HR a SP ht ae ett ———— — an = . — ee THE DAILY EXAMINER r - . . . — ToD > 5 fea Joes Wich is more common in worgs * toe POND S EXTRAC of i ‘int. snavy lst. On the Si gH t.. representative of a s world recowned Soap etauds af the 7 and Housebold Soap, both nt of eales, directions, It does away r : ed drudgery of wash da ry ‘ . t be disappointed, i AP s boen iu ate fn : } s, and ite t . specially appointed I ro THE | Awarded 11 Gold Medals eet & Mitchell, Halifax, Agents for tia and P. E. Island ‘Coughing leads to Consumption. Stop heal the Lungs the System the Cough, and strengthen with Scott’s Emulsion » Cream of Cod-liver Oil nd hypophosphiies. It is palatable and easy on the Physicians, the world over, endorse it. stomach, fian'? eat . Cr hedityd fen't be deceived by Substitzies! TOOTHACHE! HEADACHE! NEURALGIA! ISTANTLY CUSED ST CNZ APPLICATION OF NERVOL. 25 cents per Bottle, ‘943 E. oe ? : Beri li ‘ lDomr Pos ag e* ! N 4 Ti; ret ¢ Though you Cough ¢ ¢ Don’t Despair! $ $ Many apparently hopeless cases have been cured by a course of AMPBELL’S WINE OF BEECH TREE CREOSOTE ( TRY IT! 0 AT ALL DRUGGISTS. ¢ K. CAMPBELL &CO., Montreal. a ee a ee Mere Agents wanted. pres i list « I i wa ¢ D rey ‘Mannfa i iA i Cor \ le | ir eTa:, i moat ‘ t Phey u<ure M ’ n | classes re } ; | - b. PATON, Ma tite Manager irlottetown TO CBT. Sansone PILLS Mate New Rich Bln ~wrvery Neo ann tively eure of feier Le informetion around oo & cont of a box of pills Fins lalwaye be thankful mp aii manner of diseave, 1 then» th ten titae< the out avout then, aud you Fs «4 donk, They expel all impurities from the Dima wlieate women find great benefit f + teing them OUlustrated pamphict free. Fe od everye her ifr Gets la samp JUUNSUN & OO... t2 Custom Bowe St. Lorton. NERVE BEANS are a new Gis covery that cure cases 0 Nervous Detitity arc Failing + restores th weakness of or mind -ausec by over-work, or the error 0. ex NERVE BrANS solutely cures the most PREATMENTS have failed evento relieve. cleta at $1 per package, or siz for modressing cesses of youth. This Femealy al, | cases when ali othe: Pye ¥ eval or seceiys of price by THE JAMES MEDICINE ** Foronta, Gat Write for pemphies Bold — | Charlottetown by G. BE. Hughes druggist Grateini Comlorting. Epps’s Cocoa. BREAKFAST. “By ath one = , re of the nat- ural las v operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of es of well-scleet- ei Cacoa, Mr. Epps has breakfa:t tables with a del Leverage whico may save us many heavy ductors’ bills, It 1s by the judi Lous use of euch articles of diet tat a constitution the proper provided our cately flavored may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease, Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around as ready to attack wherever there isa weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves wel! forti tie | by pure blood and a properly nourish ed frame.”"—Civil Service Gazette. Made Sold only in packets, by Gracers, labelled any, JAMES EPPS & Cv., Homewpathic Chemiate. London. Engtand. STAMPS WANTED. OLD Canadian, United Statea’ and other slam ps, as used 25 to 40 years ago. For mane pay $1 to $5 each GEORGE LOWE aid by drug | _ soul of the honse and the idol of her sis- | 7 ' : “us “ ‘CONAN Dove forrs:ant, (#08, @Y AVTHORS aciiance fe cetanves aus sents CONTINUED, Yes, we have one or two other viots to pay,” said the sister. “You will, Lam sure, excuse us. I hope that you will tind Norwood a pleasant resi- denca” elder “All places are to me simply 2 battle- field,” she answered, gripping first one and then the other with a grip which erwmpled un their little thin fingers. “The davs for work and healthful exer- gise, the evenings to Browning and high discourse, eh. Charles? Goodby!” She cante to the doer with them, and as they glanced back they saw her still standing there with the vellow bull pup enddled up under one forearm and the thin blue reek of her cigarette ascending from her lips. Have the early frosts or too late a lin- FOR COLDS CUTS BRUISES —the doctor will tell you what rub thoroughly the part afflicted with SPRAINS POND’S EXTRACT, wrap it ORE warmly with flannel, and the rheuma- THROAT tism may wholly disappear. It will cer- tainly be much relieved. Now that you Catarrh have the POND’S EXTRACT try it for AND any of the many things its buff wrapper It's a AFTER But don’t accept substitutes. SHAVING POND’S EXTRACT CO., 76 Fifth Avo., N. Y. : : : a COLONIAL HOUSE, PHILLIPS SQUARE. FOR PILES BURNS SORE EYES WOUNDS SORES Headache AND ALL PAIN gering by the garden gate again aroused that RHEUMATISM so slumbering the summer long peacefully Well, if it's very bad you must change your diet and perhaps take some distasteful drug but first then mentions. wonderful curative. “Ob, what a dreadful, dreadfal wom- | an!’ whispered sister Bertha as they hurried down the street. ‘Tbank good- uess that it is over.” ‘But she'll return the visit,” answer- ei the other. ‘‘l think that we had bet- ter tell Mary that we are not at home.” CHAPTER Ii. DWELLERS IN THE WILDERNESS, How deeply are our destinies influenced by the most trifling causes! Had the un- known builder who erected and owned these new villas contented himself by simply building each within its own grounds it is probable that these three small groups of people would have re- mained hardly conscious of each other's existence, and that there would have been no opportunity for that action and reaction which is here set forth. But there was a common link to bind them together. To single himself out from all other Norwood builders the landlord had devised and laid out acommon lawn | tennis ground, which stretched behind the houses with taut stretched net, green close cropped sward and widespread whitewashed lines. Hither in search of that hard exercise which is as necessary as air or foad to the English temperament came young Hay Denver when released from the toil of the city. Hither, tod, came Dr. Walk- er and his two fair daughters, Clara and Ida, and hither alse, champions of the | lawn, came the short skirted, muscular widow and her athletic nephew. Ere the summer was gone they knew each other in this quiet nook as they might not have done after years of a stiffer and more formal acquaintance. And especially to the admiral and the doctor were this closer intimacy companionship of value. Each had a void in his life, as every man mast have who with unexhausted strength out of the great race, but each of his so- ciety might belp to fill up that of his neizhbor. It i: true that they had not much in common, but that is sometimes an aid rather than a bar to friendship. Each had been an enthusiast in fession and had retained all his inte im if The doctor still read from cover to cover his Lancet and his Medical Jour- nal, attended all professional gatherings, worked himself into an alternate state of exaltation and depression over the re- sults of the election of officers and re served for himself aden of his own, in which before rows of little round bot- tles frill of giycerin, © steps nis m rest Canadian balsam and staining agents he still cut sections with a microtome and peeped through his long brass old fashionel microscoy» at the arcana of nature. With his typ ical face, clean shaven on lip and chin with a firm mouth, a strong jaw, a ly eye and two little white fluffs of whiskers, he could never be taken for anything but what he was—a high class British medical consultant of the age - 50, or perhaps just a year or two older. The doctor in his heyday had been cool over great thinzs, but now in his re- tirement he was fussy over trifles. wan who had operated without the quiv- er of a finger when not only his patient's life but his own reputation and fuiure were at stake was now shaken to the soul by amislaid book or a careless maid. He remarked it himself and knew the reason. “When Mary was would say, ‘‘she stocd between me and the little troubles. I could brace myseif for the biz My girls are as good as girls can be, but who cau know a man as his wife knows him?’ Then his mem ory would conjure up a tuft of brown hair and a single white, thin hand over a coverlet, and he would feel as we have all felt—that if we do not jive and know a ne ’ ” alive,” he ones. each other after death then indeed we , are tricked and betrayed by all the high- est hopes and subtlest intuitions of our nature. The doctor had his compensations tc , make up for his loss. The great scales of fate had been held on a level for him, for where in all great London could one | find two sweeter girls, more loving, more intelligent and more syanpathetic than Clara and Ida Walker? So bright were they, so quick, so interested in all which mterested him, that if it were possible for a man to be compensated for the loss | of a good wife then Balthazar Walker might claim to be so, Clara was tall and thin and supple, with a graceful, womanly figure. There was something stately and distinguished in her carriage—*‘queenly” her friends called her, while her critics des¢ribed her as reserved and distant. Such as it was, however. it was part and parccl of | herself, for she was and had always from | her childhood been different from any ong | There was nothing gregari- | around her. ousin her nature. She thought with her own mind, saw with her own eyes, acted | rom her own impulse. Her face was pale—strikipg rather than pretty—buat with two great dark eyes, so earnestly questioning, £0 quick i their transitions from joy to pathos, so ewift in their com- ment upon every word ané deed around her—those cyes clone were to many more attractive than all the beant- of her younger sister. Hera was a strong, quiet soul, and it was her firm hand which had taken over the duties of her mother, had ordered the house, restrained | the servants, comforted her father and upheld her weaker sister from the dayof | that great misfor‘une. Ida Walker was a hand's breadth smal!- er thau Clara, but was a little fuller in the face aud plumper in tis figure. She had light yellow hair, mischievous blue | eyes, with the light cf humor ever twin- kling in their depths, and a large, per- fectly formed mouth, with that slight up- ward carve of the corners which goes | With a keen apprecietiou cf fun, suggest- ing even in repose that a latent smile is | ever lurking at the edges of the lips. She was modern to the soles of her dainty | little high heeled ehoes, frankly fond of . | dress und of pleasur enni simply with boiling water or milk. | pleasure, devoted to tennis and to comic opera, delighted with a dance—which came in her way only too seldom —longing ever for some new ex- citement, and yet behind all this lighter side of her character a thoroughly gocd, bealthy minded English girl, the life and ter and her father. Such was the family at No.2. A peep into the remaining villa, and our introdactions are complete. Admiral Hay Denver did not belong te 346 Spadina Avenue, Toronto, | the florid, white haired, hearty school of and | ne Yl -_— DISCOUNTS EXTRAORDINARY, Owing to the death of our senior partner, MR. HENRY MORGAN, and the consequent re-arrangement of the firm, we intend making an extraordinary effort during the month of January to reduce our stock to the lowest possible point, that everything may be in good shape for starting the new business in February. To accomplish this, we have decided to make even greater sacrifices than has been our custom in the Annual January sale. These sacrifices wiil be in the form of discounts, and will commence TUESDAY MORNING, 2nd January, and continue till the end of the month, HENRY MORGAN & CO., Jannary 2, 1894—te MONTREAL. thu sat AlGh Everybody wears them, POROUS WATERPROOF GARMENTS. ALWAYS ASK FOR ‘RIGBY.’ AM NL, / & / wa of, A Ce 4 Hatt - To ee : ® 2 : _—— ai ae | \ Liuch wore coiiuon type which is the | antithesis of the conventional sailor. He | He wore a good service stripe upon | cheek, for on one side it was pitted and ss Rie ae , At | Re my C1 My a es muta YE / ae gen " eT . 4, Mrs. DeWet—“ There, Reginall, are Mrs. Uptodate— Dear me, what a the e Rigby Waterproofs I have been tell-| sight those DeWets are, out on the streets nz \oi t. Can’t you i tvl iday like this without Rigby Garments. | ant f they look ?—~ar It tukes some people a ‘lifetime to learn just ‘ f er weather. You al- | h to | omfortable. Just think how was ya ti t ly else i | we used to swelter in those horrid Rubber ale & new thing before y« willl e , Waterproof-; and such smelling things.” . Wer have ‘ | decl9—tta e Grain Crusher TURNIP SLICER. — ee ILS nnaeree ee Having a large stock of the above Farm Implements on hand, and wishing to close them out this season, for the next two montis [ will sell them for i2 bushels of good White Russian Wheat, delivered at Charlottetown. Parties sending Wheat by train will have Bags returned with Crusher. Extra Rings for the above always on hand. D W. FPINLAWYSON, Ch’town, Dee. 27, 1893—cod & wy LEPAGE’S OLD STAND. astoria is Dr. Samucl Pitcher’s prescription for Infants and Children. It cont2ins ncither Opium, Morphine nor oihecr Nareoctic substanee. Lé is 1a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing &yrups, and Castor Oil It is Pleasant. Its guarantco is thirty ycars’ use by fifilions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays foverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diavrhoca and Wind Collie. Castoria rciicves tecthing tronbics, cures constipation cand flatulencey, Castoria essimilates the food, regulates the stomach end bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Case toria is tho Children’s Panacea—the Mether’s Fricnd, 3 € Casterii, Castoria. *Sasteri: is 2.1 execllonut medicine for chil reon. Mothers have repentcdly told me of its , 208 effect upon waeir cho ldren.” D... G. C. Oraoon, Lowell, Mass. * Castoria is so woll adapted tochy’ ’ren they I recommend it as superior toany prescripticu known to me.’ fi. A. Ancuer, M. D., 111%. Oxford St., Drooklyn, N.Y. “Our physicians ia tho children’s depart ment have spoken highly of their experi ence in their outside practice with Castoria. and although we only have among our medical supplies what is known as roguicr products, yet we are free to confess that ths merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it.” Unsitep Hosprrat anp Dispexsary, Boston, Mass * Costoria is tie bet reniedy for children of whihlan acquainted. Lhops tie dz is rot fard 2t when mothers wiliconsilerthe res! iter ’ favir chil.iren, 2nd use Castori.s i .- stvad of the various quack nostrutns which aro d-stroviag their loved ones, by forciag opinm, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending inem vremature craves.” De. J. F. Kiscnzros, Couwa;, Ar The Centaur Compary, 77 Murray Street, New York City, Blo. Auien C. Surrn, Pres., | the Highest Standard of Excellence in Point | of Flavor, Nutrition and Digestibility -——HAS BEEN ATTAINED BY—— JOHNSTON'S FLUID BEEF. __ The public have a positive guarantee that hey are get ‘ting the best possible form of concentrated nourishment. | REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES. December 2, 1893. cold is a dangerous custom, a3 most per | Sons try ove remedy only untill some friend | suggests another “sure cure,’ as Mark was a thin, hard featured man, with an ascetic, aquiline cast of face, grizzled and hollow cheeked, clean shaven, with the exception of the tiniest curved promon- tory of ash colored whisker. An observer accustomed to classify men might have put him down asa canon of the ch with a taste for lay costume and a coun- try life, or as the master of a large pub- lic school, who joined his scholars in their outdoor sports. His lips were firm, his chin prominent, he had a hard, dry eye, and his manner was precise and formal. , Forty years of stern discipline had made him reserved and silent. Yet when at his ease with an equal he could read- ily assume a less quarter deck style, and he had a fund of little dry stories of the world and its ways which were of inter- est from one who had seen #0 many phases of life. Dry and spare, as lean as a jockey and aa tough as whipcord, he might be seen any day swinging his sil- ver headed Malacca cane and pacing along the suburban roads with the same ieasured gait with which he had been wont to tread the poop of his scarred where a spurt of gravel knocked up by a round shot had struck him 80 years before when he served in the Lan- caster gun battery. Yet he was hale and sound, and though he was 15 years s¢ \ior to his friend, the doctor, he might have passed as the younger man. “ ’ (‘To be Continued.) ——_-e- Don’t Siug # Cold. If you do you will nine times in ten, have a fever to starve. A cold is a shock received by the myriad nerves that bristle near. the surface of ahuman body. This shock is transmitted to the nerve centres, and then back to the mucous membrances, forciug a great amount of bleod to those membrances, creating @ more or less severe irritation and consequent rise in the temperature, followed by chills. Excess of food in tne -tomach still fore increases the tempera- ture, anj, worst of all, helps clog. secre- tions or natural outlets of the body. It is high time we broke away from an old notion which, like some othere, has done more harm than good. For example, in years past how many poor fever sufferers, burning with internal fire and thirst, were hurried to an untimely grave because not allowed cooling drnks or @ bit of ice by the old time treatm. nt for feversas fool- ish asthe adage for colde, At last one cunning delirious patient got te a pump of cold water ani drank his fill; deteomined no to leave till the well ran dry, he slack- ed the fever, recovered, and doctors learn- ed a lesson, Experimenting with a ssvere Twain so humorously describes. When +lght hoarseness or tightening of the nase mem branes warns one ofa skin exposur or chill from wet, act promptly ; a delay is dangerous. With children’ it may mean croup and strangulation with aduits, catarrh, bronchitis, — per- haps pneumonia. If neglected, nothing can prevent the sneezing, red nose, and woe-begone look of a person with a cold. Scores of mothers would as soon go to bed without matches in the house, as wit- hout that old fashioned remedy, Johnson’~ Anodyne Liniment, nearat hand for crou- py children. Used with a mild laxative, as described in a pamphlet which T. 8. John- son und Co., Boston, Masa., will send free to anyone, Johnson's Liniment will cure a cold for audults quicker than any known remedy. A mild nutritious diet, a gentle physic to open the secretions, and a bottle of that old Anodyne. from your druggist, will conquer any cold. Johnson’s Ano- dyne L:niment was originated by an old family physician more than seventy years ago. i THE MOTHER’S INFLUENCE. Few, we believe, individually appreciate the enormons hidden force in educat.onal and moral influence exerted upon them by their mothers. Were a college founded for the propagat on of right living, its professors would touch only superticially the inner life of its students. It wonld be, in fact, a superfluous institution, for life itvelf is sach a school. We begin here like children, understanding such instruc- tion alore as appeals to the heart, and of this every man’s mother holds the key. Comprehending this, a wise mother should im prove every occasion a3 a stim- ulus to an exercise in morality, teaching even by the glance of her eye, as it appeals to the innate love of her child; a this fundamental instruction will take root as deeply as though the pupils were already older, excluding superficiality from the fact that she can touch the soul to its innermost core. When one leaves a mother’s influence, one is already a moral man, or one is not, and of a hundred who are eo, ninety-nine, even though unconsciously, are indebted to the mother. Testing His Honesty, ¥our druggist is honest if when you ask him for a bottle of Scott’s Emulsion he gives you just what you ask for. He knows this is the best form in which to take cod liver oil. sisted A Raliway Manager Says: “In reply to your question do my children object to taking Scott’s Emul- sions, I say No! on the contrary, they are fond of it and it keeps them pictures of ent ee ee A Pure Breath is an added Charm, Many a beaut:ful form and face loses its charm in an impure breath, Catarrh does not choose its victime, the innocent babe, the beantiful and witching maiden, and the manly lover alike fall victims to this offensive and foul plague. Hawker’s Catarrh Cure will positevly cure the most aggravated cases of Catarrh, restoring to the breath its pre-tine sweetness and remov- ing all its disagreeable and unhealthy symp- toms, Sold everywhere, only 25cts. The Children’s Favorite—Hawker’s Tolu and Wild Cherry Balsam. EAL MERIT is the character- istic of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It cures even after other preparations fail. Get Hood's and ONLY HOOD’S. Caprain Joun R. Hire, of schooner Lillian, says: “I was suffering with in- flammation of the cheet, brought on by exposure at sea. Took a good supply of Puttner’s Emulsion, which perfectly cured me. It has given me a new set o* ungs. USE SKU A’S DISCOVERY, the great lnod and Nerve Remedy. Salt! Salt! In STORE. 3,500 Bags Liverpool Salt, 320 ‘ Fishery ss 1,000 bush. Turk’s Island Salt, crushed, 1,000 -* - “ —uncrushed PEAKE BROS. & CO. jan2 NEW FRUITS. 300 boxes fine 0. 8. Valencia Raisins 1506 “ — selected = * 300 “ layer “ “ 50 barrels Currants, 190 cases * 50 boxes Dates, 20 “ Qranges, 20 kegs Grapes, 20 bags Nuts (Filberts). WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, The Daily Exariunes The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in. Size and Circulation. THE BEST for the Public and for Advertisers. One Year, - - - $4| Three Months, - St Six Months, - $2\0ne Month, - 35¢ Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 months at 40 cents a ménth. By special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to make # most exceptional offer to send McCLURE’S MAGAZINE FREE FOR ONE YEAR to everyone who fille out the following Llank form, subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER for 12 months at 40 cents 4 month. CUT THIS OUT AND SEND iT TO US. TTATTTTTTT TT TTT TT TT AT TTT T TT TUTTI Tee vy Twe Examiner Publishing Co., Charlottetown, P. E. Island. You will please ¢end 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 nuimber. Ns ictsissrtsbcapsiccen ssecesecnniniiniogss sehepiinaeess ae I. icecctccvnenss OPP Pee eee eee) TIVGITITIVIAITIVIITIIITGITGT NU So No "a Yo Ue Se > Um le So Nb Noe Me Se be Lo Me ln Lb Si Sn In > SLM No Ma So Ln bo Sb So bn Sn Sb Sy Nn Ln nd Lo n> nS Lo bn bn nS Lo Sb bo > Sb So lp > ln vo 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 England, including R. L. Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, A. Conan Doyic, Octave Thanet, William Dean Howells, Bret Harte, Clark Russell, Joel Chandler Ha:- riv, Thomas Hardy, J. T. Trowbridge, Jerome K. Jerome, Frances Hodgson Burnei:, Theodore Roosevelt, Joaquin Miller, Gilbert Parker, John Burroughs, Hamlin Ga land, Prof. E. S. Holden, Prof. C. A. Young, H. H. Boyesen, Robert Barr, Henry ). Stanley, Archibald Forbes, Andrew Lang, and many others. Each number of McCLURE’S MAGAZINE contains twe illustrated interview with famous people. Jes Verne, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Tissandier, the famou French Balloonist, Archdeacon Farrar, Thomas A. Edison, F. Hopkinson Smith, L H. Boyesen, Alphonse Dau tet, Camille Flammarion, Edward Everett Hale, Profexs Graham Bell and many others, have furnished material for especially prepared inte:- views, which will appear fully illustrate’ im this magazine. HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, especially for young readers, a stor) of AFRICAN Aq VENTURE. NATURAL HISTORY AND ADVENTURE.—There will be several article written by Rayinond Blathwayt, who nas been called by Mr. W. T. Stead the be- interviewer in England, from material furnished him by Carl Hagenback, of Hambur; the great animal importerand‘trainer. These articles deal with the Capture of Wila Beasta, the Training of Wild Beasts, the Transportation of Wild Beasts, the Adven- tures and Escapes of Car! Hagenbeck. The series will be illustrated by an Englis: artist of great skill in drawing animals, JOHN BURROUGHS, C. F. HOLDER, DR. C.C. ABBOTT and other writer amous for their work in this field, will contribute tv the Magazine. Fe Of interest to both Young and Old will be PO. R. L. GARNER’S AFRICAN EXPEDITION TO THE GORILLAS. Arrangements have been made, in connec- tion with aleading English review, to publish Professur Garner's letters descriptive ot his present expedition to Africa. Professor Garner is noted the world over for th: curious and interesting investigations he is making in the speech of monkeys. He sailed for Africa last September for the purpose of further pursuing his studies in the native haunts of the gorilla. The illustrations of these articles will be from photo- graphs taken by Prof. Garner in Africa. McCLURE’S MAGAZINE also contains most interesting articles under the heads The Eige of the Pature,” “ Newest Knowledge,” “ Knowledge of Immediate Value,” The Present Hour,” “Stranger than Fiction,” etc. We are offering this splendid Magazine with THE DAILY EXAMINER for only $4.60 a year, payable i» 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 subscribers may avai! themselves of this opportunity to secure practically free this great popuiar Magazine. Address: The Examiner Publishing Co., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND. Don't Talk! but call and inspect our New Parlor, Drawing Tab les Bedsteads, and odd pieces of Furniture. Don’t Listen ! but remember that we sell the Cheapest, and Room and Bedroom Suites, Chairs, are determined to give the best bargains every time at JOHN NEWSON’S, the Cheapest Furniture Store on P. E. Island. Quality of goods guaranteed. No trouble to show goods » JOHN NEWSON. Charlottetown, January 4, 1894. SILVERWARE Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. —— (a ee We are giving BIG BARGAINS in the above line of goods, as we havea large stock on hand, a G JURY, North Side of Queen Square, - - - - Opposite the Pust Offics Charlottetown, January 4, 1894—dy & wky People in this 19th century are bound to have the best that can be had for the money. That is why ZYEZERYBODY WEARS GRANBY RUBBERS! They give perfect satisfaction in fit, style and finish aud it has become a by-word that WN. B. & M. RATTENBURY. a dec?? “Gransy Ruppers wear like iron.” | December 26, 1893—tn thu eat 1894. ‘ it AS AR AND. ING—~ —> * Z oft CGH gE FOR at) KS ar WA THE “A OF A | Gi Lol, NEVER ' re. COLDS,CROUP, SOU iser aaa Otter ie bole rs cS; AND ALL THROATAND LUNG TROUBLES. PLEASAN? . SAFE MN no iane. SY"F cunt PRICE 25 AND GO CENTS MANUFACTUNED BY THE PAWKER WEDICINE CO., Lro, a. ST. JOHN, N.B. A 8S. R. FOSTER & SON, Manufacturers of Wire Nails, Steel and [ron cut Nails aud Spikes, ‘lacks, Brads, Shoe Nails, I!ungarian Nails, & St “«un.N. B. 7 Farm for Sale. THE sul ser‘ber offers for sale his farm on the Mouat Edvard Road, about one mile and a half from the city, well and favorably known as the “Welsh Farm” The farm consisis of sixty acres, and con tains a good Dwelling House aud figge Outbuildings, all in good cond iti« ” here is also a good orchard in connection Terms easy. Apply to C. BENOIT, Water Street, July 3, 1893. ‘MATEFUL, PLEASING RELIRF AFTER MANY DAYS. How « Queens County Man Found Permanent Healing. His Own Experience Tel!s Fully and Freely some Truths which a!l Read- ers of this Paper Shou'd Know. Here and there, in almost every town of our province, are “chronic” cases over which doctors disagree; cases that become worse year after year. It isto reach such that the gentleman to whom these lines refer, and whose portrai: is here given, has written the story of his case. Mr. Branscomb's home is — n Chipman, Queens Co., N.B it was there that a representa ive of the Groder compas called upon him, Sept. rst, of the present year. His greeting was most cordial He gladly acknowledged his thanks, giv: ing expression to the following statement: “It is five years since I first became afilicted with a form of indigestion Last winter it b | came more severe, developin, into chronic diarrhce: I canno tell you how much I suffere« for SIX LONG WeFks. It seemee as though relief could not b found. You will remember how , [ told you of my condition am asked your advice about takin a bottle of Groper's Syxup You told me shat the medicin was a laxative and might no meet my needs. | delayed buy ing for a few hours unii! | be gan to hope that it would help me. Even my clothes seemed a burden because of bloating of stomach 1: was with difficulty that I kept about sufficiently to attend to my business. But I ama well man now from the use of your remedy. In three days after | bought Grover’s Syxur the terrible pain and distress across my stomach were removed, My bowels rapidly assumed a nat- ural, healthy condition. Now I eat ana drink as well as I ever could, I have gained constant- ly in fl-sh since March last. I an perfectly cured. it seems a duty for me to state my case fully, that others who suffer as 1 did may koow where to find a cure,” Truly yours, E. A. BranscomB, Se reo