wm YO hee "+ NG DAILY NEWSPAPER :k PUBLISHING Company, in the SUBSCRIPTION t paid to any part of Canada or the ADVERTISING RATES all advertisements whieh are ordered > or two weeks the charge » first insertion, and for each continuation. edon application at the office. juced rate are quoted are to run for three inserted unless paid for 1 such paid notices appear on all advertise- mected wi ith | ( Chureh Fairs, Bazaars No notices will be inserted with he sAme Unless the regular rate of 10 cents per Tux ExaMtner is considered by our und Manufacturers to be * >. Island, and conse- le advertising medium vhich to make their announcements s*bundantly proved by the ‘act that © accommodate Our auvertisers we % compelled to enlarge the paper to LY EXA™Mtnen is for sale by the fol- SP rin: r :P ari ‘Road, i, upp or = usten on , Eclectic Bookstore, 5 i, D. Gordon, Georgetown. A. J. MeNeii Stanley Bridge. att ina a times : The Weekly Examiner is made up of matter which has appeared in the Daily editions, and is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting and full of the latest news. The subscription for Tak WEEKLY Exam: Lz, post paid to any part of Canada or the Uaited States, is one dollar per year. rates on the same scale as given bove for THE DaILy EXAMINER. McCLURE'S MAGAZINE Yol IV. Begins Becember, A splendidly illustrated life of _NAPOLEON, PORTRAITS We. 200 PICTURES. “DETECTIVE Pinkerton Detective Agency. *f) tat wn SHORT STORIES Re i ayes rd Ki 'p ling me To 2 be fave Ti hane t, NOTED CONTSLEIBUTORS. rt Lonis Stevenson, Archdeacon Farrar, -cent stamps for a sample o's. McCLURE, ee THE DAILY EXAMINER. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. Four Dollars a Year TERMS : Late NE W Ska z “ead ROom CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. FRIDAY, JAN ISLAND, UARY 4, 1895. Single Copies Two Cents VOL 34.—NO. 156 PE Island ila On and a:ter THU RADY, Ish, the trains of this Ra‘lw: iy wi Sundays exceyt ed) as fotlows .— “th December li run daily Moncton, N RB, A. MCDONALD, Superiutend Charloitetuwn. dec2s SPECIAL DISCOUNTS | On All Goods THIS WEEE. Gi 4, TAYLO?, Watchmaker and North side Queen Square, dec27 = aah we -|Lippineotts Magazine 1sss. The special feature of LIPPINCOTT’S— | A COMPLETE NOVEL in each issue, in addition to the usual Short Stories, Novelettes, Essays, Poems, etc., All combined, make it one of the most de- sirable magazines now published. We avoid the objection held by so many readers to a continued story. During the coming year novels may be expected from Capt. King, Amelie Rives, Gertrude Atherton, Mrs. Stickney, Mrs. Alexander, Miss Train, (Author of “ The Autobiography of a Professiona) Beauty ”), and other well-known writers. Price, $3.00 per year. Single copy, 25c Send five 2-cent stamps for specimen copy L!PPINCOTT’S MAGAZINE PHILADELPHIA, PA dec 7 90 YEARS For the last 50 years Cough Medicines have been coming in and dying out, but during all this time SHARP'S BALSAM OF HOREHOUND Never left the Front Rank for Curing CROUP, COUGHS AND COLDS, All Druggists and most Grocerymen sell it. g@ 25 cents a bottle. ARMSTRONG & CO., Proprietors, St. John, N B. un w23—d Mechanical Drawing, & The undersigned is prepared to give evening lessons in Mechanical and Indus- trial Drawing; to make Plans and Specifi- cations for Patents, Copying, Biue-print ing and ee in general. L. W. MACDONALD, Land * dtbors and Draughtsinan. Nov 21— Dominion Coal Company, Ltd The undersigned having been appointed sole selling Agents in the Province of Prince Edward Island for the above Com- pany, are now prepared to issue orders for Round, Slack and Run of Mines, and will keep a, Stock of each Mine’s Coal on hand to supply ca-tomers at lowest prices. PEAKE BROS. & CO. Selling Agents. Charlottetown, Mav 25, 1894-—-1F 36 Lafaye tte Pac e, Church School for Gils Edgebill, Windsor, N. 8. aa forms of admission asp Mal NB CF» ebay ae it ects $2. 00 ‘end traction of teeth. Otlice, 145 Queen St., Ch.arlottetown, P. EK. I, "q SELL only the BEST,“whieh is Woodill’s German Baking Powder, nd you lack no custom rs to BUY. dec& q | THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM. * & Camille Flammarion, the French Astron« omer, on Its Appearance. } Some time ago various newspapers of Europe and America contained the start ] ‘ ——— first-rate, and shall be pleased to have We are doing te telligenc that the star which guid Frains Outward. crates Toward ut call and inspect our latest arrivals in Boots Shoes, -d the wise men would again appear. This tead down, Read up ; ’ tar wa tected with “th at télented Si ; * > ite i ‘ 4 Z ae — a) rw? cCaunhecter th celebra let \M Leavi Arrive PY | Sup pers, i ubbers, Overshoes and (alters } one which, 318 y ar ag ud lenly disay 7 ie ee Chartot' vr 23 . . ry ; . ; ‘ * i oe oP , . = 49 htovalty Junct'on 21 | “‘Abothar fine lot of Women’s and Misses’ Gaiters daily | peared from the constellation of Cassio- S05 North Wiltshire 12 . - . . pela, and it was tn ind that this star of . [aS oy > ‘ or re. eS ‘ e a vr ° $ fs Pee catibee Hunter River 1is}expected ail good values, and just the things for useful | 1572 hadl previously appeared in the years 8 43 Bra ‘atbane 1 , > r . , IIe a 4 PI 8 57 Emerald zx} tS well as ornamental Amas Presents and New Year's Gifts. | 12%64and 945, and, if counted back, must | ote . .. Freetown 22) i S lj + ee ‘a ial : t :} ° ie lI tl : ads appeared in the year of the birth of | 928 ’ Ken-ington Oe solieitin s your prctrona ze an Wisaing VO :t «a i¢ Christ If these facta were well establish 1) Oe r ‘ ‘ . : > . ‘ rar? Summerside yf am {compliments of the season, yours for neat, stylish, cheap and | 4, we must certainly expect the star to 259 «Lv 5 dar tox : > ‘ , . | appear again in ourdays. Weshouldthen it . Miseouche 1 Wo i good Boots and Shoes, | Seeanew body in the heavens, entirely } Wellington ose | unlike any tixed star, t be seen in full | 21 Port Hill v09 | ‘ : * | unlike any fixed star, to be se 1 full | $4 fiaars is S00 | W K Ky Ks Ay 4 4 R 23 iY N | daylight, which would in a short time 88 ..+. Bioom field 734 7 . ’ oe again disappear. Every astronomer in re- | -oF Alberton ot 6S | cent times has asked hundreds of questions | f ‘ eine Tig nish.... “72 909 ' Charlottetown, December 17, 1891—m w f & vky nage subject a — eee -_ = | J f ie that the star ‘ atlas sininelionent Seal siciieiani oemanisioumecioniiieteimenn Hetiiehem will again appear? Is it peri — PM nartottes 103 | on lical? Is j ahaa in the sky appointed* j a Be eeesce . Charlottetown ‘ 030 | a . 3 ; ; a Bee cue ttoyalty Junction «emt The n Xt —n stion is, What really happen 3 Bedford ‘ines oe a 1 1572 : I 349 § Arp ; yLv) 965 twas a few months after St. Bartholo- ii: ¢ Lvs — ee Jar) 850] y y mew’s Night, Tycho Brahe, the great ob- | 2 ing .....Cardigan ; . 735 server of those days, tells us, that: “One | B45... Georgetown 710 E: evening, as l was watching the heavensin PM AM my accustomed manner, I saw, to my great A te ‘ uw astonishment, in the constellation of Cas- | ~~ " s Mount Stewart *s a7 . ° ia Fs. o oe | siopeia, a brilliant ine a anaenk ee | ie! “St Peter’ 73 | Winter has set in, and if you have not your Winter} ness” This was on November 11, 1572, | Sa eee ' cer's an 4 . . P . : - Three days before the star had been seen 7 ; “Bear Hives ... 701 Suppl f Co: Three Ps 6 40 aus ine 6% , l I J ot Co il In, by Cornelius Gemma, who sD ke of it as | is ea AM : y ™ Y ~ * es is ' “this new Venus.” In December of the ¢ ,,, : i 4 , 4 sime year its lustre began to wane; and in | ; : NOW [S THE THE ue Sa s a Emeratd / M | | Ss . . March, 1574, it had entirely disappeared, & - r 054 . o ‘ ; 159 Cape Traverse 7 30 | | x . “1 . : leaving no traee. As to the stars of PM AM] 3S Town and ( ee alike are taking advantage of our 045 and 12¢4, we have no authority ex rrains are run by Eastern Standari Time | reduced pr ices cept that of the Bohemian astrologer, D. POTAINGER Cyprian Lowitz. No historian mentions | | Gan Mgr Can Govt Railways them, and the Chinese chroniclers, who | + appearances in the sky with do not speak of them. Even | ¢ have been a fact, their resemblance to the star of Bethlehem is doubtful. It is true that by counting back we come to the years 630,515 and 0; but the star should have again appeared some time between Sharlottetown, December 12, 1894. | 1830 and 1891 | With regard to the Star of Bethlehem sal ‘alee : ime there are five assumptions: (1) It had no existence, and the entire statement is a beautiful Oriental fairy tale. (2) The fixed } p } : f . | tk R= | ] eo star, seen by the Wise Men, was Venus, \ t 1e Ol e OcK alt Juy a! at the time of its great splendor. (3) It “rte ; cs was a periodical star like that of 1572. (4) Highland Range at ONCE, | te phenomenon was occasioned by a ' . conjunction of planets 5) It was a It IS said that comet. Of these assumptions the most probable is the second That it was a i periodical star is scarcely likely, for 66 s 1. Ptolemy and Ma-tuan-lin would have Frocrastination spoken of it. The fourth statement was suggested in 1826 by the German astrono and repeated by Encke in 1831, 3B. C. there were conjunctions is the thief of time,” and the | 1 he7s722.< ther were conjusctions on May 29, September 3, and December 5, old-fashioned Stove is ag sure-| tacos nose cf these dave mere dhe nbaoss together than a degree, so that the ly the thief of ¢ ‘ 7 a -oal,. Wise Men must have been very near- S MORAL—Save Coal by using a “Highland. sighted to take them for one star. The FENNELL & CHANDLER. sidered, for people already knew how to Charlottetown, December 19, 1894--m w f mer ldeler, distinguish a comet from any other stars, and besides, we have no knowledge ofa comet at that time. For all these reasons we have not the least occasion to expect the return of the Star of Bethlehem at the close of our century. And even if sucha star should appear, it would simply be the twenty-sixth such case observed in his- torical times, and the interest attached to it would be purely astronomical.—Camille -- - Flemmarion in Deutsch Revue. CARRIAGE STOCK RECEIVING TO-DAY—Spokes, Hubs, Shafts, Backs Splendid Scenery in New South Wales Words cannot do justice to the wondrous charm of New South Wales scenery, which, in many places, combines the grandly romantic with sylvan beauty ina fashion which wound delight the eye of an In the writings of visitors who have not had time to become acquainted with the real attrac- tions of the Australian landscape, we fre- artist in search of the picturesque. up appearance of the country, the absence of herbage and the want of variety in the foliage of the forest; but tuere are periods when the same may be said of English scenery. During a considerable part of the year, save on the great plains of the in- terior, the grass is as bright and green as in an English park, while the rich profus ion of native flowers, of every size and hue, testifies to the luxuriant character of the soil. A trip up the Paramatta or Lane Cove rivers, near Sydney, is suggestive of the appearance of the Thames above Rich mond, but the Australian riverside scenery is more varied and picturesque.—Australia Notes, Rims, Sleigh Runners, Dashers, A splendid lot of Woodwork and American Hickory. Special low prices in ightly used. it na Lo, Every amount of ONE DOLLAR OR MORE i wiil receive a handsome thermometer. quently find allusions to the brown, dried Call cakes. What’s the time? KNOW! EDGE Brings comfort and essai ond ends 3 personal enjoymrn The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy ’ife more, with expenditure, by more pr aptly dapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, wil! attest the value to nealth of the pure liquid iaxative principles embraced in the t when remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is duc to its presenting the form most acceptab’s and pleas- ant to the taste, the refreshing and tru'y beneficial Ha ie of @ per ative 3 effects ually cleansing tho system, ling colds, hea — urine constipation. giver 1 Batisfaction 4o millions and met ; wit h the approval of the medica] rause it acts on the Xid- aoa Bowels with fect lax- Le hes and fevers ut weak id it is pe Heetly free from } nable substar:c ‘erg is ior se xle by watched all } n the ’ wi h Syn } great care, ; them. Eve wists 75 granting the appearance of these stars to | facty ry t > bottles, bué it is manu y the Californi ‘, Whose naz is also the name, Syrup of ¥ igs, d being well ered oo will mot 4 PagTO OF THE BABY TO SEND TO GRANDPA, ls What You Want For Christmas. GEO. H. COOK HIKES TO TAKE Photos of i drug: 1a Fig ae inted on ry the Children. BRING THEM | AT ONUE. CORNER QUE IN & & “GRAFTON STS., r Apothecaries’ Hall. _ nov26 —m w wf & wy ly THERMOMETERS. ee I Will give Away TO MY A Few Dozen Reliable Trermometers CUSTOMERS a purchaser of goods to the as they will go like ho PELOPLE’S DRUGGIST. George E. Hughes, Apothecaries Hall, Desbrisay’s Corner. Dec 15—mon wed fri & wy 6m wholesale lots, R. B. NORTON & CO., CITY HARDWARE STORE. They Don't Like Corn, It is truly a-maizing thing, this Euro pean indifference to corn. The people eat somg such queer things over there that one would think that corn would seema mighty blessing. In the course of two long journeys over various parts of Europe we have never but once found the cereal, and that was at a hotel almost entirely patron ized by Americans, and kept Ly a man who bad lived in America, in Paris. We were talking of corn to arm Englishman this summer. And,” said he, the States?” Charlottetown, Dec, 21, 1894—tu fri ce For Christmas Se ee “do you really eat it in ‘ i i ‘ tt" . ” Sets of Carvers, Game Carvers, Spoons, Dessert and;| ‘ " Aegan ; Tl, ‘ alk ‘7, eee Pe : . ‘ “We only feed it to animals.” Table Cutlery, Silver Knives and Forks, Razors, Razor| oo)". you treat your animals bet Strops, English Pen and Jack Knives, Scissors in cases and ne ee fi ae ‘ cy . He paused for a minute. by the pair, Christy’s Carving Knives, Bread, Cake and| pJi'ine. sait he, “in what way do you Paring Knives, Children’s Sets. Peerless ‘Lamp Stoves, Table | eat it?” : “On the ear— Mats, Fire Sets, Chopping Bowls and Knives, Fancy Coal] «the ear: On, fancy. How strange!” Vases, Coal Hods at 25c , Apple Corers and Slicers, Wringers, And he looked quite shocked.—Roches- a , ‘ er Post-Express. Sleigh Bells, Granite Ware, and last. but not least. Acme 4 j , shad How a Swan Can Fight. writes; Club Skates. Don’t you think that there is something in the list that would make Xmas very happy to someone _ besides yourself. Just try and we can do the right thing for you DD. M. RICHARDS & CO. A correspondent Yesterday (Sunday) morning some hundreds of vis- itors to Waterlow Park, Highgate, wit- nessed a curious and somewhat exciting ficht. A ferocious wire-haired terrier was rash enough to attack the cygnets in the upper lake, but, though victorious for the moment, he was compelled to beat a hasty retreat as soon as the old swans put in an appearance. The two old birds and the Ch’town, Dec. 19, 1894—m w f The Beys who Please the People. four cygnets then lined out in battle array, : aud the dog returned to the charge. Each time he made an attack he was sent back = a —————$—$—$————— : : : , howling with pain, but the birds did not follow him to the bank. When this mimic war had lasted about half an hour, two of the park-keepers came upon the scene, aliasso was made and eventually, amid the plaudits of the crowd, the dog was caught and taken to the police station,— London Daily News. An Island for Turtles. S ' a is said that he OF f the West India 13 We have a number of pairs of Laced) , 1's tat onc ofthe West tnaia is Boots, medium and heavy, good Skating} :2,0t s'ci gon a cuormons size Boots, our own make. Will clear them out] °2,, sis bese always fuied The at a big reduction for cash, -Call carly and | toc, 82 Mt ‘ntreauently attack the secure a pair, Boots, Rubbers and Overshoes, all kinds sellin low. Ordered work a specialty, all kinds promptly done, OT WHAT WE SAY, but what Hood's Sarsaparilla Does, that tells the story of its merit and success Remember HOOD’S CURES. Repairing of fined.” The classes at Terpsichore Hall will be re-opened for the remainder of the season On Monday the 7th inst.. at the musie for piano and violin will be opened Charlottetown, Dee, 12, 1894—dy The Relisble Hoot and Shee Dealer, f same day. dan, 3 2. re ILL A DOSE. elicate women find ggg 7 be _ lhustrated pasagh'e = : nail for 2% cts, in GMNSOD £ COME If you have a Cough it is time you were taking GRAY’S SYRUP , RED ' SPRUCE GUM THE OLD STANDARD CURE FOR COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA and all LUNG AFFECTIONS, Gray's Syrup has been on trial for more than 60 years and the verdict of the people is that tt in the best remedy known. 28c. and M@«. Sold everywhere. KERRY WATSON & CO. Paeprzisrens MONTREAL. ARS@N PILLS Make New, Rich Blood! pilis were a wonderi ai discovery No other: ke ae in the wo Ii manner of disease. T..¢ information around each oz is worth ten times ut abvut them, and you will always.be thankful Ung They expel all ix mpurities from the Wl) positively cure or relieve the cost of a box of pills Fine fres « using them A sent five Coens 51.00." DR L House St. Deetom, Mass The Big Rush Is Op —_A T—— HASZARD & MOORE'S OUR STOCK OF HOLIDAY FANCY GOODS Is Going at a Sixty Mile Clip. AND GET SOMETHING ont | of our CHOICE STOCK at such a low “On with the dance, let joy be uncon- oli oe Cas A | e H. BELL, Po was tent alee ie HASZ ARD& MOORE ONLY VISIBLE FOR A MOMENT. A Cannen Which Helivers Its Vire and | Then Disappears te Be Reloaded Ar I i I i { Z lisant ¥ ‘ ‘ | = ii . there I) ur I ? List is io led if theories that, if right Lin 1 two of its poiats ren lin Ss, 7 ti w t ’ 1 ext \ f t +} tle wit il! A | des« © 4 Tine inn thie gun je i ia be ends of two levers, which 1 turn are mounted at their centres on two hv: rnlic uuffing cylinders, which are placed one on cach side of the top of the carriag The ther ends of these levers « arry the counterweight, a mass of metal weighing 37,000 pounds, placed in the centre of the earriage, carrving with them the trun nions of the supporting levers ard raising the counterweight, which is held in i elevated position by a system of pawls ai ratchets. When the counterweight is r lensed it throws therear ends of the gun bearing levers forward and upward. Th buffing cylinders are drawn forward ove their stationary of the carriage arms, whose sliding blocks which move in circula vrooves, and which may be raised or low ] ered to give the desired elevation When the discharge occurs the force of recoil throws back the upper ends of the ‘vers, Which in turn force the cylinders te yew rear end of the carriag the counterweight taits original position where it is caught and held by the pawls gun nor any part of the carriage is exposed above the protecting parapet except for the instant and ratchets Neither the of firing The extreme elevation is 15 de grees; the depression, 9 degrees it is calculated that two-thirds of the force of the recoil comes up in the hydraulic eylin ders, the other third being used in raising rounds were the counterweight Ten fired from itin fourteen minutes and nine nds, the most rapid firing of any xun known. The shell is575 pounds. A non commissioned officer and eight handle the gun. the other day. teen sec: <plosion was deafening, and the ifter down it came to its orig ith the same gentle and zraceful mo tion, as if it were a mere toy being hand! ed by a girl STORY OF “OLD IRONSIDES.” lfow the Stirring Verses Came to Be Writ- ten by Oliver Wendell Holmes. “Old Ironsides,”’ Dr. Holmes’ most stir ring lyric and the one which brought him recognition as a poet, was first printed in In 1820 the frigate fmany the Boston Advertiser Constitution, the conquering hero o a sea fight, lay at Charlestown navy yard, condemned by an unsentimental depart ment, to be destroyed as no longer sea worthy. however, his legal studies had been aban ‘doned and he was living quietly at home, It was in the interval between his desertion of the uncertain of his future occupation. «w and his resolve to study medicine that “Old Ironsides” was written. man’s mind was filled with enthusiasm for the achievements of our navy, and that its most famous vessel should be chopped up like any unhallowed wood naturally provoked and galled him. The feelings which the action of the department aroused in him found spontaneous expression in the poem. There was nothing deliberate according to the Boston Post: it was wholly impromptu I'o the best of his recollection, he says, he wrote itonascrap of paper with a lead pencil while standing one day before the tireplace in the old house at Cambridge And then, without dreaming of the great popularity it would win, or of how effectual its protest would be, he sent it off to the Advertiser, Where it appeared in the issue of Thursday, Sept. 16. Asit gave eloquent voice to the sentiment of the w habs country, its success was both sudden and universal The poem was copied with applause from paper to paper, while in Washington ji was struck off on handbills and distributed through the city. The grand result was preservation with honor for the Constita tien about its composition, Piain Force of Character. It is neither by his intelligence nor his talents, says Max O’Rellin the Revue dx Paris, that John Bull has created the im mense British empire; it is by force of character than 400,090,000 people scattered over the earth, to widen it every day, without func- tionaries, with a handful of soldiers, and more often with volunteers, is wonderful, it must be acknowledged And, at pres it, 1 can affirm that nota single colony eauses John Bull & Co. the least appre hension. A magistrate and a dozen police men administer and hold in respect dis tricts larger than five or six French de partments Justice is meted out to the natives as impartially as to the colonists All these young most complete liberty nationalities enjoy the political and so ‘ ial. If l have not succeeded in proving, in spite of their thousand and one whims. the Anglo-Saxons are the only people in the world who are perfectly free I have wasted my time and yours, dear readers, Theve are many people in Britain who imagine that the future reserves for the British empire a con federation having its centre in London If. during all my travels among the Anglo Saxons of the whole world. I have ac quired a deep conviction it is that the colonies will never accept the realization of this dream. Each weald want to pre e:ve its individuality and nationality Moreover, none of them have the least desire to be comprised in the quarrels Britain might have with any European nation. They will semain branch estab lishments of the firm of John Bull & Co = or they will be inde ndent. Of the Dutch settlers in Africa M. Blouet says: “The Boers are farmers and hunters and nothing else Ignorant, bigoted, backward, they do not change their ideas any more than they change their linen. They are hospitable, dirty, brave and lazy They have much religion and very few scruples; they are satisfied to live like their ancestors and ready to die the day their independeuce is menaced. Johannes burg will absorbthe Transvaal; the apathy of the Boers will have to give way before the ever-increasing activity of the British. The Transvaal is destined to become an Anglo-Saxon republic, which will one day form part of the free United States of South Africa,” i Warning to Women, Lalies who appreciate the high quality Z of Priestlev’s name is stamped on every unknown mark “The Var- has been used the second t tive yards. Instances are not where Priestley’s trade nished Board ” time with inferior goods wrapped upon i “IT propese,” began the client exclaimed, partners now.—Dal)las News. 30 days clearance sale. got to go. fig cost only.—Prowse Bros whic tinued its use, having taken three bottles did, and enjoy perfect rest at nig much pleasure in recommending Hood’s Sarsa parilla.”’ pistons to the front end At the same time the breech end of the gun is carried up by steel upper ends are pivoted to the sun, and whose lower ends are pivoted to and raise FOF eR ce men can A reporter saw it tested When the bar released the ratchet the gun rose in the air with an ease and grace that was astonishing. The instant inal position evening at 7} Store, Queen Street. Crockeryware, Glase- jan2 eod tf — ‘ Se em tt Broke en in Health That Tired Feeling, Constipation and P Pain in the Back ‘ppetite and Health Restored ky Hood’s Sarsaparil C. I. Hood & ¢ I {25s with a general t t pain in the back, t I< only little rest at count of t and had no: ee te whate $s tl i in my limbs th t I gave out be if ‘ one. I tried a great m lat rar . was g er but did not get any permanent relief from 2 Hood’s=* Cures source until, upon recommendation cf a frix I pu irchase: ia bottle of Hood's Sarsapar made me fee] better at once. I have « © Feel Like a New Man. Ihave a good ¢ appetite , feelas strong as ever I CHARLES STEELE, with Erie Pre- serving Co., St. Catherine’s, Oaterio. Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient, yost easy in action. Scld by all druggists. 2 iff £ 4 Art ‘ of never forgetting is acquired by ‘earning te remember the richt thing at the right time. For instance, snould you have any uneasiness at the stomach at any time, : think of Adams’ TUTTI FRUTTI. It gives imme- diate and permanent relief. OA OL ED II tt See that no imitation is palmed off on you. CHARLES &. THORNE, Practical Plumber, mas and Sanitary Engineer. Having for a number of years worked in the United States with an experienced Plumber, will now furnish first-class work and jobbing of all kinds at short notice. rESTIMONIAL oa ent Johnson, Esq.. Druggist, Revere Hotel. All orders left at REV E te E HOTEL. _oet3i—dv 3m eed £UCT ION SALE. The Anetion Sale will be resumed this o'clock at P. Monaghan’s ware, Groceries and Faney Goods, wil! be offered without reserve, C. 1 MORRISON, Auctioneer. Dr. Holmes was then a youth of “1. He had been graduate’ from Harvard the year before and had spent some time in the study of law. At that moment, The young ro maintain an empire of more deliberate old lawyer who called around to see a young w dow on business, when his vivacious “I accept.” They are Everything has Cost is no object This sale It is Really Equal to an ny Imported -—) , “Take my Sen and re | } Insist on Getting this a\\ | 10 ese or oke for F Goirs Ere fe Mowraen | Gratelul—Comlorting EPPS'S GOGOA BREAKFAST—SUPPER. “By a thorough knowledge of the nat- ural laws whic y govern the operatione of ligestion and nutrition, and by a careful ap yplic ation of the prope rties of well-select ed Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for breakfast and supper a delicate ly flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors’ bills. such articles of diet that a constitutios It is by the judicious use of may be gradually built up until shong enough to resist every tendency to diseuse, Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating ar<und us ready to attack wherever there isa weak point. We may escape many a tacal shaft by keeping ourseives wel! for fied by pure 'b lood and a proper] ly pour sh- d frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or m Jk. Sold ouly in packets, by Grocers, labelied thus, JAMES mere & CO., Lt > ome c Cemists, Lond : Mee nd, ‘Don’t fame that when you buy Scott's Emul- sion you are not getting a secret mixture containing worthless or harmful drugs. Scott’s Emulsion cannot be sec- ret for an analysis reveals all there is in it. Conseque ntly the endorse- ment of the medical world means something. Scott’s Emulsion Overcomes a promctes the making of § olid Flesh, and gives Vital Strength, 1: has no equal as acure for Cou igh: »Co Bronchitis, Weak Lunes, Serofula, Anaemia, Eaciation, and ‘ Wasting Vises: of Chiidren. Scott & Bowne, Geiievilie. Ali Druggisis. 5Gc. & $1. REVERE 4)fE L (Formerly Rocklin House.) This centrally located Hote!, which is within five minutes’ walk of Reilwa Depot, has been i painted and renovated. water, and possesses the finest bath roome in any Hotel ate. Coach meets ail (rains thoroughly cleaned, Is fitted with hot in the city. Terms moder- P. 8. BROWN, Proprietor septi9—dy 6m wy I vr , BS gem Hae 7 F ” y TE SR ens a rs = com Nes emma eee ~ / S 0 rae | shee F ry