oy, CALFPNYDAR FOR JANTARY, 1804, THE DAILY EXAMINER. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. TERMS: Four Dollars a Year ‘ - ££ Cat > > NEW Sha,._‘ Read 7-_—___-_---o- —_——- - 0) —— or - ' (x) ’ Cae G0. Bow . New Moon, 6th day, 10h 54.9m.. Pp m.b firet Quar 14th day, 3h 56." m, p.m, 8S W ‘ Vv — on. ss . ay, 10h 58.9 am.N EF St | ! . VW Week s 13 Higt water n hom | after’n y ’ ‘is 6 34 ny iu 9 | 7 36 “ia i4 2 & 28 ‘ sday 49 as 68S 4 i 22 9 56 s 8 45 23 |; 10 35 @ oa R a¥ 4s j 25 | 11 13 ; ay 45 | 26 ll 43 uy 43 | 29} morn wed ay ‘7 | 29] 02:1] ay 4 ih) 0 54 : I | 1 3 ~ dav i +3 , s ' | = Sina ‘ 34) 250 { ’ : on i + 43 Vuexd i | 7 t 54 Ay i3 »} 6 16 . uy 2 0} 7 39 I av 12 | il 8 47 2 S siay ‘| t2 } 9 45 é a 40) Ss 10 50 ‘ : ° 2s { mca } 39 ii | is I ‘ 38 | 45 aft 4 2 W lay 74 47 0 42 « | ’ 4s 119 5 \ | L 458 2 Sa tay l 2 3 2818 lay 3] 3 29 291M i ; ‘ 4 39 i A 2 > | 5 40 ‘ 2 7 7 5 ’ Suny | 4 57 | i o | 1? NIL "rT | Tr I 4ihi hi {\ 4 sine DatLy NEWSPAPER ¥y P. E. Isnanp, Is isened ‘ afternoon, from the office of ine Exawiner Poawisnme Company, in the | 1ilding, Queen Street RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (iN ADVANCE) We take that | publishers of pleasure in announcing Ove Vear $i. Max Monrne 2.00) | rarer Monts i.e Une MonTH OBS Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES we have made arrangements 1 COE RO TF US —— = —s importa Announcement at! - A Grand Treat for Subscribers to The Examiner. “THE GREATEST WORLD'S FAIR BOOK IS READY with the The Magic City For smal! advertisements which are ordered } for only one or two weeks the charge is cents per inch for the Orst insertion, aad 20 ents for each continuation. hed on application at the office. Special it prices at @ reduced rate are quoted for advertisements four inches in size or te rum for three mouths o: contrac larger, which are ~ arent i as ste of 10 cents per line, cireum#tances will euch paid notices appear in Lhe Oca Cohan. Syne Lisecounts made on all advertise- ments connected with Charch Fairs, Bazaars, Pienios, ete © notices will be inserted with ioe Same UG iless the regular rate of 10 cents per we is pail ite: «ote EXaminer is considered by our Merchants and Manafactugers to be the lead- ing newspaper in P. FE. Island, and conse- quently (he most valuable advertising medium through which to make thelr announcements public, is abandantiy proved by the fact that in order to accommodate our advertisers we have been compelled to enlarge the paper to ite present size, Tur Dit vy Exavener is for sale by the fol- towir x agents R. H. Mason, Post Of'ce, Charlottetown Meintyre Malg ve Road, : Paal, Lower Spring Park Road, W.M. Coffin, -rafton Street, S. Gr ‘ r. Water and Prinee St. ty. Chappell, Prince Street, bacnar Store, Queen >treet, Geo. Carter & Co., Queen Stre: %. Gray, News Stall, P. E. 1. Railway and On the (raias M. & T. 4. Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore, Sum- mersi Harry MePFarlane, Souris. Hon. D. vrdon, seorgetown. D. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. i. M. Clarke, Alberton Chaa. A. Gillis, Orwell Cove. its tS The Weekly Examiner is issved every pablishers’ office. which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is @ iivet-class weekly newspaper and full of the latest news. The subscription for Tuk WEEKLY Exam. post pald to any part offCanada or the (VE United States, is one dollar per year. Advertising rates on the same scale as given hove for Tue DaILy EXAMINER. ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES. Queen Street, Che alesroom : ttetown Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX DOCTOR DORSEY, Physician and Graduate of the Medical De University of the City of New York, late Member of tbe Resident Staff of Belie- vue Hospital and the New York Lying-in Hospital, New York City. Queen OFFICE. North Side OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Residence—Near Corner of King and Queen “treats. Charilotletown. Remet ~The Greatest Rheumatic and Neuralgia Cure MANUFACTURED ONLY BY THE HAWKER MEDICINE ST JOHN. N. B. Rate cards are } notices inserted unless paid for | and under po | Friday morning from the [t is made up of matter -interesting Surgeon. arument of the Square to supply this celebrated work in Weekly of TEN CENTS per number. It will be issued in sixteen consecutive Parts to our subscribers at the very low price Weekly Parts, ‘each containing sixteen to twenty magnificent Photographic Views and IlListorical Deserip- W. BUEL. They Author, MR. J. to the public. OYER 300 in NATURAL PHOTOGR‘\PH COLOR®, embracing all VIEWS the wonderful famous MIDWAY PLAISANCE, curious and interesting character sketches of life in foreign countries and an | World’s Fair and its surroundings, and the /and curious races of people. | The IT 1s | The | The History of the Fair that has been published. Beautiful as ing the work of the corps of artists employed in finest in existence. tion, has ever been seen in pictorial representations ; especially for THE MAGIC « ~eries. You only need to compare the specimen being done by these inferior World’s Fair Series The Examiner Always Watch Our Advertising Column. for Portfolio of “THE MAGIC CITY.” The Photographs, in They were taken by treined «ar ists of who knew how to secure the best results and the most favorable Their beauty and splendor will be a surprise to our readers. and the ‘ITY, and will not be made common by promiscuous publi- cation in other works, adds a hundredfold to their value. There are «ther World’s Fair Series being issued, rs but the price charged for them is no lower than for the magnificent “ WHITE CITY other books to show you that the “MAGIC CITY” will sweep the field and over-ran the business Greatest, Granéest, Most Beautiful, Only Complete a Dream, while the historical descriptions give the work a value beyond al! computation. author spent nearly the whole summer at the Fair, preparing his notes and superintend- taking views. These pictures more than points Nothing equal fact that they were cheap, unreliable, garbl of “MAGI: CI Y” with in the field now. Gets the Best ! features of natural ec nation: The Photographs are the finest that have ever been offered } 9 | i tions of the .— D's FAIR and the MIDWAY PLAISANCE, by the famous American | constitute a splendid series of ! the with its i ong wild | olors, are The are the al reputa- of view to them obtained ed affairs, the Announcement of the First Gran: THE AMERICAN $8.00 T'ypewrriter. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing glance. 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. Takes any width of paper or envelope up to 84 inches. tuation marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just ike a $100 instrument. | its kind ever offered at a popular price for which the above claim can be truthfully made | {t is not a toy, but a typewriter built fur and capable of REAL work. the large machines sometimes become in expert hands, it is still at least as rapid as the pen, and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastere We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. capitals, small letters, figures, While not a Jasy to understand—learned in Weighs only four pounds—most portable. Compact, takes up but little room. Built solid and simple ; order easily mastered. which do mest of the work. Takes good letter-press copies. and pune {t is the first of! s rapid as d alinost at ) minute can't get out of Capital and lower case keyboard ailke-- More “margin play” for the small letters Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.09, We guarantee every machine, and are glad to answer all inquiries for farther information as to this machine and also the “ Yost.” | IRA CORNWALL, in registered letter, money order or certified check. D. B. STEWART, Agent, Chariotietowa. General Agent for Maritim e Provinces. dec20 ee ———— What fills the housewife with delight, And makes her biscuit crisp and light, Her bread so tempt the appetite ? COTTOLENE What is it makes her pastry such A treat, her husband eats so much, Though pies he never used to touch ? COTTOLENE What is it shortens cake so nice, Better than lard, while less in price, Aad does the cooking in a trice ? COTTOLENE What is it that fries oysters, fish, Croquettes, or eggs, or such like dish, As nice end quickly as you’d wish? COTTOLENE What is it saves the time and care And patience of our women fair, And helps them make their cake so rare? COTTOLENE Whe is it earns the gratitude Of every lover of pure food By making ‘‘ COTTOLENE "’ so good? Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., Wellington and Ann Streets, MONTREAL, “You'll Feel Better ” » Eve y does, after taking a fro hanes = sMALTO PEPTONIZEDS PORTER. It builds up the run-down sys- . tem,—is strengthening and appe- » izing. Itis readily borne by weak . stomachs, regulates the bowels, * and is invaluable to those afflicted with Indigestion and Flatulency. S THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LTD. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA, Ilighly Recommended byPhysicians. are sibs in the preparation of " W. BAKER & C0. a2 which is absolutely pure and soluble. It has more than three times ) the strength of Cocoa mixe i with Starch, Arrowroot vo: Sugar, and is far more eco- It is delicious, DIGESTED, pcciiilinteiiianientiedi Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained—how ree stored—how Ordinary wor: on Phy- siolcgy will not tell yous the doctors can’t or Sywon’t; but a/{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 for our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, W.¥. THE SOCIETY OF ARTS of Canada (Limited), MONTREAL. CAPITAL STO3K A Society established with a nourishing, anc EASILX $100,009. ART THAT WILL WASH. . A Chinese Colorist’s Works on Exhibition In the Sandwich Islands. A Chiuese artist came here on an orien- tal steamer and has been selling some queer things in red, green and yellow to his ad- miring countrymen. He paints on silk and linen as arule, but wiliturn off gonre pieces on White paper. His taste, however, runs to large pictures on grasscloth, paint- ed in a panoramic way, which permits him to sketch a scene along several linear feet of snace. Accustomed as he has been ¥t home to paint by the acre and with both iands, he is not dismayed by a huge can. yas, but with calmness and industry will preceed to illaminate a whole sot of bed sheets with blue elms and green roses and diabolical Chinese gods sand women and lovers, One picture that he showed a reporter wes said to represent 4%.2ec—e arty. thonzh it needed some Gs57 Since at sarse to dispel the idea that it was a catastro- phe atsea. What looked like the raging inain, however, was renlly a Chinese turf, tnd the bent and bedraggled object in the foregrcund was not a wreck, but a tree. in awful print of a lost Celestial maid in the grasp of a devilfish proved to be one of an alinon d eyed damsel twined in the aves and tendrils of a flowering shrub. instead ef pery squids, as oue might have supposed, were tambourines, and a rock in the boiling surge was only a pago- da set in the heather and bushes. A series of small paintings told aro mantic story very dear to the Chinese heart. ‘The herc of the pictorial tale was the strongest man in the empire, having become an athlete under the teaching of tis wife, who was a female Samson. . To wether they challenged the world without voft gloves and ‘‘bar none,”’ In course ot time, hov-ever, war came, and the wife was overpowered and taken away, leaving the husband very miserable. As the art- ist paints bim standing mournfuily at the | door of his deserted lavender house, great nomical, costing less than one cent @ cup of } | i : | view to} lisseminate the taste for arts, to encourage | ind help artists. Incorporated by Letters Patent of the Government of Canada, the 27th February, | 193. GALLERY OF PAINTINGS Nos. 1666 and 1668 Notre Dame St., Montreal. EXHIBITION AND — SALE. ADMISSION FREE, from 10 o’clock, & 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 ean, Marius Roy, Scherrer, Sauzay and a es many others, are members of this iety. Ask. for our Catalogues and Circulars. H. A. A. BRAULT, oct26 Director. | { dclicate bronze | or leaf.—Hawa } is put, vermilion tears roll down his mauve com plexiou, stain his green vest and trickle along his chromatic trousers and sink inte the scarlet and yellow earth, Then 20 years go by, and another war ‘tsues. ‘ii wo urmies meet, and the strong: stehampions go forth for a preliminary ynbut. Behold! The man asd wife ure nt against each other, and the artist ‘ises to te cceasion. He shows the hus and holding his dulcinea out «t arm’s ngth by her belt, and as he bears her way toward a saffron river which runs sh y bine banks he hasa fierce, Whiskered joy on his face that invites ta ‘pearl tinted breeze, but a crimson “icane to Liow through it. Meanwhile 1¢ captured giantess, Cemure aas surrendered without a murmur. The visiting knight of the nigments that will wash, and he says that ne of his pictures can go through a Chi- se lnundry without the loss of the natu -:1 bine tint on a maiden’s cheek or of the flush of an opening flower iian Star. Qucer V telting Cards, Many are the uses to which the cactus but one of the queerest is that in Cape Town, South Afri ea, Where cactns leaves ere made to serve he purpose of visiting cards. It might occur to the reader that a packege of thick w Yich prevails ! leaves covered with prickly spiaes would not be easily accommodated in an ordi- } nary cardcase. The leaves of the special kind of cactus used for this purpcse are not very prickly, however, and furthermore these unique ecards are not carried about, but are left «rowing on the plant which stands at the foot of the front steps. When a lady calls, she hes only to take a *:“-, or from her bonnet and scratch her t:“ ~ on the i glossy surface of the leaves, whilea gentle man accomplishes the same end with his sharp penknife, The lines thus scratched turn silver white and remain clear and distinct on the leaf for years. On New Year's day these cactus cards are particalarly convenient, and popular hostesses often appropriate a large branch of their cactus plant to the registry of vis- its received on that day, There is one cactus, which is not espe cially plentiful, which not only bas smooth leaves, bat has spines so large and stiff that they make excellent pens, and visitora are saved even tho slight trouble of drawing out a hatpin or a penknife.— Youth’s Companion. Taught a Lesson. A certain pompous lady, after teasing the shopmaa of a millinery establishment beyond the forbearance limit, pompously ordered a spool of cotton to be sent to her house. It was agreed she should be made an example of and a warning to her kind. She was surprised, and her neighbors intensely interested, soon after sle arrived home. A common dray, drawa by four horses, proceeded slowly to her door. On the dray, with bare arms, were a number of staiwart laborers. They were holding on vigorously to some object she could not see. It was a most puzzling affair. The neighbors stared. After a deal of whip cracking and other impressive cere- monies the cart was backed against the curb. There, reposing calmly, end up, in the center of the cart was the identical spool ef cotton she had ordered, With the aid of a plank it was finally rolled, barrel fashion, to the pavement. After a mortal struggle it was upended on the purchaser’s doorstep. ‘The fact that the purchaser came outa little later and kicked her prop erty into the gutter detracted nothing from it.—London Million. Diamond Cut Diamond. + Two queer iooking creatures sat ata cafe table :%x3°:.2 their coffee. One of them, while ta,.ing, played carelessly with his spoon—a silver spoon. He turned it over and over, dropped it, picked it up again and, last of all, when he thought nobody was looking, he stuck it into the sty: aft of his boot. Butthe other man saw } #@.ancl then, delicately lifting a spoon in wy Seats he said: ‘‘Gentiemen, shall 1 saow yon a pretty conjuring trick? I bet that I will place this spoon in my pocket’’ ~-he suits the action to the word—‘‘and | will take it out of this gentleman’s boot."’ This he does. Whereupon he gravely took up his hat, bowed to the company and walked off.—France Dustree. Big Elevators. The largest elevator in the world—in fact, there «are three of a size—may be geen at Weehawken, where the passengers for the West Shore line are lifted by*hy- draulic power 165 feet to a trestle strac- ture, where they take the trzins. Each car will accommodate from 150 to 200 peo- ple. Immense elevators on a similar plan are being built at Glasgow for the tunnel wonder the Clyde. The highest single ele vator is the one in the Washington moenu- ment, ivhich is worked by steam, the chain being rolled upon a drum. It makes up in safety what it lacks in speed.—bos- ton Globe. For Over Fifty Years. Wet Terep Remepy-—— Soothing Syrup has Ay Orp Axb Mra. Winsloe’s beed used for over fifty years by millions | of mothers for their ci ildren whrile teeth- | nig, with perfect snecess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, ailays the pain, | cures the colic, and is the best remedy for | Diarrhoea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggi-ts in every part of the world. Foenty-ive cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. —m. w. f. wkly—1 y gle Copies Two Cents | DON’T CARRY A COUNTERFEIT COIN, ee Jt Is Contrary to Law aud May Eatail Dis- agreeable Consequences. “A man better have a live rattlesnake in his pocket than a counterfeit dollar car. ried as a pocket piece,"’ Lawrence of the treasury depertment when talking about the earrying of coins or bis which one knows to be counter- feit. “‘A great many men don’t know the danger they run in this Uuing,’”’ he said ‘Suppose, for instance, that a man has a counterfeit dollar which he has had for years—one that he has picked up some | where and carries as . pocket piece. He goes into a store one d ay and brys some article or otherand gets al « of silver coin in change, He goes from the store, say to a saloon where be buys a drink, or to : dro store to get something or other —it matters not where he sroes, prov rided there is one of these ‘smart’ young fellows behind the counter who ia always reac i; to ane SOM “; Up on something or other “Paying for his purchase with one of the doliars, the man behind the counter maybe fives the doller back with the re mark thet it is counterfeit. The purches er, somewhat abashed and not liking the eying of the crowd around, begins to make sera | excuses to the effect that he did not know and sweet, | : : thing, but there is one now, and the pub ; brush uses | } the case. it was counterfeit, and so on, and om clerk, who is anxiovs to muke a record 2 a counterfeit detective, suddenly cz the police, acd the man is nrrasted and searched. Oa his+ person is found the other counterfeit dollar, and the possession o! thetwo dollars ‘s prima facie evidence tLat he iatendet +o pass both of them . i said Inspector | | and requires a ConsTITUTIONAL REMepy | mot purge, pain or gripe. uiis in > and that man hasn't got enough friends | in the world to keep him out of the peni tentiary. ‘True, it looks hard, but that man had no business carrying around u counterfeit coin for a pocket piece or any other reason. Jt is a plain violation of the luw to carry counterfeit money about with you, something which many people do not realize, “Suppose I happen to know that a man, — a cashier in one of the well known banks of Minneapolis or St. Pant for instance, hae | a $20 bil) in his possession, I go into thet bank, and | call him by name aid ask him for that bill. He says he hasn’t gor it. ‘But,’ 1! rejoin, ‘you did have such a bill vesterday in your possession, for ] have the testimony of two reputable men that they saw you show it around to som parties. ‘Now, T want that bill. You havi no business with it.’ He demursa and makes various excuses and doca not give me any satisfaction, What do you sup pose Ido? I go out and get a search war rant, and [ yo through every dollar of money in that bank, dollar by dollar, or bill by bill, until I find that counterfeit #20 bill, and then I confiscate it. Ther used to be no law against this sort o facts in 1 of lic generaily ought to know the And fo rmerly it was not: counterfeiting —- anybody couid make them, and anybody conld have them ia their possession so long as they were not used, but that has all been changed now." | —Minneapolis Journal. The Futare of Wheat. Wheatgrowers and whent the term is permissible, are el 7 tothe belief that that prod be so much looked upon ia the viy coming vict is pot t Mr. Herman Hicks Of Rochesier, N. y Deaf for a Year Caused by Catarrh in the Head Catarrh is a ConstiruTionaL disease, like Hood's Sarsaparillatocurei:. Read: “Three years ago, as a resultof catarrh, £ may lost my hcaring and was deat for mors than a year. f tried various thines to cure it, and had several physicians attempt put no _ vement was apparent. I contd divtine me sound =| was intending puttiag inyselt under the care of a specialist whea some One sugtested that possibly Hood's Bar sa Na would do me some good. | beesa it Without the expectation of any basting help. To my surprise ead prens jey I found vase Thad taken three bot I. ts ihat my ——e- img was returning. rt on ti! I ha taken three more. It is » ow ‘over a year and i can hear lectly wet. 1 ain troubled | us very little with the eats arth. i consider this a remarkable ease, ei1 cordially recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla to all who have catarrh.””, HERMAN Hicks, & Carter Street, Kochester, N. Y. : . HOOD’S PILLS are purely vegetable, and de Sold by ali druggists, ene esteemed tessa eon annonce - ~— . ; . : , " a yes Ba, ~ 7” ming | a d th« " ®. a : ’ x > 4 ‘ La t t LS : to ve Mune J , < ca 2 » Si ovse ww ~~ Bre Sew SI ae i ’ ner? > he i x hoy ahs , sve a8 Gat thee rit, Mand to eo ind the: te be inci a? Unieurity aud sbiilty. I : wry ie Wahine ALy oibes ’ edicine—it cures dis- cay y removing the poison, and af the san me SUPPLIES Goop ri No other rem ‘ >» Many won- eT ‘ ai so much suf. iitle Tablets cure constipation, puaddyspepsia, 35 cts. icAL ADVICE FREZ. SNBSA SLUT GS WOLFVILLE, NM. & eh sw tatd Vee Ries, druggists, W untae n; For en'e by all pried bs W. R Trade sup Charlotte. wa es. EI] fense to make the dies which are used in | jobbers, if | futurs age 4 prime necessity as it wasten or a Cozeu | years ogo, or before there had been an enormous growth in the canned 4s:00ds business and before corn and o-'s and rye were recognized rs a partet the possil: appointments even of an epicure’s tabk Ten yeurs ogo there were but thires cr fou generally recognized ways cf preparing cornmeal 89 as to make it palatable, Twenty years ago about the only people in the world who didn’t feed all their cate to horses were the Scotch. Today oat fakes are almost 2s much of an essential on the breakfast table as coffee. About the only consumers of rye as an article of food 2% years ago were the Germans. Schwartz brod ‘is now almost as common on an es sentially American table as is bread made from bolted wheat flour. There is no question that enormous quantities of wheat are still consumed, but not sach quantities es the growth in population would warrant one in expecting: vrould be consumed. ‘The world has found substi tutes for bread to the degree thet what ia known asa “square meal’? is often con sumed into which the staff of lifo doe not enter xt all. If this condition continaes and other substitutes for bread conse ioto use, is there any reason for believin:r that the price of wheat will ever got back to the big figures thet were wont io make the heart of the wheatgrower ylad?—Cin- cinnati Times-Star. Tomb of the Three Wise Men, There is in the cathedral church of Co logne a large purple shrine spotted with gold and set upon # pedestal ef brass in the middle of a square mausoleum, faced within and without with jasper. Th shrine is said to contain the remains « the three wise men who went to Beth] hem in orcer to worship the Messiah ar whose bodies, according to tradition, we.” discovered somewhere in the exst, broug. to Constantinople and interred in the Ca thedral of St. Sophia. When Eustorgiu became bishop of Milan, the people of tha city obtained the privilege cf making Mi lan the resting place of the sacred relics. When Milaa fell into the hands of l’red erick Barbarossa—A. D, 1162—the influ ence of the archbishop of Cologne prevail ed upon the emperorto allow the remains to be transferred to the latter city. The are generally called the Three Kings o Cologne, and their names, which are Cas per, Melchior, Balthasar, are written i: purple characters upon a little grate tha is adorned witha retaarkably large orien tal topaz and a profusion of pearls an: precious stones. Over against the shrin« are six large silver branches, perpetually iluminated with wax candles. This evle brated shrine is said to he opened ever morning at 9 o’clock, when the wise m: are seen at full length, each having on | head an elegant crown of gold, richly gar nished with jewels.—Brovklyn Eagle. A Curious Creature. The creature most tenacious of life is the common sea poly». One may be cut i: two, and two creatures are the result. On may be slit lengtbwise into half a dor sections, making as many animals. T.we | may be turned inside out and enjoy them selves just as well as before. If two b- divided and placed end to end, the resuli | will bea monster havinga head at each | end of its body.—Exchange. Bridling Geese. In the —— of France # cord is put round the neck of geese, and to this curd is suspended horizontally in front of the breast a long and heavy stick. Goats in the same region are bridled—if indeed we may call it bridling—exactly in the same tashton. The object in both cases is to heep the animals from passing thro. the hedges and eating the grass of neighbors, Pond’s Extract, Usedgalike by the medical profession and the people, it holds a position held by no other medicine in this country, or, perhapg, the world, Nursing Mothers and delicate childre - should make free use of Puttner’s Emul- | | sion, the best jung healer, strengthner, and flesh productor. Clergyman, stulents and overtaxed busi- | ness men will finda wonderful ative agent in Puttners Emulsion, which contains Phosphorous (brain food ) in the most assimilable form recuper- | one ISS: WARY DGULE, STU SiO, STAWPER BLOCK In: truections given in the various Lranep es of D and Painting nov24—Iin eod awing LINIMERT pe mas Sian nated by an Cid Family think Of It. Yeon inter . fears, and etill: sau Fae _ ration atter Generation have used biessed | Eve ry oo r “utfe have a bottle in his satchel. From Rheumatism, Every S ufferer fom "Seurglet Nervous Headache, Diphtherla.Coughs, ~~ — oy * *hole ye age »--- weness in Body or Lim Strains, will find in this oid Anodyne ait at eee care’ Jobceos son’ Anodyne Lint 5 Every Mother 2: {nodyee Linkment jn the Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, Colic, Cuts, Bruises, Cramps and Pains liabie to occur in any family wt notice. Delays may cost a life. Retiewes to Compiaints like m Price, paid; tles, “2. wress ‘ Lc Jobheon 4 Con Ben oe Fifty Years BEFORE THE PUBLIC AND SaLB STILL INCREASING, Gray’s Syrup ot Red Spruce Gum For COUGHS, COI DS and all LUNG AFFECTIONS. 25 cts. a bottle. Sold every where KERRY WATSON & CO. Proprirrone MONTREAL. (OUR DRUCGIST FOF MILLERS EMULS|Q) PURE NORWEGIAN en ae a Sayre Pree It Oe ees ae) a Ss alatable as cream. 3 taste .ike othurs. In big Sante 5Oc. and $1.00. When we assert that ° Dodd’s aww Cee Kidney Pills wens. Cure Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of ail who have used them. TH rf CURE TO STAY CURED, By a mail on receipt of price, » druggists or — “De L. A. Smith & Con Toronta, Se ee SS Ra RIC. NANNY NPI! ik eI, c f . 7 pe fees