* (cn A Story of the Pyrenees. By MAN PEMBERTON. | for those far ere 1s ease i gone in ¢ onsumption nol & ~* recovery ease. The rc cure for those not tar Phe ‘oc is prevention tor those who are threatened. Scall Emulsion. of Cod-iiver Oil is for you, rone. even if you are only a lhit- ] than tie thin. SCOTT'S EMULSION Years 732 t et aiwavs wsr/Orm—a.w o “ad-liver Ol 4 semhesbhite , S<ett’s Emuision, with trade-mark of mf and Ush. Fruit Growers’ Meetings ‘Insist < ~ yenterisiement fteg rarded me as & cutpurse who had come to steal his | is rs spoons hat mes . ahs of the Han. | ’ ; se ' 1 : ee f ' ae ok her said T angered beyouc M r of Agr ite, Uirector skint. “‘don’t you think that youv’e ot i KE ba s t the fool long enough? I have arra M here to stay the night at your Edw ister’s order You have his letter in band if my word is not enough, ‘RULT GC Pao aa § VG to the stables, I beg, and get { cabh . Se © a LO A. Re | 4 . ‘ ' \ appeal he bowed again, though 7 ‘ ea } : . ” s : iy e> that his legs were tottering Mi iN CR \y i st hour } 1 ! ( al I v “— | rtainly,’” exclaimed he, ‘‘I Know u = wae . v whenes you come Oh, indeed, I Island are capable of 1 1 developmeno!,) oo. your servant. All that you ask shall aD i Le F: Ss Sj yne—I pledge my faith, Iam byt nterest ss ‘ 7 an old man, and it was not my word T Me gsw i 1 ¢ save your excellency.’’ ua : ‘ : . | Aimer » that,’’ said I, telling mnyself CHAT TETOWN--Tuesdav, Jan. | ; + sain } si : 17 j that Juan Bazan, steward to the worthy 92 ——— Pp on Ha , 4 ‘or © — —_— oo 2 te Trevino, was nothing less than CARDIGAN—Wednesday, Jar -%tDs! 3. imbecile. Bust he was already on his el | way to the stables, and thither I follow- ee ae as ‘ a : ALBERTON—Friday, January 3 led ina state of perplexity and wonder até p.! | which no words could express. SUMMERSIDE Satur lay, Fel Lst, | **)his war, senor,’’ hecried, snatching at2_ ' a lantern which he had left upon the ; , ’ ment, ‘‘this way, I pray you. The Wv¥ SA ERS, l slit ' : J pra) es . abi ng stables are through the great are’ here. Dire r Dominion Ex: rime al Farr 13 “— & eare to tho | avement; jt is worn, Y i; }ifear. If [ had but known sooner. Oh, wo i . news g2es with a lame foot in a) 6 6 a. © ¢ ee eo e 88 eo se 3 os oe sca’. rr 44 3 Mi og 6 | Chen you knew chat I was coming?’ 4 ; | ; , . j Miciil cried | - € WH 3 3 r exeellency is the best judge of mi La j he excluimed—and atthe same ° ad | rent he threw epen the door Gof the = wey Seo : d ii answer struck me as curious and Am very muck plea ‘lg af: me os le gbigmatiesl Ugless the landlord down "1 have used Menthol Plasters in several cases i » had played a joke upon the pair a ree oh should have told him of my MORE Washington, ] le 4nd this supposition afforded Se It Cures Sctatica, Lumbarco, Neu- 2 "a a ee i Suan a 7 aa % if the a a, Pais isin B ack or Side, or } ti on.iy Key that litte 1 10RZIC ¢ 1€ | any Lfuscular Pains. 2 ‘ ] said at once that they had frightened the old man, and turned @| «| Davis & Lawre nee Co., Ltd, os Speneenes sapheaiy : coe : saggy Sole Propriet TRE i * totellhimso But he, who a 8s oe 8 noment before bad been at my elbow, € @ 6 Se e S © © ee was no longerto be seen. He had van- i ished like a fle ig ray of light, r r eo; . : 9 A Happy New be: ar) **A matiediction on the old fool, said 3 , ’ to myself; they have told him some cock To Ali. jand bull story, and he takes me fora I rizand. I shall have an accoynt to set- " — N 7 I tie with mine host of Isaro if ever mis- ‘ ‘ Pyrat € ars ” sOW 15 . ly -\ew 2 ears | fortune carries me to his village again. Gifts To-nig and M ay and Truth to tell, directly I had begun to + ; on fis . a Tuesday we w g 5a 0 per understand the thing, the hum rous side F ( |} of it appealed to me irresistibly. I had en . — re | played many roles im a young life: but the i g Alt =, Dressicg Cases,! role of brigand was newto me. Better \ jaskets, Jewel C s, Manicure | said I, to te taken fora brigand than a t hae > 2 } tn iY esticfacti S Fa C aa Toys of a}] | bazmen; and with this for satisfaction, I , vy , | tended my horse and gave the poor beast eam “a ars, -\mas 304). feed. Nor could I, in reason, complain New Year's Cards at cost of the stables. Thoy were ornamental « LEWIS enuugh to have moved ar hi tecture to Jec28 Grafton Street, | tears; an iI did not failto observe thut =| | ip eee fa5 es. fs ita / 3 i \Co € : rEO | IO BNIOUSNESS,| | i DYSPEPSIA.4| SICK HEADACHE, | ~ —_ “=: = j REGULATE THELIVER! | 5 ONE FILL AFTER EATING L INSURE? BOOD CIGESTION.| | (PRISE 25 Eto, Te fJODUS MERCO.T) | | that I found PYN 'Y - PECTORAL Positively Cures and COLDS COUGHS pt Propsy. Rt tism, Heart Disea i be Impure F f money r ¢ Sold ry €alicrs in I sicine, of OY maiion gece,* {tr . per x Six } s $2.50, a.L./. SMITH & CO.. one we can eel! you Dodd's Kidney Pills a he following prices, viz.:—&0c. per box ” boxes for $2.40. To the trade — $4.10 x dozen, or three dozen at $3.75 pr dozen. Sent by mail to any address port aid. GEORGE E. HUGHES, may29 Charlottetown. PHOTOGRAPH Y Superior workmanship, re fined finish and moderate prices combine to make these Photos the most satisfactory in Charlottetown to-day. » GEO. H. COOK Corner Queen & Grafton Sts, | wonderfully deep and | swere wWAICA | ccByY, some | gaudy in library sparsely } sage fa | the larger of these was a spectacle which ; on this route. | when I had finished. ‘ Ww way he gabbled on; bor l ‘ ve 1: moment that he was when he spoke to me, All my . dea irs; J gave him the e dus his master, and he with the note unopened | i nwhile I bad dismount- | vy her vad had pushed my s Moorish court ‘which would in antiquarian to ecstasies, ‘ emorials to dead secl their frescoed crowns ‘ de. A fountain, rich in sculp- anal =traxe y, enst outa frozen jet ’ ippearance of a band of y with delicately wrought s guve access to innumerable ¥ ver Wasa greater contrast be- W "ay interior and exierior. Without, { ha ‘1 the sole actor in’ the scene of sola within, 1 was the guest in a which kings might have built and this was the mys- s enjoyed Yet it the man who was responsible one of the stalls was occupied by a sturdy bay cob which was in the best condition. steward of the duke of ndeniably loved his beast, and this was no smal! point in his favor. I re solved that I would reward him by put ting an end to the farce we were playing: and, so thinking, I returned to the court and began to call to him. Many times I called, my voice sounding baying under the old arches of the cloister, but no word an- d me. A search in the lower rooms about the quadrangle was no more fruit fu!, the most part of thee, as is the cus- tom in Spanish houses, being given up to lumber and to cellerage. It was only when I had made the circuit of the yard wice and had come upon a little staircase carried me to the balcony above evidence of life and occupa Many doors opened upon this bal leading to reception rooma, Spanish spler some to ad or sane, the Trovin 10 url tion idors, gloomy bedchembers of vast size; on toa chapel with ap altar weighted down with vorn emblems of devotion; one to a stocked with heavy vel- gut at the very far end of ghe pas- ing the stables Icame suddenly artments that spoke unmis- and in umes upon two ap takably of very recent occupation; filled me as much with merriment as with wonder. The first of these rooms was furnished as a sitting-room ; the second as a kitchen. But it was not their furniture which I re- marked with such amusemeent. Piled high upon the floor of the larger chamber were silver vessels, cups, goblets, dishes, spoons, of every conceivable snape and variety. Mingled with them were a num- ber of rings, bracelets, necklaces and other votive offerings, snatched, I surmised, haphazard from the altar near by. I guess- ed instantly that the excellent Juan Bazan bad made this attempt to save such of his master’s property as he could from the bands of one whom he regarded as a marander. Defeated in his purpose by my sudden coming to the House of Snows, he had left the heap as a witness to his en- deavors. But more than this, he had also left the house. Even as I was examining the amazing collection at my feet, I heard the great gate clang upon its hinges. The windows of the room looked out upon the mountains. I beheld by the white light of the glittering snow the unhappy steward flying for his life down the broad road to Isaro, ‘Terror at length had conquered him. I was sure that he had gone for the police. This utterly unlooked for greeting struck me at the first as entirely funny. I said to myself that a whole company of alquazils would occupy the house present- ly, and that they would be merry souls at any rate, and to be preferred to the gibber ing idiot who had offered me such a be wildering welcome. Meanwhile, the ter ror-stricken man had left avery decent dinner and 4 verv good bottle of wine be FURNESS LINE, Regular Fortnightly Sailings between LONDON and HALIFAX. Under spe cial contract with the Dominion Govern ment. S.S. HALIFAX CITY, 3,000 Tons. S.S. ST. JOHN CITY, 3,000 Tons. 8.8. DAMARA, 2,500 Tone. The Furress Steamships are the finest All boats are Clyde built, w th saloon and sle eping berths am\dshipe where least motion is felt. 8. 8. St. John City and Halifax City are electrically lighted throughcur. Superior acccmmodation for all kinds of Freight, Dairy Produce, ete. For information regarding sailing dates, | valleys had put etc., apply to FURNESS, WITBY & CO, Lrp., Pec ple’s Bank Building, Halifax, N.S. Or W. ¥. Clarke, Passenger Agent, Cherl sttetown, P. E. I, dec21 Sleigh For Sale. A very alin Sleigh, wil] accommo- date six persons, nicely upholstered, light enough for one horse. Apply at this wishing him bon voyage on his way to the police station, I fell to with the appetite of a hungry and snow-drivern man,and made a meal worthy of a prince bishop. It must have been near to nine o'clock There was a wealth of the moon’s hears then pouring into my room, and the surpassingly white light fell 1 the mountajns All the on armor of silver and of hills znd plenteously upor jewels; the amphitheater of peaks glittered with an irradiance bling ing to the eyes; the pine trees had the aspect of great Sushes made of silver were like froth of No human thing enseades twigs; the and of pearis. diamond \N BAZAN GOING AWAY, was abroad at such an hour I opened the window of my room and listened if there were any sound of horses tramping or of men ay spe raagae sll But all was still as the zenith of the nigh ; the police which Juan Bazan was to bring were not yet to be heard. Solitude ‘reigned in the hgtghis: the town. alone echoed the spirit of the feast I had made myself sure of this and was about to c ose the casement again, for the wind was bitter cold, when the first really startling vision of that night of visions ame tomyeryes I say that I thogght myself alone, the victim of a pretty hoxx, the one living thing in that house of mys teries. And just when I was hugging the notion that | woald do Juan Bazan the honor of sleepi: gin his bed until he should return.and wasa out to make the window fast, what should I sea but the shadow of a girl east plain and clear cut upon the white terrace befors the house. There it was, the reflection of the shape of a @omnan in Spanish dress; of a young woinan, as I thought, and of one who was watching and waiting. During long moiments the shadow lay upcn the snow. Then it passed quickly; Ror was there ®ny sound, not so much as of a footstep or whisper to indicate whence if came or whitber it had gone. PART ai. To say that tis apparition alarmed me would be to magnify the truth. There nad been nothing particularly terrifying 4.eout the etof Juan Bazan; there was nothing so ve in the which he had eft to compel suspicion or watchfulness. [argued that the girl possibly was his jiaughter,or was employed About the place She too, it might be, went in dread of the ‘brigand’’ who had descended so sudden ‘'y mpon her home. I determined to re assure her, and, snitching the lantern which the estimable Juan had left behind aspe house ‘im, Iran into the court and began t awl Spanish exclamations with the ener ry of a waichman. Yet, and this was trange, not a whisper cf an answer did I get. Except for the erackle of the frust beneath my feet the whole yard was as -ilent as the flelds of snow upon the iwights above. Smaller courts opening rom the greater onp were alike deserted sand lit only by the moonbeams which looded down upon them s) searchingly. No longer did any black shadow lie upon he untrodden snow. ‘he ghostly corridor aad no company; the entwining pillars were the only eentisels that guarded this haven among the mouniains. Convinced of this, 1 begat to think that a poor digestion was responsible for my ipparition; and though a certain vague neasiness, bred, perhaps, of the strange shapes about mec, was not to be put off, I returned at last to the steward s room and ay down upon his bed, ‘After all,’’ said l, ‘‘there is nothing to fear from an en counter with a Spanish giri—especially if she be pretty.’’ It was probable that old Tuan himself would come running back inon with a score of po icemen at his tail. { concluded that I wouid greet him with 4 request for the Key of his ce lar; and that, thus armed, we would herald Christ mas day with such a carousal as should bring all the dead Spaniards—and all the lead Moors, if there were any so far north —leaping from their graves. In which war, I said, | would recompense m feelf for my dismal surroundings and keep my thoughts from England and from those I loved. The lantern was still burning where I had ieft it; there was a flicker of firelight upon the ceiling wlenat Jast I went to sleep. The day's work had tired me; the crisp, bracing air of the mountains weigh ed down my eyes with drowsiness. I could not have been upon Juan's bed more than ten minutes when a dreamy, restful uncon TO BE CONCLUDED. } Some Things You Can Do On Christmas Day for Humanity’s Sake. Surprise your wife by getting up first and kindling the kitchen fire. Indulge in an outward display of good spirits, but do not encourage an iuternal application. If you goto church resolve to keep awake at all hazards, but ff you do happen io doze once in a while do not snore. Instead of getting your pretty type- writer a se#lskin sacque and your wife a pair of cotton gloves, reverse the order. Refrain from administering little Johuny’s diurnal thrashing. Put a nice large Ceristmas box in his stocking in- stead of on his ear. If you are in arrears for subscription to your daily newspaper, drop into the editor’s sanctum and remark that you’ve comé@to “square up.” It will be worth your trouble to see bow he’ll act. When your wife trots out those worsted slippers swear inwardly if you jike, but don’t make an outward demonstration of your feelings, thereby increasing your chances to get worsted yourself ; smile pleasantly aud ejaculate, “Just what I need, dear !” If you happen to be in the kitchen when the milkman comes, don’t look daggers at the poor vender of bovine extract, but smile pleasantly. Be careful how far you yo though, for he isn*t used to it, and the surprise may produce a shock to his uerv- ous system, a Bo Want a cook, Want a partuer, Want a situation, Waut a servant girl, Want to sell a farm, Want to sell a house, Want to rent a_ house, Want to exchange anything, Wat to sell plants or grain Want to sell groceries or drugs, Want to sell _ or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or catt's ADVERTISE IN THE EXAMINER PRODUCK WANTED Seemann MESSRS. C. WELSH & CO., 3 Taber pnacle Street, London, beg to solicit regular consignments of Fresh Uysters, Fruit and office, tf—jan21 other Canadian Produce. Best prices have an important bearing on the profes- sion of letters. These writers are publish- ing their novels in the old-fashioned way ; that is to say, they are bringing them out in book form without selling the serial rights to any magazine. The experiment is important, because authors usually make nearly all their profits from their serial rights, and are satisfied with a sale of 2,000 copies for the matter In book form. Under such circumstances, there- fore, they have aimed their work directly at the editor who was to buy it, and have been careful to tone it down so thav it wight suit the requirements of the vehicle in which it was published. Itis this ton- ing-down process that makes a serial as distinguished from a novel, and it isa well-known fact that the books which are enjoying a large sale in this country just now are for the most part written by foreign authors, who have been in the habit of writing for the public rather than for editors. The men who are bringing their stories out in book form this year have, of course, deliberately sacrificed the profits that might have been derived from the serial rights. But at the same time they have known while writing that no editor stood between them and the public, and they have let themselves go to the very top of their bent accordingly.—N, Y, dun. . A True Incident, It was @ bright, frosty afternoon. A busy crowd thronged W avenue, all bustle and life as to and fro, in and out of the many handsome, alluring stores the gay crowd continually surged, the same perplexing thought nodoubt engaging the uttention of many of them, as to what token of affection tay should secure for their dear amidst the numberless beautiful attractions to be met with on every side. Among an admiring group gathered outside one of the windows of a grand bazaar, a woman plainly attired in faded mourning paused a few moments. She held by the hand a little girl of about 5 years old, whose eager, bewildered gaze was concentrated in silent adoration at the scene of enchanutnyent there displayed. Presently the woman turned away and passed on. As she did so the child sobbed, in anxious, piteous accents “You can’t find Santa Claus, mamma, can you A look ef pain came into the mother’s sad, careworn face, as she replied consol- ingly ; “Yes! Bea good gig] now, him presently.” From the gay avenue she turned, with her sobbing disappointed little one, going —whither I Knew no, or ifshe was able @ find Santa Claus, and to make glad the troubled spirit of the expectant child. But ] know that mother’s heart ached bitterly beneath her thin, faded cloak, at the piti- fulcry of her offspring. Poor woman! With her loving m¢ ee s heart and empty purse! Poor, wee, wistful chiid! Ali! there are many such in this city. Parents tao whom the approaching glad ones and Ili find Christmastide will bring neither goud cheer nor joy, in any shape or form, and children to whom Santa Claus—if they have ever heard of such a being—ig but a far-off vision, an unfulfilled dream ; for poverty, dark, bitter Paresh lurks in their homes, and with her gloomy preseace clauding for them the sunshine ot life, which G a has bestowed in such abund- ance on some ol His creatures O, think of it! Youw hoate so favored, whose pathways are flooded to overflow- ing with life’s richest blessings, when yoa foudly lay @-ide the many costly gifts, purchased for your happy darlings, of ghe anxious young hearts in many a humble home, who are wondering with an eager janging, which amounts to pain in their childish hearts, whether Santa Claus will find them out this time It will take but a mite of your abund- ance to fill the hearts ~ some such little ones with delight, as well as fulfilling the command ofthe Saviour—whose birth we will conymemorate at the joyoug Christ- mastide. “Be ye kind and tender-hearted.” He lov- ed little children and took them up in His aggis and blessed them A Christmas Sermon, There are two things in human life—te be happy oneself and to make another so, When the first is gone, the next, thank God, is always left. Do not %ck yourself in your room too soon, too often or too long. Dash away your tears. Play the waltzes for the chil- dren. Put away your crape. Wei a white dress and a high mien and the smile of those who conquer the selfishness of pain on Christmas Day. The best friends of the young, of the erring and the overlooked, are those who have known the sorest anguish and have achieved the sweetest peace. Such, too, are the most sacred flowers of our festivals and the dearest angels of our happy homes AT STITTSVILLE! The Town's Leading Merchant Laid Up tempted, of the Kheumatism in various forms is oue of the most common diseases there is. It arises generally from impure blood and a broken down system. In the limbs it is painful; in most of the in- ternal organs dangerous, and in the heart usually fatal. The experience of Mr. S. Mann, the well known general merchant of Stitts- ville, is interesting : “Last winter | was badly with rheumatism. I decided Dr. Chase’s Pills. To my got immediate relief, and before I had used one box my affliction was gone. “TIT was also troubled with bilious- ness for years, and at intervals of three or four weeks would be laid up with a severe headache and sick stomach. Since using Chase’s Pills I have not had an attack of either. ‘I may add that Dr. Chase’s Oint- meut for piles and skin diseases in just as effective as Dr. Chase's Pills for blood troubles. I have a clerk who suffered terribly from bleeding piles. He tried Chase’s Ointment and in a few days was completely cured.” Al! dealers and Edmanson, Bates & Co., afflicted to try surprise. I manufacturers, Toronto. 25c. Chase’s Linweed and ‘Turpentine for colds, bronchitis and consumption. Sure cure, 25 cents. ‘ Fitz-dames ScotchWhisky XECOMMENDS _ ITSELF, SPECIAL QUALITY—8 Years Old. PURITY GUARANTEED — Sole Proprietors: -or Sale by all Dealers. — Sample Rooms & Groce'y Store Having now completed my Sample Rooms, heated by hot water and lighted by electricity, with all sanitary arrange- ments and a private entrance to same, I have converted my Saloon into a Grocery, and stocked with the choicest Groceries, hoping by paying strict attention to the two above business to receive a liberal patronage for same. P. P. GILLIS. realized, dy 10i wy 2i—jan13 janlb—6i d&w @ many misleading and the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has led to the placing on the market of their name, labels, and wrappers. Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu- facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and Chocolates on this continent. used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.’s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. : om waa ————E ————EE a . ce ee “ " Y “ T a: «< > r ow a - - : : . PFUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1896 THE DAILY EXAMINER . . ’ ? seas ) 1) 19 — ry moa him mur pernavs, pegyane . : * on " Ti e 3 | tit, |: | |: ( | |: | | eaten on a Christmas eve ie Bag ane va Experiment By Novelists. | W — bid (hak 24 i MUU La de ee eee tis ee po Two or three wathens of ep mentees: I ime VY arn I ng. godse , r : - . . as ing an experiment this year which is cer- . wae sampled ie cookingon the spot: nd | tain to prove interesting, and is Tikely to The great success of the chocolate preparations of Bissell’s Perfection. Carpet Sweeper, THE iE BEST MADE unscrupulous imitations Walter No chemicals are MSN CASTO Z y y Y y (LISS SSNS SS for Infants | Children. OTHERS, Do You Know 2: Parcor, Bateman’s Drops, Gotter’c Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and most remedies for children are compesed of opium or morphine? Do You Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons ? Do You Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics without labeling them poisons ? Do You Know that you should not permit any medicine to be given your child unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ? Do You Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a Ust of its ingredients is published with every bottle ? Do You Know that Cactoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher. That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than of all other remedies for chilJren combined ? Do You Knew that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of other countries, have issued erclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word “ Castoria” and its formul., and that to imitate them is a state piison offense ? Do You Know that one of the reasons for granting this goverument protection was because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless? Do You Know that 35 sverage doses of Castoria are furnished for 35 . cents, or one cent a dose ? Do You Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may be k. pt well, and that you may have unbroken rest # Well, these things are worth knowing. They are facta. Cefltten, 22 Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. The The fac-simile “signature of | of ‘SIMON W. CRABBE, Stoves and Hardware, Walker’s Corner. Charlottetown, December 20, 1895—135 & wky ss te ht i tt et he ee oe ee ee en Bees ‘RIPANS: ONE GIVES RELIEF. \* Sk il: SSS SSS Ss BOOS SOE 6068 6OS8868S8SSS 8888888888 WHOLESALE. Zine, Glass, Bar Iron, Cut Nails, Horse Nails, Clinch Nails, Horse Shoes, Sleigh Shoe Steel, Disston’s Cross Cut Saws, Disston’s Ci - cular Saws. Agents for the celebrated Ameri- can Highland Ranges. Seo ee aaa a ea eee eres seose ag *‘ALL THE MAGAZINES IN ONE,"* TREVIE eREVIEWS. Edited by ALBERT SHAW. LILLLLII II LPPPPLPLDPLPLPLPLP PLD LPS quotations, Ga. aa Raa ture, the subscription price, ® Aside from these departments, equal in extent to a magazine. with pictures on every The Literary World says of the ‘REVIEW OF REVIEWS,’ of Eiffel Tower for the survey field of periodical literature. the hour. the daily newspaper. it is monthly in its method. under a field glass.” Soe a REVIEW*REVIEWS 13 Astor Place, HE REVIEW OF REVIEWS, as its rame implies, gives in readable form the best that appears in the other great magazines all over & the world, generally on the same date that they are published, increase Of worthy periodicals, reviews, Summaries, and giving the gist of periodical litera- are alone worth he editorial and contributed features of the REVIEW OF REVIEWS are themselves The Editor’s ‘‘ Progress of the World”’ is an invaluable chronicle of the happenings of the thirty days just past, page of the men and women who have made the history of the month, “We are deeply impressed from month to month with the value which is a sort of the whole And yet it has a mind and voice of its own, and speaks out with decision and sense on all public topics of It is a singular combination of the monthly magazine and It is daily in its freshness; It is the world Solid on all News Stands. Single Copy, 25 cents. New York. SSSsSsSsssssssssessssssescsesesesececeseses FENNELL & CHANDLER Charlottetown, January 3, 1896—135 FIVE MONTHS FOR $1.00. HOWARD FLOUR If you have not yet used it ask for it and take no other, With the recent extraordinary these careful ALL RELIABLE GROCERS KEEP IT. octl—246 ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION $2.50. AN ENGLISH SOLDIER generally has a favorite whiskey which he calls for wherever he goes. For years English Garrisons have called KILTY The Military Scotch. Try it yourself and you'll always ask for it. Lawreace A, Wilson &Co., Montre THREE RECENT SAMPLES 25 cents. Agents find it the [lost Profitable Magazine. F SHSGSSSSSSSSSSECSSSG§555SSSSSS4SS5S55BQNSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSGSSSSSSSSESE | Sesss ROBERT PALMER & Cd., Charlottetown Sash ecember 11, 1895—135 and Door Factory READ We are now better prepared than ever to su DOORS FRAMES, SASHES and ticing, Tennoning, Jig and Fret Sawing. All kinds of GOTHIC WINDOWS made at shortest notic Our Machi nery is new and of the a best description, and we manufacture thebest Qu ebec pine. Give us aca! ROBT. PALMER & CO., and FRAMES, MOULDINGS and FINISH SPOUTING and CONDUCTORS, STAIR RAILS, STAIR BALUSTERS, NEWEL POSTS, which are always kept constantly in stock. We are also prepared to do all kinds of JOBBING in Planing, Jointing, Mor THIS | Creme de la Creme PANEL ly Contractors with «x» La Fayette CIGARS and CIGARETTES Are for sale in every store in the city. Give them a trial and convince yourself True Lovers of delicious TEA are satisfied when supplied with our lines of English Breakfast Congou, India, China, Oolong and Ceylon Teas. to be the best on the market for quality, strength The public realize a good article DPV VIV VV eee Ves VV VV SVVSVBVVSS when they use it, and to-day our sales on this Tea are larger than ever before. We carry a full line of Canned Goods, J Jellies, Fish, Boned and Skinned Dried Codfish Flour, Meal, ete., which we will sell at the very flavor and price. lowest prices. Our ain parts of the city. WILLIAM GRANT & CO. Charlottetown, June 19, 1895—135 w is ta bay the most reliable gool and sell them at the lowes! prices. change for cash or goo ls. that you are smoking the finest. Manufactured by J. M. FORTIER, Montreal. sept24—dv & wky tf We believe our 22c. Blend Wood’s P hosphodine.—zx- Great English Remedy. Is the result of over 35 years treating thousands of cases with all known drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment—a combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stages of Sexual Debility, Abuse or Ezcesses, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Mental ; Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of ~| which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption aad an early grave. Wood's Before Taking. | Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed almost hopeless—cases that had been treated by the most talented physi- cians—cases that were on the verge of despair and insanity—cases that were tottering over the grave—but with the continued and persevering use of Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were restored to manly vigor and health—Reader you need not despair—no mat- ter who has given you upas incurable—the remedy is now within your reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and happiness. Price, one package, $1p six packages, $5; by mail free of postage. One will please, six guaranteed to cure, Pamphiet free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont -, Canada. Wood's Phosphodine is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominion. BVVBVWIVIEVISVsVTsTESVIsEsVsesosweseseseeseE ams and Eggs taken in ex Gcods delivered to all QUEEN STRE ET, =" Aw has aad | Rte ce AAI: OD! EL