1 yes Le eae Aires Cie Btgogh title. lel ll ee a deiinn 4 ig ed ate be a ‘i ad Es i e a> a h ————e es a THE ATTENTION ! p : tA XN M Con \ of tl 4 NT Kk SI M BS TER CANS | ak . ! very xt « . ’ Thes i Stock le 8 ** RCHMENT LININGS TIN PLATES NGOT TIN EAD, COPPT rT N TWINE AN \ MARLIN} : crs i: v0 r sup} WALTER WATHESON, ‘ ' wa . x WK Wit iN ,N uid M . ( MeN , M KN Law rta B g { rUESDAY t M 1 1894 li K \ I ‘ rt a. WILLIAM VEERS, CONSUMPTION is averted, or if too late to avert it it is oftem cured and c/ways relieved by Scott’s Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil. Cures Coughs, Colds and Weak Lungs. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. Don't be deceived hy Substitutes: Scott S Bowne, Beillevitie. Al Druggists, Vc. & OL i store on ‘wet = a ed B. H. Ne mae % Ape ‘ a countess t Estate a St nl —jan25 >see e 42 2esne!U Though you Cough ¢ ¢ Don’t Despair! Many apparently horeless cases g have been cured by a course of AMPBELL’S WINE OF BEECH TREE CREOSOTE TRY IT! AT ALL DRUGGISTS. K. CAMPBELL &CO., Montreal, i a id ~ TO LET. The Premises lately ocenpied by Mr. Georg: Thorne, situate on Sidney Street, containing ight bedrooms, kitchen, dining room, shoy and front room; good yard and stabling, ete Possession immediately. Apply to JAMES F. CURTIS. TOOTHACHE! HEADACHE ! NEURALGIA! DISTANTLY CURED BY ONE APPLICATION OF NERVOL. 25 cents per Bottic, at all Druggists. PILLS Make New, Rich Blood! No oth ire of feli-w he winetion around asect tof a box of ville Mim be thankful. UN from the bie flu osing them d everywhere, or sent ailifor BS cta in stampe, fire ——— DR 7 JVUHNSUN & CU,. 24 Custom House 5. Dorton. Frcs ated pam phiet free. ft ta NERVE BEANS are 8 new dis covery that cure ~ 3 Debility, Vigor an Failing’ Manho. s solutely curea the most obstinate cases when TREATMENTS have failed eveato relieve. —cld by drug gists at Gl per package, or ots Fas sent y AL oF seceipt of price by sadressing THE JAMES MEDICIN}I Toronte, Unt. 4 Writefor pamphica. Sold ia—- Charlottetown by G. E. Hughes dri gzist Gratelul — Comlorting. Epps’s CO pps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of ural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the properties of well-select- ed Cacoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage whico may save us many heavy doctors’ bille. It is by the judicious use of euch articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until enough to resist every tendency to disease, Hunreds of subtle maladies are floating wherever there the nat strong trong around us ready to attack is a weak point. We may escape many a fata] shaft by keeping ourselves well forti tied by pure blood and a properly nourish ed frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in packets, by Grocers, labelled tiue, JAMES EPPS & CO., Homecepathic Chemists, London, Es. iand. ~ STAMPS WANTED. OLD Canadian, United States’ and other siamps, as used 25 to 40 years ago. For mane pay $1 to $5 each. GEORGE LOWE 346 Spadina Avenue, Toronto, . iLosaienciacant aan ale : ge 2 ae ao nye a DAILY Lobster Packers, 12 Most uservL TREE THE COCOANUT FURNISHES FOOD, SHELTER AND EMPLOYMENT. Hundreds of Thousands Of Human Heings Find Ali These BHiessings from Its Exist- enceSome of Ite Chief Characteristics in Detali Worth of tte Frult. The cocoanut grows cnly near the shore, where its roots penetrating the sandy soil may drink freely from clear } Of all trees it is Werground springs egarded by Garden and Forest as the ost useful t man, furnishing food ‘ snd employment to hundreds of auds of the human race. intropi intries, especially in southern India and in Malava. the cocoanut sup stwo whols munities with the necessities of life Every part is - 2 roots are considered a emedy against fevers; from the trunk wouses, boats and furniture are made he leaves furnish the thatch for houses and the material from which baskets its, mats and innumerable other twork of fibres irticles are made; the 1 at their base <i for sieves and is wade : ‘ lot} from the young is ne flower stocks a palm wine, called toddy s obtained, from which arrak, a fiery slcoholic drink, is distilled Che value ft fruit is well known. From the usk, which is called coir, commercially, lage. bedding. mats, brushes and ther articles are manufactured. Inthe tropics, lamps, drinking vessels and spoons are made from the hard shells The albumen of the seed contains large quantities of oil, used in the east for oking and in illuminating; in Europe and the United States it is often mace into soap and candles, yielding, after the oil is extracted, a refuse valuable as food for cattle, or as a fertilizer. In some parts of the tropics the kernel of the seed forms the chief food of the in havitants. The cool, milky fluid which fills the cavity of the fruit when the nut s young, affords an agreeable beverage, ind the albumen of the young nut, which is soft and jelly-like, is nutritious and of a delicate flavor As might be expected in the case of a plant of such value, it is ofteu carefully and extensively cultivated in many countries, and numerous varieties, dif fering in the size. shape and quality of the fruit, are now known. The cocoa nut is propagated by seeds; the nuts are sown in nursery beds, and at the end of six or eight months the seedlings are large enough to plant. The plants are usually set twenty-five feet apart each way in carefully prepared beds filled with rich surface soil. Once established, a plantation of cocoanuts requires little care beyond watering which is necessary in its early years to insure a rapid and vigorous growth. In good soil the trees uaually begin to flower at the end of five or six years, and may be expected to bein full bearing from eight to twelve years. Thirty nuts from a tree is considered a fair average yield, although individual trees have wen known to produce an average of 300 nuts during a period of 10 yeara An application of manure increases the vield of the trees, although probably the value of the additional crop obtained in this way is hardiy large enonagh to jus tify such expenditure. In recent years the cocoanut has been cultivated on a very large scale in British Honduras, Jamaica and other parts of Central Am erica, as Well as on the northern coast of South America and the West Indies Cocoanvts bring all the way from $19 to $28 per 1,000, according to quality The Names of Things. Once in a while, not very rarely eith er, weare led to wonder why names, not only absolute rediculous, but in them selves disgusting, are applied to articles of food. The other d y sone ladies were looking over a magazine and dis cussing the making of what was set down in the publication as a ‘Toad in a hole,” this nondescript teim being ap plied to some fruit or other ingredient wrapped up in a bit of pasteand cooked In tae same sense We read of ‘‘little pigs in blankets,” and varions ‘‘deviled articles There certainly can be no thing appetizing in the idea that one is eating an article modeled after his sa tanic majesty or in the simitude of the inhabitants of a pig-sty. Neither of these names has pleasant suggestions, yet some of them are generally in dulged in. In the same general line’ we have beasts of various sorts more or less re pulsive as trademarks for good products. Well-regulated families would do well to refuse to take some of these edibles Weare not so poverty-stricken in the way of names. terms and language generally that we should fbe obliged to fall back on objects that excite unplea sant emotions. Itis high time that a halt were called and reform demanded in this respect The Lost rides, While two wedding procession were fighting for the road at one of the gates at Hankow the chairs holding the brides got mixed and each lady was taken to the wrong bridegroom. The gentlemen never having seen their wives before, wcording to the Chinese custom, knew no mistake. When the next morning the mothers of the two brides went to present the usual hair oi! to their dangh ters each found a stranger installed in her place. Neither mother, moreover, had any means of finding out where her laugnter had gone. Aftera very diffi cult search of the city the brides were both found and then the idea of making the best of things was blocked by the fact that one of the brides, who was rich and iniended fora rich husband, had fallen into the hands of a very poor man. The problem remains unsolved Obeying the Wife. A Scotch clergyman, just as he had told the bridegroom to love and honor his wife, was surprised to hear the man interject the words ‘‘and obey.” A few years afterwards the clergyman met the man D'ye mind, sir, yon day when ye married me, and when I wad insist upon vowing to obey my wife? Well, ye may now see that I was in the right Whether ye wad or no. I have obeyed her and, behold, I am the only man that has a twostory house in the hale toun." “El Fatat,”’ The welcome fact that Oriental wo- men are waking up from the lethargy of compelling custom, is strongly evidenced in the appearance of a paper published by aSyrian lady in Alexandria. It is called El Fatat (The Young Woman), and is edited by Miss Hind Nonfa!l, from Tripoli, in Svna. It appears bi-month jy, and all its articles are written by lad-es __———— 8 e8eoe —-———= ALL THREE CURED, Nell MeKechnile, with his wife and mother- in-law € ured of Constipation by Dodd's Kidney Pills—These Pills better Than Ordinary Cathartiecs, Toronto, Feb. 19 Neil McKechnie, a popular barber of this city, has been a suf- ferer from chronic constipation for vears. He used Dodd’s Kidney Pills and not only obtained immediate relief, but a permanent eure. His wife and mother-in-law were similarly afflicted, and used these pills with the same good result Ordinary caihartics give only temporary relief and patient worse than before using While D-dd’s Kidney Pills are not athartics, their peculiar ‘action on the liver and kidneys is such that the causes of constipation are permanently removed These pills are manufactured by Dr. L. A Smith & Co.. Toronto, and ara sold by al dealers, or will be mailed on receipt of! price; fifty cents per box, ur six boxes for $2.50 leave the them a cad Do you Cough? Hawker’s Tolu and Wild Cherry Batam is a sure Cough Cure. ee “Mother, what shall I do for this dread ful cough?” “Take Puttner’s Emulsion my dear, it always helps our family USE SKOA’S DISCOVERY, the great Blood and Nerve Remedy, - | 7.30 a. m EXAMINER . : SUNPAY SERVICES, St. Paul’s Churech.—Fourth Sunday in lent: Morning Prayer and Holy Com- munion at LL o’elock. Sunday School at 2.30. Evening Prayer at 7 o'clock. St. Peter’s Cathedral.—Fourth Sanday in Lent: Holy Communion at 8 and 11 Matins at 10.15 a. m. Children’s 2.30. Evensong and Sermon a ™m, Service at at 7 o'clock St. Dunstan’s Cathedral.—First Mass at Children’s Mass at 8.30 a.m. High Mass and Sermon at 10 a. m. Vespers and Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament at 7 o’clock. St. James’ Church.—Prayer meeting at 10.15 a.m. Preaching at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. by Rev. T. F. Fullerton, pastor. Sunday School and Bible classes at 2.20. Young men’s class led by Mr. Pitblado. at 10.15 and 7 p. m land, pastor. Class at 2.30. Preaching at ll a. m. and by the Rev. David Suther- Sabbath School and Bible First Methodist Church. — Morning prayer meeting at 10.30. Preaching at 1l a. m. by Rey. G. C. P. Palmer, and at 7 p. m. by Rev. W. W. Brewer. Sunday School and Bible classes at 2.30. Second Methodist Church.—Preaching at ll a. m. by Rev. W. W. Brewer, and at 7 p. m. by Rev. G. C. P. Palmer. Sunday School and Bible classes at 2.15. Zion Church.—Morning prayer meeting | i } POND'S EXTRAC WILL CURE Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Lameness, Influenza, Wounds, Piles, Earache, Chilblains, Sore Eyes, inflammations, AVOID IMITATIONS. POND’S EXTRACT CO., mmcmaws wD) ast teete a as FAC-SIMILE OF BOTTLE WITH BUFF WRAPPER, Frost Bites, Soreness, Catarrh, Burns, Bruises, Sore Feet, Face Ache, Hemorrhages. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTE. 76 Fifth Avenue, New York. Young People’s Union at 3.15. The Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper will be services during the week. and 7 p.m. by Rev. C. W. Corey. School and pastor’s Bible Class at 2.30 Meeting Honse, Upper Street.—Services at 11 a. m. Great George and 7 p.m. Kensington Hall.—Sunday 2.30 o'clock, p. m. Evangelistic vice conducted by Mr. D. W. opening with a song 7.15 p.m Scott, Gospel Meeting.— Remember the Gospel Meeting in the Atheneum on Sunday afternoon, at 4 o’clock, conducted by the Railway men. Strangers always welcome Les86n: John 3, 16—“For God so loved the world.” re ere Too Late for the Train, It is impossible to you are a minute late, while on the other hand “catching a cold” is almost impossible to avoid. If you have “caught a cold” obtain at once a bottle of Hawker’s too Tolu and Wild Cherry Balsam; it will quickly put itto flight. It is a certain eure for Coughs Colds, Croup, Bronchitis, Hoarseness and all throat and lung troubles. Safe and pleasant to take, sure to cure. Sold everywhere, 25 and 50 cents a botile. LirtLe Rock, Ark., Feb. 27.—A_ special to the Gazette from West Plains, Mo., says that Anderson Carter and Bud Montgome- ry were taken from the County jail at Mountain Home, Ark., by a mob of 250 men last night and lynched. The sheriff, jailor and ten guards on duty at the jail were overpowered and disarmed. -_ For Over Fifty Years, Ax Orp Axp Wert Triep Remepy.— Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teet!- nig, with perfect snecese. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is nealculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind.—m. w. f. wkly—1 y Ricuwonp, Me., Feb. 27.—The ninetieth anniversary of Neal Dow’s birthday will be celebrated March 20th. Tha good ‘T'emp- lars and other temperance organizations in Maine will have a prominent part in the exercise of the day. Public union meet- ings will be held in Portland and probably other leading Maine cities Perfect health is seldom found, for im- pure air is so general. Hood’s Sarsaparilla really does purify the blood health and restores ileaiiliatehaaniinenanonns The modiste may have the artistic and aesthetic sense, but except she have the right material to work upon, the result will be, nota creation, which every Jad) lesires in a costume. Priestley’s well known dress fabrics, by their softness, ricnness and wonderful quality of perfect fitting and draping, achieve beautiful results in the hands of the tasteful jresamaker. Ladies should ask for Priestley’s famous black dress goods. Sitnmensiil t1ow to Get a Suulight Picture, Send 25 “ Sunlight ” Soap (wrappers bearing the words “Why a Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man’’) to Levev Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto. and you will receive by post a pretty pic- ture free from advertising, and well worth framing. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is the best in the wrappers Write your address carefully. be. open, The oil of the Norwegian Cod Liver is nature’s grand restorative, and is only Emulsion, “the kind that coughs, brenchitis and all affections of the throat and lungs. No oily taste like others. In big 50c. and $1.00, at druggists. bottles, —_— > R'ood and NérveRemedy. ’ . . Meagher's Orange Quinine Wine, Prepared strictly according to the British Pharmacopeia. Quinine in this agreeable than when taken in Capsules, Powders or Pills Dose—Half a wineglassful. For sale cians upon receipt of card. MEAGHER BROS. & CO., feb26—d& w 3m Montreal. SHERIFFS SALE. tion to me directed, issued out of Her Majesty’s Supreme Court of Judicature, at the suit of Thomas W. May against John Martin, Ihave taken and seized as the property of the said John Martin all his right, title and interest in and to the fo piece or parcel of Jand situate, lying and being at Dr.ndas, in Township Number Fifty-five, in Kings County, in Prince Edward Iuland, bounded and described as follows :—On the North by land Jately sold to Jonathan Matheson ; on the East by land now or formerly in possession of Daniel Nicholson ; on the South by land now or fermerly in possession of Alexan der McLeod; and on the West by the Cum- berland road, containing one humdred acres of land, a little more or less. And I do hereby give Public Notice that I will on Friday, the Tenth day of August next, A. D. 1894, at the hour of Twelve o’clock noon, at the Court house, in Georgetown, in Kings County, set up and sell at Public Auction the said property, or as much thereof as will satisfy the Jevy marked on the said writ, being Six Hundred and twenty-nine dollare, and interest on Five Hundred and twenty-six dollars, from the Fifteenth day of July, A. D. 1893, tiil paid at the rate of Seven per cent., per annum besides sheriff's fees and all incidental ex- penses. DANTEL A. McINNIS, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, King’s County, February 2od, 1894. A. A. McLean, Plaintiff’s Attorney. dy ex, 3in f ! | } Baptist Church.—Preaching at 11 a. m | } Does | market and it will only cost 1 c. postage to | send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends’ found in its entirely and purity in Miller's | USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the grea | by all druggists. Sample bottie free to physi- | : : t Talk Don ! but eall and inspect our New Parlor, Drawing By virtue of a Writ of Statute Execu- | | ; lowing property, namely, all that tract | administered at night. Special evangelistic | Sunday | service from 7 to | “catch a train” when | OLONIAL HOUSE, PHILLIPS Mantle Dp —t 4' cpartment. SQUARE. On Thursday morning, the 15th, and we will show our New Spring ‘NEW SPRING MANTLES! Bible Class and Sunday School at 2.30. School at } Ser- i following days Mantles. HENRY MORGAN & CO., February 22, 1894—tu thu sat MONTREAL. DOES YOUR Wire Do HER OWN Wasuina? i ; | ; | | j ‘ ; } Every bottle warrented. | } } } | | | j | | form is quicker in action and more reliabie | F she does, see that the wash is made Easy and Clean by getting her SUNLIGHT SOAP, which does away with the terrors of wash-day. Experience will convince her that it PAYS to use this soap. SS Castoria is Dr. Samuel Piitc! and Children. It cont2ins1z we mel | oe? other Nareotic substance. i. aera Pleasant. ; a. oe secant) lite ca tovcrishness. Castoria prc cures Disa ea and Wi - oe oll € inn AO on Onl #*s Castori. assimrat ea. La ? 7 - . Feel en oy ? ot? ana VOWS, FivVings LICAit toria is tho Children’s Par 4 ° Castoria. * Oastoric i 1 excell » for chi Mothers have repeatedly told mo of its upon their children.” Dr. G. C. Orcoon, } Lowell, Mass. BU mecdicin aren. food effect * Castoria is the best remeily for children of which I a: f=r Cistant when mothers willcons intercet of tacir chiliren, 2s stead of the various quack nostrums which 2re destroying their loved ones, by forcing opiur morphine, sooth'ng syrup and other hur agents Gown their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves.” Da. J. F. Krxcee.oe, Conway, Ar nacquainted. I hope the-day is tot } i ul ul Tho Contanr Company, 77 Murray Strect, New York City. 2er’s prescription for Infants neither Opium, Morphine nor aregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. Its guarantee is thirty ycars’? use by Riillions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays ad Colic. tronbles, enres constipation and flatulency. o food, regulates the stomach r:acea—the Mother’s Friend. ft is a harmicss substitute . ‘vents vomiting Sour Curd, Casteria relicves hy and natural sleep. Case Cc astoria. “ Castoria is so well adapted to children thas I recommend if as superior toany prescription known to me." H. A, Ancner, M. D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. * “Our physicians in the children’s depart ment have spoken highly of their experi- enco in their outside practice with Castoria, and although we only have among our medical supplies what is known as regular products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it.” Unrrep HesprraL and Dispeysary, Bosten, Masa Auten C. Surra, Pres., cures” colds, | ere cE t i Room and Bedsteads, and odd pieces of Furniture. Don't Listen ! but remember th are determined every time at JOHN NEWSON’S, the Cheapest Furniture Store goods guaranteed JOHN NEWSON. . Charlottetown, January 4, 1894 Frlace drawer, clothes French degree. Soap Beware THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., Montreal, jan6—ey sat tf Bedroom of BS‘ BY’S OWN SOAP in your linen before using it Suites, Chairs, Table at we sell the Cheapest, and to give the best bargains on P. E. Island. . No trouble to show goods Quality of a Cake and it will impart to your the delicate aroma of fine Pot Pourri in a modified The longer you Keep the the better. of imitations. — SATURDAY, MARCH 3, 1894. dé McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FREE 40 cents a month. month, CUT THIS OUT ANO SEND IT TO US. Tse Examiner Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. number. TITIV ITTV ITTV TIITIITTT id Octave Thanet, Wi Stanley, Archibald Forbes, Andrew Lang, and many others. with famous people. views, which will appear fully illustrate? in this magazine. of AFRICAN ADVENTURE. the great animal importer and trainer. artist of great skill in drawing animale. amous for their work in this field, will contribute to the Magazine. Of interest to both Youn graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Africa. The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” etc. THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. One Year, - -- $4\Three Months. - $I Six Months, - $2/One Month, - 35c Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : You will please send to my address the DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months from date, for which I agree to pay 40 cents a month, it being understood that you are to have sent to my address for one year, without extra charge, McCLURE’S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current Dita caatctinstinchienbnaiines inna JLo Do So So Sb SSS ln Lp Sbp Lo LSS bo Lp Np Si ln So Sin b> Sb LL lb lL Loi Nn Soli lp Llib il lpn lp lol CALL AT OUR OFFICE and see the entertaining and finely illustrated Me CLURE’S MAGAZINE, which has among its contributors the most famous authors in America and een. including R. L. Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, A. Conan Doyle, lliam Dean Howells, Bret Harte, Clark Russell, Joel Chandler Har- ris, Thomas Hardy, J. T. Trowbridge, Jerome K. Jerome, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Theodore Roosevelt, Joaquin Miller, Gilbert Parker, John Burroughs, Hamlin Gar land, Prof. E. 8. Holden, Prof. C. A. Young, H. H. Boyesen, Robert Barr, Henry M. SL A The wally Examiner The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 months at By special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to make @ most exceptional oifer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fille out the following blank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 40 cents 4 AVUTTTT TTT TTT TT TTT TTT TUTTTT-TTTTTTTTTTT TIT TTT 110 o Y ‘ip Lb So Sb SS te Sa iS Sb HS Sn Sb Ni Nn lb Sin Si nb Sli Sp v Each number of McCLURE’S MAGAZINE contains two illustreted interviews Jules Verne, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Tissandier, the famous French Balloonist, Archdeacon Farrar, Thomas A. Edison, F. Hopkinson Smith, H H. Boyesen, Alphonse Daudet, Camille Flammaricn, Edward Everett Hale, Professor Graham Bell and many others, have furnished material for especially prepared inter- HENRY M. STANLEY wili contribute, especially for young readers, a story NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE.—There will be several articles written by Raymond Blathwayt, who has been called by Mr. W. T. Stead the best interviewer in England, from material furnished him by Carl Hagenback, of Hamburg, These articles deal with the Capture of Wild Beasts, the Training of Wild Beasts, the Transportation of Wild Beasts, the Adven- tures and Escapes of Carl Hagenbeck. The series will be iMustrated by an English JOHN BURROUGHS, C. F. HOLDER, DR. C. C. ABBOTT!and, other writers and Old will be PROF. R. L. GARNER’S AFRICAN EXPEDITION TO THE GORILLAS. Arrangements have been made, in connec tion with aleading English review, to publish Professor Garner’s letters descriptive ot his present expedition to Africa. Professor Garner is noted the world over for the curious and interesting investigations he is making in the speech of monkeys. sailed for Africa last September for the purpose of further pursuing his studies in the native haunts of the gorifla. The illustrationa of these articles will be from photo He MoCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under the heads The Edge of the Future,” “ Newest Knowledge,” “Knowledge of Immediate Value,” We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for only $4.60 a year, payable in advance or in monthly instalments of 40c. as desired. We make this exceptional offer in order that we may secure a large number ot new subscribers, but all who are already eubscribers may avai! themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popular Magazine. Address: The Examiner Publishing o., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. —(x}—— stock on hand. Charlottetown, January 4, 1894—dy & wky — eres aoeeasene Se — » EM OURE sh ACHE AND DEAFN ick INFLUENZA, Bold everywhere. Price, 25 cents. M'fd. by THE H 4 Tas MED Cc. G JURY, North Side of Queen Square, - - - - Opposite the Post Office 3 WAX MEN CATARRH aff y RE PLE SILVERWARE Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. We are givmg BIG BARGAINS in the above line of goods, as we have a large ——— EFFECTUALLY CURES CATARRH, COLD IN THE HEAD, CATARRHAL HEAD~- ECO'Y.,L'td., St.John, N.B. that can be had for the money. That is why and it has become a by-word that “Granpy Ruppers wear like iron.” SOLE MANUFACTURERS. December 26, 1893—tu thn sat ZYVYERYBODY WEARS GRANBY RUBBERS! They give perfect satisfaction in fit, style and finish People in this 19th century are bound to have the best Operative & Prosthetic Dentistry, DR. J. P. MURRAY, Stamper Block, Victoria Row janl5—d&w lyr if re wie ~ Pe js . | ia | te \ }-1 ee} ee ad THREE FRIENDS You Mieet in Our Stock. Quality, Quantity, Price, We keep everything a first- class Clothing Store should keep. We not only sell at moderate prices, but fill and deliver orders promptly and carefully. Inspection of our Overcoats, Ulsters, Reefers and Suits will ocnvince you we are fully up Give us a eall P. E. Island. McKay Woolen Co. Charlottetown, Nov. 17, 1893. Lobster Supplies, 1894 Lobsters ani Fishing Outfits at lowest prices for cash or approved credit: 700 boxes Leaadbrook Tin Plates, best brand; 100 boxes do. do., delivered at Georgetown or Souris; 5,000 Ibs Block Tin, 3,000 ibs Pig Lead, 2,000 tbs Cotton Twine for Trap Heads, 300 coils Manilla Rope, #, 12, 15, Is; $ doz Herring Nets, sizes: 5,600 small Hoops for Heads, * ,000 Trap Bows. 5° kegs Trap Naila, assorted sizes; 25 kegs Box Nails, 2.):0 cases 1 Ib Tali Lobster Cans, 2,009 cares 1 Ib Flat da, 1,000 ceses 4 lb Flat do, all guaranteed ; 300 lbs Copper, 10 Lobster Bath Boilers, Galvanized Tron, assoried sizes; 100 Galvanized Bath Trays, 300,000 Paper Linings for 1 |b Tall Cans, 300,000 do. for 1 lb Flat Cans, 200.000 do. for 4 Ib Flat Cans, at factory prices if orders given immediately; also, 100,000 lathe. Apply to LONGWORTE & ©O., Water Street, assorted jans-2m- 2aw i894. Spring Trip From Liverpool. z THE CLIPPER BARK RALPH B. PEAKE, 700 Tons Register, Classed A 1 at Lloyds, RICHARD RENDLE, COMMANDER, will be on the berth at Liverpool on the lst MARCH, and will sail from that port For Charlottetown Direct, ABOUT Isr OF APRIL NEXT, and wiil carry Freight at through rates to he different Railway points onthe Island so Pictou. ga For Freight appiy in Londen to John Piteairn & Sons, 7 Unien Court, Old Broad Street, E. C.; in Liverpool to Piteairn Bros., 51 Souty John Street, or here to the owners, PEAKE BROS. & CO. Charlottetown. Jan. 16, 1894. pat guar eod her wat sum jour sw The World’s Columbian Exposition. 1. The whole civisized world has been in- terested in the Great Celebration. The crowned heads of Europe, the governments otf all the famous nations of the globe, the lands of the Orient and the islandsof the sea have ali been co-operating to render the Exhibition worthy of the greatest event of modern times, Its magnitude and marvelous character can only be described by saying that it has com- prised all the rarest products of lan the most dazzling wonders or nat nd sea, ure and the grandest prod ctions of human genius, 2. The Great Fair which celebrates the dis- covery of America by Columus has never been eqvalled. I! was larger and more mag nificent than any similar exhibitien ever held. Over tweniy milion dollars was ex- pended in its grand spacious bnildings, and the result was the most attractive Exhibition the world ever saw. 3. This gorgeous display is vividly portrayed in our PICTGRIAL HISTORY OF THil WORLD'S COLUMBIAN KX POSIT“ON, this captivating volume i brilliant paygo- rama ol the Great Fair whicen has awakened such a world wide interest, This wonderful work is a royal ume of Over SOD octavo vol- large double-column pages, 10} inches long by 7) inches wid It contains nearly twice the amount « matter in an uf dinary quarto book, ar » therefore egual to a large volume of 1600 pages It contains a complete history of the World- renowned Exposition at Chicago; captivating descriptions oi the magnificent Ba d ng marvellous Exhibits, such as Ws Textile Fabrics, “achinery, Nataral ducts, Latest Inventions, I . -< . with afuli deseription ol ¢ ts wonder- ful Buildings, Parks, ete., by ex-Governor Wim. KE. Cameron, of the Werld’s Columbian Exposition History Co., with an introduction by Hon. Thomas W. Palmer, ex-U. S. Senator and ex-Minister to Spain, iucluding a chapter on the Women’s Department by Frances E. Willard, President of the World’sand Nation- al Woman’s Christian Temperance Unions. CON DITIONS—It is printed from clear, new type, on fine calendered paper, and is embel- lished with a large number of BEAUTIFUL ENGRAVINGS, which charm everyone whe sees them. This grand work surpasses anything tha covert te hicago has yet appeared in this tine, and will be sol¢ by subscription only. Wait for it; take nd other. MRS. N A. STEWART is Sole Agent for this city dec? S. R. FOSTER & SON, Manufacturers of Wire Nails, Steel and Iron cut Nails and Spikes, ‘lacks, Brads, Shoe Nails, Ilungarian Nails, &€ St Joun, N. B. ~ ae a ee Farm @or Sale THE subscriber offers for sale his farm on the Mount Edward Road, about one mile and a half from the city, well and favorably known as the “Welsh Farm’ The farm consists of sixty acres, and con tains a Dwelling louse aud five Outbuildings, al! in good condition. There is also a good orchard in connection, Terms easy. Apply to C. BENOIT, Water Street good July 3, 1893. to the wants of the people of PO salah tall 5 -% a PS ABR ie ——— 4 sittin. Pe ;