CALENDAR FOR JANUARY, 1804 New M ny, 100 56.9m., p. m. b ret Quar 14 56.7 m,pm, SW F M a ‘ ~a [ \ > aaiy r sets Wile ' \ 14 § is 6 34 3 ‘ } 7 Sei \ ‘ 2 8 2> | 4 i «1a 4¥ 21 9 13 Si F x iY 22 9 § f *4 i 4S 23 | 10 35 | S Si 25) 1k U3) 3 $s 26} 11 48} 6S 29); morn ay Git 31 a ‘ ; 0 0 54 ‘ 1 3l 2 Ss ‘io ‘ 2 50 : j 43 | ‘ 54 1 7 : ‘ re! i : j i 39 i 4 8 47 21s ‘ » 45 é . ’ : 10 50 $2 3 ; ‘ I ’ ‘ aft i : 2 ‘ ay 42 : 4s ] } é ie f 40 —— ee LT |), (IL! EIR THE greatest DAtLy NEWSPAPER or P. E. latanp, fs issucl every afternoon, from the office of Tic ExaMiIner Pusiasnine Company, tn the London house Buildiag, Queen Street RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE) One YRAR si... Six Monti 200 | Turee Monts ; 1.00 Oxs Monte e a Sent poet paid to eny part of Canada or the United States ADVERTISING RATES For staal! advertisements which are ordered for only 1 OT two weeks the charge is & eentsa per inch for the Grst insertion, and & cents to ach mtinuation. Rate cards are | furnished on app ication at the office. Special ecoutract prices ta reduced rate are quoted for acd isement« four inches in shee or large 6 h are t in for three montns or a , serte] unless paid for : of 19 nts per line, and under no circumstances will such paid notices appear ; im the ioca. Column. al discounts made on all advertise- ments connected with Church Fairs, Bazaars, | Picnics, ete. ‘0 uotices will be inserted with ; t i¢ same Unies the regular rate of 10 cents per é pala That Tue Exinwixver is considered by our Merchaats and Manufacturers to be the lead- ing newspaper ic I’. E. Island, and conse- g@uratly the most valuable advertising medium through which lo make their announcements pablic, is abundantly proved by the fact that in order to accommodate our advertisers we ha bee ipelled to eularge the paper to its presenti s Ti I ¥Y EXavtnee is for aale by the fol- low gents RK. H. Mas Post Off ce, Charlottetown J. Meintyre Malpeque Road, . C. Ps Lower Spring Park Road, Ww Me. Cofin, — i S Grey, cor. Wat ad Pri nee St D. Chappell, Frinece Stree Pascaar Stor Queen 5 treet, ’ ‘ ster & Co., one “t. S. Gray een Sail, P. E. |. Railways . and M xT i. Wals 1, Eeleetic Bookstore, Sum- Harry MeFarlane, Sourita. Hon. Dy + ordon, +-eorgetown. Db. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. %. M. Clarke, Alberton. Chas. A. Crillia, Orwell Cove. COS SE ae The Weekly Examiner Is issued ery Friday morning from the publishers’ office. It is aie up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and | While the historical descriptions give the work a author spent nearly the whole summer at the Fair, "preparing his notes and nuperintend-| ing the work of the ve of artists employed in taking \ y were taken by who ‘oso how to secure the best resuits and the Their beauty and splendor will be a surprise to our readers. has ever been seen in pictorial representations ; especially for THE MAGIC CITY, eation in other works, la a first- * weekly newspaper—interesting and ful! of the latest new The subseription for Taz Weekcity Exam. INER, Dost paid to any part offCanade or the United & s, is one dollar per year. ad tising rates ti the same seale as given bove for Tux lbaruty EXAMINER. “Ss . ’ Physician and wi Graduate of the Medical Department of the University of the City of New York, tate Member of the Realdent Staff of Belle- ‘ae Howpital and the New York Lying-in Hospital, New York City. OFFICE North Side Qneen Square OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Res.tence—Nenar Corner of King and Queen | Streets. Charlottetown. ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES. alesroom: Queen Street, Cherlttetown | j ! i i Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE--——----LONDON REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY | J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX | heumatic and Neuralgia Cure OitheAge | HOVSEHO! aK SURE ((g0TH INTESMAL AND en Av > Aatrer MANUFACTURED ONLY BY | THE HAN WKER MEDICINE CON na, 31 SOHN. N.B qe Four Dollars a Year “erate » on LOTTETOWN , exe Importan “Announcement ! 5 8 22 A Grand Treat WORLD'S FAIR BOOK [S READY! announcing irrangements aren City in W eek ly Parts to our subseribers at the very low sated consecutive ‘publishers of this celebrated work rT E N ENT3 per nunber. e: a. containing sixteen to twenty magni ific ent Ph rt ris ap! lie Ni iews a nd Historical Deserip- WORLD'S FAIR and the The Photographs are hs fines tions of the Author, MR. ito the public. isha ieee ever eas aia OYER 300 YIEW’S PHOTOGR‘PH COLOR®, World's Fair and its surroundings, and curious and interesting character and curious races of people. TIS ‘History of the Fair tha in NATURAL embracing all Greatest, Most Beautiful, Gnly Complete has been published. The Photozraphs, colors, are | Beautiful as a Dream, computatio ll. » pie tures are trained ar t-ts national reputa- equal to them and will not na made common by adds a hundredfold to their value. garbled affairs, ‘WHITE CITY” There are other World’s Fair Series being issued, cheap, unreliable, but the price charzed for them is no lower than for the magnificent You only ‘need to compare the specimen of “MAGI; Cit Y” with other books to show you that the “ MAGIC CITY” will sweep the field a: ul over-run the business | being done by these inferior World's Fair Series in the field 1 The Examiner Always Gets the Best Watch Our Advertising Colama. for Portfolio of “THE WAGIC CITY.” the Announcement of the First Grane aoe cenafan THE AMERICAN $8.00 Typewrriter. 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IF WE KNEW. ° j , " ae eae If we Knew Wath Walk:ng tnouz.viess In the noixv, crowded dav, | That some pear! of wondrous whitencas Close beside our pathway lay, We would panse where we now hasten, We would often took around, ; Le-t our careless feet should trample Some rare jewel te the grounl. If we knew what forms were fainting For the shade that we could Sings r, If we knew what lips were parchi For the water we conld bring, {| We would haste with eager footsteps, Ve would werk with willing hands, Bearing cups of cooling water, Planting rows of shading palms, [f we knew what friends around us Closely press 10 kay goo'=hy a Which among the lips that kis-ed n>, F.r-t would ’neath the daisies lie, Ve would clas p our arms around them, Low king on them through our tears, lender eurds of love ete rnal We would whisper in their ears. If we knew what lives ETE EUERORED, By some thoughtless words of ours, Which had ever lain among then Like the frost among the Howe re, dh, with what sincere repentings, With what anguish of regret, While our eyes were overflowing, We would ¢ v, “Forgive! forect! ‘fwe knew - alas!and do we Ever care or seek to know Whether bitter herba or roses In our ne iohbon ra garden ero setier far along life ‘s pat hwey Keep ¢] = is gok den rule in vyew, You shonld always care fer others As vou’d have them care for you. _—s> © << - CANADIAN WOOL, BY DP. MCRAE Phe present is a good time for an oni-} ovk on Canadian wool, What are the prospects for beiter prices ar ud a ‘ime market in the near future ? w hat efeet | will the placing of wool on the free ve i in he American iariff have on Canadian |} wool? Before attempting to answer tlrese sake a look at the nasi and the present situation of the wool ques tion. Time was ia the part when our juestions, let us ta long Canadian woo!, strong in staple and glossy in lustre, commanded a high pric -when forty aul fifty cents were freely paid to farniers for the Leicester and Coty- wold wool. Taen cane a sudden drop; u-tre voods were not in the fashion. The woo!-vrower waited, hoping for a rie in yricee, Fashions have » changed many imes since then, bat lustre weools have vever got near the old pricer For the xist few years twenty cents und under has wen about the price obtained for clean, vashed wool, and twelve ceats ahout tlhe t pric paid for nuwashed of Le ame quality. At these prices there 28 ! ai orig been but little profit made by the la ge | dealers in Canad‘an woo!s. Now and t. en in prast years, notably hefore the a loptivs of Oe increased d der the Mekin vy Tar.fi, there was an active demand at ities Un ig “el p ices for the dealers, but the buying ance then Lae not been active and dealer rave halto hold a large part of the chp for many months and then barely get out i ofit cot and «xoenses. The American narket is stil! the market for our surp!us woo!; we send there about a million pounds annually, while all that gocs to the British market is very small indeecd—a few thou- sand pounds, and that mainly for British i Columbia. But the Americans do not re- sulate the price even, although they are ; practically onr only foreign castomer. lhe price is set in adingy little room in London where the auction sales of the world’s wool crop are held. Australia and New Zea'and now grow immense quantities of long, lustre wool, and by the price this can be bought for in London and laid down in the United States, the American regulates his offers for Canadian wools. Thelong woo! grown ! alia has kept down the price of our Canadian wool. In the days of high prices they grew little or none, but since then it is expored by a hundred ship loads. The quality, too. is a Little finer than ours, since it has been graded up Austr | from a Merino basis by the help of Cotes. i wold, Lineoln and Le.cesier rams. The “taple is long and strong, the lustre good, | and it is grown very cLeaply on the great Australian plains. This, more than any | other, is the rival we have to face in sell- ing our lustre wool in the American mar- ket. But what about our home market— | the buyers fur onr own Canadian mille? They buy as cheaply as they can, and | have offered to them wools from all parts ‘of the world. Hundreds of samples of different grades and qualities come by | sample post from the dealers of Great Brit- ain and thecontinent. Cable codes enable | yy- 7s” ay. offers aud answers to be made cheaply | porpers Magzinef or November, fand quickly. Our wool competes with | ' the wool of the world in the home mar ket. We have protection in theory, but | | pra tically it is of very little account. The } Canadian Tariff of Cus stoms reads : “Wool, jclass one, viz. Leicesier, Cotswold, Lincolnshire Southdown combining wools, | or wools known as lustre woels, and other | like eombing wools such as are grown in Canada, three cents pe rib.” The ordinary | farmer who reads this would naturally onclude that this ought to be « protection to the extent of three cents per pound. | It, however, has not that effect. If the | duty under this class were mede thirteen | or thirty cents per pound it would make very little difference; more down wool is used in Canada than is grown here. Here then, if anywhere, protection should i protect the wool-grower. It does not; thousands of pounds of down wools They can be combed by the modern | combing machinery, but they are not known as “combing” wools, they are not lustre and they therefore do not come un- der the clause “other like combing wools, suches are grown in Canada.” The cross-bré iNew Zealand snd Australian tion with our long Canadian wools, yet they are r ally not “like such as are grown in Canada;” they have the dash of Me -rino blood - they pay no dnty. Of all the many tons of wool coming into Montreal } annually, the returns will show that in a | recent year not one cent was paid for duty | on wool at that port, and the total collect. | s | be adversely affected. By the new system | ed forthe Dominion on al! wools was fifteen cents for the same year, while the quantity of foreign wool brought into Can- jada that year was over eight million pounds. Our total export for the same | year was under one million pounds, and did not much exceed the import of woolen rags for shoddy to be used in our Canadian mills. The extended use of shoddy has been one of the chief factors in keeping down the price of good wool. Rags from anywhere or everywhere, bought in Britain, jare bronght to “Canada by the hundred tons, some of them are toul with the wear enough to be worked into the goods sold to Canadians as “home manufacture.” So much for the situation at present. Ifthe Wilson Bill be adopted by the |; Canadian Pacific Railway, replying to the toast, “Railway snd 8 upp ng interests,” Hood’s Sarsaparilla | 000,060 pas engers,and in {292,12,000,000 | country earned $29,000,000, and in 1892 ; they earned $52,000,000, an increase of (tries with whom a few i weet, end concluded an interesting speech 1» | over the thirty-five aud a half mi thich | lare annually used by the mills | i da half miles which iin Canada and pry no duty. | 1. 99 ; nthe canal next ast The story of | ' known as lustre wool, they Lave no ; > i earn -s Ka ef. Phe tory it | railways originally absorbed the canals; . | jt is now the tar h atter to have | wools impo yrted come in direct competi- | . 30.m , nofthe latter to have i | richest seaport in the ee mniry. To-day | | mean competitor, | Should make free use of Puttner’s Emul- | sion, the hest Jung healer, strengthner, and , | of the dirtiest of dwellers in Old World | ’ slums, and yet they are thought good | | ative agent in Puttners Ernulsion, which VOL 33.—NO. 167 Mrs. A. A. Williams Lynn Mas : or the Good of Others Americans, our wool will be admitted free sone into the amarketa of the inited’ Bes. Mr. Wiiliams Heartily in- States; Australia will have the eon.e! derses Hood’s Sarsaparilia. } - . : > ! Tee : ?, privilege. Our woo! crop ia very We are pleased to present this from small compared to thetrs. Prices wil Rev. A. A. Williams, of Sillsbee , ha i : . , : probably change but litile, if any, Gyg the’! street Christian Church, ynn, Mass. : Lond mm tut rcet, but we will ha re 4 ever I see no reason why a clergyinan, more than market, more Duvers. because of off? neai- | a layman, who knows whereof ! < ness and the interchange fyi freer tale | should hesitate to approve au faswaye bring Canvian mannfacturers Article ic g ‘ of Meric will not be at as ten nur i tiected to any extent, it ‘ + and worth, fgom whieh he or his family have wools find better customers at rlichtly been signally benefited, and whose co mmend i hetter prices in as United States thev = —— inaeee wo [ee those benefits to Pe a sini r > yihers by in reasing { wir confidence. My wife will replace with wools from Britain a has for many years been a safterer for Serer they do now when any line is scaree, and rvo a* vur wools vo into more mills and be ' ee us Headache ' , . . | y ! a} ‘ . c eng better Known In the Sta er, Our trade aa gen ‘on premieet” “a it hat cs > will be hetter and onr prices steadier. formed iittle. Last falla fricud gave bh . ‘to B BE Set ORS ao a Ue of Hood's Sarsaparilia. li seems si rpris- oe ing What simply one bottle could aud did do CANADIAN RATIAVAY DEVELOPMENT | torher, The attac Ks Of headache decreased in Bl number and were less yjolent iu their inten ~~ sity, while her general health has been im- Mr. Shonines-y, vice-preed nt of te proved. Her appetite has also been better rom our experience with tthe Toronto Board of Trade hanenet, | Ihave no hesitotion in endorsia den enneies.* made a brief but “interesting epecoh. | pia A.A. Wit Lidsts 3; waking of the railroads, he said te: ryears | HOOD’S PILLS are the best family cath e : Har.., : i , was a sma!] period in the history cf 2 gentleand efective, Tryabox fries ate country, and yet how much kad tran opired : n the develupment of railways. In pax? | 7 . ali the 1@ looads inthecountry ear, ied but 9, Nervous, Tired, Weak. That most dreaded disease, typhoid pneunio- bia left me with @ Cough, Fore throat, tired and nervous. 1 couki not sleep night To aad to m; F many trowbics, Jast winter [hac La (irippe. Ii an increa~e ofnear|y 50 per cent. In ISR2 the rai lw ays carried 13,060,000 tons of freight, and is 1892 75 per cent. In L838] the racdways of the 22,900,000. nn imerease of over | nearly “0 per cent, It murt be remem- hered, when considering these figures, that the greater part of the period bas been d- voted to construction, and that the rail- waye were as y.t only in their infancy seemed L would As aslight evidence of their growth thes bot live until hwt onivy to refer to the interna! business of spring. I tried Cana la, and the incretsod comminnica FATHER AND SON . tion the Dominion enjoved with coun TVvOK years ago there were practically no tra le relations, They Skoda’s | Dise vOvO ry. had’. seen placed upon the Pacifle t Many remedi: , Canadian steamship line, that, if” bat got no ree: f i “BY, time were taken aa the measure ¢ wala i took Sko- hie idistanee. had reduced the distanes d2’s Discovery. i between this eoauntev and Japan nearly My ittrle hoy has 10 percent. So far as a fast Atlantic been sickly toe steamship line was concerned, practically several years. no advance had boen made, but jet them Ife ted has teken hope that in the near future the Dominion Skeda’s snd now Government would seeure the pr per he ist * fat, TORY cheekeud Liitle yeople to pnt a service on that route. Mr Bpenghor asy pointed ont that it chap as you was the aim of the ¢. P.R. to grant wows Rae toree, the lowest possible freight for farmers i: Fimer FP. Albee, the Northwest. Was 1 imagined for a sates = Ss, moment that a concern having a mort im- SKODA DIS SRY £9, portant stake inthe western conntry as es ey 4 the C. P.R. hal would attenipt to dis hey a oy ; ri¢ by W. k we emigration by forcing unteason- PoE ty able rates ont of the eure’ He p sinted hel ; out ie 2t 25,000 alditioral farmers located in the territory west of Winnipeg, pre MAINS BARRY DOULL, ducing the same average crop, would jmean an increase of $10,060,006 in thy! SPP 210, STAWPER BLOCK glowing s of the C.P.R He painted ae ogy ing pic ‘ture of “ae future of the North Instruet jon’ given in the varie new es of Drawing and Pair amidst s lou aprlauce ai nov29—2in eod ~~. ORIGIN OF THE ARAB STERD, v for three a ive without a dre » Of wate, ” A last, fy i The origin of the best atrain ef Arebia | blood has been related by some re niancer, While Mohamined was fis ghting his way to greatness he was once ¢ compelied to lead his corps of 20,000 cav: aly hili-top, they deseried the silver et: 7 distant river. Mohammed o te red | trumpeter to blow the eall to dismount } and loose the horses, a, ~~ Y —_ starving for water, at on n mal gallop toward the 7 n aebt oat No sooner loosened than came the alarm } —fal-e, as it happened— of a annie a) ye bush. ‘To horse !? was blown, a | peated by a hundred bugles. — B: nt th man ; i wa + too great; the rched a. j were not to he a ial ; “a ia ib ynerke ANY OTHE grew wilder and wilier as 20,000 Se -teeds pushed de perately for the river Tur DITEDNAL as EXTEDNAL ute banks, Ofall the frantic erowd but five aD niares responded to the c all To these inated ly an Oid Family Faysician. fatale pilimper ene gh nse nr neg } ‘ a 8 leads, turned in their tracks, came i vely back, | ration after Generation have used and blessed it pleading g intheir eves and anguish in their | Ew sravel s “uff have @ bottiedn bis satcbet, sunken ff —_ and stood befure the Pro- Every Su fferer tow : phet. Le > fk 7 the ir master au 1 a se 19 ; Nervous t adache, Diphtheria, Coughs, Catarrh, Bron! ! enitis, Asthma, Cholera Morbas, Diarrhoea, Lameness, | of obedience e had conquered th ei 7 stress, | Serences in Body or Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strair | will find im this old Anodyne relief and yeu: but their bloodshot eves told of a fearfal | Should have Jolinson’® | torme nt—the more “pe vathetic ae their Every Mother (ee niment in the dumbness. The danger was over; the Sere Throat, Tonsdittie, Colic, Cuts, Bruises cramps : me * aud Pains Hable to occur in any femil thou faithful mares were at onee relea es but | notiee- De! lays may cow a Mie. Re’ pa. —+4 Mohammed selected there five fur his own | Complaints like magic. Price, % ota. ea, “2. Laxvress paid. L 8. Johnson & use; and they were the dams of one o f the great races ‘of the desert. From them | bare sprang the te a ; — Lr } Baby Wants _— be claimed the average horse of the +-rient comes - to this ideal. He must have been bre: from he 19,995.~ From de Tar rr from the 18.995.— Hom“ Rilers of Tur Martin’s tin 2: ae XN e ~ Per Over Fifty Years, Cardinal I ood Ax O.p Ann Weit Trteo Reuepy.— FOR INFANTS AND INVALIDS. Mre. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup ha- The most palatable food prepared, and | beed used for over fifty years by millions is unequalled by any ether preparation | of mothers for their child-en while teeth- ofits kind. The best food and the b nig, with perfect snecess, It socthes the value, jatt-up in one pound Tins, pri child, eortens the gums, all lays the pain, 25 cts, per Tin cures the colic, and i is the best re ‘medy for So'd Retail by ali Dii and Gro- a arrhoea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold | cers and Whel by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its vaine js MERRY WATSON & CO. Prornicrons incalculable. Be sure and ask fur Mrs. | MONTREAL Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no | other kind.—m. w. f. wkhy—-! y —The British Home News saya: Man- DRUCCIST FOR NORWEGIAN comprise the length of their gigantic en- terrrise, and they have baen fullowed by a large party of journalists and others. | The Queen isto be es kf i to formally | | ; ’ | | chester is now 2 seaport. The Wectors | a SY EM of the new canal have travelled in state | ; : | ; (GO) N71 bake YPDPH aa | | ; the opposition to the scheme is now an- cient history. The great interests of the | meament are centred inthe future. The a fp their revenge. Liverpoo! has long been | Die as cream. oils regarded asthe dearest a3 well “AS the | oa t1.00. in big bottles she is no longer the “toll-kee per of the | Mersey.” The revival of Southampton gave her one ser‘ous blow; now she will have to considerably modify her tariff, in addition to which her coas ting trade will! eee When we assert that Dodd’s Mee LIN Kidney Pills wenn 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 + / CURE TO STAY oa By a. fruggists or mail on t of p go cents be L. A. Smith ec Sad wien cotton can be brought to Manchester at a | reduction in cost of 63 8d per ton; wool, at | a redu iion of 8s 8d per ton; tinned meate, | at a reduction of 9s ad per tony tea, at a reduction of 93 7d per ton; grain fwheat in sacks) at 2 reduction of 4 1d per ton; fruit (oranges) ata reduction of 8s 10d per ton, and soon. It will be seen that the railways in the new canal have no —_— —.~ ow — Nursing Mothers and delicate children flesh productor. Clergyman, students and overtaxed busi- ness men will finda wonderful recuper RArrrrereeree’ 802200864 contains Phosphorous (brain food) in the | most assimilable form sash j i wy Fh a , 7 Pe Se z f com So oe ema ese i mir wom oe ppllnecemapy ede warhaer lipo Lo emmmamniutl Bi a eee “7