a RE a ee Ce ME SE en Min EEE yl sn iat scl lb Yr ee PS re sca nc a lie — er "i ot “ * x wn li i i la I A RR » EM *: 2 Sag = me — ae a - 2 nese goede mraagroedtom, « oo a ee SON 5. ce ao ee a ee Pan See Se ; ' €4 t ‘ ee EER Rg Nec eam ret ra : me fr Wie i ail pause hits an »* , Nothing on Earth will do it like Sheridan’s Powder. Thousiads of successful Poultry-Keepers all @ver the country owe ho small portion of their @access (9 the practice of mixing with the mash food given to their poultry every day, a small nantity of SHERIDAN’s ConpDITION POWDER. has be on used and indorsed by Poultry-Raisers ever thity years, and for all kinds of poultry. ff you can’t get the Powder send to us. One e k, 25 cts.; five, #1. Large two-lb. can, $1.20 ix can. @Xp, ] uid, 85. Sample copy bes: Poultry @aperiree. 1.5. JOHNSON & CO.. Boston, Mase THE DAILY EXAMINER enasem => o— Subscription $4 a Year 85 cents a Month. THE WEEKLY EXAMINER . Subscription, $l}a Year. *Payable in Advance. .°* Ge Lac D uty Bxamrner is on sale every day of publication at the follow- ing plaves :— Aiberton—@ S Muttart. Bradalt ane. -R Nicholson Untown— Mason’s Newstand, Geo Carter & Co, Queen St Haszard & Moore, Grafton St, CJ Mitchell, Queen St, W M Coffin, Grafton : t, D Chappell, Prince St, Johnson & Johnson, Kent St, Capt T White. Pownal St, F J Hornsby, Victoria Row, Heath Norton. . liee va air? -— Cieorcatown—Hon D Gordon. kK ensing'on— E Love Little Y ork—S Brown Morell - H D McEwen Mt Stew art- Douglas & Jardine. Summer side—D K Currie, Small & Beairsto. Perey “eaman, D =utherlaad. Srdney, © B—M Forrestal. Wan's, Lost, Fount, &¢ WAN CED -—-A general servant, Apply to Mrs Artiur Newberry. Sonrts- TO LET.—The store on Queen Street now occupie. by the Bcston Optieal Company ¢s Office. |’ossession given March 13st. Appiy io T. J. Morris. WAN TED.—Agood, steady young man—one who is used to wait om guests. apply at Hotel De vies. Sins, WAN)ED-An experienced canvasser to trvvel aid appoint agents. No canvassing; salary and expenses paid. Drawer 66, Brant- tord, Ors. 20 d&w FUR JOLLAR LO3T.—Several days ago black (ur collar. Finder will be rewarde leaving same at this office. LOST..-A chain braselet either on Grafton or Great Geurze Street. Please leave at THE EXAMINER office, where reward wil! be : 9 given oid 2108 TENDERS! ~ FOR— tndian River Church. Tenders are asked for the construction and completion of St. Mary’s Church, up co the Oth March, next, to be addessed to the undersigned and marked “Tender for Indian River Catholic Church.” Pians and specifications can be seen on Monda:, 5th February, next, at the Bishop s Palace and at the office of Mr W. C. Harris, Architect, Ch’town, for ten days; afterwards they can be seen at the Paroch is] House,Summerside. A certi- fied bank cheque of $50.00 will be required to accompany each tender, which will be returned if tender he not accepted, and forfeited if tenderer fail to accept, f called upon. Ihe undersigned does not bind himself to accet the lowest or any tender. D. J. GILLIS, P. P. Indian River, P. EB. I., Jan 3lat 1900. Here \d. isn't Be err at (Comforting beyond expression to be able to go ‘0 a place where you know every thing is done im a tirst clase manner Our aim is to give our custoin- ers the very best value at the lowest possible price. We guarantee all our work to be strictly firet class. Give us a cal) and be convinced, ~> % % Broce Stewart and Co'y. “THE MODERN” Founders Engineers & Machinists Steam Nav. Co’y’s Wharf Ch’town, PEI Phone 125 Tc: LE The northend of a house situated on ‘Prince Sireet, containing nine rooms, suit- sble for a bearding house or private resid - eace Apply to, THOMAS McQUAID Qucen $' -Q =4@{4e4 a = o<« @& @ @® @@ =s 2 «= ©. © @ @ 2. 82666 bis ! Cupid In a Huff. “Our engagement is off again.” “What's the matter now?” “fl gave her a belt buckle with my photograph on it, and she nses it to fasten her dog’s collar.”—Chicago Rec- ord. A Serious Disappointment, “Why does Mrs. Timberlake that settled look of melancholy?” “Because she can’t make eyeglasses stay on that flat nose of bhers.’’—Cleve- land Plain Dealer. wear Just Reversed. “Yes,” she said, “I am proud to say that I am a bachelor girl.” “And I,” he replied, “take equal pride in the fact that I am an old maid man.” —Chicago Post. Gyration. “The French have a folding bicycle.” “Ts that so? Well, the American wheel doubles up often enough to suit me.”’—Indianapolis Journal. A Mixed Blessing. “Telephones are great time savers, aren’t they?’ “Well, that depends on who calls yon op.”—Chicago Record. Tale of Two Countries, “T guess”— “Oh, don’t guess. You Americans always guess, you know.” “No, I don’t know. You Englishmen always know, don’t you know?’—Chi- eago Tribune. Where the Trouble Lies. “Don’t you have a horror of lending books?” “No; I haven’t any horror of lending books, but I have a horror of not get- ting them back again.”—Chicago Rec- ord. The Meteor Craze. ~ ‘What's the matter, my boy?" “I've got a speck in my eye.” “Here, bold on! Don’t move. Per- haps it’s a leonwl.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Joint. “Been having an encounter with rheumatism, old man?’ “Yes, a joint debate.”—Detroit Jour- foal. EAK AND.... PUNY CHILDREN Become Strong and Healthy by using Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food. Children are frequently left weak and sickly as an after result of measles, scarlet fever, etc., and in this state are easy prey to nervous disorders, rickets, spinal disease, or consump- tion, diseases which do not affect robust, healthy children. The blood is weak and watery and the nerves tmproperly nourished. Feed the blood and nerves with Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food, and the pale, pinched faces will soon become rosy and plump, and tiredness and weakness will give way to strength and animation. Mr. E. W. Day, 62 Close Avenue, Toronto, writes: ‘‘My eldest daughter, aged eight, be- came very much run down. Her fretful, ner- vous, sleepless condition greatly alarmed her parents. She was taken from school, and in spite of the best nursing, the thin, weakened, bloodless face grew painfully worse. Fortun- ately we used Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. An improvement became apparent in a few days, it continued, and in a few weeks she returned to school built up anew, and greatly to our joy fully restored to health.” . Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food, soc. a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co, Toronto. JUST IN@ eos 03 030 QZ A few dozen _ regulation Hockey Sticks and Pucks re- ceived Saturday. A few Shin Pads left which can be bought cheap, CHAS J. MITCHELL, BooKSELLER and STaTIONEN Queen Street. Opp. Prowse’s...... You are Interested in reading the letter an, and the telegrams about Prince Edward Island’s represeatatives in South Africa; new liable to be in the fighting at aay jime. FOR ONE DOLLAR I wll eend to any address, pos tpai an elegant photograph, size, 7x inches, of eur contingent, with Majo Weeks in the centre—a splend j large photegraph of Rev. T. F. Ful Jerton taken the de; before he lef the Island— (RANSVAAL SOUVENIR BOOKLET nicely illustrated, written by Mr A. M. Belding, of 8t. John—an two copies of ‘‘our Contingent. Wall Calendars, ene at least o which sheuld be in every house Prince Edward Island. All for One Dollar. ROBT. L. COTTON, P. O. Box, 84, CHARLOTIETOWN The Clay Potter Who Escaped Being Crippled for Life by Almost a Miracle. A. N. Wideman of Duntroon, Ont., Inter viewed in Toronto—The Most Hope- *% less Case of Rheumatism on Re- cord—A Living Monument to the Power of Dodd’s Kidney Pills, Toronto, Feb. 5.—The wonderful es- fA. N Wideman, which found its way iato the newspapers a few weeks ago, is till a nly ci of interest here. He will he remembered a® the man who was so fr ghtfally crippled with Rheumatism, » log twisted and conterted out of shape. He was tairly snaiched from a mieer- able deats by Dodd’e Kidney Pille. aad he has been one of the greatest upholders f Dodd’s Kidney Pills in Qanada ever rince. Mr. Wideman etil] hae to use » stick when he walks as the disease has left him with one leg shorter than the other, With tuie exception, and with the pefect due tothe breaking of his teeth from taking mercury medicines, Mr. Wideman is as well as ever he was in bis life. “I never heard of anything like the way Dodd’s Kidney Pills worked in my case,” said he. ‘‘ They drove the rheu- matism clean oul of my system. You know work was slack in the earthenware works, acd I took achance to work ia the harvest field. I got soaked several times with rain and that brought oa the worst attack of rheumatism I ever heard of. I was in bed five months. My legs were twisted out of shape, the toes point- ing inward. Well, nothing the doctor could do did me the least good. My teeth broke off from the mercury he gave me, that was al].” “How did you come to take Dodd’s Kidney Pills ?” Mr. Wideman was asked. “A neighbor of mine,’Mrs. Boyer, got me totry them, I did so to please her but continued their uee because they were curing me.” “And you ascribe your present health and strength to Doai’s Kidney Pille ?” “T certainly do. If it hadn’t been for Dodd’s Kidney Pills I would be in my grave at this minute,” said Mr. Wideman emphatically. ellaineinaiatnitaien cinema Conspiracy. Weather Man—It’s going to be aw- fully foggy tonight. Astronomer—Then lll rush out an announcement of another brilliant meteoric shower.—Chicago Record. Up Against It. She—I think Lieutenant Peary is a noble, brave man. He—Yes, but he’s up against an aw- fully cold proposition this trip.—Ohie State Journy!. & re Stock, When news came to Boxby that the squire’s son “down below” had made a large sum of money in stocks, some of the wiseacres shook their heads. Not so old lady Sprowle, with whom the young man had always been a prime favorite. “I don’t see what the minister meant, saying he didn’t favor Bob’s having deal- ings in the stock market,” she said indig- nantly to one of her neighbors.. “J can’t see why money made in trading cattle, if it’s done fair and square, isn’t just as good as money made any other way!’— Youth’s Companion. <= < —~ How much business can a man do! whose svsiem isin a state of disorder ? Headache is‘only a symptom. It is not adisease. The pain in the bead is the sign Of rebellion. There have been mis- takes in diet and other abuses. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets area gentle, effective renvoator and in- vigorator of stomach, liver and bowels, They assist nature without threatening to tear the body piece-wneal. There are no griping pains, no paucea. One is a Jaxa- tive, Send 31 one-cent stamps tocover cost of mailing only, and receive free 8 copy of Dr. Pierce’s Medical Adviser. Address World’s Diepensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N.Y. &.. ae RINE. The Rink will cpen for the season Xmas afternoon. Tickets same ‘price as last year. SEINE. .c0vens ss csnanmsan SE bans 500355.” 82,50 Children’s......... ....$1.50 Alternoon............ $1.50 Present your friend with a ticke+ or Xmas Tickets for sale at Johnson & John sons’, A. W. Reddin’s, and Apcthe caries Hall, or the managers. E.H. BEEK, B. C. PROWSE Bread For Horses, A delivery wagon of one of the big bread baking factories stopped in front of an up town livery and boarding sta- ble, and two men at once unloaded bar- rels of bread and carried them into the stable. The bread looked good and was good. There were all sorts and sizes of loaves in the barrels—“home- made,” “rye,” “Vienna,” “potato,” “graham” and “cottage.” The curicsity of a man who saw the bread being delivered to the stable was aroused, and he ventured to ask the proprietor of the stable what it meant. “There’s nothing remarkable about it,” said the proprietor with a laugh “I simply buy it for horse feed. We grind the bread up and mix it with other feed, and it makes first class food for horses. It is stale bread and costs us 40 cents a bgrrel, and there are 50 or 60 loaves to the barrel, so you see ft comes pretty cheap. Some of the bread igs only a day old and is good enough for any man to eat, but the bread fac- tories cannot sell it. What you see here are returned loaves from the grocer- fea.” The Illusion. “What beautiful peaches!” said an old lady as she stopped at a stall in the market and admired a basket of the choice fruit. They were covered with a pink gauze and looked very tempting indeed. The old lady bought the peaches and took them home. The next day she ap- peared again at the stall and showed the stall keeper a small piece of pink veiling. “Do you keep that kind of veiling for sale?” she asked. The stall keeper told her that he did not. “Well,’ she said, “when I took those peaches home they were small and sour and green, and I thought if I could get some of that veiling that made them look so pretty and plump in the basket I’d wear it myself. If it would improve me as much as it did the peaches, people would think I'd found the elixir of youth.”—London Fun. Some Queer Tastes, He put his fingers in the epen fron- work of the hotel lamppost to steady his weak knees, wiped the rain from his face with a shaking hand and fixed an uncertain eye on the windows of the dining room. He was very drunk. ‘ ‘The Pradent Man Setteth — His House in Order.”’ Your human tenemeni should be given even more careful attention than the house you live in. Set it in order by thoroughly renovating your whole system through blood made pure by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Then every organ will act promptly and regularly. Never WILE Tynes In pursuance of an Act of the General Assem- bly of this Island, made and passed in the fifty-first year of the reign of Her present Majesty Queen Victoria, Chap. 12. intituled: The City of Charlottetown Incorporation Act, andof the Act amending the same, 55 Vic., Cap. 10, intituled * An Act to amend the City of Charlottetown Incorporation Act.” Ido hereby give Public Notice that an elec- tion of a Mayor for the said City, and for one person to serve as a@ Common Councilman in the City Council for each cf Wards Number 1, 2 and 3 of said City. and of two persons to serve as Common Councilmen in the said Cou.cil for Ward No. 40f said City, and of three persons to serve as Common Councilmen in the said Council for Ward No. 5 ‘in said City, being in alla Mayor and Kight Common Councilmen representing the City as follows :— For Ward Number One.... One Councillor, sit - a2 Two... One Councillor, Tiree. One Councillor, Four ..T wo Councillors, Five...Three Councillors, WILL BE HELD ON Wednesday, the l4th day of February, A. D. 1960. At the several places, that is to say: In Ward 1, at or near th John %. Morris, Queen Sireet. oe In Ward 2, at or near the house of Mrs Thom- ees smpemte ~. R. Heartz’s Ware- se. Sydney reet, bet eorg ne ae Streets. re ee f nh Waid 3,at or near the Market House. In Ward 4,at or near the City Hall, ey * 7 Kent and Queen Streets. nh Ward 5, at or near the carriage sh of Philip Large & Son, on Great Geonse Streets And tthe said Eleciion the Pell will be ee = wee ou a forenoon, aad con pen until five o’clock in the af f the same day. ee DESCRIPTION OF WARDS. Number One shall comprise all that part es — _ —— of Beethonae ') &D e parcel of land formerly k as A eee 5 nace Ground. a ere umber l'wo shall comprise all thet Charlottetown which lies oa of beet —— ne 2 = Dorchester Street. umber ree shall comprise all that of Charlottetown which lies south of Gralion Street and north of Richmond Street. Number Four shall comprise all that pet of Charlottetown which lies south of iteroy — “eo perth Na ieee Street. umber Five shall comprise all that rt of € -aarlottetown which lies north of Fitsroy Street ncluding thé Common of the said Town. NOMINATION DAY. WEDNESDAY. Februa 7th, A. D. — Pg Faint = Twelve at noon until the ouroclock in sano o> e afternoon of the or qualification of Electors. 51 Victoria, Cap. 12, sections cer -_ H, M. DAVISON. x JAMES WARBURTON, ay Chek. Mayor of the City of Charlottetown. ‘ss “<< “ se Ty é City Clerk’s Office, Charletteto 7. he CIVIC ELECTION THE DAILY KXAMINER, CHAKLOT'IELOWN, FEBRUARY 6 1900 — WIDEMAN TALKS, | | —— ceive prompt attention, [® ag @ ive JOHNSTOWS FLUID BEEF {? a" oe pee J. F. B. contains all the nourishing propertics of Beef. J. F. B. is invaluable in the Sick Room. J. F. B. is most palatable and invigorating. J. F. B. is inexpensive. THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPAWY{ The Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New Yo RICHARD A. [IcCURDY, President | ASSETS—$277,517,350.56. ANNUAL INCOME—$55,006,629.43 INSURANCE IN FORCE—$971,711,997, ce All Canadian Policies payable iu gold Before placing your insurance please call or write stimates, gs an J OHN McEACHERN, . > ak AGE YOU WANT TO REPLAG —— SOME OF YOUR—— BLUE DISHES. Oow- ——- We are selling the balance stock of Blue Ware at 25 cent discount, Call andjget a bargain at _As we have disposed of our grocery § business, all accounts must be settled eithak by cash or note, bearing interest, befor sl February 15th, 1900, on which date the§ books will pass to other hands for collection, Settlements can be made at our implement store, Le Page’s old stand, Queen St. W. GRANT & ce Feb 2—dyeod wy em = STOVES _ Highland Ranges Jewel Ranges Jewel Stoves Heating Stoves Tortoise Heaters See that you get the Tortoise with a one top Fennell & piece. Chandle —$ - Plumbing &- Heating IT am now prepared to do Sanitary Plumbing in all its branches. — rw Hot water H eating and Gas Fitting. * obbing oroaal atter ze work guaranteed first-class, Estimates furnished at short not as - = before placing your orders—it wil] be money saved. Orders! "> NORTON & O'S. Store, or at residence, Edward Streot willl Angus McInnis, PRACTICAL PLUMBER § Gas, Steau and Hot Water Fitter, Ch’town, P. E i " "a Be We We de Ba Ma ba @e Of all Wine Merhant | Wholesale from the distiller, A. G. Taousox ;