a ee CALENDAR FOR MARCH, isos. . . * . E VW S ~ rt VA ‘ = et $ . PTION ‘ a1 ~ 1 2 a or ~ KS . are at ‘ I . : : 1 se Fairs, I aars ‘ serted witl 4 16 cents pe ‘ ; I ; : a , nm ; | a ha mig sers W li I - ; } ‘ ar t ¥ J Ma KR { “ gt k Road s ~ I s . t ~ s N Sta i. Railway amd } v 4 Bookstore, Sum- H w . i A 4 i.s8 G. 3 \ ES ES The Wee -kly Examiner | from the | Writes s ry Friday morning Pr olis tee it is made ap of matter ¥ ; ed in the Daily editions, and ts « aper nteresting 4 I r Tat WEEKLY Exam. | part of Canada or the ‘ ry ur A gra . 1¢ Scale as given i i ¥ EXAMINER. DOCTOR DORSEY, | Physician and Surgeon. | Gradua f I M rf sident {omy and i I ‘ Hospits rk City. OFFICE N Side Queen Square i sf POST OFFICE wf King and Queen ROBERT BEAIRSTO COMMISSION MERCHANT AND AUCTIONEER. GOOD REFERENCES Queen Street, Che-'attetowr Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS ence LANE-----------LONDON ANADA BY REPRESENTED IN ¢ J.A.MORRISON, ¢ : dl s KG — wC ie wy wei | The Greatest | Rheumatic and Neuralgia Cure | f the Age RY HOUSEHOLD R jw" PAIN CURE ((BOTH INTER -RNAL AND Ex aD Sa ~ YJ NLY CY - | in registered letter, HALIFAX ee See en eee HE DAILY EXAMINER. rERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, NEW SERIES! CHARLOTT STOW N, P. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, = The Magic City HaveiYoufseen:Part 7.? Cut out Coupon on Page 1. | tuation marks ( i 3k ance small letters, figures and all. ae machine. » Ribbon. Prints capitals, marks~71 in | Writes just like . | Ne Shift Keys. the type Lae | Prints on flat surface. Easy Compact, Built solid from order | THE AMERICAN $8.00 Typewriter. 4 This is a well-made, practical machine, writing ca ipitals, small letters, figures, and pune- 71 in all) on full width paper, just ‘Ti ke a $100 instrument. its kind ever ole ‘red at a popular price for w hich the above claim | [tis not a toy, but a typewriter built for and capable of REAL work. | the large machines sometimes become in e xpert hands, it is still at least as rapid jand has the advantage of such simplici ity that it can be understood and maste red We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. to understand—! Weighs only four pounds- takes up but little and Capital and lower It is the first of can be truthfully made. While not as rapid as as the pen, almost at. a | earned in 5 minutes portable. room. -most simple; can’t get out of case keyboard ailke- | Writing always in sight. easily mastered. ) Corrections and insertions easily made. More “ margin play”? for the small letters | Take s any width of paper or envelope up which do mest of the work. | to si inches Takes good letter-press copies money order or certified check. | Packed securely in handsome case and expressed to any address on receipt of price, $8.00, | We guarantee every machine, glad to answer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the “ Yost.” | and are IRA CORNWALL, D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlottetown, Provinces. dec20 General Agent forMaritime FIRE INSURANCE. Your patronage by the following great Fire Companies }is respectfully solicited : The Royal Ins. Co. of Liverpool, The Lendon & Lancashire Ins. Co. of Livepro>l. The United Fire Ins Co of Manchester The Phenix Ins. Co. of Brooklyn. These KNORMOUS MONETARY STRENGTH, their prompt and liberal /settlement of losses. | JOHN MACEACHERN, jan] AGENT FOR PF. E. ISDAND. Don't Talk! | command noted for Companies and are but call and inspect our New Parlor, Drawing Room Tad e Bedsteads, and odd pieces of Furniture. and Bedroom Suites, Cr irs, Don't Listen! but remember that we sell the Cheapest, to give the best at JOHN NEWSON’S, the Cheapest on P. E. Island. Quality of goods guaranteed. No trouble to show goods | JOHN NEWSON. lottetow n, Ji January 4 4, 1894. Flace a Cake S OWN SOAP in your linen are dctermined every time Furniture Store of B‘BY’S drawer, and it will impart to your clothes the delicate aroma of fine 4 French Pot Pourri in a modified degree. The longer you keep the Soap before using it the better. + Beware of imitations. ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO. Montreal, SOLE MANUFACTURERS THE jan6—-ev sat tf bargains , “THE LOYAL CIRCLE OF and | Li vt k for Queen Street KING'S DAUGHTERS INTEND GIVING A Musica! & Literary Entertainment IN—- ST, PAUL'S SCHOOLROOM, | ON- | Thursday, Avril 5.) Remember the date. Particulars later This is the heel of the GRANBY RUBBER. this pattern on the heel when you buy a Rubber or Overshoe. It guar- antees a perfect article. Granby Rubbers Wear Like Iron. Ask your dealer for them. mehld The brick store on Queen’ Street, lately occupied by E. H. Norton & Co. Apply at office ot trustees Connolly Estate, eod tf—jan25 PE 2 4 FN v: # Sa) “ase KX NOWLEDCE brings comfort and improvemeat and yda to personal enjoyment when hitly used. The many, who live bet- than others and etjoy life more, with oxponditure, by more promptly lapting the world’s best products to he needs of physical being, will attest he value to nealth of the pure liquid axativa principles embraced in the enwody, Syrup of Figs. lis excellence i is due to its presenting n the fort most acceptab' 2 and pleas- i$ to the taste, the refrezhing and ru!y eneficial properties of a perfect lax- ive 3 effectua lly cleansing the system, es yeti ug colds h eg and fevers .d perman entyy constipation. $ a ne Satisfac piillions and eS with the approval of the medical fession, because it acts on the Kid- ya Liver and Bowels withort weak- ing them and it is perfectly free from ry objoct:onable substar.ce. Syrup cf Vigs is for sale by all drug- sin. T5e. bottles . but it is manu sure@ dy the Ca lifornia Fig Syruy o. Ouly, whose name is printed on every “age, clso the same, Syrvp of Fizs, d being well informed, you will not cent pny substitute if offered. W. R, Watson, Druggist, Island. Charlotteuwa iymwit Unlike the Dutch Process GA No Alkalies ay | Other Chemicals are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’S BreaklastCocoa which is peters pure and soluble, Ithas morethan three times HI the strenyth of Cocoa mixed be With Starch, Arrowroot or > eo Sugar, aud is far more eco- namical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY DIGESTED. Seld by Grocers ever everywhere. W.BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass PERFECT MANHOOD! How attained-—how re> stored—how Ordinary works on Phy- siolegy will not tell the dectors can’t or 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 write for-our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), ERIE MEDICAL CO,, Buffalo, N.Y. LINIMENT yneike ANY OTHe As much Tor “ae Im 1810 Originated by an Oid Family Pnysician. Think Of It. cinerea ration alter Generation have Every ee a vu ffe have a bottle in nis sate caishak Rheumatism, Eve ry Sufferer Tom, S*cemaien. Nervous Headache, Diphtheria, Coughs,Catarrh, Bron. chitis, Asthma, Cholera-Mor! bus, Soreness in Bo lyor Limbs, Stiff Joints or Strains, Will tind in this cia Auodyne relief and speedy cure. Should have Every Mother ia eget pont, Saeeeete, Colle, Cuts, ee, Cra a [ore iable to occur in ery, f ‘amil, without notice. Delars may sane a life. feves —y: fA nts like Son ir Eiveconantl bi. Sedona pal ot MARCH 21, AFTER HAVING BEEN KEPT ~_- UP ALL NIGHT With that COUGH, if you do not want to repeat the experience, buy a bottle of the OLD STANDARD REMEDY Gray’s Syrup of Red Spruce Gum The best Cough Cure in the world. Sold everywhere 25 cts. a bottle. KERRY WATSON & CO. Prornictons MONTREAL. vin ig NORWEGIAN Sp CO}DE Waa Oo! Lt WITH HYPOPHOSPHITES Pala A crea taste .ike others. In big bottles 5Oc. and 81.0 having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. Single Copies Two Cents 1894. CLOTHES OF A QUEEN, - VOL 33. - SUPERIOR FOWLS | Advantages of Raleieer res ¢ Bred Chickens | HER MAJESTY TAKES A WARM INTER- | EST IN THOSE SHE WEARS. Their Effect Also off Much Concern to the Royal Lady What Hecomes of Her 01d Clothes.-Her Caps and Her Koote—The Dressing Room, | The recipient of many of Queen Vic- * ria'y cast otf garmeuts is Clary, a little caper in Windsor. “Clary is the personal friend of Queen | # i | time and upon asmaller amount than the latter. Vie ‘tor ‘ia’s head dr sser. It is not a Fierdship to be Gesjised, since to the tit dresser fails e 1 bier Majesty's cast oF at p tre, sine cap or night As re reas more tha: » ODCe, | the head-dresser is well worth ‘“eulti vating.” Queen Victoria has very pret ty feet. They are smaller and dyintier han the feet of any of her children > he nlwaya wears an | congress paiter, and her {ia the keeping of the : tootmakers at Windsor r-oral, as well as the conr! London. Likewise have the provincial irapers the block upon which is fashion lel Her Majesty's caps. © This block is ace to fit her head clocely, and Bal uarter of a century the style has scar ‘we variol The caps are always made fiine wi.te crepe lisse. The lisht fraine serlged with five wisie silk wire Japon Lie!: three little crepe lisse frills ar wed, 10 meet in the baci K tWu jong nie streamers Cuntily hemstiiched bs aud. ‘The streamers tall to the waist ine, When completed the whole must nt weigh more than three ounces ‘The Queen or Jers these c ap 8 oOZzeéill Vv th Six dozen caps genera! Vy : suffice rasingle sojonrn at Windsor Castle ue took four dozen with her on her lasi it to Grease. Six dozen night dresses ‘¢ crumpled during a Windsor visit ever is the same nightdress worn a cond time, even after laundering bo gets them? Ah, that’s the head *sser's secret. nes a fire trade in royal rubbish Her Majesty's mantles are ace after the same model. They num rsix for winter and six for r. Black materials of various de rees of weight and warmth make the winter wraps, while those reserved for sainmer are made of rich white silk, | :#intily lined and timmed with four or } six bands of narrow black braid or cord, ind finished with deep black silk fringe ‘ne white mantles are worn when Vic oria takes her daily drive in the vicinity ‘f Windsor, where her presence ex<ites little attention from the townsfolk. meee so democratic is our ruler that he not unfrequently drives out through he stable door, to the chagrin of curi ous strangers always congregated at the main entrance to the castle grounds. The coachman never knows which direction she wishes to follow. That caprice is confided solely to the single ontrider that accompanies her in these i rural drives, On the occasion of the opening of the institution founded in London in com- nemeration of Her Majesty's jubilee, the Duke of Connaught delivered in per- son to the provincial draper the order for Her Majesty’s bonnet and manties Not until the night before the auspic- ions event, however, did the Duke con- fess to the Queen that he had ordered the neck of the mantle to be trimmed with ostrich feather trimming. The Queen was much disturbed. She retired before the mantie put in ana | pearance at the castie, but she ie not sleep, “‘If there are feathers on my | cloak,” she fina’ly announced to the | maid, with truly feminine petulance, ‘I will not wear itto- morrow. The people | Will say, ‘There's the Queen! She is fut- ' ter than ever! Needless to add, the | feathers were discarded. Royalty suffers. as much anxiety in preparing for public functions as Joes its brother of the common clay. There is as much excitement in the royal household in preparing for a state func tion as in the modest establishment. Everybody tries on her dresses and hats and comes in for Her Majesty's inspec | tion days before the event takes place. The effect each is likely to produce on | the public beholder is weighed and con- sidered as caretully as the versonal like | or dislike of the wearer. he members | ofthe royal family, it is refreshing to know, are very human in their dress re- hearsals, and the brothers and sisters are not above personal bantering. ‘I know Beatrice will cry,” the broth- | ers were wont to say, and the Princess | of Battenberg. being very nervous. not | infrequently dissolved into tears on the “aiways eagtpn ctmenenecres acteiccnminearaaanemananseaiibataptetiat greenies | spot. PNext to Her Majesty’s sleeping cham ' ber is the dressing-room, in which, on !long, low shelves, her mantlee, cans and shoes are laid. They make a curious picture—a study in blae* end white Two maids undress the queen and put her to bed, Before she gets into bed they heat and spread between the Irish iinen sheets a white bianket, part wool, part cotton, and bound with white silk | ribbon, with the royal arms embroidered | in the corner. Queen Victoria reclines upon the blanket until the body is thor- oughly heated. The maids then with- draw the blanket, and the finest product of Ireland's loom embraces the _— of England and the Empress of India. ; ** Gone, Sir, Gone," Landseer, the wonderful anitaal paint- er, often told an amusing story, of which he was the hero, to illustrate that a man must go from home to learn the news about himself. One day while walking in London he saw in the window of a picture-dealer a good specimen of his own work. Step- io inside be asked the name of the painter. The salesman said the picture wasa genuine Laniseer, and one of the best he ever painted. Taking up the picture and critically examining it, Landseer asked if the dealer would warrant it. “Most certainly,” replied the sales- man, ‘‘and what is more, he will never paint another.” ‘How's that?’ asked the painter. “Gone, sir, gone,” answered the man, putting .bis finger to his forehead; “gone, sir, completely off his head, and not like ever to recover.” Lanaseer hurried ont, that he might have a good laugh without betraying his identity. —-Household. Duke’s Money. Ducats were originally duke's money, first made in the Duchy of Apuia in 1140. They Have Artificial Wood Now. Artificial wood for furniture, roofs, {nsulators, etc., is now made by burning uiagnesite together with wood, shavings, sawdust, cotton, hair, er wool. 228+ o> Wearing Low Shoes. Wearing iow shoes inthe fall simply invites a cold. If you take cold, then take Hawker’s Tolu and Wild Cherry Balsam ; it is a sure cure for coughs, colds, Hearee- ness, Bronchitis, etc., “Sold every where, only 25 cents. cine sas ---—- Now is the time to get your supply of crockery as we are seiling off cheaper than ever to make room for new goods to arrive as soon as navigation opens. The cheap crockery store.—W. P. Colwill § feb 6 dy&wky 3wke, | tonot understand the ‘alty never wears the | ~—Improve the Flock. While it is probably not best for per- sons just starting into the poultry busi- —NO. 210 Mr. J. W. Dyhimen st. George, New Brunswick. After the Grip se Strength, _No Ambition ness to invest large sums in producing | Mood’ s Sarenematite Gave Perfect highly-bred fowls they should get the best their means will afford and endeavor to improve the breeding of the stock each year. However, many poultry raisers (especially inexperienced ones) es fess advanta f pure bred fowls over those of common blool. in the main, the advantage of thorough- Lred stock over the common hies in the ability of the former to develop in less of food The Jersey cow will, in B given tuuwe, turn a certain amouanc of food into a great deal more butter fat than will any ec mnou COW, an 1 the Shorthorn breed of cattle will make far | more beef from a certainamount of food } time. old-fashioned | last is | provincial | paker in | | Velop several and in a | than any common stock, and do it in less The same rule applies to thorough bred poultry, says a writer in Western Poultry News. Each breed has well known characteristics. A Leghorn hen, given the sarne amount of food as a com mon one, will lay more eggs. Then the Leghorn and other pure-bred hens de months sooner than the common fowls. The Langshan, Ply mouth Rock and Wyandotte fowls ail develop very quickly and at an early age Health. The following letter is from a well-:nown merchant tailor of St. George, N. B “C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass | “Gentiemen—I am glad to say that Hood's Sarsaparilla and Hoou’s Pills have done me a | gr oni of G0: . I had a severe attack of the rip in the v and after getting over the fev rer i did not sec to gather strength, and had n Ja:mnbition. Ho a's Sarsaparilla proved to be st what I needed he results were very a otiet actory, mid LT recommend this medicine to all whe are afiicied with rheumatism or other Hood's =»*Cures affiietions caused a isen and poor blood, | always keep Hood’s Sarsaparilla iu my house have nice pinup bocies, nicely feathered in, and make the nicest kind of early broilers. They mature early, lay double the num! er of eggs that a cominon hen will, and when turned of for market will | bring & lore money than the common | ones, Wi reat at 59 cents a bushel and egz¢s + 5 centsa dezen, there are hens which will turn a bushel of wheat | into ten dozen eggs worth $1.50, thus increasing the profits on the grain three- | foli. These facts 2 been demon strated time and and it seems It is suspected that she | | ed get a Leghorn cockerel summer | | get a | highest degree. | cock terter. raiik nonsense to coutinne raising scrub chickens vear after vear without in any way en = avoring to pe the quality of the flock. <A trio of fowls and a few dozen evs are e b to st. in with. Or 1rOug the flock can Ar improved by mating commonthens with a ~ wd th oronghbred male. If egws are the clnef thing ~vant- If eggs and flesh both are desired it will be best to Langshan, Plymouth Rock or Wrandotte male The average size of the members of the flock can be greatly increased by mating the hens with Brahmas or Cochins. In comparison with the amount of the investment, there is no other stock that pays as well as ponltry, and it possesses the additional advan tage that with a can have as good as the best, while it takes considerable money to buy fine zattle and horses. The reason why some are disappointed with thorough bred fowls is because they don't give them as good treatment as they would horses and cattle. The small care be stowed on the fowls will give a greater profit, and they are deserving of it. The | value of eggs and poultry sold in the markets of this ccuntry the past year was three hundred million dollars, and yet eges were imported to meet the de man Does 3 Your “Cow Pay > There are thousands of cows kept for the dairy and for domestic use which do not pay for their keep, and should as soon as possible be sold to the butcher. As long as this class of stock is tolerated to a large extent the same kind of stock will be perpetuated by breeding from inferior animals. By a constant. weed- ing out and by a careful selection of the best to be fousd the standard will be rapidly raised, and the profits of the dairy will be greatly enhanced. The oo now arises as to the most per- ect method cf testing the capacity of the cow to produce, when she is pro- vided with all the requisites of food and care. The scientists Soe provided the instrument for making the tests of per- centage of butter fat in the milk, and the one universally endorsed is the Bab- Then the milk may be weighed and an estimate made on what the cow will produce in a year, or dur ing the period of lactation. moderate capital you | . ; descriptions ACCOMPANY an luse it when I n ed atonic. We also keep lik od’ Lills on ds ant think highly of them.” J. W. Py KEMAN, St. Ge ree, New Brunswick Wood” 3 Pils : not purge, pair. or cripe. A TRIP ROUND THE WORLD re pur “ely y vegetable, and ao Sold by all drugrists, STODDARD’S fare issued PICTURES. beautiful Photo than Stoddard’s Views of Famous Places and Scenes. a . Oo more Engravings Portfolio 0: T he pictures equa) the finest photogr aphs in detail | photographs of the | } | } In testing a cow it is found that the fourth month after calving she gives milk near the average quality for the | whole year. Make two tests, fifteen days apart, and in each test use the milk of eight consecutive milkings and the average of these two tests will give the approximate average of the quality for the year. By knowing the amount of milk given during the year one can then 6 tty accurate estimate of the onantity of butter fate the cow gives. — Western Rural OTD D atime Animal Fertilizers. A dead animal of any kind, fish, fowl] | or beast, buried near the roots of a fruit or other tree will cause a wonderful | growth. The animal substance does not pass into the vegetable, but, being a natural and a powerful generator of electricity, increases the current that passes from the atmosphere to the earth, and thereby a large quantity of support is drawn from the atmosphere, says Foster's Weather Bureau. You can grow a good crop of potatoes on a brick pavement if moisture is retained and the | potato vines are connected with moist earth by copper wires Commercial fertilizers do not enrich the soil, do not add anything to it that is of value. The object sought in these fertilizers is to put the soil into a con dition that will enable it to conduct electricity. The electrical current — into the vegetable through its eaves, carrying with it the gross mat ter that goes to-uild up the vegetable cells, mat after that matter is deposited in the vegetable the electric current must have a conductor through which to pass to the earth Jorn out soils are poor conductors, and the acids used in the commercial fertilizers, which are little more than acids and sand, pulverize the dead soil and enliven it for a short time tood Animal Pointers. Animals have a social] nature and the domestic animals a friendly feeling for the kind hand that affords shelter and the daily supplies which add to their comfort and growth. Though the sel fish owner may have in view the prema- ture ending of the fatting carcass or the rpetual servitude of the patient beast Re should be humane and kind in the If you are out of pa tience kick the side of the barn or your self but never the dumb animal which is at your mercy. Thisis not ouly hu mane but it pays in more ways than ong. Make pets of the animals and they will be much more easy to handle and bring much better returns in the way of profit. Let the indifferent farmer try it and see what an elevating influence it a ere on himself ae _well as the stoc . Puttner’s Emulsion contains neither Quiuine, strychnine, nor other harmful drug. Its ingredienta are wholesome ani- mai and vegetable substances, and it may be taken indefinitely without dangerous re- | sults. eeeeee REAL MERIT is the character | istic of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It cures even after other preparations fail. Get Hoed’s and ONLY HOOD’S. | ———— $90 USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY the greaa Blood and Nerve Remedy. ~ 1a BS Rate [PET Chanmiagis written explanations and each photograph The pictures are 8x10 in size. Single Fame subjects would cost $1.00 each. They are bound upin covers, and are exactiy the same size as our famous World’s Fair Portfolios. Sample copy may be seen at this office. This series of pictures is issued in 16 parte. Each part will contain 16 photo- rraphs at the feast. The price for each partis 10 cents, and an Examiner cou- pons must be sent with the money. HOW T0 GET THESE PICTURES. ee Stoddard’s Photographs Parts 123 & 4 Now Ready. _ out this coupon, and send with 10 ( sto THE EXAMINER OFFICE, and the P. art wanted will be delivered to you. Or- ders from the country filled by return mail. No charge for postage. The Examiner Pub. Co. March, 1894. THE MAGIC CITY. This series of World’s Fair Photographs will be published in 16 parts. Single parts cost 10 cents each. Coupons must also be sent for each part wanted. a, Pon FA 7 og 9 oY tee wu ke 2 nt xc oiled ey me 4 &,. BB #) = 23 8 S a wt ; §) S4a: fi ¥ = f= & ; — Fit: > f |e og u fh <S & FF = be: ee ee “ S. 2 ue $. = so; . = ¥o O ian «CO OE K « —- . a ® Ss ~~ Se 2 §, = , ak wf => Sa 2 4 | § 8 a os ax ¢ | => @ 3385 Ss aan . o a & iki & x S ZFS ¥ Pad oe tee re x = 2 Hei B & am ois 1 2S Us FE 5 o>, sa 8 <k & Ag 4 tw Kf: MEG WO pee ee cal ‘The Examiner Publishing Co CHARLOTTETOWN. Physicians Endorse Them, and Physicians Make Them. Mr rs. eten on E. Whittemore, Headache and Catarrh. How many people suffer constantly from the above diseases, which ulti- mately lead to nervous prostration, consumption and death. Mrs. Whitte- more Says: *‘Have had headache and catarrh for years, and found no relief until [ took Skoda’s Discovery. IT have not had headache once since.” Skoda’s Discovery purifies the Blood, tones up the nerve centers and makes you well. Skoda’s Little Tablets cure constipation, headache, and dyspepsia. 35 cts. per box. Medical Advice Free. SKODA DISCOVERY 00., LTD., WOLFVILLE, W, $, For sale by all druggists. Trade eap | pried by 7 Watson; Charlottetown ae ae