CALENDAR FOR JANUARY, 1894 VW ‘ LY EXUDE ‘ Mhee of HING M y, im the fo i gueen Street SUBSCRIPTION N ADVANCE $4.00 | > M wTHs 20 | T VE tte ) 0.3 ADVERTISING RATES ny part of Canada or the j ulvertisements which are ordered | rtwo weeks the charge is t first insertion, and 2 ation. Rate cards ar¢ otfiee, Special ta reduced rate are quoted * ir inches in sive or apy stioOn at the : in for three months or sserted uniess paid for s per line, and ander no | es \ such paid notices appear s its made on all advertise- | 1 Fairs, Bazaars, ' I i es will be inserted with j ve regular rate of lv cents per | | : i Ci F {'VeER is yisidered by ous | : afacture to be the lead- v spap E. isiand. and conse- t valuable arivertising medium | 3 1aK r announcements put s abundantly proved by the fact that | an a r advertisers we | a i to enlarge the paper to | ' its we . Ti ¥ Examtnves ts for sale by the fol- | wing agents i R. H. Mason, t } : Charlottetown J.M y M al pe Road, : ( Pa Lower Spring Park Road WM nfin, -rafton Street =. (9 r. Wat-r and Prince St D. Ch ; Prince S Ha ac Store, Yue at. Geo & Co., Queen Street. e | s ray. News Stall, P. E. tl. Railway, and | ol fie Pa j M. x1 Walsh, Eclectic Bookstore. Sum- | mersid ; H McFarlane, Sourita. Db. Gordon, eorgetown. } Db. A. Egan, Mt. Stewart. | G. M. Clarke, Alberton | us, A. Gillia, Orwell Cuve, its tS ee The Weekly Examiner Ie issu every Friday morning from the | } office It is made up of matter wh sppeared in the Daily editions, and sa ss weekly aewspaper—interesting an hiest news, The subseription for Toe WereKxrty Exam. . sid to y part of Canada or the { “ dollar per year. A g rat ¢ same scale as given & DaILy EXAMINER. “DOCTOR DORSEY, and Surgeon. ee . crnvsician ra t ' Med al Department of the t ty f New York, late he Resident Staffof Belle- Hospital and the New York Lving-in Hospital, New York City. OFFICE North Side Queen OPPOSITE POST OFFICE Square Santcd Near Corner of King and Queen il harlottetown ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT | AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES 1 cy Street. (Chek du ; tteto" Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, MINCING LANE-----------LONDON REPRESENTED IN TANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX | Rheumatic and Neuralgia Cur. Of the Age able HOUSEHOLD REN, ANDO "" PAINGURE ” | _ (BOTH INTERNAL AND EXVER! MANUFACTURED ONLY BY : ) THE HAWKER MEDICINE GY OD Bonne. 21 YOHN.N.B. ae | | | | j t } }did Photographic Views and Historical Descriptions otf | Plaisance. Don't Fail to Get a Sample Number of “The Magic City.” $8.00 ‘T'ypemriter. This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, and pune- | | tuation marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just like a $100 instrument. It is the first of DYEING COMPANY j ' THE DAILY ee” ; i blic, ma TERM3. Pour Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Pu y — AMIN speak free.”—-Euripides. Single Copies Two Cents } NEW 82. tea CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E. ISLAND, MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1894. VOL33.—NO. 176 ATHE PAIL! Ph # P ; i | Nite | 1 had for dinner was the best I ever ate. Thanks to COTTOLENE, the vew and succceésful shortening. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR it. You have heard of the good man who prayed for RAIN and got a FLOOD! Well) — | Made only by N, K. FAIRBANK & CO., Wellington and Ann Streets, MONTREAL, PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained-—how re» stored—how preserved, Ordinary works on Phy- siolcgy will not tell you: the doctors can’t or THE EXAMINER'S Portfolios of the that is what happened with other words, HE MAGIC City ! If WOULD GO, because it is the Best, the Largest, the Greatest, the Jeautiful. the Most Wonderful of all! Containing over 500 Splen- the World’s Fair and the Midway | Nothing hke it! Nothing equals it! World’s Fair, in) WE KNEW Grandest, the Most they all want it and must have it. you wish to know. Your SEXUAL POWERS are the Key to Life and its reproduction, Our book lays bare the truth. Every man who would regain sexual vi gor lost through folly, or develop members weak by nature or wasted by disease, should — RE QT i R H, D. | write for our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- | hood.” No charge, Address (in confidence), ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. All who have seen it are astonished at its marvellous beauty. It is away above | and beyond everything else relating to the Wold’s Fair. Its GRAND PHOTOGRAPHS IN NATURAL COLORS are a surprise to everybody. ONLY OU COUPON “THE MAGIC CITY” will be published in sixteen consecutive weekly parts or | numbers, each containing sixteen to twenty splendid Photographs of the World’s Fair | and the Midway Plaisance, with accurate Historical Descriptions, The complete series | will constitute a large and beautiful oblong volume, 11x15 inches, illustrated with OYER SOO CRAND YIEWS, — INCLUDING —— Great Paintings, Celebrated Statuary Glimp bX . = Art ie | S Eve body does, after taking a Cees) Character Sketches in the Midway, | $tew bottes of architectural Details, Prenweses® (nrions Foreign Types, | @MALTO PEPTONIZED And all the Grand and Wonderful Features of the Great Fair, taken at the ORTER. y ’ . as : ; ‘ . : It builds upthe run-down sys- the Splendor of the World’s Exposition by a Special Corps of Artists. y All the Principal Buildings, Sghzonsestey: Foreign and State Buildings, 2s, General Views, ‘ interiur Views, * woes “You'll Feel Better ” COs Oe height of tem,—is strengthening and appe- tizing. Itis readily borne by weak stomachs, regulates the bowels, and is invaluable to those afflicted with Indigestion and Flatulency. THE MALTO PEPTONIZED PORTER CO. LTD. TRURO, NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA, Highly Recommended by Physicians. 5. B. Enman & Go's. Stock of Ganned Goods Thrown on the Market dike the Dutch Process The consecutive weekly parts will be mailed to any address, or delivered to persons | . , ‘a . » mtr trv areneot . ‘ rh ‘ TD , calling at our office, at the uniform price of TE CENTS KACH, and ONE COUPON. Don’t miss the greatest and best of all the World’s Fair histories. AT PRICES THAT ARE BOUND TO CLEAR THEM OUT QUICK. N A 0 Alkalies o GA —on— For 50 cents we are offering 5 Cans Tomatoes. { For 40 cents we are offering 2 Cans 2 Ib. Peaches. ) Other Chemicals 50 OC “ 6 at Corn. “« 40 66 o 2... 9 Straw berries. f are used in the © 50 5 Peas ‘< 20 9 B. C. Salmon. : preparation of 50 ee “ 5 Beans a 2 2 © (3b. Apples. | W. BAKER & COUS “« §9 « $6 2 (1 gal.) Apples. All the above is FRESH, NEW STOCK, imported last N S B ENMAN & CO i ge] BreakfastCocoa \ B 11 which is absolutely : pure and soluble. | Ithas morethan threetime ' the strength of Cocoa mixe with Starch, Arrowroot ¢ Sugar, and is far swore eco- nomical, costing less than one cent @ cup It is delicious, nourishing, anc EASILx DIGESTED, icmeoumtitietiananiann Sold by Grocers everywhers. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mas; Store To Let. —_—_ } Charlottetown, January 12, 1894 mon wed fri THE AMERICAN The =mal] Store in the Cameron Block, | next door to Messrs. Reddin Brothers. Apply to HORACE HASZARD. janll—2w eod ; i ; } | its kind ever offered at a popular price for which the above claim can be truthfully made : , « . . * * ras aa Tr ; aa} a [t is not a toy, but a typewriter built for and capable of REAL work. While not as rapid as Gold Medalist D ers and Cleaners the large machines sometimes become in expert hands, it is still at least as rapid as the pen, | y ’ : : 4 : ka ee ad TR : and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastered almost at a | MONT* EAL glance. We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. | WE ARE PREPARED TO DYE al! r | class of goods and garments equal to any House in Europe. FRENCH CLEANING a specialty. All information regarding shades, prices, etc., furnished by CHAS. IVES MORRISON, Agent, Queen Street. Writes capitals, small letters, figures and Easy to understand—learned in 5 minutes. marks—71 in all. Weighs only four pounds—most portable. Writes just like a $100 machine. Compact, takes up but little room. No Shift Keys. No Ribbon. Prints from | Built solid and simple; can’t get out of the type direct. order. Prints on flat surface. Capital and lower case Writing always in sight. easily mastered. Corrections and insertions easily made. More “margin play” for the small letters Takes any width of paper or envelope up which do mest of the work. to 8} inches. Takes good letter-press copies. sept 25—eod ailke-- ee Christy keyboard Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.00, kinives i vertified check ‘ guarantee every machine, and are —_—— in registered letter, money order or certified check, We guarantee every mu , and are glad to answer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the “ Yost. BREAD— CARVING—PARING. FOR SALE BY | sa reahesbileaaat ce eilatoces, R. B. Norton & Co., CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. aug 16. General Agent for Maritime Provinces. dec20 D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlotietown. | domestic animals, | postules form. | recover—possibly one iu five may die. | coagulate. | soil or may spread over it in broad pools, | chump. | still have abundant life and activity. HOW TO CURE BEEF. ” Make and Keep Beef For Home Use In Winter. Mrs. Charles writes in The Rural New Yorker: I have just been interviewing Mr. Charles, my better and larger half, in ito the young steer he has been stall feeding for several weeks and was glad to hear that he would soon be in good condition for killing, weather per- mitting, and [ know he will make deli- cious eating, He was selected from a herd of 40 steers bought in Buffalo last Jane and was pasture fed till about six weeks ago Since then he has been kept constantly in the stable, fed on a diet of pnmpkins cornmeal, bran and clover hay. We killed two such animals last winter and certainly never had such superior beef in the Wouse—rich, juicy and tender as young @ficken ~The manner in which we disposed of our beeves last winter proved so satisfactory that | will de- scribe it, thinking others may find some suggestions which will prove heipful to them. As soon as we are likely to have steady | cold weather the steer will be slaughter- THINGS WORTH KNOWING. Points Abont Carpet Mending of Interest to the Economically Minded. i Brussels and other nap carpets may be pieced so neatly that the serm almest es- capes notice. In order to do .bis the parts to be joined, having been cgrefully matched ‘s to pattern, should be trimmed smoothly, following the line of the weft. Next but- tonhole the edges carefully with carpet | thread of a color as near as possibfe the wool’of the carpet. Stitches must be taken venly on wrong side through at least two threads of the weft, taking care not to en- | tangle and flatten or to ravel wool on the | edges. When this isdone, overhand togeth- eron wrong side the two buttouholed edges, | und if the work is done neatly when the | ed. One fore quarter and one hind quar- | ter will be sold to neighboring farm- | ers, who are always giad to avail them- ’ ” 5 selyes of an opportunity to get such | i J eS choice meat at so much lower than re- tail prices. The fore quarter reserved | for ourselves, after hanging a week or | two, we shall cut up and pack in a 20 gallon crock for corning. Each piece is thoroughly rubbed with the following mixture and then packed as solidly as possible in the lerge crock or jay: Four quarts of rock sult, 4 pounds of brown sugar, 4 ounces of saltpeter to 100 pounds of beef. These jars are far superior to borrels for this purpose, as they can be kept much sweeter, and the jar cannot absorb the juices of the meat as a barrel would. ; No water is needed, as the beef juices | will prove sufficient after a few days’ standing. <A 20 gallon jar will hold about 150 pounds of meat. Corn beef prepared in this way will keep several! months in cool weather, though | think the meat fibers are hardened and tough- ened after, say, two months. I canned corned beef in glass fruit jars last winter very successfully, opening them in midsummer, The remaining bind quarter is hung in the large, airy garret over the woodshed, where it gen- erally freezes. A steak or roast is cut off as desired. In favorablo weather the meat will keep two months if desirable, } improving in quality every day. What Is Anthras? This definition is given in bulletin No 10 of the Delaware experiment station: Anthrax is a disease which affects all | dyes with a small paint brash, using colors | Vet, ornamented with a diagonal band of Carnivora or flesh | | eaters—dogs, for instance—enjoy, it is | true, a high degree of protection against | it, but at times they, too, succumb. Man himself is quite susceptible, and sheep, goats, horned cattle and horses are espe- cially liable to contract it, The result | depends upon the portion of the body | that is affected. If the poison passes through the stom- | ach and develops in the intestines, death follows. If, in the case of man. a wound | on the hand or leg gives the poison en- trance into the body, then malignant Oftentimes snch patients The same can be said of horned stock, | but sheep and goats, with one or two curious exceptions, have little or no re- sisting powers, and anthrax once in a flock oftentimes claims one-half as vic- tims. The cause of this disease is a plant too | small by far to be seen by the naked eye. Onder the microscope it looks like a rod possibly five times as long as it is thick. “ive thousand of these rods put end to | end might measure one inch in length. This rodlike plant goes to seed under certain circumstances—a point to be re- membered—for it is this peculiarity which gives to it almost unlimited pow- er for causing losses, for these seeds can stand both heat and cold and can lie for years in a dry place without loss of vitality. A combination of heat, mois- ture and food, such as the animal body | offers, may cause the seed to germinate and develop an epidemic anew. Once within the animal body, anthrax plants multiply without seed formation, and if they cause the death of the ani- mal and it is buried without dissection or mutilation, which would allow air to | come into contact with the blood, then | in a short time the plant dies, and noth- | ing remains to generate future trouble | Almost invariably, however, immediate- ly after death blood exudes from all the natural openings of the carcass of an anthrax victim. It may sink readily into the Such blood does not offering ample opportunity for aeration | and for seed formation within a rela- tively few hours. Live Stock Points. Fall planted rye for the winter and | spring pasture of the lambs is.one of the most satisfactory and paying of crops. Now is the time to set the broiling machines, otherwise incubators, going Colonel F. D. Coburn says there is no | necessity for a boar’s being a slugyish, stupid, half idiotic, chuckle headed A boar can be tractable aud Use gumption in your feeding meth- ods. Get rid of the old superstition that it is wicked to feed wheat to stock When wheat is only 40 cents a bushe!, pork 5 cents, and butter 25 cents a ponnd, turn wheat into pork and butter instead of selling it at 40 cents. Wheat is excellent as concentrated food for all live stock, The Breeder's Gazette is down on the “well nigh obsolete” score card as used by judges at fairs. The Gazette ob- serves that it has not been used in the cattle ring of a western show yard in 10 years, and that swine breeders have re- covered thoroughly from the score card fever. It wisely shows up the ‘folly of attempting to apply mathematics to the judging @ life” ver Fifty Years. Ax Ucp Axnp Wein Triep Mrs. Winsloe’s {EMEDY.— Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty years by millions | of mothers for their children while teeth- nig, with perfect snecess, It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable, Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind.—m. w. f. wkly—1 y ee USE SKOLA’S DISCOVERY, the great Blood and Nerve Remedy, i | morning meal, and the whole hearted farm- | er boasts, “‘] may not be as forehanded as | apint of milk, with a beaten egg and a } dainty flavoring of spice, baked in a crust | which hardened a bit in the oven while the | mince pies of England. | Tf. U., and some cold, black coffee if she | cures even after other preparations fail. carpet is tacked down the seam will be per- | fectly smooth. By the ingenious and capa- ble sewer pieces may be so inserted where holes or ineradicable spots have been as to lefy scrutiny, and the otherwise condemned carpet may be rendered useful for at least another year. Stair carpets so treated will be entirely | without the lumpy seams so disagreeable | to the tread, and which so soon present a | gray, faded ridge destitute of weol. i When carpets have been worn in spots or lines so that the gray weft is exposed, tem- porary relief may be had by applying liquid nearest the wool of the carpet. A pretty badly worn stair carpet was made quite presentable by a skillful treat- ment with colors used for painting on bolt- ing cloth. Only two applications during the year were necessary, and this ingenious frescoing stood admirably the test of fre- quent dusting and brushing. Care should be taken not to drop the staining liquid in large spots. If not sufficiently colored, al- low to dry and repeat treatment next day, Colored inks of various shades are also use- ful in this direction, according to a writer in Harper’s Bazar, who gives the foregoing practical information, Cushion For Stickpins, This is undoubtedly worthy of a place in one’s cottection of pretty things for Christ- mas gifts. It consists of a circular pad bound and faced with emerald green vei- gold embroidery and fancy gimp. The A HANGING CUSHIOR, graduated flounce of lace is caught up a the sides with loops and ends of satin rib- bon corresponding with the one which hides the wall hook and depending from the cen- ter of the twist holder. New England Pie of the Real Sort. In New England there is pie for the some, but I’ve never seen my breakfast table without pie.” Henry Ward Beecher never did a grander deed than when he sang the glories of apple pie. And there are other kinds of pie. Pumpkin pie, made in the proportion of a cupful of pumpkin to mixing went on; mince pie which is not the tough little mass of jellied citron and candied orange peel, baked in the shape of what the small girls calls a “turniper” and supplied with sirup through a hole in the top crust in a way unpleasantly suggestive of 4 lamp being fed with oil, as are the In this land the housewife adds to one- third of minced apple two-thirds of chop- ped and cooked lean beef, puts in a cupful of molasses for each pie, adds a soupcon of brandy if she doesn’t belong to the W. C, does, spreads the filling on the crust, sticks it fullof plump raisins and coversit with a delicate blanket of dough crimped on the edges with a fork. It is baked almost as lengthy a time as the Peterkins’ quince sauce was cooked, ‘‘as long as the fire laste and then better be put on the next day,” and it’s more than worth eating when done, writes one who celebrates in Good | We cannot tell how that Son of Harry K. Ruby, of Columbia. Pa., Suffered From Birth With @ Severe Form of Scrofula Humor “ Until my boy was six ye. d trom birth a terrible 43 = wad gheed cae jous humor. Sores would appear on him and spread until as Large as a Dellar and then discharge, followed by others, so thatthe larger part of his body was mass of sores a)! the ume, espevially severe on his legs and hack of his ears and on his head. The humor had a very offensive odor, and caused intense Itching poor boy suffered in all those years. Physicians did not effect a cure. At last I decided to give him Hood's Sarsaparilia, as my druggist recommended it. In about two weeks the Sarsaparilla began to have effect.. The sores coramenced 10 heal up; the Hesh began to look more nat . ural and heaithy. Then the scales came off and ai over his body new and heaithy flesh and skin formed. When he had taken two bottles he wz i . ‘ * Was entirel free from sores, having only the sears to show where the had been. These have all disap- P | the good : Hood’s Sarsaparilla has done our little boy.” Hawrny K. Rt BY, Box 356, Columbia, Pennsylvania. HOOD’S PILLS cure Constipation by restene ‘DS tue peristaliic action of the ali 1entary Canal Physicians EXDORSE Them, and we GUARANTEE them to Curr. (or money refunded.) Mrs, Elmer E. Millett, P. O. Box 511, Livermore Falls, Maine. SALT RHEUM and all diseases of the BLoop & SKiy. Skoda’s Discevery, Skoda’s German Ointment and Skoda’s German Soap, are specially adapted to cure inherit- ed and chronic diseases. Mrs, Millett writes; “TI have had Salt Rheum ever since ~ could remember; tried many remedies, but received no benefit until I took Skoda’s Discovery. Skoda’s Cures. My husband says it will cost too mach to board me if I take any more of Sko- da’s Discovery. Skoda’s Little Tablets cure sick headacher Constipation and dyspepsia. 50 in a box, 35 MEDICAL ADVICE FREE. SKODA DISCOVERY CO, LT2., WOLFVILLE, HS, For sale by all druggists. Trade sup plied by W. R. Watson; Charlottetown P.E Wiss WARY DOULL, STUDIO, STAWPER BLOCK. Instructions given in the various branch *s of Drawing and Painting. nov29—2m eod JOHNSON ANODYNE LINIMENT oe by an Old Fi amily Paysician n use for more than Bixnty ration nk OF It. Moar nels and it. Every Traveler should have @ bottle in his satchel. Every Sufferer Bclatica, Neuralgia Nervous Headache, Diphtheria,Coughs, tarrh, Bron. _ Anunnas Cholera Morus, > : ness, oreness in or mi ot Strat will find in this old Anodyne relief and 1 hed ~ Speed Every Mother Anosyneinimentin the house for Colda, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, Colic, Cuts, Bruises, Cramps ard Pains Mable to occur in t notice. Delays may cozt a life. Re 1 Summer . 36 Complaints like » ti , 5 ota. es, “2. xpress 18. Johnson & Baby Wants It. Martin’s Cardinal Food FOR INFANTS AND INVALIDS, The most palatable food prepared, and is unequalled by any other preparation ofits kind. The best food and the best value, put up in one pound Tins, price 25 cts. per Tin. Sold Retail by all Druggists and Gre- cers and Wholesale by KERRY WATSON & CO. Proprirrone MONTREAL. Housekeeping the praise of New England cookery. Ammonia as «a Carpet Cleaner, If you wish to clean and brighten your carpets after they have heen beaten and put down, wipe with a cloth wrung from water, to which a little ammonia has been added, A tablespoonful of ammonia ina gallon of water will often restore colors in carpets. It will also remove whitewash stains from them. In fact, the housekeep- er has no better help than her bottle of am monia, - Cold Slaw. One head of fine white cabbage, minced fine; 3 hard boiled eggs; 2 tablespoonfuls salad oil; 2 teaspoonfuls white sugar; 1 tea- spoonful salt; 1 teaspoonful pepper; 1 tea- spoonful made mustard; 1 teacupful vin- egar. Mix and pour upon the chopped cab- bage. Joint rabbits, fry in hot bacon fat with one sliced onion. Cover with one quart of boiling water, add one sweet pepper cut small, three cloves, salt and pepper. Sim- mer till meat tender, thicken with a little flour and add chopped parsley, ow to Get a Suulight Picture, Send 25 “ Sunlight ” Soap wrappers (wrappers bearing the words “Why Does a Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man”) to Levey Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto. and vou will receive by posta pretty pic- ture free from advertising, and wel] worth framing. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap isthe best in the market and it will only cost 1 e. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefally. EAL MERIT is the character- istic of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It | | | Get Hood's and ONLY HOOD’S. OUR DRUCCIST For a Se RYT NORWEGIAN mee ODD] Prd acti al ads dent alatable as cream. ° taste .ike others. 50c. and 81.00. ony In big bottles When we assert that Dodd’s Kidney Pills Cure Backache, Dropsy, Lumbago, Bright’s Dis- ease, Rheumatism and all other forms of Kidney Troubles, we are backed by the testimony of all who have used them. TH+? CURE TO STAY GURED, By a. druggists or mail on receipt of price, ge cents. . L. A. Smith & Co., Toronta, BA gs ” EE tan ais wt aaa 2) ‘z