PEE SS DS EOS ~ TUE DALLY EXAMINER) Tae Leapixne DatLy NEWSPAPER or P. E. Isianp, j sued every afternoon, from the of ser ate Read, ROOM pe EXAMIY ER PUBLISHING COMPANY, wad sa House Building, Queen Street. THE DAILY EXAMINER. “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. Single Oopies Two Oents NO 205 — <a, (CONTINUED FROM YESTERDAY'S EXAMINER.) GOODS OPENED TO-DAY. as nailers opening up our SPRING CLOTHING. Without Call and ask to see your testimeny to ours as to the MAKE and QUALITY of these goods. the lines enumerated below, a ee ne te tm me McKAY WOOLEN COMPANY hesitation we say that the nicest lines o and we feel The following repre- 100 Men’s Dark Tweed Suits, $ 6.50 50 “ Light Tweed Suits, 6.50 50 “ Double Breasted Dark Tweed Suits, 7.50 50 “ Double Breasted Light Tweed Suits, 8.50 50 “ Double Breasted Serge Suits, 12.50 50 “ Single Breasted Serge Suits, 12.50 25 “ Clay Worsted Coats and Vests, 12.50 25 “ Spring Overcoats, Blue. We would like to have the pleasure of showing these McKay Woolen Co., Bargain Corner. £ RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. a ? (2N ADVANCE) Ox¥ YEAR eecete Vv &ix MonTHS eooeececeneceoes 210 Jicuiilioniltaadaiiic BE BROUITEM, ..00ccccescccccecese «e+ LO | I Qne MonTH er eeseccccecccescces ctecces MOS Rent post paid to any part of C d. tk ‘ United — ee TERMS : Four Doilars a Year r * 7 ° The Weekly Examiner; === : jillian ts issued every Friday morning from tho . publishers’ office. {t is made up of matter yr which has appeared in the Daily editions, and \ OL 356 is a first-class weekly newspaper—interesting d fall ofthe latest news. INFORMATION FOR FARMERS. : ane me i ee a Prof Saunders, lirector of Experime n- | ® tai ia addressed the comm ttee On Aer ea few days ago, and gay a great deal of valuable formation con- eer sts made in growing varieties of oa eat, barley and peas He said, ac r to the retur: Wa inf ference early 14 bu + per acre be- tween the average yield at<« in Canada. an 2 is * when compared with the yield in Holland. This was a very serious estion in its bearing on the pro fits of farming, simce every bushel pe: acre ases On the averaz » of Can adamade again tothe farmers of this country, estimating the oats at an average value of « cent per pound, of $825,000 Ther were two lines of | wance open to us regard to. the | . ; : | pr \ ent of this, a: well? as of all other crops Lhe first ia better | es cern Porenge & aan | All day long we have been as bus aa] sporta : € @X¢ ee { reater | \ + . a rT = eare in the selection of seed, 89 as 0 wi READY-MADE CLOTHING we ever handled were laid on our counters to-day. eles poolidi norte He th | satisficd that you will have no hesitation in adding gave the res 8 OI + arieties of oats, a wv sown on the same day, at the Central Ex | sents only goods opened to-day hi yeritnental Farm, Ottawa, and the b:ancl, > : y nes at Nappan, N. S, Brandon, ja ov Youths’ Dark Tweed Suits, $5.60 Indian Head, N. W. T., and Agassis, B, C 50 a Dark Tweed Check Suits, 6.50 -utting lots together, yas - : i 7 Bis tisk thee onthene ik an ele 50 ae Double Breasted Tweed Suits, Dark, 7.00 60 bushels, 8 pounds per acre, and the 50 « Double Breasted Tweed Suits, Light, 7.50 eg oon pt sank dak ta dade tikes — = Double Breasted Fine Serge Suits, 9.50 bh.ca ga i@ poorest Crop in each farm = ~+ ° end those which gave ‘the best was: 54 25 “ fpring Overcoats. bushels 1 The twelve varieties which had averaged best at all the Ex~ perimental farms, and hence might be re garded as amongst the most productive } oats in the Dominion, were the following, We expect to be at the same job all day to-day and for several days to come. in the order of their average yield o eT a goods to you. An ericvan Beauty......... iseusielanes 75 16 Goluen Beauty inhetbtgeveuseednds 74 26 ES EL SE EES 21 PID... sc idtsinbids dtedaken tn 12 Wh WP IN bicedinsccnices oacae 31 Early Golden Prolific...............69 16 OR ee 67 32 Ricco a ae : eos NE oii ilist oi ceieids a ckceucs 5 ee 20 Bemeroved Lewawe. .. -.cocccececcacss 67 — Could «not get mewn meer Dodaneel ....... 6.5... 5... 65 ie census returns for L891, the average yield was 14.6 bushels, as compared with 28.6 bushels for Great Britain and 344 for Denmark. As in the case of oats, thirty- five varieties of wheat bad heen grown in each of the Experimental farms in unl form plots, all sown on the same day. The The average of the barley crop of Can gia was given as 24.7 bushels, against 35.1 in Great Britain, and 42.7 in Ho'land. The results were given of tests of the different sorts of six-rowed barley, sown last vear on test plots on all the F xperi- Se a themselves will be helped to Bargains at John Newson’s and Bedding a specialty this Parlor Suites sell at sight, The finish and prices do it. JOHN NEWSON. Charlottetown, February 14, 1896—dy aK Sp 2 aS en ed Pane) CE UL OEY Paw res average yi-ld of the whole was 29 bushels 43 poun is per acre. The average ditlerence between thoze varisties which gave the lowest yield on each farm and those thai Those | gave the highest was 20 bushels 18 Ibs. The twelve varieties of spring wheat which hai averaged the best over the whole series were as follows: Bush. Lbs. ’ : lat ceil cchacsses Set a ad Furniture White F 2: 2 Be ROE sk ndsicd ck dcdcden coven 43 Advance jpedeencen sekiibe b tdbdenene kcsedulll 18 iW awliniirbedusnivetccmeccwteured 31 49 montk. a a ee 40 Herieon Bearded.....:.......0:....0.231 22 BE I iis os estes ve ccauiaic dace 6 PN iene sav scsben pus eseutacs ie 47 Alp ia bevdeccones teense ceddensmnt x0 49 PE nse dickies ceesceens. 5 ee 32 series icles ees 9 8 With respect to wheat, erst to a {ae ee 5 i‘. Q Big Values and SmallPsisas! who wish to help Store. Bedsteads Our Chamber and The six varieties which had given the best results throughont, taking into con- sideration all the tests, were :— Rushels. Pounds. French Chevalier...... 4T 26 Canadian Thorpe......... 44 25 Danish Chevalier......... 41 6 TO idesnn cs cess 30 sce icc, 15 Prise Prolific... <..<....-40 ll HE BEST is wha: the People buy the most of. That’s Why Hood’s Sarsaparilla has the larges? sileOF ALL MEDICINES. A hatchet hearing the nameof Roberi . La Salle, the French explorer, the motto } “Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam,” and tie date 1655, was found embedded in the trunk of &tree which was cut down in gouthern Chet yygan county, Mich., a few days azo. The wood had grown completely arcvod the hatchet, and there was no sign of its presence on the outside. The date is probably that of the manufacture of the hatchet. The motto ia that of the Jesuit Fs —— mental farms. The average yield, taking} = into account the returns from al! the farms, was 43 bushels 33 poucds per acre. The six varieties of six-rowed barley which had averaged best throughout, tak ing all the results into consideration, were :— Busbels. Pounds. eh cw cs... 08 30 Blensury........ -+-48 32 . OT cle ica sos {7 2 : a 38 5 LB inc cns eanntis oo ve 43 36 Vanguard sadnetesrkoniee 23 Just Received. FENNELL & CHANDLER. Charlottetown, Feb. 28, 1796 THE St. Lawrence Sugar Refining Co., Ltd MONTREAL. order to which La Saile belonged. = een —_—— = ES Mt Man Wou'd : Write Business Letters :On Scraps of Waste Paper if he knew how cheaply : he could get nicely Priat- : ed Office Stationery, very : best paper, at very lowest ; prices, at : with no impurities whatever.” i (x) Laboratory of Inland Revenue, Office of Official Analyst, Montreal, Apri‘! 8th, 1895. “T hereby certify that I have drawn, by my ows hand, ten ssamples of the 1 LAWRENCE SUGAR REFINING CO’S. EXTRA STANDARL: GRANULATED SUGAR, indiscriminately taken from ten lots of about 3150 barn :ls each. I have, nalyzed same, and find them uniformly to contain :, 99 1» to 100 p. c. of Pure Cane Sugar (signed) JOHN BAKER EDWARDS, Ph D., ©. L., Prof. of Chemistry and Pub. Aum’ yst, Montreal The Examiner : «Job Printing Rooms, : novl9—2aw 25 N RATTENBURY, AGENT ee Ee —_ tan * Want a wife, Want a cook, Want a partner, Want a situation, Waut a servant girl, Want to eell Want to sell a house, Want to rent a house, Want to exchange anything, Wat to sel] plante or grain Want to sell groceries or drugs, Want to sell or trade anything, Want to find customers for anything, Want to sell or buy horses, pigs or catt)- - ADVERTISE IN | THE ILSZAMINER (Pee Moe gee +. |. a a farm, Pp. 0. BOX NO, 475. HL SON WAY Wholesale Wine & Vsguor Merchant ITALIAN W AREBOUSE, 248 Hollis & 45 Uppor Water Stencil iat wit HALIFAX, N. S. & C0. Ty (14) ootl Rejected by Straight Line and Mutual Companies. But now insured in both. “Should I die while I am in a position to pay my insurance premiums, my family will owe their support to Scott's Sarsaparilla. Two years ago I applied to two companies for insurance, $1000 ineach, My face was a mass of pimply blotches and my urine did not stand the test. One doctor in examining me said I could not pass, but that my trouble | was curable. He advised an aiterative i medicine, and I commenced taking Scott’s Sarsaparilla, Both companies rejected me, but four months later, after I had taken five bottles of your remedy I am thanktul to say both accepted me asa risk—one being a stock company, the other a mutual. The examiner w previously examined me, remarked “ never saw such a change in any man.” ‘ This is indorsed by Mr. J. Todd, the pylar druggist, corner Queen and ‘rawford Streets, Toronto. Scott’s Sarsaparilla builds up debili- tated constitutions, imparts strength, 2 vigor and vitality, clears and purifies the ee blood. It cures skin diseases, rheu- matism, gout, indigestion and all com- | plaints arising from poor or poisoned boo. Of all druggists, $1 per bottle. | DUNRAVEN’S MISTAKE. T be expulsion of Lord Dunraven from the New York Yacht Club wil! probably have one satisfactory result, namely, to | prevent any further British challenge for ithe America’s cup. The expulsion will ‘likely put an end to friendly relations be- ‘tween the yachtsmen on either side of the Atlantic. It will be well if this be 80, in i view of the fact that the spirit in which United States yachtsmen have defended the cup has not been the spirit of gentle- men und sportsmen, but the spirit of {bucksters grasping every possible advan- tage; a fact which has been at the bottom |of the past unpleasantness, and would continue to cause unpleasantness in the future. Lord Dunraven made the mis- take over here of thinking that what was sauce forthe American goose was sauce for the British gander. He saw the New York Yacht Club sticking like leeches to their rights, and he thought he ought to have his rights too. The New York Yacht Club has shown the blooming Bri- tisher his mistake. May the rest of the blooming Britishers see the point, and wisely leave the Awerica’s cup to the un- challenged care of the New York sharp- ers.— Ottawa Journal. BIG CLAIMS FOR A RIFLE, Dr. S. F. McClean, of Washington, Ia., who has invented an army rifle that is causing astonishment among military rmen wherever it is exhibited, left Chicago for New York a few days ago tu enter his rifle in‘o competition before a com- mittee of the state legislature which was appointed to equip the National Gaard of that state with 15,000 new guas. The in- vention has been fully patented. A single straight movement of the hand loads and fires the rifle, which has a capacity of five cartridges at present. It is filled by one movement from a cate containing tne cartridges. The new contrivance makes clogging of the rifle or disarrangement of the cartridges impossible. It is lighter than other rifles, and 750 rounds have been fired at one time to test its endur- ance and faithfulness to aim, { The Toronto Journal would like to bet a bat that England will quit Egypt—when the millenium comes. Dr. Churehill Julius, bishop of Christ ehurch, New Zealand, has appeared in public on a tricycle. Heis very uncon- ventional. Some time ago lie insisted on laying the last brick on the restored spire of his cathedral] and was hoisted up in a chair at the end of arope. He recently addressed a congregation he was visitiny as fullows: “I neversaw so much bad coin in all my life. To cffer to the church, tothe cause of God, money that the butcher or the baker would not accept shocks me. The man who would do that wants the grace of God very badly—or : three months’. Samuel Edison, father of Thomas A. Edison, the inventor, died at Norwalk, Ohio, a few days ago, after an illness of several weeks, he wa3 ninety-one years old. He was of Dutch extraction and was born at Digby, N.S. When six years of age he went to New York, and removed to Fort Gratiot, Mich., in 1855. The old man was married twice, his second wife the inventor’s stepmother surviving him. Thomas A. Edivon bas beea exceedingly Florida in the winter. “Tom is a gocd bo *,” said the old man on one occasion. “He sends me around to haye agood time.’ A cro3s suit is one that is. taken across tLe maternal lap, the small boy being in- eda the suit. — LITERARY NOTES. The March number of the Delineator is called the Great Spring Number, and is especially valuable and interesting be- cause of the early forecast it contains of spring and summer styles and materials for ladies, misses and children. The first of a series of articles on current events of interest to women, by Mrs. Frederic Rhinelander Jones, appears in this num- ber. Mra. Oliver Bell Bunce contributes an instructive article on “Perfumes aad other Toilet Preparation;” Lucia Gilbert Runkle brings to the discussion of © Liter- ature as a Profession for Women” the authority of acknowledged celebrity aa a writer, while Tillie Roome Little has a bright and helpful description of some new and pretty luncheon and German fav- ors in silk and other materials. “Mam’ Julie,” am amusing ani pathetic dialogue sketch of Southern life, introduces a new writer to readers of this magazine. In the domain of the kitchen the number is freighted with good things;-Mra. A. By Longstreet writes upon the “Chemistry of Fooar;” Helen Combes tells about an “English High Tea,” and the dishes pre- pared for it, and the regular article on “Seasonable Cookery” deals with the chafing dish and <lishes to be prepared in init. Other features include the second paper on the “Care of the Teeth,” Eina Witherepoon’s Tea Table Chat, Sara Mil- ler Kirby's Kindergarten parer, the usual notices of new books and the Novelties in lace making, knitting, ta:ting, crocheting, etc. Subscription price of the Delineator is $1.00 a year, or 15 cents per single copy. Leave your subscription with the local Butterick Pattern agency, or address the Delineator Publishiug Co., of Toronto, — Toronto, Unt, 33 Richmond St. est. Suicide is rather frequent in Denmark and it is proposedto check it by a law handing over the body of every suicide to a dissecting room. j IE ee Book and Job PRINTING ! TO BRITAIN, O, Britain, famed among the nat ‘ons Jon zg, As arbiter of her too weak to stand Against the fierce oppressor, now thy hand To help Armenia ’gainst the awful wrong That she has long been suffering from the strong And cruel grasp of Ismaili, Put forth without delay. Armenia’s cry Has risen uato Heaven. Her martyrs throng, Impatient, at the foot of God’s white throne, And call for vengeance on the murderer. Say, where’s the boasted courage thou hast shown When oft thou hast o’erthrown the con- queror ? Awake ! tor Freedom strike another blow ! That Christ has warriors yet, let Moslems know. Henry Harvey Srvarr, Teacher. McAdam Junction, N. B. Feb. 8th, 96. A German scientist has found very deadly bacteria in Russian wheat, and the Agrarians are agitating for the exclu- sion of foreign grain. The Pali Mall Gazette says that if the tentative negotiations now in progress be- come tang ible, France will offer toabandon her interests in Newfoundland in exchange for concessions in Egypt. The representative of a syndicate of English capituiists has just purchased 506,006 acres of coffee land on the I[sth- mus of Tehaunsepec. The tract will be planted in coffee trees. About 15,000 tons of starch has been made from potatoes this season in the three Stat es of Wisconsin, Minneso‘’a And North Dakota. Not far from three and a half m illion bushels of potatoes haye been u In New York city the cobblers are near- ly all foreigners, Many of them are Ita!- jane, the rest are Germans, Hungarians, etc. Very few are native Americans. of 9 4 First Class Work. Best Qualities of Paper. Work Promptly Done. Prices Low. Try us. THE EXAMINER PUB. C0. ci Cy ee -, ad Kd &; “9 = »* ; nig, with perfect snccess, Is a dangerous disease because it is liable to result in loss of hearing or smell, or develop into consumption. Read the following: “My wile has been a sufferer from eatarrh for the past four years and the disease had gone eo far that her eyesight was affected so that for noarly a year she was unable to read for more than five minutes at a time. She suffered severe pains im the head and at times was almost Gistracted. About Christmas, she com- menced taking Hood’s Sarsaparilis, and since that time has steadily improved. She has taken six bottles of Hood’s Sar- saparilla and is on the road to a complete oure. I cannot speak too highly of Hood’s Garsaperilis, and I cheerfully recommend it.” W. H. Fursixr, Newmarket, Ontario. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. . cure habitual constipa- Hood’s Pills fiom ‘Price 230. per box The Pali Mali Gazette says that Dr. Carl Peters. the African Exploser, who was recently elected president of the Ger- man Colonial Association, is about to un- dertake a new exploration of Somaland in the interests of a number of wealthy Am- ericans. During the recent war amenities be tween England and Germany, tne London Shipping Exchange sent the following telegram to the German Emperor: “No need to send 5,000 Germans from. your — j country; wecan most readily spare them from here. The youngest member of the British Parliament is Lord Milton, who is 23. There is 70 years differonce between his age and that of Charles Pelham Villiere, “the father of the Among other youthful members of the new Parliament are A. B. Bathurst, 23; Richard Cavendish, 24 and T. B Cur- ran, 25. How te Geta “Sualight" Boo Send 12 “Sunlight” soap wrappers to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto who will send post-paid a r-bound book 160 Gioia” Wes 6 “Lite buoy” Car bolic Soap wrappers, a similar book wil This 1¢ a splendid opportunity to @biaim good reading. Send your name and address written carefully. Remember “Sunlight” sells at 6 cts. per twin-bar, and “Life buoy” at 10 cts. One cent postage will bring gour wrappers by leaving the ends open’ satd&w Ay Otp Axp Wett Trizp Reuepr Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beed used for over fifty — 7 millions g@{mmothers for their children while teeth It soothes the child, softens ihe gums, allaye the pain, cures the colic, and 1s the best remedy for Diarrhea. Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists iu every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mre. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no ther kind.—m. w. f. wkly—l y Valuable Property: For Sale, The subscriber offers for sale the desir- able residence, “Edenhurst,” on West Street, between B. Heartz, Esq., and Hon. L. H. Davies’, The property has 84 feet fronting on West Street and 200 feet to the water. The house is heated throughout with hot water; also a well of spring water in cellar. Apply on the premises to Simon Davies, or Davies & Haezard, Solicitors. feb2y $10 per Set. Partial Sets $2 and upwards. Gold and Porcelain Crowning. Best material, best workmansn. best satisfaction. DR. J. P. MURRAY, u25 Queen Street, Charlottetow LBWIS' PHOTOGRAPHS None Better ! None Cheaper ! For Fineness of Finish and Artistic Posing, LEWIS’ PHOTOS are unsur- passed anywhere. Special attention given to CHILDREN’S PICTURES; also to Copying and En- larging Old Pictures. ENTRANCE ON GRAFTON ST., OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. House of Commons.” } feb2 0 THEY DON'T WANT CANADIANS. According to some of our exchanges the glory of the American nation has been splendidly exemplified by the return of a young man named Robertson, who left a situation in Montreal a week or two since upon the invitstion of a friend who had ee- cured him a better j. b in New York city. Roberteon had been working as invoice clerk a few days in the Metropolis, when his employers were thratemed with al! sorts of trouble if they did nut send away the Canadian, and although resistence was offered fur a time, they fiaally enceumbed, and the Montrealer was sent adrift to re= flect upon the greatness of the American ple. Kobertson was quite plucky, 1owever. and resolved to seek a new posi— tion. Hewent to the mayor of New York and asked for a writing to the effect that he might reside in the city buat the chief magistrate’s answer was about what an escaped Nihi'st from the mines of Siberia might expect from the chief of police of St. Petersburg or Moscow. His honor als» said that there was tco many American youths out of employment to allow him to extend any such favor to a Canadiau, But a geutleman who had dis- charged a dozen or more book-keepers for incompetency, put Rolertson to a test in penmanship and the keeping of accounts, and engaged him on the spot. Here again the infamously mean espionage began,and it was soon discovered that the merchant had a young Canadain in his employ. His head was demanded at ull cost, and at length obtained Robertson my dis- couraged and returned to Mouffreal firmly resolved to live and die in his native Can- ade, Before leaving New York, however, he found that a sc-salled detective had been dodging his footsteps from office to office,and thus Yankee honor was vin- dicated. LOWERING THE RATE OF INTEREST, Mr. Mullock’s bil! to lower the legal! rate of interest from six to four per cent., created much discussion when it came be- fore the Committee on Banking and Com- merce. In order to oppose the bill suc- cessfully, the council of the Montreal Board of Trade is sending a delegation to Ottawa, composed of Messrs, F. Wolferstan Thomas, James Crathern, and Charles Chaput. The Ottawa Board of Trade has alxo considered the question, and unani- mously adopted a resolution declaring that the proposed change would not only be de- trimental to the commer.e of Canada, but would injuriously affect the investment of fureign money im this country. During the discussion Mr. Geo. Burn expressed his sympathy with the motion, and said that in forty-eight out of the fifty States ia the Union the rate was six per cent., ani in the other two, Illinois and Louisana, ic was five per cent. Ic seemed to him that if a man incurred an obligation to pay a certain amount of money ate certain time, it was putting a premium on him anaking a default to kaow that the rate of interest would be reduced. The proposed change, in his opinion, would have the opposite effect of that intended, for the borrower, instead of being benefited, would only be pressed harder for payment. ‘Toronte bankers also went to Oitawa and opposed it. The bill was thrown out on Thursday last.—Monetary Times. a WANT CORSETS AND HAIRPLS. The Canadian-Australianliner Miowera, which recently arrived at Vanconver, re ceived an interesting report from the ship Dartford, which the spoke just before leaving Australian waters. ‘The capiain of the Dartford stated that when passing that isolated spot inthe South Atlantic, Tristan d’Acunha, on his way from Lon- don, a boat came off and bailed him. Yards were backed and a boat was found containing men, who brought potatoes, egge, milk and penguin skins far trade. They wanted ship’s stores, stating that they were in great need on the island. They depend upon passing ships for clothing, flour, tea, rice and sugar. When the Dartford passed they had been for six months without seeing a ship. The Dartford was able to Iet them have groceries and a few odds and ends. Corsets, hairpins and ribbons were then requested, as well as female appare!, but as sailing ships carry no such stores, the ladies of Trisdan were left 4:-~---solate. The population o. ... _.@ is very small, the females being three to one. They consider themselves English, though under the care of no flag. The latest addition to the colony is the second mate of a wrecked vessel, the Allan Shaw, who was seized and married almost as soon as the waves cast him ashore. RNEAS A, MACDONALD, Barrister-at-Law OFFICE, GREAT GEORGE STREET. CHARLOTTETOWN. Money to Loan. Fire and Life Insurances takep. Agent for Credit Foncier Franco-Cana‘ dien, Lancashire Fire insurance Co., Great Eestern Life Assurance Co. dec6 --26 &wy TO LET. Tuat large Shop, part of the “London Hove-” Building, lately occupied by J T. McKenzie, Tailor, with good room up tairs for work shop or store room. Apply to HON. DANIEL DAVIES, L. AH. DAVIES, Q. C., Executors Estate late Geo, Davies, Or to F. W. L. Moore, Solicitor, in Building. oct Scotch Whisky. An old-established firm of Scotch Whieky Distillers and Merchants want a Buying Agent of good standing for Prince Edward Island, for their finest quality eight-year-old Whirky incase. References given and required. Apply to Bex 30 McMurtries Advertising Offices, Glasgow Scotland. 6i—feb28 DON'T FORGET that une place to have WATCH RE- PAIRED PROMPTLY and as it should be done is at W. N. TANTON'S, Late of the employ of W. W. Wellner Great George Street, your NEAR QUEEN SQUARE, ne ap , nai A PEO Eg FRR Oe RR SpgmEr mE pt A 4 os . " pA *Sam Re A eee oernengs een ey ee er ae eee appa = er ompeen 3 OS Ths. ae BEES pO x 4 oe ge lee ow Nasir peapiay sent a, Exteak go mom, cgay silicon 3 Sx ies = m pen soe ere ree agile , Se Bite Sk et eS mm eel a ae age