Y. W. R. WATSON, Wholosale Druggist, Char lotteetown, mwf j APPLES. 259 Rarreis Choice Canadian Baldwins. N,B: & M. RATTENBURY. 121 2Zaw m th ? t ) 50 BOXES} and h do ) Raisins. c QUALLS AND RAISING CUBR ANTS Al J th Nh 25 BARRELS, ( i 75 HALF-BOXEs |} Urranis. 1,000 BOXES) N., B. & M. RATTENBOURY. _ 42) 2.7 m th Se 290 Barrels, N., B. & M RATCENBURY, d21 2aw m th BEARS. 156 bbis. Beans. N., B. & M RATTENBURY. 621 2aw mth EMULSION Cop LIVER OIL? Pleasant to take as Milk. Estey’s Emulsion cures one, Colds, Consumption, Throat and all Lung troubles. A great remedy for weak ami delicate children, builds them up, strengthens the bones, makesnew blood, All dealers sell it, don’t be induced te take any substitute—it hasn't any. + ya ye a A Sat Et ; alOTiSe., = rt Lf, rn LABEL THE GENUINE ie Vu ATC LINDA) OMHARTSHORN) tne"~ ~go9 having the HARTSHORN, gD SY ALL DEALERS. Factory, Toronto, Ont jyls B, M, Estoy Mig. Co., Moneten, 3. (Contributed by the W. C T. U.) Temperance Thoughts. A statement was in circulation some time ago that Mr. Spurgeon induiged in wine That report brought out this statement from the eminent man of God: ‘“‘I am a total abstainer, advocate total abstinence, and rejoice in wearing the blue ribbon.” We nave it on no less an authority than that of Professor Harnack, of Berlin, one of the leading specialists in church history, that the use of water instead of wine in the communfon was almost universal in the early Christian church Grand temperance work is being done in the English navy through the efforts of Miss Agnes Westun and others. On some ships, ten per cent. of the ship's company are enrolled as tocal abstainers. Remem- bering the sailor’s proverbial f »ndness for ‘* grog,” this is certainly encouraging. The Deer Park Sanitarium, a private asylum for inebriates, was opened in To- jronto(Can.) in November. Its founders ' purpose to surround a patient with Chris- tian influence, and send him out, not only , cured of his appetite tor aicohel and nar- cotics, but a th rough Christian man. At a recent aveting in Scotland, Mr. ' Moody told of » Scotch distiller with whom ' he had been talking, who boasted to him of having given one hundred and thirty tons ef coal to the poor. ‘As if,” said the (evangelist, ‘* that could be a set-off agaiust ‘the havoc wrought through his hellish business.” There never was a stricter pledge than that of Solomon’s. Wethink it sufficient ,to say ** Drink not,” but he said ** Look not on the wine.” The color, the sparkle, the very sight of the intoxicating draught is enough to awaken the appetite in some men, su that it becomes neceasary for them to make a covenant even with their eyes. Why is it that one peril is courted while | another peril is shunned, in popular estima- ition? Boys, for example, love to play with gunpowder in spite ot its risks, but are dis- inclined to play wish poisonous snakis And men and women who are afraid of strychniae have no fear of wine or whiskey. Nothing, indeed, is more remarkable in connection with the liquor question, than the officious readi- ness of unprofessional people to recommend something that has ‘‘the urunk” in it to their friends and neighbors, as a remedy for every ———ee ee. Scientific Miscellany. stance of mimicry ina spider, onusts3, has been observed in France. To snare its prey, hides in convolvulus flowers, which ars plenty ia this region and are of three prin- flowers, and a partly pink variety fre quents the pink flowers. If the three varieties of Thomisus were at colored flewer; and in a box nearly white Evecrricat Ipnas —A_ Loeds inventor claims to have constructed several clocks, earth itself. An electrician states elec- trical apparatus will return 10 per cent. of the heat energy expended at the central cent ; but as the central station can and does use coal costing one-fourth or one third of what we must pay for coal to burn in a stove, electric heat can be obtained as cheap as heat from a coal stove In a new fire engine both tho foremg of the water and the propelling of the machine are af- fected by the current from a storage bat- tery. Acambric ueedle has been magnet ized by polarized light, Galton’s laboratory has provea of less value than was expected. A_ serious difficulty is that strong persons are fond of testing their physical excellences, while feebler ones avoid an exhibiton of their weakness. A Zooioaica, Noveity.—One of the most extraordinary of recent z ological discoveries is that of a uew marsupial mo!e, Notoryctes typhlops, whoch appears to exist in smal! nombers only in a limited district of the interior of Australia. In this region, it passes most of its time in the red sand- hills and among the tussocks of porcupine grass. The first specimen of the animal wag received at Melbourne about two yeara imaginable complaint or disorder. No matter what one’s trouble is,—headache, indigestion, } lame back, corns, languor, nervousness, a| sense of fulness, or a sense of ‘‘ goneness,”—~ as soon as it is mentioned, some one, who |makes no pretence to medical knowledge or akill, will tell of bottled porter, or a wine sangaree, or a milk punch, or a spoonful of j whiskey, to be taken at meal-time, or in the middie of the forenoon, or before going to bed, | as the certain cure of that particular trouble. | Persons who would never think of prescribing | Myrenetee, or aconite, or hasheesh, or even oil of vitriol or croton oi], without asking a physician about it, will speak with the utmost positiveness of the propriety of their pet dose of intoxicating beverages. And the next | Strangest thing is that so many people are fools enough to take sach advice—and the liquor which comes with it. Yet there is ten tames < 31! ef OA y § as much harm done by liquor drunk at the = SO + advice of friends, as by all tne other poisons put together. There is trouble enough from physicians’ currying popular favor by re- commending liquor to their thirsty patients ; but if druankaras must multiply on the plea of medical necessity, by all means let them go to to rnin with a certificate from ‘regular practi- tioners,” and not start off tor perdition on the advice of their unprofessional aunt or next- door neighbor, oo +> News Notes. Lydia A. Walker, 16 yeara old, was caught setting fire to a barn at Columbus, Wis., on the llth inst. She fled and her pursuer had nearly overtaken her when she drew a large butcher knife aud detied ar- rst. Two blows from a club were neces- sary to compel her to surrender. When put in jail ehe confessed to 15 depredations| creased, aud was 171, in three months, including mutilation of live stock, burning of a schoolhouse and destruction of other property. At 11 o'clock Jast evening, says a Louis- ville, Ky., despatch of the 1ith, Charles Winiger, who lives at Tweaty-second and Walnut Streets, and is employed in « furni- ture factory, was a single man and had no idea of getting married. Two hours later he was a husband and on his way home with his wife. He had finished his work at the factory rather early in the afternoon, and after eating supper concluded to take stripuptown. He stopped at the house of an acquaintance, where he met Mary Winks. It was a case of love at first sighr, and he lost no time in proposing. The woman was equally well pleased with her strange admirer, and she readily gave her consent. A carriage was called, and the couple drove over to Jeffersonville, Ind,, where they were married The marriage is one of the quickest on record. A Regina despatch says: In the Assmeb. ly Nolin, of Batoche, moved for a special commitiee to enquiry into the question of indemnity to persons who suffered loss of property after the rebellion of 1885. He charged the officials with having acted like brigands. Oliver Dunsfer, who died last week at his home near Bernardsville, N. J., left an estate valued at nearly $200,000, although he began to build up his fortune by work- ing forthree cents an hour. He was 82, and was considered eccentric. He had two relics in which he took much pride in showing to his friends. It was the inden- ture binding him to Oliver Woudward, and the other a tobacco box half filled with tobacco. He shut this tobacco box up forty years ago and never used the weed GOCE BOXES TIN PLATES, 2tons PIG TIN. Lamb & Plug, 1 “ BAR COPPER, lj ia. square. E. H. NORTON & UO., dea3l—2law & wy di Charlottetown, Lobster Packers! Below all other prices. Order at once to arrive. bsg that. Emma Hayland, 22 years old, daughter of Herman Hayland, a wealthy leather merchant, who lives at No. 128 East 84th Street, New York, committed suicide by hanging herself on Friday last. The young woman had attended a ball, and had gone upstairs to put away her bail dress, and an hour later was found hanging to the door where she had hung herself, ago, and since then a very few others have been secured, but no ie have been found at any time except during the short period of semi-tropical rains, Perpetual boring seems to be the characteristic feature of the creature’s life. It euters the ground obli- quely, and burrows either for a few feet or many yards, not apparently reaching a depth of more than two or three inches. Its conical snout and scoop-like claws evable it to bore with wonderful rapidity. It fills the tunnel as it progresses, and is not known to make permanent burrows After emerging, the mole travels a few feet on the surface, when it again enters the ground. Tue Most Powrrroet Brasting Agent. —A new explosive called fortis, is being tested by the Belgian Government, and is reported to have given really startling results. The substance is now believed to have a force from 30 to 40 per cent. greater than that of any other explosive known. A mine, 13 feet deep, was drilled in the solid rock, and charged with a relatively small quantity of fortis. It detached a mass Over 200 fect high, breaking it into pieces of 50 or 60 pounds, and projecting them to a distance of 350 yards. Between 1860 and 1889, the total pro- duction of aluminum is estimated to have been 110 short tons, exclusive of alloys. In 1889, the product in the United States, including that contained in alloys, was 47,468 pounds; in England about 12,000 puunds; in France, 10,000 pounds; and in Germany 20,000 pounds. The production of aluminum ailoys had enormously in- 759 pounds for the United States aloue. Exercise FOR Etperty Prorie. — The tissues and orgins, Mr Frederick Lagrange tells us, do not mature at once in man. At 45 years the bones and muscles have lost none of their solidity and vigor, ut after 35 years of age, even in conditions of perfe t health, the heart and arteries tend to a deterioration which is scientifically known as sclerosis but has been more picturesquely called the “rust of life.” This imperfection of the arterial system is shown by shortness of breath, and tine heart suffers in case of too vivlent exertion. jut the need of exercise, less intense and energetic than the running and rowing races of youth, continues It is in the eariiest period of mature age that the most characteristic manifestations of lack of nutrition—obesity, gout and diabetes, in which lack of exercise plays an important part—are produccd; aud the treatment of them demands imperiously a stirring up of the vital combustion, Walking is the most hygienic exercise for the elderly, provided it is sufficiently prolonged. Nothing isso good for the man of 50 years ss a gunning tramp, or long pedestrian tours like those the Alpinists make. {ack of time, however, may compel another chvice. Many opea air games, hke tennis, lawn tennis, and even rowing, when practiced not for racing but as a recrea ion— that is, with a liveliness graduated to the respiratory capacity of the rower—provoke, for example, in one or two hours, an elimina- tion ef the products of disissimiiation and an aquisition of oxygen equivalent to what one cau get from eight or ten hours of walking. They gain time for the busy man, but in sach a way as to give the good effects of exercise while avoiding too great forciog of the cir- culation and of respiration. Tnovent TRANSFERENCE. — That science still has much to learn was recoguized by Prof. Lodge, President of the section of Mathematics and Physics at the late meeting of the Beitish Asece ation, in these words: “May there not also be an immaterial (per- haps wn etherial) medium of communication ? Is it possible that an idea can be transferred from one person to another by a process such as we have not yet grown accustomed to, and know practically nothing about ? case I have evidsace the fact. A Sprper Mimic.—An interesting in- Thomisus the south of the spider cipal colors. A green variety of the spider visits the flowers having a greenish hue, a variety mostly white Jives in the white animal is found ia a red dahlia it is red instead of pink, and is yellow in a yellow flower. The first supposed to be permanent, but it has been accidentally discovered that the color of any one of these spiders changes ina few days when the spider is placed in a differently together the pink, white, green and yellow soon become which are driven by the electricity of the station, and in using a stove we get 25 per | — The anthropometric work of Mr. Francis In this For neat, clean, tasteful Printing, } and prompt attention to orders, THE EXAMINER Job Printing Depart- it is peculiar Don’t forget it. ri Sinete Copies Two Cangs VOL. 29.-NO. 196 Jas, Patn& Ch Furs. Si uffs, Capes, Collars. Boas, Astracan Jackets, Caps, Cheap for Ready Cash. Jas, Pala & U0. Dress Goods, Foules, Tweed Mix'ures, Cheviot Tweeds, Vierinos, Cashmeres, Shert Lengths, SUITABLE FOR GIRLS' DRESSES Dress Robes, SUITABLE FOR WEDDING DRESS&3 Bargains ia Tals Dajarbmaat ees ee LL Ja8, Palo & U0. Mantles, Ulsters, Jackets, Cloaks. Dolmans. Everything in This Department at Extraordinary Low Prices. Ja, Palo & UF. ficefers, Overcoats, Suits, Cape Coats, BEST V:LUE IN THE CITY. GOAT ROBES. Owing to the mildness of the season, we are clearing out our GOAT ROBES very cheap. en eet te tial, Very Choice Patterns in Silk Handkerchiefs, China Silk Handkerchiefs, JAS. PATON & 60., BROWN’s BLOCK, . I assert that I have seen it done and am perfectly convinced of 168 Market Square. Ch’town, Dec. 22, 1891—dy & wky AS A a